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Harry E. Gove

Researcher at University of Rochester

Publications -  80
Citations -  2522

Harry E. Gove is an academic researcher from University of Rochester. The author has contributed to research in topics: Accelerator mass spectrometry & Mass spectrometry. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 67 publications receiving 2453 citations. Previous affiliations of Harry E. Gove include Argonne National Laboratory.

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Radiocarbon Dating Using Electrostatic Accelerators: Negative Ions Provide the Key

TL;DR: This work has shown that with negative ions and a tandem electrostatic accelerator, the 14N background is virtually absent and fewer than three 14C atoms in 1016 atoms of 12C have been easily measured.
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Chlorine 36 dating of very old groundwater: 1. The Great Artesian Basin, Australia

TL;DR: In this article, the suitability of /sup 36/Cl/Cl ratios of 26 groundwater samples from the Great Artesian Basin of Australia have been measured, and the water ages calculated from the data compare favorably with ages computed independently from hydrodynamic simulations.
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Analysis of 36 Cl in environmental water samples using an electrostatic accelerator

TL;DR: In this article, a new atom identification and detection technique for ultrasensitive mass spectrometry has been applied to the radionuclide 36Cl and the results showed that the 36Cl/Cl ratio in AgCl precipitated from six different natural water samples with a background level below 3 × 10−15.
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Neutron discrepancies in the DS86 Hiroshima dosimetry system.

TL;DR: In this article, inconsistencies between low-energy neutrons and DS86 calculations for Hiroshima are examined using all available measurement data, including new measurements for 36Cl which extend the measurement range to more than 1.7 km from the epicenter, and Monte Carlo modeling calculations for each sample measured.
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Development of 36Cl standards for AMS

TL;DR: In this paper, large-quantity dilutions of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) 36Cl standard (SRM 4943) to 36 Cl Cl ratios of 5.000 × 10−13, 1.600 × 10 −12, 5.003 × 10-12 and 1.000× 10−11 have been prepared for AMS standards.