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Vladimir Grichine

Researcher at Lebedev Physical Institute

Publications -  82
Citations -  28804

Vladimir Grichine is an academic researcher from Lebedev Physical Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutrino & Photon. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 71 publications receiving 24408 citations. Previous affiliations of Vladimir Grichine include CERN & Russian Academy of Sciences.

Papers
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Geant4—a simulation toolkit

S. Agostinelli, +126 more
TL;DR: The Gelfant 4 toolkit as discussed by the authors is a toolkit for simulating the passage of particles through matter, including a complete range of functionality including tracking, geometry, physics models and hits.
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Geant4 developments and applications

TL;DR: GeGeant4 as mentioned in this paper is a software toolkit for the simulation of the passage of particles through matter, it is used by a large number of experiments and projects in a variety of application domains, including high energy physics, astrophysics and space science, medical physics and radiation protection.
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Recent developments in GEANT4

John Allison, +102 more
TL;DR: Geant4 as discussed by the authors is a software toolkit for the simulation of the passage of particles through matter, which is used by a large number of experiments and projects in a variety of application domains, including high energy physics, astrophysics and space science, medical physics and radiation protection.
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First measurement of electron neutrino appearance in NOvA

P. Adamson, +258 more
TL;DR: The first search for ν_{μ}→ν_{e} transitions by the NOvA experiment finds 6 events in the Far Detector, compared to a background expectation of 0.99±0.11(syst) events based on the Near Detector measurement.
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New constraints on oscillation parameters from νe appearance and νμ disappearance in the NOvA experiment

M. A. Acero, +197 more
- 24 Aug 2018 - 
TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analyses of the determinants of infectious disease in eight animal models and three of them are confirmed to be connected to EMMARM, a type of “spatially aggregating disease”.