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The FLUKA Code: Developments and Challenges for High Energy and Medical Applications

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The FLUKA Monte Carlo code as discussed by the authors is used extensively at CERN for all beam-machine interactions, radioprotection calculations and facility design of forthcoming projects, which requires the code to be consistently reliable over the entire energy range (from MeV to TeV) for all projectiles.
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This article is published in Nuclear Data Sheets.The article was published on 2014-06-01 and is currently open access. It has received 1511 citations till now.

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First Measurement of Monoenergetic Muon Neutrino Charged Current Interactions.

TL;DR: This result is the first known-energy, weak-interaction-only probe of the nucleus to yield a measurement of ω using neutrinos, a quantity thus far only accessible through electron scattering.
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Ion recombination and polarity correction factors for a plane–parallel ionization chamber in a proton scanning beam

TL;DR: While no polarity effect was observed for the Markus TM23343 IC in the authors' pencil scanning proton beam system, the effect of volume recombination cannot be ignored and charge collection efficiency versus applied IC voltage is measured, confirming that the proton PBS represents a continuous beam.
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Radiation Effects on Deep Submicrometer SRAM-Based FPGAs Under the CERN Mixed-Field Radiation Environment

TL;DR: In this article, the single event effects on a 28-nm static random access memory-based field-programmable gate array (FPGA) under CERN's mixed-particle field are analyzed.
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Dose build-up effects induced by delta electrons and target fragments in proton Bragg curves-measurements and simulations.

TL;DR: target fragmentation was investigated indirectly by measuring low-noise proton Bragg curves with the focus placed on their build-up regions by means of simulations and experiments and it could be shown that the relevant models worked well to reproduce both building-up effects.
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Journal ArticleDOI

Review of Particle Physics: Particle data group

Kaoru Hagiwara, +142 more
- 20 Jul 2012 - 
TL;DR: The Particle Data Group's biennial review as mentioned in this paper summarizes much of particle physics, using data from previous editions, plus 2658 new measurements from 644 papers, and lists, evaluates, and average measured properties of gauge bosons, leptons, quarks, mesons, and baryons.

FLUKA: A multi-particle transport code (Program version 2005)

TL;DR: The 2005 version of the Fluka particle transport code is described in this article, where the basic notions, modular structure of the system, and an installation and beginner's guide are described.
ReportDOI

FLUKA: A Multi-Particle Transport Code

TL;DR: The 2005 version of the Fluka particle transport code is described in this article, where the basic notions, modular structure of the system, and an installation and beginner's guide are described.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The FLUKA code: Description and benchmarking

TL;DR: The physics model implemented inside the FLUKA code is briefly described in this paper, with emphasis on hadronic interactions, and examples of the capabilities of the code are presented including basic (thin target) and complex benchmarks.
Journal ArticleDOI

High Energy Nuclear Events

TL;DR: In this paper, a statistical method for computing high-energy collisions of protons with multiple production' 01 particles is discussed, which consists in assuming that as a result of fairly strong inter-actions between nucleons and mesons the probauilities of formation of the various possible numbers of particles are determined essentially by the statistical weights of the different possibilities.
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Frequently Asked Questions (6)
Q1. What are the contributions in "The fluka code: developments and challenges for high energy and medical applications" ?

The FLUKA code has been used for a variety of applications at CERN and elsewhere this paper, and some of the recent improvements of relevance for CERN problems, mostly ν beams and interactions, underground experiments, and medical applications have been described. 

SPIN AND PARITY EFFECTSStatistical evaporation of excited low mass fragments is unsuitable due to the relatively few, widely spaced levels. 

Composite ejectiles like d, t, 3He, and α can be reasonably described by coalescence algorithms during the intranuclear cascade and preequilibrium stages. 

A popular choice forthese calculations is the Fermi Break-up model [19, 20], where the excited nucleus is supposed to disassemble in one single step into two or more fragments, possibly in excited states, with branching given by plain phase space considerations. 

All possible combinations of unbound nucleons and/or light fragments are checked at each stage of system evolution and a figure-of-merit evaluation based on phase space closeness at the nucleus periphery is used to decide whether a light fragment is formed. 

Another promising technique for in-vivo hadrontherapy monitoring relies on the detection of prompt photons emitted following nuclear interactions by the beam particles.