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Tatsuhiko Ogawa

Researcher at Japan Atomic Energy Agency

Publications -  35
Citations -  1759

Tatsuhiko Ogawa is an academic researcher from Japan Atomic Energy Agency. The author has contributed to research in topics: Monte Carlo method & Neutron. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 25 publications receiving 1257 citations.

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Features of Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code System (PHITS) version 3.02

TL;DR: In this article, the Particle and Heavy Ion Transport Code System (PHITS) 3.02 has been released and the accuracy and the applicable energy ranges of the code were improved.
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Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code System, PHITS, version 2.52

TL;DR: An upgraded version of the Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code system (PHITS2.52) was developed and released to the public in this article, which is a more powerful tool for particle transport simulation applicable to various research and development fields.
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Benchmark study of the recent version of the PHITS code

TL;DR: In this article, the authors performed a benchmark study for 58 cases (22 cases reported in this paper and 36 reported in online as supplementary materials of this paper) using the recent version (version 2.88...
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Transport model comparison studies of intermediate-energy HI collisions

H. H. Wolter, +141 more
TL;DR: The Transport Model Evaluation Project (TMEP) as discussed by the authors has been pursued to test the robustness of transport model predictions in reaching consistent conclusions from the same type of physical model, and calculations under controlled conditions of physical input and set-up were performed with various participating codes.
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Overview of particle and heavy ion transport code system PHITS

TL;DR: A general purpose Monte Carlo Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code system, PHITS as mentioned in this paper, is developed through the collaboration of several institutes in Japan and Europe and can deal with the transport of nearly all particles, including neutrons, protons, heavy ions, photons, and electrons, over wide energy ranges.