scispace - formally typeset
Y

Yosuke Iwamoto

Researcher at Japan Atomic Energy Agency

Publications -  148
Citations -  2864

Yosuke Iwamoto is an academic researcher from Japan Atomic Energy Agency. The author has contributed to research in topics: Neutron & Neutron temperature. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 137 publications receiving 2256 citations. Previous affiliations of Yosuke Iwamoto include KEK & Kyushu University.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

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.
Journal ArticleDOI

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.

PHITS: Particle and heavy ion transport code system, version 2.23

TL;DR: A Particle and Heavy Ion Transport code system (PHITS) was developed under the collaboration of JAEA (Japan Atomic Energy Agency), RIST (Research Organization for Information Science and Technology) and KEK (High Energy Accelerator Research Organization) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

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...
Journal ArticleDOI

Recent developments and benchmarking of the PHITS code

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compared calculated partial projectile fragmentation cross sections with accelerator-based measurements from the reactions of 200-1000 MeV/n He-4, C-12, N-14, O-16, Ne-20, Si-28, and Fe-56 on polyethylene, carbon, aluminum, copper, tin and lead, with different thicknesses, using different total reaction cross section models in PHITS.