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IAEA looks at nuclear techniques for crop resilience
The International Atomic Energy Agency has launched a five-year coordinated research project (CRP) to strengthen plant health preparedness using nuclear and related technologies.
Wheat blast, potato late blight, potato bacterial wilt, and cassava witches broom disease can spread quickly across large areas of land, leading to severe yield losses in key crops for food security. Global trade and climate change have increased the likelihood of rapid, transboundary spread.
A. Dubi, A. Goldfeld, K. Burn
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 91 | Number 4 | December 1985 | Pages 470-480
Technical Note | doi.org/10.13182/NSE85-A18363
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
Recently a detailed theory analyzing the dependence of the second moment and calculational time upon geometrical splitting was developed based on the direct statistical approach (DSA). The extended model refers to the application of the DSA to the case in which splitting and Russian roulette are used depending on the direction in which the particle crosses the surface, but with the limitation that any source particle reaching the detector must have crossed the surface. The results of a first attempt to use the theoretical results for the optimization of the splitting parameter on one surface in a practical problem are reported. The feasibility of the method in predicting a near optimum splitting parameter is demonstrated, and the application of the method to multiple surface problems is discussed.