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State Department adds Hungary to Central European nations making U.S. nuclear agreements
The U.S. nuclear industry took a further step to solidify its influence in Central Europe on February 16, when U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán signed the U.S.-Hungary Civil Nuclear Intergovernmental Agreement, potentially setting the stage for decades of cooperation in civilian nuclear energy between the two countries. This new agreement comes one month after the signing of a similar agreement between the U.S. Department of Energy and the government of Slovakia.
Yu. V. Petrov, A. I. Shlyakhter
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 77 | Number 2 | February 1981 | Pages 157-167
Technical Paper | doi.org/10.13182/NSE81-A21350
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
An estimate of the cross sections of nuclear reactions with thermal neutrons in terms of the average parameters of the target nucleus (the strength function, the average level spacing, and the average reaction width) is obtained. The probability distributions for the ratios of actual thermal neutron cross sections to their estimated values are introduced. These functions can be calculated from the statistical model. They are calculated for neutron radiative capture and for inelastic neutron acceleration by the isomeric nuclei [as well as the (n, α) reaction, etc.]. Using these results, one can predict the probability of finding the actual thermal neutron cross section in a given interval.