11 results on '"Konstantin Gordeev"'
Search Results
2. A Method for Estimating the Deposition Density of Fallout on the Ground and on Vegetation from a Low-yield, Low-altitude Nuclear Detonation
- Author
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Harold L. Beck, André Bouville, Steven L. Simon, Lynn R. Anspaugh, Kathleen M. Thiessen, Sergey Shinkarev, and Konstantin Gordeev
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Radioactive Fallout ,Epidemiology ,exposure, radiation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Altitude ,Radiation Dosage ,fallout ,Radiation Monitoring ,health effects ,Papers ,fission products ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
This paper describes a relatively simple model developed from observations of local fallout from US and USSR nuclear tests that allows reasonable estimates to be made of the deposition density (activity per unit area) on both the ground and on vegetation for each radionuclide of interest produced in a nuclear fission detonation as a function of location and time after the explosion. In addition to accounting for decay rate and in-growth of radionuclides, the model accounts for the fractionation (modification of the relative activity of various fission and activation products in fallout relative to that produced in the explosion) that results from differences in the condensation temperatures of the various fission and activation products produced in the explosion. The proposed methodology can be used to estimate the deposition density of all fallout radionuclides produced in a low yield, low altitude fission detonation that contribute significantly to dose. The method requires only data from post-detonation measurements of exposure rate (or beta or a specific nuclide activity) and fallout time-of-arrival. These deposition-density estimates allow retrospective as well as rapid prospective estimates to be made of both external and internal radiation exposure to downwind populations living within a few hundred kilometers of ground zero, as described in the companion papers in this volume.
- Published
- 2021
3. A Methodology for Estimating External Doses to Individuals and Populations Exposed to Radioactive Fallout from Nuclear Detonations
- Author
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André Bouville, Harold L. Beck, Lynn R. Anspaugh, Konstantin Gordeev, Sergey Shinkarev, Kathleen M. Thiessen, F. Owen Hoffman, and Steven L. Simon
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Radioactive Fallout ,Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Papers ,Body Burden ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Radiation Dosage ,Risk Assessment - Abstract
A methodology of assessment of the doses from external irradiation resulting from the ground deposition of radioactive debris (fallout) from a nuclear detonation is proposed in this paper. The input data used to apply this methodology for a particular location are the outdoor exposure rate at any time after deposition of fallout and the time-of-arrival of fallout, as indicated and discussed in a companion paper titled “A Method for Estimating the Deposition Density of Fallout on the Ground and on Vegetation from a Low-yield Low-altitude Nuclear Detonation.” Example doses are estimated for several age categories and for all radiosensitive organs and tissues identified in the most recent ICRP publications. Doses are calculated for the first year after the detonation, when more than 90% of the external dose is delivered for populations close to the detonation site over a time period of 70 y, which is intended to represent the lifetime dose. Modeled doses in their simplest form assume no environmental remediation, though modifications can be introduced. Two types of dose assessment are considered: (1) initial, for a rapid but only approximate dose estimation soon after the nuclear detonation; and (2) improved, for a later, more accurate, dose assessment following the analysis of post-detonation measurements of radiation exposure and fallout deposition and the access of information on the lifestyle of the exposed population.
- Published
- 2021
4. OPTIMIZATION OF VESSELS SIZES FROM THE CONDITIONS OF THE MINIMUM HULL SURFACE AREA
- Author
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Bogdan Vnukov, Konstantin Gordeev, and Sergey Scherbin
- Subjects
Surface (mathematics) ,Materials science ,Hull ,Marine engineering - Abstract
The method of optimization of vessels sizes for the reasons of the minimum surface area of the hull is considered. The dependences of the optimal diameter, height and minimum surface area of the tank body on the volume are obtained.
- Published
- 2020
5. OPTIMIZATION OF THE SIZE OF THE TANK FOR STORAGE OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
- Author
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Konstantin Gordeev and Sergey Scherbin
- Subjects
Petroleum product ,Waste management ,business.industry ,Environmental science ,business - Abstract
The method of optimizing the size of tanks for reducing the metal capacity.
- Published
- 2020
6. Retrospective Dose Assessment for the Population Living in Areas of Local Fallout from the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Part II: Internal Exposure to Thyroid
- Author
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Leonid Ilyin, Sergey Shinkarev, Nickolas Luckyanov, Masaharu Hoshi, Konstantin Gordeev, Steven L. Simon, and André Bouville
- Subjects
Radioactive Fallout ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Population ,Thyroid Gland ,Radiation Dosage ,Oral cavity ,Models, Biological ,Risk Assessment ,Whole-Body Counting ,Radiation Monitoring ,Risk Factors ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Computer Simulation ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,education ,Food Contamination, Radioactive ,Nuclear Warfare ,Retrospective Studies ,Radioisotopes ,education.field_of_study ,Radiation ,business.industry ,External irradiation ,Environmental Exposure ,Vegetation ,Kazakhstan ,Biological materials ,Photon emission ,Dose assessment ,Body Burden ,Environmental science ,Nuclear test ,Physical geography ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Relative Biological Effectiveness - Abstract
A methodology to assess internal exposure to thyroid from radioiodines for the residents living in settlements located in the vicinity of the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site is described that is the result of many years of research, primarily at the Moscow Institute of Biophysics. This methodology introduces two important concepts. First, the biologically active fraction, is defined as the fraction of the total activity on fallout particles with diameter less than 50 microns. That fraction is retained by vegetation and will ultimately result in contamination of dairy products. Second, the relative distance is derived as a dimensionless quantity from information on test yield, maximum height of cloud, and average wind velocity and describes how the biologically active fraction is distributed with distance from the site of the explosion. The parameter is derived in such a way that at locations with equal values of relative distance, the biologically active fraction will be the same for any test. The estimates of internal exposure to thyroid for the residents of Dolon and Kanonerka villages, for which the external exposure were assessed and given in a companion paper (Gordeev et al. 2006) in this conference, are presented. The main sources of uncertainty in the estimates are identified.
- Published
- 2006
7. Retrospective Dose Assessment for the Population Living in Areas of Local Fallout from the Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site Part I: External Exposure
- Author
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Konstantin GORDEEV, Sergey SHINKAREV, Leonid ILYIN, André BOUVILLE, Masaharu HOSHI, Nickolas LUCKYANOV, and Steven L. SIMON
- Subjects
Radioactive Fallout ,Radioisotopes ,Radiation ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Environmental Exposure ,Radiation Dosage ,Models, Biological ,Risk Assessment ,Whole-Body Counting ,Kazakhstan ,Radiation Monitoring ,Risk Factors ,Body Burden ,Humans ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Computer Simulation ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Relative Biological Effectiveness ,Nuclear Warfare ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
A short analysis of all 111 atmospheric events conducted at the Semipalatinsk Test Site (STS) in 1949-1962 with regard to significant off-site exposure (more than 5 mSv of the effective dose during the first year after the explosion) has been made. The analytical method used to assess external exposure to the residents living in settlements near the STS is described. This method makes use of the archival data on the radiological conditions, including the measurements of exposure rate. Special attention was given to the residents of Dolon and Kanonerka villages exposed mainly as a result of the first test, detonated on August 29, 1949. For the residents of those settlements born in 1935, the dose estimates calculated according to the analytical method, are compared to those derived from the thermoluminescence measurements in bricks and electron paramagnetic resonance measurements in teeth. The methods described in this paper were used for external dose assessment for the cohort members at an initial stage of an ongoing epidemiological study conducted by the U.S. National Cancer Institute in the Republic of Kazakhstan. Recently revised methods and estimates of external exposure for that cohort are given in another paper (Simon et al.) in this conference.
- Published
- 2006
8. MOVEMENT OF RADIONUCLIDES IN TERRESTRIAL ECOSYSTEMS BY PHYSICAL PROCESSES
- Author
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Ilya A. Likhtarev, Lynn R. Anspaugh, Sergei M. Shinkarev, Konstantin Gordeev, Steven L. Simon, and Reed M. Maxwell
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Radioactive Fallout ,Radioisotopes ,Radionuclide ,Epidemiology ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Earth science ,Air pollution ,Radioactive waste ,Vegetation ,Environment ,Models, Theoretical ,Plants ,medicine.disease_cause ,Environmental protection ,Soil column ,medicine ,Soil Pollutants, Radioactive ,Environmental science ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Ecosystem ,Terrestrial ecosystem ,Interception - Abstract
Physical processes that effect the movement of radionuclides in the temperate environments post-deposition are considered in this paper. The physical processes considered include the interception of radionuclides by vegetation, resuspension, and vertical migration in soil. United States and Russian results on the interception of radionuclides are reviewed and defined in terms of models that are currently undergoing evaluation and revision. New results on resuspension are evaluated, and a preliminary new model for the time-dependent resuspension factor is proposed. Chernobyl-related results on the movement of radionuclides into the soil column are presented, as is a revised model for this process based upon recent results from Ukraine.
- Published
- 2002
9. Fallout from nuclear tests: dosimetry in Kazakhstan
- Author
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Konstantin Gordeev, Nickolas Luckyanov, A Lebedev, André Bouville, Steven L. Simon, Sergey Shinkarev, Y Stepanov, I Vasilenko, and Lynn R. Anspaugh
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Radiation ,Nuclear warfare ,Waste management ,Nuclear engineering ,Radioactive fallout ,Biophysics ,Environmental science ,Dosimetry ,Environmental exposure ,Databases as Topic ,General Environmental Science - Published
- 2002
10. Ultrasound-detected thyroid nodule prevalence and radiation dose from fallout
- Author
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CM Fillmore, L. A. Crooks, B. I. Gusev, Philip W. Wiest, Z Carr, Charles E. Land, P. W. Woodward, Sergey Shinkarev, Harold L. Beck, André Bouville, John Langer, Konstantin Gordeev, Steven L. Simon, Z. Zhumadilov, M. H. Hartshorne, G. Abisheva, Robert M. Weinstock, and Nickolas Luckyanov
- Subjects
Radioactive Fallout ,Neoplasms, Radiation-Induced ,Biophysics ,Radiation Dosage ,Article ,medicine ,Relative biological effectiveness ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Thyroid Nodule ,Nuclear Warfare ,Ultrasonography ,Radiation ,business.industry ,Thyroid disease ,Radioactive fallout ,Ultrasound ,Radiation dose ,Thyroid ,Nodule (medicine) ,Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation ,medicine.disease ,Kazakhstan ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cytopathology ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,Relative Biological Effectiveness - Abstract
Settlements near the Semipalatinsk Test Site (SNTS) in northeastern Kazakhstan were exposed to radioactive fallout during 1949–1962. Thyroid disease prevalence among 2994 residents of eight villages was ascertained by ultrasound screening. Malignancy was determined by cytopathology. Individual thyroid doses from external and internal radiation sources were reconstructed from fallout deposition patterns, residential histories and diet, including childhood milk consumption. Point estimates of individual external and internal dose averaged 0.04 Gy (range 0–0.65) and 0.31 Gy (0–9.6), respectively, with a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.46. Ultrasound-detected thyroid nodule prevalence was 18% and 39% among males and females, respectively. It was significantly and independently associated with both external and internal dose, the main study finding. The estimated relative biological effectiveness of internal compared to external radiation dose was 0.33, with 95% confidence bounds of 0.09–3.11. Prevalence of papillary cancer was 0.9% and was not significantly associated with radiation dose. In terms of excess relative risk per unit dose, our dose–response findings for nodule prevalence are comparable to those from populations exposed to medical X rays and to acute radiation from the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bombings.
- Published
- 2007
11. External dose estimates for Dolon village: application of the U.S./Russian joint methodology
- Author
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Lynn R. Anspaugh, Sergey Shinkarev, Nicholas Luckyanov, André Bouville, Konstantin Gordeev, Harold L. Beck, Steven L. Simon, and Charles E. Land
- Subjects
Radioactive Fallout ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,International Cooperation ,Radiation Dosage ,Models, Biological ,Risk Assessment ,Whole-Body Counting ,Russia ,Radiation Monitoring ,Risk Factors ,Statistics ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Computer Simulation ,Joint (geology) ,Nuclear Warfare ,Radioisotopes ,Radiation ,business.industry ,Radioactive fallout ,Research ,Environmental Exposure ,Kazakhstan ,United States ,Environmental science ,Body Burden ,Nuclear test ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Relative Biological Effectiveness - Abstract
Methods to estimate external dose from radioactive fallout from nuclear tests have for many years depended on two types of data: measurements of exposure rate in air and an empirically derived power function to describe the change in exposure rate with time, Over the last four years, a working group with American and Russian participation has developed a bi-national joint methodology that offers an improved capability for estimating external dose. In this method, external dose is estimated using exposure rate functions derived from data from American nuclear tests similar in construction to SNTS (Semipalatinsk Nuclear Test Site) devices. For example, in this paper, we derive doses for test #1 (August 29, 1949) at the SNTS using an exposure rate function for the U.S. TRINITY test. For the case of test #1, the average external dose for a person in Dolon is estimated to have been about 0.5 Gy compared to 1 to 2 Gy estimated in other work. This prediction agrees better with reported EPR measurements in teeth from village residents and with measurements of TL signals in bricks from Dolon buildings. This report presents the basic elements of the joint methodology model for estimation of external dose received from SNTS fallout.
- Published
- 2006
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