GUILHERME SOARES ZAHN

Resumo

Has a bachelor's degree in Physics from Universidade de São Paulo (1991), master's at Nuclear Engineering from Universidade de São Paulo (1994) and doctorate at Nuclear Engineering from Universidade de São Paulo (2006). Has experience in nuclear ans applied physics, focusing on nuclear structure, acting on the following subjects: beta decay, neutron activation, gamma spectroscopy, nuclear structure, neutron flux determination and detection, and also on the development od instrumentation and sotware aimed at nuclear applications. (Text obtained from the Currículo Lattes on October 14th 2021)


Possui graduação em Física pela Universidade de São Paulo (1991), mestrado em Tecnologia Nuclear pela Universidade de São Paulo (1994) e doutorado em Tecnologia Nuclear pela Universidade de São Paulo (2006). Atualmente é pesquisador da Comissão Nacional de Energia Nuclear, lotado no Centro do Reator de Pesquisas do Instituto de Pesquisas Energéticas e Nucleares. Tem experiência na área de Física Nuclear, com ênfase em Estrutura Nuclear, atuando principalmente nos seguintes temas: decaimento beta, detecção de nêutrons, irradiadores de nêutrons, ativação neutrônica, fluxo de nêutrons, desenvolvimento de instrumentação e de software para aplicações nucleares. (Texto extraído do Currículo Lattes em 14 out. 2021)

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  • Resumo IPEN-doc 26965
    On the use of gamma-gamma coincidence to detect very low activities
    2017 - ZAHN, GUILHERME S.; GENEZINI, FREDERICO A.; RIBEIRO JUNIOR, IBERE S.; FAGIONATO, ESNEL A.
    The detection of very low gamma ray activities is a delicate task, and very important in environmental radiation studies, for instance. It usually requires the use of low-background shielding, as the long counting times required usually make the background subtraction quite tricky, and often result in rather high experimental uncertainties. In this work a different approach is tested, where a two-detector gamma-gamma coincidence system is used to eliminate essentially all of the background continuum - at the cost of reduced overall efficiency and, more importantly, requiring that the radionuclide to be studied presents useful gamma-gamma coincidences. Two distinct methods of analysis are tested, either using an "open-window" coincidence where an event is registered whenever any event is registered in the other detector, or using a strict coincidence analysis, where a valid coincidence between two gamma-rays from the same decay are required; this allow for a discussion on the advantages and problems of each method, as well as for an experimental assessment of the performance of such a system.