Monte Carlo N-Particle Transport Code

MCNP
Developer(s) LANL
Stable release
MCNP6.2 / February 5, 2018 (2018-02-05)[1]
Written in Fortran 90
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Computational physics
License MCNPX Single-User Software License (proprietary)
Website mcnp.lanl.gov

Monte Carlo N-Particle Transport Code (MCNP) is a software package for simulating nuclear processes. It is developed by Los Alamos National Laboratory since at least 1957[2] with several further major improvements. It is distributed within the United States by the Radiation Safety Information Computational Center in Oak Ridge, TN and internationally by the Nuclear Energy Agency in Paris, France. It is used primarily for the simulation of nuclear processes, such as fission, but has the capability to simulate particle interactions involving neutrons, photons, and electrons among other particles. "Specific areas of application include, but are not limited to, radiation protection and dosimetry, radiation shielding, radiography, medical physics, nuclear criticality safety, detector design and analysis, nuclear oil well logging, accelerator target design, fission and fusion reactor design, decontamination and decommissioning."

Monte Carlo N-Particle eXtended

Monte Carlo N-Particle eXtended (MCNPX) was also developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory, and is capable of simulating particle interactions of 34 different types of particles (nucleons and ions) and 2000+ heavy ions at nearly all energies,[3] including those simulated by MCNP.

Both codes can be used to judge whether or not nuclear systems are critical and to determine doses from sources, among other things.

MCNP6 is a merger of MCNP5 and MCNPX.[3]

See also

Notes

  1. "MCNP6.2 Release notes" (PDF). LANL. 2018-02-05. Retrieved 2018-02-15.
  2. Cashwell, E.D.; Everett, C.J. (1959). A Practical Manual on the Monte Carlo Method for Random Walk Problems (PDF). London: Pergamon Press.
  3. 1 2 James, M.R. "MCNPX 2.7.x - New Features Being Developed" (PDF).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.