RF Capture and Acceleration of Gold Ions in Booster (open access)

RF Capture and Acceleration of Gold Ions in Booster

N/A
Date: November 1, 1999
Creator: Gardner, C. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Injection of large transverse emittance EBIS beams in booster (open access)

Injection of large transverse emittance EBIS beams in booster

N/A
Date: November 1, 2011
Creator: Gardner, C. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some tools of the trade we`ve developed for our cross-section calculations (open access)

Some tools of the trade we`ve developed for our cross-section calculations

A number of compute codes have been modified or developed, both main-frame and PC. Seven codes, of which three are discussed in some detail. The later are: a controller-driven, double-precision version of the coupled-channel code ECIS; the latest version of STAPRE, a precompound plus Hauser-Feshbach nuclear reaction code; and NUSTART, a PC code that analyzes large sets of discrete nuclear levels and the multipole transitions among them. All main-frame codes are now being converted to the UNICOS operating system.
Date: November 1, 1992
Creator: Gardner, D. G. & Gardner, M. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Search for anomalous heavy-flavor quark production in association with W bosons (open access)

A Search for anomalous heavy-flavor quark production in association with W bosons

None
Date: November 1, 2004
Creator: Abazov, V. M.; Abbott, B.; Abolins, M.; Acharya, B. S.; Adams, M.; Adams, T. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Indium donor complexes with cation vacancies in CdTe and ZnSe (open access)

Indium donor complexes with cation vacancies in CdTe and ZnSe

Very dilute (10{sub 12} cm{sup {minus}3}) indium donors in CdTe and ZnSe powders and in CdTe single crystals were investigated using {sup 111}In Perturbed angular correlation spectroscopy. Most indium atoms are in uncomplexed sites but can form weakly-bound complexes with native defects in very defective material. The only complex observed in CdTe is an indium-Cd vacancy pair. The CdTe in which these pairs occur is apparently n-type, most Cd vacancies are free and doubly-charged, and the binding energy with indium is 0.15 eV. In ZnSe, indium can pair with a Zn vacancy or with some other presently unidentified defect. These complexes form in ZnSe containing large concentrations of both free Zn vacancies and complexes of Zn vacancies with other defects. In CdTe, the pair formation equilibration time constant is two days at 15C,an implication that Cd vacancies are mobile at room temperature. Lattice relaxation around a Cd vacancy in CdTe was probed by single crystal PAC experiments.
Date: November 1, 1993
Creator: Griffith, J. W.; Lundquist, R.; Platzer, R.; Gardner, J. A.; Karczewski, G. & Furdyna, J. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of nitrogen in boron carbide with the Leco UO-14 Nitrogen Determinator (open access)

Determination of nitrogen in boron carbide with the Leco UO-14 Nitrogen Determinator

Use of various metals as fluxes for releasing nitrogen from boron carbide in the Leco Nitrogen Determinator was investigated. Metals such as iron, chromium, and molybdenum that wet the graphite crucible all promoted nitrogen release. Tin, copper, aluminum, and platinum did not wet the graphite and were of no value as fluxes. A procedure for sample handling and the resulting performance of the method are described. The precision at 0.06 to 0.6 percent nitrogen averaged 4 percent relative standard deviation.
Date: November 1, 1977
Creator: Gardner, R. D.; Ashley, W. H. & Henicksman, A. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intercomparison of theoretical calculations of important activation cross sections for fusion reactor technology (open access)

Intercomparison of theoretical calculations of important activation cross sections for fusion reactor technology

Various theoretical calculations of radionuclides in the reactions {sup 94}Mo(n,p){sup 94}Nb, {sup 109}Ag(n,2n){sup 108m}Ag, {sup 151}Eu(n,2n){sup 150m}Eu, {sup 153}Eu(n,2n){sup 152g+m2}Eu, {sup 159}Tb(n,2n){sup 158}Tb, {sup 187}Re(n,2n){sup 186m}Re, {sup 179}Hf(n,2n){sup l78m2}Hf, {sup 193}Ir(n,2n){sup 192m2}Ir are compared. We normalize the theoretical results to the evaluated experimental data at 14.5 MeV, and take their average. This yields averaged theoretical excitation functions for the production of the various radionuclides at neutron energies ranging from threshold to 14.5 MeV. We discuss differences between the various theoretical results, and between theory and data where they exist. Our theoretical results may be used in conjunction with experimental data to produce evaluated radionuclide production cross sections for neutron energies lower than 14.5 MeV.
Date: November 1, 1993
Creator: Chadwick, M. B.; Gardner, M.; Gardner, D.; Grudzevich, O. T.; Ignatyuk, A. V.; Meadows, J. W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculated powder x-ray diffraction data for three tantalum tungstates. [Ta/sub 22/W/sub 4/O/sub 67/; Ta/sub 2/WO/sub 8/; Ta/sub 16/W/sub 18/O/sub 94/] (open access)

Calculated powder x-ray diffraction data for three tantalum tungstates. [Ta/sub 22/W/sub 4/O/sub 67/; Ta/sub 2/WO/sub 8/; Ta/sub 16/W/sub 18/O/sub 94/]

A study was made of computer-simulated powder x-ray diffraction data for Ta/sub 22/W/sub 4/O/sub 67/, Ta/sub 2/WO/sub 8/, and Ta/sub 16/W/sub 18/O/sub 94/--the three compounds in the Ta/sub 2/O/sub 5/--WO/sub 3/ system from 27 to 69 mole percent WO/sub 3/. The crystal structures of Ta/sub 2/WO/sub 8/ and one form of Ta/sub 16/W/sub 18/O/sub 94/ (Type B) were deduced from reported data. 8 tables. (auth)
Date: November 1, 1976
Creator: Holcombe, Jr., C. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Temperature-gradient and heat flow data, Grass Valley, Nevada (open access)

Temperature-gradient and heat flow data, Grass Valley, Nevada

A series of 16 shallow and intermediate-depth temperature-gradient holes were drilled for Sunoco Energy Development Co. in Grass Valley, Pershing County, Nevada, on leases held by Aminoil USA, Inc., under the cost-sharing industry-linked program of the Department of Energy. Thirteen shallow (85-152 m) and 3 intermediate-depth (360-457 m) holes were completed and logged during the period June through September, 1979. The locations of these holes and of pre-existing temperature-gradient holes are shown on plate 1. This report constitutes a final data transmittal and disclosure of results. The drilling subcontractor was Southwest Drilling and Exploration, Inc. of Central, Utah. They provided a Gardner-Denver 15W rig, a 3-man crew, and supporting equipment. A l l holes were drilled with mud as the circulating medium. Drilling histories for each hole are summarized in table 1. GeothermEx, Inc. performed on-site geological descriptions of the cuttings; obtained several temperature profiles for each hole, including an equilibrium profile taken 23 days or more after cessation of drilling; selected samples for thermal conductivity measurements; integrated temperature, temperature-gradient, and heat-flow data obtained in this project with published values; and prepared this report.
Date: November 1, 1979
Creator: Koenig, James B. & Gardner, Murray C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Optimization of a Shaped-Charge Design Using Parallel Computers (open access)

The Optimization of a Shaped-Charge Design Using Parallel Computers

Current supercomputers use large parallel arrays of tightly coupled processors to achieve levels of performance far surpassing conventional vector supercomputers. Shock-wave physics codes have been developed for these new supercomputers at Sandia National Laboratories and elsewhere. These parallel codes run fast enough on many simulations to consider using them to study the effects of varying design parameters on the performance of models of conventional munitions and other complex systems. Such studies maybe directed by optimization software to improve the performance of the modeled system. Using a shaped-charge jet design as an archetypal test case and the CTH parallel shock-wave physics code controlled by the Dakota optimization software, we explored the use of automatic optimization tools to optimize the design for conventional munitions. We used a scheme in which a lower resolution computational mesh was used to identify candidate optimal solutions and then these were verified using a higher resolution mesh. We identified three optimal solutions for the model and a region of the design domain where the jet tip speed is nearly optimal, indicating the possibility of a robust design. Based on this study we identified some of the difficulties in using high-fidelity models with optimization software to develop improved …
Date: November 1, 1999
Creator: Gardner, David R. & Vaughan, Courtenay T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reservoir fracture mapping using microearthquakes: Austin chalk, Giddings field, TX and 76 field, Clinton Co., KY (open access)

Reservoir fracture mapping using microearthquakes: Austin chalk, Giddings field, TX and 76 field, Clinton Co., KY

Patterns of microearthquakes detected downhole defined fracture orientation and extent in the Austin chalk, Giddings field, TX and the 76 field, Clinton Co., KY. We collected over 480 and 770 microearthquakes during hydraulic stimulation at two sites in the Austin chalk, and over 3200 during primary production in Clinton Co. Data were of high enough quality that 20%, 31% and 53% of the events could be located, respectively. Reflected waves constrained microearthquakes to the stimulated depths at the base of the Austin chalk. In plan view, microearthquakes defined elongate fracture zones extending from the stimulation wells parallel to the regional fracture trend. However, widths of the stimulated zones differed by a factor of five between the two Austin chalk sites, indicating a large difference in the population of ancillary fractures. Post-stimulation production was much higher from the wider zone. At Clinton Co., microearthquakes defined low-angle, reverse-fault fracture zones above and below a producing zone. Associations with depleted production intervals indicated the mapped fractures had been previously drained. Drilling showed that the fractures currently contain brine. The seismic behavior was consistent with poroelastic models that predicted slight increases in compressive stress above and below the drained volume.
Date: November 1, 1996
Creator: Phillips, W. S.; Rutledge, J. T.; Gardner, T. L.; Fairbanks, T. D.; Miller, M. E. & Schuessler, B. K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Instructor-Free Training Department (open access)

The Instructor-Free Training Department

Today`s skills will be obsolete in the year 2000. That workforce will require a much higher degree of technical sophistication and adaptability. Enormous demands will be made of DOE contractor training departments even as federal deficit reduction actions increasingly restrict resources and as the emergence of electronic performance support systems appear to diminish the need for training. True training will still be required but they must, and can, train better, faster, and cheaper. These goals are attainable by implementing the implications of performance-based training and by focusing on learning instead of on teaching. (Indeed, ability to learn efficiently and rapidly will be the premier talent in the next century.) Training Departments must dedicate themselves to changing performance, not to teaching classes. The best training department of the future will have no {open_quotes}instructors{close_quotes}. Trainingforce 2000 will look and function much differently.
Date: November 1, 1993
Creator: Gardner, P. R. & Sanford, D. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implementation of deep soil mixing at the Kansas City Plant (open access)

Implementation of deep soil mixing at the Kansas City Plant

In July 1996, the US Department of Energy (DOE) Kansas City Plant (KCP), AlliedSignal Federal Manufacturing and Technologies, and Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), conducted field-scale tests of in situ soil mixing and treatment technologies within the Northeast Area (NEA) of the KCP at the Former Ponds site. This demonstration, testing, and evaluation effort was conducted as part of the implementation of a deep soil mixing (DSM) innovative remedial technology demonstration project designed to test DSM in the low-permeability clay soils at the KCP. The clay soils and groundwater beneath this area are contaminated by volatile organic compounds (VOCs), primarily trichloroethene (TCE) and 1,2-dichloroethene (1,2-DCE). The demonstration project was originally designed to evaluate TCE and 1,2-DCE removal efficiency using soil mixing coupled with vapor stripping. Treatability study results, however, indicated that mixed region vapor stripping (MRVS) coupled with calcium oxide (dry lime powder) injection would improve TCE and 1,2-DCE removal efficiency in saturated soils. The scope of the KCP DSM demonstration evolved to implement DSM with the following in situ treatment methodologies for contaminant source reduction in soil and groundwater: DSM/MRVS coupled with calcium oxide injection; DSM/bioaugmentation; and DSM/chemical oxidation using potassium permanganate. Laboratory treatability studies were started in 1995 …
Date: November 1, 1998
Creator: Gardner, F. G.; Korte, N.; Strong-Gunderson, J.; Siegrist, R. L.; West, O. R.; Cline, S. R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interpretation of geology, geophysics and hydrochemistry for selection of geothermal drilling sites, Canon de San Diego Grant, Sandoval county, New Mexico (open access)

Interpretation of geology, geophysics and hydrochemistry for selection of geothermal drilling sites, Canon de San Diego Grant, Sandoval county, New Mexico

This project began in mid-1977 as an evaluation of the geology and hydrogeology of the Canon de San Diego Grant for Sunoco Energy Development Co. (Sunedco) and evolved late in 1977, at Sunedco's direction, into a more comprehensive study of geophysical, geologic and hydrogeochemical data. This has been used to select sites for the possible drilling of deep geothermal wells.
Date: November 1, 1978
Creator: Koenig, J. B.; McIntyre, J. R.; Klein, C. W. & Beyer, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal observation wells, Mt. Hood, Oregon. Final report, October 4, 1977-July 9, 1979 (open access)

Geothermal observation wells, Mt. Hood, Oregon. Final report, October 4, 1977-July 9, 1979

Exploration drilling operations were conducted which included the deepening of an existing hole, designated as Old Maid Flat No. 1, from 1850 ft (564 m) to 4002 (1220 m) on the western approaches to Mt. Hood and the drilling of three new holes ranging from 940 ft (287 m) to 1340 ft (409 m). The Clear Fork hole, located in Old Maid Flat, was drilled to 1320 ft (402 m). The Zigzag hole was drilled to 940 ft (287 m) at the southwestern base of Mt. Hood in the Zigzag River valley. The remaining hole was drilled on the Timberline Lodge grounds which is on the south flank of Mt. Hood at an elevation of about 6000 ft (1829 m) above sea level. The deepening project designated as Old Maid Flat No. 1 encountered a maximum bottom hole temperature of about 180/sup 0/F (82/sup 0/C) and is to this date the deepest exploratory hole in the Mt. Hood vicinity. No significant drilling problems were encountered. The Clear Fork and Zigzag River holes were completed without significant problems. The Timberline Lodge hole encountered severe drilling conditions, including unconsolidated formations. Two strings of tools were left in the hole from structural collapse …
Date: November 1, 1979
Creator: Covert, W. F. & Meyer, H. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A survey of metallurgical research on several actinides (open access)

A survey of metallurgical research on several actinides

A Los Alamos perspective on metallurgical research on neptunium, plutonium, americium, curium, and californium is presented. Alloying behaviors of these metals are discussed. Metal fabrication technologies, principally for plutonium, are emphasized.
Date: November 1, 1993
Creator: Olivas, J. D. & Schonfeld, F. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Origin of relativistic effects in the reaction D(e, e{prime}p)n at GeV energies (open access)

Origin of relativistic effects in the reaction D(e, e{prime}p)n at GeV energies

In a series of recent publications, a new approach to the non-relativistic reduction of the electromagnetic current operator in calculations of electro-nuclear reactions has been introduced. In one of these papers, the conjecture that at energies of a few GeV, the bulk of the relativistic effects comes from the current and not from the nuclear dynamics was made, based on the large relativistic effects in the transverse-longitudinal response. Here, the authors explicitly compare a fully relativistic, manifestly covariant calculation performed with the Gross equation, with a calculation that uses a non-relativistic wave function and a fully relativistic current operator. They find very good agreement up to missing momenta of 400 MeV/c, thus confirming the previous conjecture. They discuss slight deviations in cross sections for higher missing momenta and their possible origin, namely p-wave contributions and off-shell effects.
Date: November 1, 1999
Creator: Jeschonnek, S. & Van Orden, J.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Eddy current control in the AGS rapid cycling booster accelerator magnets (open access)

Eddy current control in the AGS rapid cycling booster accelerator magnets

The Booster requires highly variable magnet cycles. When B is large, eddy current induced sextupole, etc., in the dipole vacuum chamber (VC) is large, with a much smaller contribution from magnet ends. Simple passive coils excited automatically by transformer action cancel the B induced sextupole. A self correction coil is not required for the quadrupoles, since g induced aberrations are very small (< 1.0 {times} 10{sup {minus}4} at full aperture). Iron magnetization does not produce dipole or quadrupole magnet multipole aberrations, so these magnets have been effectively made independent of unwanted multipoles for all cycles. However, variations in the transfer functions and thus the Booster tune have not been automatically eliminated. Iron magnetization contributions are almost matched, but the B induced field retardation in the dipoles VC is larger than in the quadrupoles. Results of measurements will be presented, plus a simple system to overcome the mismatch and make the tune independent of B. Properties of special lattice magnets and their corrections will also be described.
Date: November 1, 1993
Creator: Danby, G. T.; Jackson, J. W. & Spataro, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field lysimeter facility for evaluating the performance of commercial solidified low-level waste. [Shallow land burial] (open access)

Field lysimeter facility for evaluating the performance of commercial solidified low-level waste. [Shallow land burial]

Analyzing the potential migration of radionuclides from sites containing solid low-level wastes requires knowledge of contaminant concentrations in the soil solution surrounding the waste. This soil solution concentration is generally referred to as the source term and is determined by such factors as the concentration of radionuclides in the solid waste, the rate of leachate formation, the concentration of dissolved species in the leachate, any solubility reactions occurring when the leachate contacts the soil, and the rate of water flow in the soil surrounding the waste. A field lysimeter facility established at the Hanford site is being used to determine typical source terms in arid climates for commercial low-level wastes solidifed with cement, Dow polymer (vinyl ester-styrene), and bitumen. The field lysimeter facility consists of 10, 3-m-deep by 1.8-m-dia closed-bottom lysimeters situated around a 4-m-deep by 4-m-dia central instrument caisson. Commercial cement and Dow polymer waste samples were removed from 210-L drums and placed in 8 of the lysimeters. Two bitumen samples are planned to be emplaced in the facility&#x27;s remaining 2 lysimeters during 1984. The central caisson provides access to the instrumentation in the individual lysimeters and allows selective sampling of the soil and waste. Suction candles (ceramic cups) …
Date: November 1, 1984
Creator: Walter, M. B.; Graham, M. J. & Gee, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTROCHEMICAL PROBES FOR DOWN HOLE AND IN-LINE CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF HIGH PRESSURE, HIGH TEMPERATURE GEOTHERMAL FLUIDS (Interim Report - Period Ending October 1977) (open access)

DEVELOPMENT OF ELECTRICAL AND ELECTROCHEMICAL PROBES FOR DOWN HOLE AND IN-LINE CHEMICAL ANALYSIS OF HIGH PRESSURE, HIGH TEMPERATURE GEOTHERMAL FLUIDS (Interim Report - Period Ending October 1977)

The objectives of this program are to develop probes that can determine the water chemistry of high temperature geothermal fluids. The entire probe system includes a high temperature reference electrode, oxidation potention (redox potential) , conductivity probe, pH, corrosivity, and specific ion probe (sulfide). The objective of this study for FY 1977 was to develop a reference electrode and conductivity probe that would operate in the geothermal environment and provide data. This work also involved a study of sealing materials. A high temperature-pressure, thermodynamic reference electrode was developed which was demonstrated to be operative in a simulated geothermal environment up to 250°C containing the contaminants that would affect its operation. An electrodeless conductivity probe was developed for use in the geothermal environment. This design is particularly resistant to the effects of scale deposition. A large number o f sealing materials were investigated for use in the 250°C geothermal environment. From this study, PNL has developed a spring-loaded seal that may have other applications in the geothermal industry.
Date: November 1, 1977
Creator: Danielson,, M. J.; Koski,, O. H. & Shannon,, D. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Busted Butte Unsaturated Zone Transport Test: Fiscal Year 1998 Status Report Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Program Deliverable SPU85M4 (open access)

Busted Butte Unsaturated Zone Transport Test: Fiscal Year 1998 Status Report Yucca Mountain Site Characterization Program Deliverable SPU85M4

This report describes the status of the Busted Butte Unsaturated Zone Transport Test (UZTT) and documents the progress of construction activities and site and laboratory characterization activities undertaken in fiscal year 1998. Also presented are predictive flow-and-transport simulations for Test Phases 1 and 2 of testing and the preliminary results and status of these test phases. Future anticipated results obtained from unsaturated-zone (UZ) transport testing in the Calico Hills Formation at Busted Butte are also discussed in view of their importance to performance assessment (PA) needs to build confidence in and reduce the uncertainty of site-scale flow-and-transport models and their abstractions for performance for license application. The principal objectives of the test are to address uncertainties associated with flow and transport in the UZ site-process models for Yucca Mountain, as identified by the PA working group in February 1997. These include but are not restricted to: (1) The effect of heterogeneities on flow and transport in unsaturated and partially saturated conditions in the Calico Hills Formation. In particular, the test aims to address issues relevant to fracture-matrix interactions and permeability contrast boundaries; (2) The migration behavior of colloids in fractured and unfractured Calico Hills rocks; (3) The validation through field …
Date: November 1, 1999
Creator: Bussod, G.Y.; Turin, H.J. & Lowry, W.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activation Analysis Nuclear Chemical Research Radiochemical Separations. Progress Report No. 8 for November 1958-October 1959 (open access)

Activation Analysis Nuclear Chemical Research Radiochemical Separations. Progress Report No. 8 for November 1958-October 1959

Activities at the Michigan Reactor and pneumatic tube system are outlined. Various modifications including installation and operation of a "bunny" rabbit pneumatic tube system for transferring samples from laboratory to counter are described. Prelimirary investigation for design of a neutron generator for activation work is described. Modifications to the 100-channel pulse-height analyzer including addition of auxillary circuits and additioral detectors are sumnnarized. In nuclear chemistry a cyclotron bombardment to produce long-lived vanadium tracer for yield determinations in activation analysis is described. Summaries of project work which have been published on absolute (d, alpha) reaction cross sections and excitation functions, use of computers in nuclear data analysis, and research on Ir/sup 196/ are presented. Study of the gamma spectra of 33-second Kr/sup 90/, 41-second Xe/sup 139/, and some longer-lived fission product rare gases is reported and a summary of preliminary results is given. Detection of a long-lived isomer of Ag/sup 108/ in old Ag/sup 110m/ samples is reported and new values for the branching ratios of 2.4minute Ag/sup 108/ are given. Activities of the Subcommittee on Radiochemistry are summarized. Development of a radiochemical procedure by the use of amalgam exchange is reported and exchange of the elements Cd, Tl, Zn, Pb, …
Date: November 1, 1959
Creator: Maddock, R. S. & Meinke, W. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Chemical Research, Radiochemical Separations and Activation Analysis: Progress Report 7, November 1957 - October 1958 (open access)

Nuclear Chemical Research, Radiochemical Separations and Activation Analysis: Progress Report 7, November 1957 - October 1958

Progress report discussing projects and work completed by the University of Michigan Department of Chemistry 1957-1958.
Date: November 1, 1958
Creator: Meinke, W. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the Development of a Java-Based Tool for Multifidelity Modeling of Coupled Systems: LDRD Final Report (open access)

On the Development of a Java-Based Tool for Multifidelity Modeling of Coupled Systems: LDRD Final Report

This report describes research and development of methods to couple vastly different subsystems and physical models and to encapsulate these methods in a Java{trademark}-based framework. The work described here focused on developing a capability to enable design engineers and safety analysts to perform multifidelity, multiphysics analyses more simply. In particular this report describes a multifidelity algorithm for thermal radiative heat transfer and illustrates its performance. Additionally, it describes a module-based computer software architecture that facilitates multifidelity, multiphysics simulations. The architecture is currently being used to develop an environment for modeling the effects of radiation on electronic circuits in support of the FY 2003 Hostile Environments Milestone for the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative.
Date: November 1, 2002
Creator: GARDNER,DAVID R.; CASTRO,JOSEPH P.; HENNIGAN,GARY L.; GONZALES,MARK A. & YOUNG,MICHAEL F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library