Properties of e/sup +/e/sup -/ interactions at. sqrt. s = 50 and 52 GeV (open access)

Properties of e/sup +/e/sup -/ interactions at. sqrt. s = 50 and 52 GeV

Bhabha scattering and multi-hadronic e/sup +/e/sup -/ annihilation events have been observed in the AMY detector at ..sqrt..s = 50 GeV and ..sqrt..s = 52 GeV at the TRISTAN e/sup +/e/sup -/ storage ring. Here we report the results of a preliminary analysis of the properties of these events. We present results for the e/sup +/e/sup -/ ..-->.. e/sup +/e/sup -/, e/sup +/e/sup -/ ..-->.. ..gamma gamma.. and e/sup +/e/sup -/ ..-->.. ..mu../sup +/..mu../sup -/ differential cross sections as well as for R, the ratio of e/sup +/e/sup -/ annihilation into hadrons to that for dimuons. In addition we present results on the characteristics of the final state hadrons in the annihilation events.
Date: July 1, 1987
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cerro Prieto geothermal field: exploration during exploitation (open access)

Cerro Prieto geothermal field: exploration during exploitation

Geological investigations at Momotombo included photogeology, field mapping, binocular microscope examination of cuttings, and drillhole correlations. Among the geophysical techniques used to investigate the field sub-structure were: Schlumberger and electromagnetic soundings, dipole mapping and audio-magnetotelluric surveys, gravity and magnetic measurements, frequency domain soundings, self-potential surveys, and subsurface temperature determinations. The geochemical program analyzed the thermal fluids of the surface and in the wells. The description and results of exploration methods used during the investigative stages of the Momotombo Geothermal Field are presented. A conceptual model of the geothermal field was drawn from the information available at each exploration phase. The exploration methods have been evaluated with respect to their contributions to the understanding of the field and their utilization in planning further development.
Date: July 1, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drug and alcohol abuse: the bases for employee assistance programs in the nuclear-utility industry (open access)

Drug and alcohol abuse: the bases for employee assistance programs in the nuclear-utility industry

This report describes the nature, prevalence, and trends of drug and alcohol abuse among members of the US adult population and among personnel in non-nuclear industries. Analogous data specific to the nuclear utility industry are not available, so these data were gathered in order to provide a basis for regulatory planning. The nature, prevalence, and trend inforamtion was gathered using a computerized literature, telephone discussions with experts, and interviews with employee assistance program representatives from the Seattle area. This report also evaluates the possible impacts that drugs and alcohol might have on nuclear-related job performance, based on currently available nuclear utility job descriptions and on the scientific literature regarding the impairing effects of drugs and alcohol on human performance. Employee assistance programs, which can be used to minimize or eliminate job performance decrements resulting from drug or alcohol abuse, are also discussed.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Radford, L.R.; Rankin, W.L.; Barnes, V.; McGuire, M.V. & Hope, A.M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy efficient buildings. Technical potentials and policy recommendations for conservation and renewable resources: a least cost scenario, 1980-2000 (open access)

Energy efficient buildings. Technical potentials and policy recommendations for conservation and renewable resources: a least cost scenario, 1980-2000

Working from the premise that the largest and least expensive source of energy in the US in the next 20 y is the energy that could be saved in buildings, building energy consumption in commercial and residential buildings is examined, and the energy savings which could be accomplished by more efficient building design, by energy conserving retrofits and by the use of solar heating equipment are discussed. (LCL)
Date: July 25, 1980
Creator: Rosenfeld; Goldstein; Harris; Claridge & Gawell
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Role of molecular dynamics on descriptions of shock-front processes (open access)

Role of molecular dynamics on descriptions of shock-front processes

By means of a computational approach based on classical molecular dynamics, we can begin to form a realistic picture of shock-induced processes occurring at the shock front and resulting from the detailed, violent motion associated with shock motion on an atomic scale. Prototype studies of phase transitions will be discussed. We will also examine the interaction of the shock front with defects, surfaces, voids, and inclusions, and across grain boundaries. We will focus on the critical question of how mechanical energy imparted to a condensed material by shock loading is converted to the activation energy required to overcome some initial energy barrier in an initiation process.
Date: July 22, 1981
Creator: Karo, A.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
FFTF (Fast Flux Test Facility) reactor shutdown system reliability reevaluation (open access)

FFTF (Fast Flux Test Facility) reactor shutdown system reliability reevaluation

The reliability analysis of the Fast Flux Test Facility reactor shutdown system was reevaluated. Failure information based on five years of plant operating experience was used to verify original reliability numbers or to establish new ones. Also, system modifications made subsequent to performance of the original analysis were incorporated into the reevaluation. Reliability calculations and sensitivity analyses were performed using a commercially available spreadsheet on a personal computer. The spreadsheet was configured so that future failures could be tracked and compared with expected failures. A number of recommendations resulted from the reevaluation including both increased and decreased surveillance intervals. All recommendations were based on meeting or exceeding existing reliability goals. Considerable cost savings will be incurred upon implementation of the recommendations.
Date: July 1, 1986
Creator: Pierce, B. F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical Data Advisory Board assembly of mathematial and physical sciences (open access)

Numerical Data Advisory Board assembly of mathematial and physical sciences

The Numerical Data Advisory Board (NDAB) is an advisory body that provides expert overview, on a broad basis, of data needs and data programs as required for the advancement of science and technology. Board members, representing various disciplines, concern themselves with the quality, reliability, availability, accessibility, and dissemination of numerical data in physical, chemical, engineering, and interdisciplinary subjects as well as numeric and non-numeric data that arise in biology and geology. Topics of concern are addressed by the NDAB membership, or by specific, carefully chosen committees and panels established by NDAB in order to include experts appropriate to the subject at hand.
Date: July 30, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electromagnetic Structure of Nuclei (open access)

Electromagnetic Structure of Nuclei

A brief review is given of selected topics in the electromagnetic structure of nucleons and nuclei, including nucleon form factors from both quantum chromodynamics and electron scattering data, measurements of the deuteron and triton form factors, quasi-elastic scattering, and the EMC effect. 47 refs., 13 figs. (LEW)
Date: July 1, 1986
Creator: Arnold, R. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Condensed draft action description memorandum for the decontamination and decommissioning of Battelle Columbus facilities (open access)

Condensed draft action description memorandum for the decontamination and decommissioning of Battelle Columbus facilities

Under provisions of the Surplus Facilities Management Program (SFMP), the US Department of Energy, Chicago Operations Office, proposes to provide funding for Surveillance and Maintenance (S & M) and subsequent Decontamination and Decommissioning (D & D) of fifteen facilities and associated premises belonging to Battelle Columbus Division. The fifteen facilities are contaminated as a result of nuclear research and development activities conducted over a period of approximately 43 years for DOE and its predecessor agencies--the Energy Research and Development Administration (ERDA), the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and the Manhattan Engineer District (MED). The proposed action includes continuation of ongoing S & M as well as a D & D of the facilities. The S & M activities include a continued environmental monitoring program to maintain assurance that radioactive contamination has not escaped to the surrounding environment; regularly scheduled inspection and maintenance of health, safety, and radiation protection equipment and instrumentation; a program of health physics surveillance monitoring, personnel dosimetry, and equipment and instrumentation maintenance and calibration; and emergency planning, training, and drills. The so- called dismantlement D & D mode is the proposed alternative for D & D of these facilities. For the facilities in question this will generally involve …
Date: July 12, 1988
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data management in a fusion energy research experiment (open access)

Data management in a fusion energy research experiment

Present-day fusion research requires extensive support for the large amount of scientific data generated, bringing about three distinct problems computer systems must solve: (1) the processing of large amounts of data in very small time frames; (2) the archiving, analyzing and managing of the entire data output for the project's lifetime; (3) the standardization of data for the exchange of information between laboratories. The computer system supporting General Atomic's Doublet III tokamak, a project funded by the United States Department of Energy, is the first to encounter and address these problems through a system-wide data base structure.
Date: July 1, 1981
Creator: Glad, A.; Drobnis, D. & McHarg, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measuring and modeling solar irradiance on vertical surfaces (open access)

Measuring and modeling solar irradiance on vertical surfaces

This report presents the first evaluations of 5 algorithms for converting global horizontal and direct normal solar irradiance components to global irradiance on tilted surfaces using measurements from the Solar Radiation Research Laboratory (SRRL) at SERI. High resolution (15-min) measurements from 8 thermopile radiometers oriented vertically in the 4 cardinal directions were available for a 169-day period ending 31 December 1984. Concurrent measurements of global horizontal and direct normal solar irradiance components were also used. The pyranometers used were intercompared on horizontal, north-facing, and south-facing vertical orientations. The conversion algorithms each attempt to account for the very complex atmospheric interactions with incoming solar radiation. The sky and ground radiance contributions to tilted surface are assumed to be isotropic, anisotropic, or a combination of the two depending on the algorithm. Results from the analysis of measurements on vertical surfaces for 22 July through 4 September indicate a general overestimate (18% to 46.5%) of solar irradiance on north-facing surfaces by all 5 of the algorithms. The best agreement with measured data was demonstrated for south-facing surfaces where all but one algorithm were within the present measurement by as much as 23% of the observed 15-min data.
Date: July 1, 1986
Creator: Maxwell, Eugene L.; Stoffel, T. L. & Bird, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Materials surface modification by plasma bombardment under simultaneous erosion and redeposition conditions (open access)

Materials surface modification by plasma bombardment under simultaneous erosion and redeposition conditions

The first in-depth investigation of surface modification of materials by continuous, high-flux argon plasma bombardment under simultaneous erosion and redeposition conditions have been carried out for copper and 304 stainless steel using the PISCES facility. The plasma bombardment conditions are: incident ion flux range from 10/sup 17/ to 10/sup 19/ ions sec/sup -1/cm/sup -2/, total ion fluence is controlled between 10/sup 19/ and 10/sup 22/ ions cm/sup -2/, electron temperature range from 5 to 15 eV, and plasma density range from 10/sup 11/ to 10/sup 13/cm/sup -3/. The incident ion energy is 100 eV. The sample temperature is between 300 and 700K. Under redeposition dominated conditions, the material erosion rate due to the plasma bombardment is significantly smaller (by a factor up to 10) than that can be expected from the classical ion beam sputtering yield data. It is found that surface morphologies of redeposited materials strongly depend on the plasma bombardment condition. The effect of impurities on surface morphology is elucidated in detail. First-order modelings are implemented to interpret the reduced erosion rate and the surface evolution. Also, fusion related surface properties of redeposited materials such as hydrogen reemission and plasma driven permeation have been characterized.
Date: July 1, 1986
Creator: Hirooka, Y.; Goebel, D. M.; Conn, R. W.; Campbell, G. A.; Leung, W. K.; Wilson, K. L. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Terrestrial fate of coal-liquid constituents: behavior of alkyl anilines in soil (open access)

Terrestrial fate of coal-liquid constituents: behavior of alkyl anilines in soil

The low molecular weight aromatic amines (anilines) are important water soluble constituents of coal liquids. The impact of anilines released to the terrestrial environment will largely depend on their mobility and persistence. Studies were conducted to investigate those processes governing the mobility and persistence of the alkylanilines, namely, soil sorption and chemical/microbial degradation. Soil sorption measurements were conducted on aniline and several methyl substituted anilines on A and B horizons of a soil profile collected from Davies County, Kentucky. The magnitude of sorption was large in all horizons. Sorption in the B horizons was larger than in the A horizon for many of the anilines studied, indicating the importance of both the mineral matrix and organic carbon content of the soil in determining the magnitude of sorption. Results of these measurements indicate that movement of the anilines through the soil would be significantly attenuated by sorption reactions. Aniline sorption measurement in the A horizon after removal of the organic matter and in the B/sub 22/ horizon after removal of amorphous iron oxides and crystalline iron oxides indicate that organic matter largely controls aniline sorption in the A horizon, while crystalline iron oxides and phyllosilicates are important in the B horizons. …
Date: July 1, 1982
Creator: Felice, L. J.; Zachara, J. M. & Rogers, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A History of the Atomic Energy Commission (open access)

A History of the Atomic Energy Commission

This pamphlet traces the history of the US Atomic Energy Commission's twenty-eight year stewardship of the Nation's nuclear energy program, from the signing of the Atomic Energy Act on August 1, 1946 to the signing of the Energy Reorganization Act on October 11, 1974. The Commission's early concentration on the military atom produced sophisticated nuclear weapons for the Nation's defense and made possible the creation of a fleet of nuclear submarines and surface ships. Extensive research in the nuclear sciences resulted in the widespread application of nuclear technology for scientific, medical and industrial purposes, while the passage of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 made possible the development of a nuclear industry, and enabled the United States to share the new technology with other nations.
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Buck, A.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal fracture stimulation technology. Volume 1. Fracturing proppants and their properties (open access)

Geothermal fracture stimulation technology. Volume 1. Fracturing proppants and their properties

A review of previously published literature on proppant permeability is presented. This data will be used in the subsequent phases of the geothermal stimulation project. Much information comes from the oil and gas industry which has tested various proppants during the past thirty years over a range of different closure stresses at the lower temperatures found in oil reservoirs. The historical development of proppants is summarized and reviewed and a variety of data on proppants found in today's literature is presented. Also included are several standard test procedures and equipment setups used in measuring proppant properties and in proppant testing.
Date: July 1, 1980
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical Engineering Department technical abstracts (open access)

Mechanical Engineering Department technical abstracts

The Mechanical Engineering Department publishes abstracts twice a year to inform readers of the broad range of technical activities in the Department, and to promote an exchange of ideas. Details of the work covered by an abstract may be obtained by contacting the author(s). General information about the current role and activities of each of the Department's seven divisions precedes the technical abstracts. Further information about a division's work may be obtained from the division leader, whose name is given at the end of each divisional summary. The Department's seven divisions are as follows: Nuclear Test Engineering Division, Nuclear Explosives Engineering Division, Weapons Engineering Division, Energy Systems Engineering Division, Engineering Sciences Division, Magnetic Fusion Engineering Division and Materials Fabrication Division.
Date: July 1, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological testing and chemical analysis of process materials from an integrated two stage coal liquefaction: a status report (open access)

Biological testing and chemical analysis of process materials from an integrated two stage coal liquefaction: a status report

Samples for chemical characterization and biological testing were obtained from ITSL runs 3LCF7, 3LCF8 and 3LCF9. Chemical analysis of these materials showed that SCT products were composed of fewer compounds than analogous materials from Solvent Refined Coal (SRC) processes. Major components in the SCT materials were three-, four-, five- and six-ring neutral polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAH). Methyl(C/sub 1/) and C/sub 2/ homologs of these compounds were present in relatively low concentrations, compared to their non-alkylated homologs. Organic nitrogen was primarily in the form of tertiary polycyclic aromatic nitrogen heterocycles and carbazoles. Little or no amino PAH (APAH) or cyano PAH were detected in samples taken during normal PDU operations, however, mutagenic APAH were produced during off-normal operation. Microbial mutagenicity appeared to be due mainly to the presence of APAH which were probably formed in the LC finer due to failure of the catalyst to promote deamination following carbon-nitrogen bond scission of nitrogen-containing hydroaromatics. This failure was observed for the off-normal runs where it was likely that the catalyst had been deactivated. Carcinogenic activity of ITSL materials as assessed by (tumors per animal) in the initiation/promotion mouse skin painting assay was slightly reduced for materials produced with good catalyst under normal …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Wilson, B. W.; Buhl, P. & Moroni, E. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Earth Sciences Division annual report 1983 (open access)

Earth Sciences Division annual report 1983

Research is reported on: reservoir engineering and hydrogeology, geomechanics, geophysics, and geochemistry. Separate entries were prepared for 67 research activities.
Date: July 1, 1984
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Life sciences: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, 1988 (open access)

Life sciences: Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, 1988

Life Sciences Research at LBL has both a long history and a new visibility. The physics technologies pioneered in the days of Ernest O. Lawrence found almost immediate application in the medical research conducted by Ernest's brother, John Lawrence. And the tradition of nuclear medicine continues today, largely uninterrupted for more than 50 years. Until recently, though, life sciences research has been a secondary force at the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL). Today, a true multi-program laboratory has emerged, in which the life sciences participate as a full partner. The LBL Human Genome Center is a contribution to the growing international effort to map the human genome. Its achievements represent LBL divisions, including Engineering, Materials and Chemical Sciences, and Information and Computing Sciences, along with Cell and Molecular Biology and Chemical Biodynamics. The Advanced Light Source Life Sciences Center will comprise not only beamlines and experimental end stations, but also supporting laboratories and office space for scientists from across the US. This effort reflects a confluence of scientific disciplines --- this time represented by individuals from the life sciences divisions and by engineers and physicists associated with the Advanced Light Source project. And finally, this report itself, the first summarizing the …
Date: July 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Survey preliminary report, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, California (open access)

Environmental Survey preliminary report, Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, Stanford, California

This report presents the preliminary findings from the first phase of the Survey of the US Department of Energy (DOE) Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) at Stanford, California, conducted February 29 through March 4, 1988. The Survey is being conducted by an interdisciplinary team of environmental specialists, led and managed by the Office of Environment, Safety and Health's Office of Environmental Audit. Individual team components are being supplied by a private contractor. The objective of the Survey is to identify environmental problems and areas of environmental risk associated with the SLAC. The Survey covers all environmental media and all areas of environmental regulation and is being performed in accordance with the DOE Environmental Survey Manual. This phase of the Survey involves the review of existing site environmental data, observations of the operations at the SLAC, and interviews with site personnel. The Survey team is developing a Sampling and Analysis Plan to assist in further assessing certain of the environmental problems identified during its on-site activities. The Sampling and Analysis Plan will be executed by a DOE National Laboratory or a support contractor. When completed, the results will be incorporated into the Environmental Survey Interim Report for the SLAC facility. The …
Date: July 1, 1988
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the geothermal resource in the area of Albuquerque, New Mexico (open access)

Evaluation of the geothermal resource in the area of Albuquerque, New Mexico

Factors indicating a potential geothermal resource near Albuquerque are: (1) nearby volcanoes active as recently as 120,000 years ago, (2) gravity interpretation indicating a potential reservoir averaging 1.5 km thickness, (3) high heat flow near the city, (4) warm waters (>30/sup 0/C) in municipal wells, (5) recent seismicity indicating active faulting, thereby, allowing the possibility of deep hydrothermal circulation, (6) high shallow (<30 m) temperature gradients (>100/sup 0/C/km) discovered in our drillholes, (7) deeper (<500 m) gradients from water wells exceeding 80/sup 0/C/km, and (8) chemical analyses of 88 groundwater samples yielding estimated base reservoir temperatures as high as 190/sup 0/C. An area of elevated shallow temperature gradients (less than or equal to 140/sup 0/C/km) was discovered a few kilometers west of Albuquerque by our 69 hole drilling program. Resistivity, magnetic, and gravity measurements combined with computer modeling suggests that heated ground water is forced closer to the surface here by flow over a buried ridge. A well drilled nearby yielded the highest recorded temperature in the Albuquerque area at its maximum depth (32.8/sup 0/C at 364 m). The deep gradient is 35/sup 0/C/km. An oil test well close by reported large volumes of water at 1 km; therefore, the …
Date: July 1, 1983
Creator: Jiracek, G. R.; Swanberg, C. A.; Morgan, P. & Parker, M. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feeding Activity, Rate of Consumption, Daily Ration and Prey Selection of Major Predators in John Day Reservoir, 1984 : Annual Report. (open access)

Feeding Activity, Rate of Consumption, Daily Ration and Prey Selection of Major Predators in John Day Reservoir, 1984 : Annual Report.

The extent of predation on juvenile salmonids in John Day Reservoir was determined. Salmonids were the single most important food item by weight for northern squawfish (Ptychocheilus oregonensis) in the restricted zones at McNary tailrace and John Day forebay during all sampling periods. Salmonids accounted for 18.1% of the weight in the diet of walleyes (Stizostedion vitreum vitreum) in 1984 which was at least twice that found in previous years. In smallmouth bass (Micropterus dolomieui) salmonids contributed little to their diet whereas for channel catfish (Ictalurus punctatus) fish accounted for 64.1% of the weight in their diet with salmonids responsible for approximately half of this weight. An intensive search of the fisheries literature was conducted to review various fish capture and control techniques which might have potential as predation control measures for the major predators of juvenile salmonids in the Columbia River system. Most prey protection measures were judged to have high potential and direct predator control measures were judged to have moderate or low potential.
Date: July 1, 1986
Creator: Gray, Gerard A.; Administration, United States. Bonneville Power; Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife & (U.S.), National Fishery Research Center
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hazards Control Department annual technology review, 1987 (open access)

Hazards Control Department annual technology review, 1987

This document describes some of the research performed in the LLNL Hazards Control Department from October 1986 to September 1987. The sections in the Annual report cover scientific concerns in the areas of Health Physics, Industrial Hygiene, Industrial Safety, Aerosol Science, Resource Management, Dosimetry and Radiation Physics, Criticality Safety, and Fire Science. For a broader overview of the types of work performed in the Hazards Control Department, we have also compiled a selection of abstracts of recent publications by Hazards Control employees. Individual reports are processed separately for the data base.
Date: July 1, 1988
Creator: Griffith, R. V. & Anderson, K. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Survey preliminary report, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California (open access)

Environmental Survey preliminary report, Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, Berkeley, California

The purpose of this report is to present the preliminary findings made during the Environmental Survey, February 22--29, 1988, at the US Department of Energy (DOE) Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL) in Berkeley, California. The University of California operates the LBL facility for DOE. The LBL Survey is part of the larger DOE-wide Environmental Survey announced by Secretary John S. Herrington on September 18, 1985. The purpose of this effort is to identify, via no fault'' baseline Surveys, existing environmental problems and areas of environmental risk at DOE facilities, and to rank them on a DOE wide basis. This ranking will enable DOE to more effectively establish priorities for addressing environmental problems and allocate the resources necessary to correct them. Because the Survey is no fault'' and is not an audit,'' it is not designed to identify specific isolated incidents of noncompliance or to analyze environmental management practices. Such incidents and/or management practices will, however, be used in the Survey as a means of identifying existing and potential environmental problems. The LBL Survey was conducted by a multidisciplinary team of technical specialists headed and managed by a Team Leader and Assistant Team Leader from DOE's Office of Environmental Audit. A complete …
Date: July 1, 1988
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library