EFFECT OF SITE ON BACTERIAL POPULATIONS IN THE SAPWOOD OF COARSE WOODY DEBRIS. (open access)

EFFECT OF SITE ON BACTERIAL POPULATIONS IN THE SAPWOOD OF COARSE WOODY DEBRIS.

Porter, Emma G., T.A. Waldrop, Susan D. McElreath, and Frank H. Tainter. 1998. Effect of site on bacterial populations in the sapwood of coarse woody debris. Pp. 480-484. In: Proc. 9th Bienn. South. Silv. Res. Conf. T.A. Waldrop (ed). USDA Forest Service, Southern Research Station. Gen. Tech. Rep. SRS-20. Abstract: Coarse woody debris (CWD) is an important structural component of southeastern forest ecosystems, yet little is known about its dynamics in these systems. This project identified bacterial populations associated with CWD and their dynamics across landscape ecosystem classification (LEC) units. Bolts of red oak and loblolly pine were placed on plots at each of three hydric, mesic, and xeric sites at the Savannah River Station. After the controls were processed, samples were taken at four intervals over a 16-week period. Samples were ground within an anaerobe chamber using nonselective media. Aerobic and facultative anaerobic bacteria were identified using the Biolog system and the anaerobes were identified using the API 20A system. Major genera isolated were: Bacillus, Buttiauxella, Cedecea, Enterobacter, Erwinia, Escherichia, Klebsiella, Pantoea, Pseudomonas, Serratia, and Xanthomonas. The mean total isolates were determined by LEC units and sample intervals. Differences occurred between the sample intervals with total isolates of 6.67, …
Date: January 1, 1998
Creator: Porter, Emma, G.,; Waldrop, Thomas, A.; McElreath, Susan, D. & Tainter, Frank, H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation of LOTIS: Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System; a fully automated wide field of view telescope system searching for simultaneous optical counterparts of gamma ray bursts (open access)

Instrumentation of LOTIS: Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System; a fully automated wide field of view telescope system searching for simultaneous optical counterparts of gamma ray bursts

LOTIS is a rapidly slewing wide-field-of-view telescope which was designed and constructed to search for simultaneous gamma-ray burst (GRB) optical counterparts. This experiment requires a rapidly slewing ({lt} 10 sec), wide-field-of-view ({gt} 15{degrees}), automatic and dedicated telescope. LOTIS utilizes commercial tele-photo lenses and custom 2048 x 2048 CCD cameras to view a 17.6 x 17.6{degrees} field of view. It can point to any part of the sky within 5 sec and is fully automated. It is connected via Internet socket to the GRB coordinate distribution network which analyzes telemetry from the satellite and delivers GRB coordinate information in real-time. LOTIS started routine operation in Oct. 1996. In the idle time between GRB triggers, LOTIS systematically surveys the entire available sky every night for new optical transients. This paper will describe the system design and performance.
Date: March 6, 1998
Creator: Park, H. S.; Ables, E.; Barthelmy, S. D.; Bionta, R. M.; Ott, L. L.; Parker, E. L. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The numerical performance of wavelets and reproducing kernels for PDE`s (open access)

The numerical performance of wavelets and reproducing kernels for PDE`s

The results presented here constitute a brief summary of an on-going multi-year effort to investigate hierarchical/wavelet bases for solving PDE`s and establish a rigorous foundation for these methods. A new, hierarchical, wavelet-Galerkin solution strategy based upon the Donovan-Geronimo-Hardin-Massopust (DGHM) compactly-supported multi-wavelet is presented for elliptic partial differential equations. This multi-scale wavelet-Galerkin method uses a wavelet transform to yield nearly mesh independent condition numbers for elliptic problems as opposed to the multi-scaling functions that yield condition numbers which increase as the square of the mesh size. In addition, the results of von Neumann analyses for the DGHM multi-wavelet element and the Reproducing Kernel Particle Method (RKPM) are presented for model hyperbolic partial differential equations. RKPM exhibits excellent dispersion characteristics using a consistent mass matrix with the proper choice of refinement parameter and mass matrix formulation. In comparison, the wavelet-Galerkin formulation using the DGHM element delivers a frequency response comparable to a Bubnov-Galerkin formulation with a quadratic element.
Date: August 1, 1998
Creator: Christon, Mark A.; Roach, David W. & Voth, Thomas E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Introduction to the SI Library of unit-based computation (open access)

Introduction to the SI Library of unit-based computation

To address current deplorable practices in numeric computation, we set out to develop a software subsystem to provide a convenient means of expressing, computing with, and displaying numeric values with attached units, thus obtaining the well-known bene#12;ts of type safety consistent with recommended unit-based practices of long standing. An additional requirement of this project was to ensure strict compile-time type-checking without run-time overhead (i.e., at no run-time cost in time or in space). More speci#12;cally, we sought 1. application of current software technology to numeric physical concepts, 2. convenience of expression in such application, 3. general utility rooted in existing standards, 4. use of nomenclature from our problem domain, and 5. no attendant performance penalties! The present project, known as The SI Library of Unit-based Computation, has succeeded in addressing these requirements. The resulting software module (known hereinafter as the SI Library or, simply, the Library ) meets (and, in many respects, greatly exceeds!) all its goals and is intended for contribution (for non-commercial use) to the FPCLTF (\Zoom") project library at Fermilab.
Date: October 1, 1998
Creator: Brown, Walter E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Software management at Fermilab (open access)

Software management at Fermilab

We describe the structure and performance of a software management system in wide use at Fermilab. The system provides software version control with Con- current Versions System (CVS) con#12;gured in a client-server mode. Management and building of software is provided by Software Release Tools (SoftRelTools) originally developed by the BaBar collaboration. Support for SoftRelTools, the heart of the system, is organized by the Fermilab computing division in close communication with the end users: CDF, D0, BTeV and CMS. Unix Product Support (UPS) is used to initialize environmental variables for multiple versions of software on multiple platforms. Distribution of frozen releases is currently handled by internally developed scripts, but will soon be performed by Unix Product Distribution (UPD). At CDF the development version of the software is also distributed daily and built in place on 18 di#11;erent machines, with new machines added weekly. Although primarily intended for UNIX platforms, in- cluding Linux, the system is also supported for Windows NT by D0. This system handles the version control, management, building, and distri- bution of code written in Fortran, C, and C++. A single executable can call routines written in all three languages. A distinguishing feature of the system is its ability …
Date: October 1, 1998
Creator: Harris, Robert M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quality Assurance Project Plan (open access)

Quality Assurance Project Plan

This Quality Assurance Project Plan documents the quality assurance activities for the Wastewater/Stormwater/Groundwater and Environmental Surveillance Programs. This QAPP was prepared in accordance with DOE guidance on compliance with 10CFR830.120.
Date: June 1, 1998
Creator: Holland, R. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation damage measurements in room temperature semiconductor radiation detectors (open access)

Radiation damage measurements in room temperature semiconductor radiation detectors

The literature of radiation damage measurements on cadmium zinc telluride (CZT), cadmium telluride (CT), and mercuric iodide (HgI{sub 2}) is reviewed and in the case of CZT supplemented by new alpha particle data. CZT strip detectors exposed to intermediate energy (1.3 MeV) proton fluences exhibit increased interstrip leakage after 10{sup 10} p/cm{sup 2} and significant bulk leakage after 10{sup 12} p/cm{sup 2}. CZT exposed to 200 MeV protons shows a two-fold loss in energy resolution after a fluence of 5 {times} 10{sup 9} p/cm{sup 2} in thick (3 mm) planar devices but little effect in 2 mm devices. No energy resolution effects were noted from moderated fission spectrum of neutrons after fluences up to 10{sup 10} n/cm{sup 2}, although activation was evident. Exposures of CZT to 5 MeV alpha particle at fluences up to 1.5 {times} 10{sup 10} {alpha}/cm{sup 2} produced a near linear decrease in peak position with fluence and increases in FWHM beginning at about 7.5 {times} 10{sup 9} {alpha}/cm{sup 2}. CT detectors show resolution losses after fluences of 3 {times} 10{sup 9} p/cm{sup 2} at 33 MeV for chlorine-doped detectors. Indium doped material may be more resistant. Neutron exposures (8 MeV) caused resolution losses after fluences of …
Date: December 1, 1998
Creator: Franks, L. A.; Olsen, R. W.; James, R. B.; Brunett, B. A.; Walsh, D. S.; Doyle, B. L. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
B190 computer controlled radiation monitoring and safety interlock system (open access)

B190 computer controlled radiation monitoring and safety interlock system

The Center for Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (CAMS) in the Earth and Environmental Sciences Directorate at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) operates two accelerators and is in the process of installing two new additional accelerators in support of a variety of basic and applied measurement programs. To monitor the radiation environment in the facility in which these accelerators are located and to terminate accelerator operations if predetermined radiation levels are exceeded, an updated computer controlled radiation monitoring system has been installed. This new system also monitors various machine safety interlocks and again terminates accelerator operations if machine interlocks are broken. This new system replaces an older system that was originally installed in 1988. This paper describes the updated B190 computer controlled radiation monitoring and safety interlock system.
Date: August 1, 1998
Creator: Espinosa, D L; Fields, W F; Gittins, D E & Roberts, M L
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical evaluation of monofil and subtle-layered evapotranspiration (ET) landfill caps (open access)

Numerical evaluation of monofil and subtle-layered evapotranspiration (ET) landfill caps

The US Department of Energy/Nevada Operations Office (DOE/NV) has identified the need to design a low-level waste (LLW) closure cap for the arid conditions at the Nevada Test Site (NTS). As a result of concerns for subsidence impacting the cover, DOE/NV redesigned the LLW cover from one containing a `hard` infiltration barrier that would likely fail, to a `soft` (ET) cover that is sufficiently deep to accommodate the hydrologic problems of subsidence. An ET cover is one that does not contain hydrologic barrier layers but relies on soil-water retention and sufficient thickness to store water until evapotranspiration (ET) can remove the moisture. Subtle layering within an ET cap using the native soil could be environmentally beneficial and cost effective.
Date: January 1, 1998
Creator: Wilson, G.V.; Henley, M. & Valceschini, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CERT tribal internship program. Final intern report: Melinda Jacquez, 1995 (open access)

CERT tribal internship program. Final intern report: Melinda Jacquez, 1995

The purpose of the intern project was to write a comprehensive booklet on all state legislation proposed in 1995 on Native American issues. A second purpose was to contact tribal governments and request an ordinance, law or resolution on hazardous and nuclear waste transportation. This intern report contains a summary of bills proposed in 37 state legislatures pertaining to Native American issues. Time ran out before the second project objective could be met.
Date: September 1, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Renewable Energy Technologies for Designing and Constructing Low-Energy Commercial Buildings (open access)

Renewable Energy Technologies for Designing and Constructing Low-Energy Commercial Buildings

The Thermal Test Facility (TTF) at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) in Golden, Colorado, was designed and constructed using a whole-building energy design approach. This approach treats a building as a single unit, not as a shell containing many separate systems. It relies on the use of energy simulation tools for optimization throughout the design process, and requires the involvement and commitment of the architect, engineer, and owner. It can produce a building that requires substantially less energy than a building designed and constructed with conventional means. TTF operating costs are 63% less than those of a code-compliant basecase building. These savings were achieved by implementing an approach that optimized passive solar technologies and integrated energy-efficient building systems. Passive solar technologies include daylighting, high-efficiency lighting systems, engineered overhangs, direct solar gains for heating, thermal mass building materials, managed glazing, and a good thermal envelope. The energy-efficient heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning (HVAC) system, designed to work with the building's passive solar technologies, includes ventilation air preheat, ceiling fans, indirect/direct evaporative cooling, and an automatic control system. This paper focuses on the design features of the TTF and the results of tests conducted on the TTF since its completion in 1996. …
Date: July 27, 1998
Creator: Torcellini, P. A.; Hayter, S. J.; Ketcham, M. S.; Judkoff, R. & Jenior, M. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of radiation damage measurements in room temperature semiconductor radiation detectors (open access)

Status of radiation damage measurements in room temperature semiconductor radiation detectors

The literature of radiation damage measurements on cadmium zinc telluride (CZT), cadmium telluride (CT), and mercuric iodide (HgI{sub 2}) is reviewed for the purpose of determining their applicability to space applications. CZT strip detectors exposed to intermediate energy (1.3 MeV) proton fluences exhibit increased interstrip leakage after 10{sup 10} p/cm{sup 2} and significant bulk leakage after 10{sup 12} p/cm{sup 2}. CZT exposed to 200 MeV protons shows a two-fold loss in energy resolution after a fluence of 5 {times} 10{sup 9} p/cm{sup 2} in thick (3 mm) planar devices but little effect in 2 mm devices. No energy resolution effects were noted from moderated fission spectrum neutrons after fluences up to 10{sup 10} n/cm{sup 2}, although activation was evident. CT detectors show resolution losses after fluences of 3 {times} 10{sup 9} p/cm{sup 2} at 33 MeV for chlorine-doped detectors. Indium doped material may be more resistant. Neutron exposures (8 MeV) caused resolution losses after fluences of 2 {times} 10{sup 10} n/cm{sup 2}. Mercuric iodide has been studied with intermediate energy protons (10 to 33 MeV) at fluences up to 10{sup 12} p/cm{sup 2} and with 1.5 GeV protons at fluences up to 1.2 {times} 10{sup 8} p/cm{sup 2}. Neutron exposures …
Date: April 1, 1998
Creator: Franks, L. A. & James, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Science and technology in the stockpile stewardship program, S & TR reprints (open access)

Science and technology in the stockpile stewardship program, S & TR reprints

This document reports on these topics: Computer Simulations in Support of National Security; Enhanced Surveillance of Aging Weapons; A New Precision Cutting Tool: The Femtosecond Laser; Superlasers as a Tool of Stockpile Stewardship; Nova Laser Experiments and Stockpile Stewardship; Transforming Explosive Art into Science; Better Flash Radiography Using the FXR; Preserving Nuclear Weapons Information; Site 300Õs New Contained Firing Facility; The Linear Electric Motor: Instability at 1,000 gÕs; A Powerful New Tool to Detect Clandestine Nuclear Tests; High Explosives in Stockpile Surveillance Indicate Constancy; Addressing a Cold War Legacy with a New Way to Produce TATB; JumpinÕ Jupiter! Metallic Hydrogen; Keeping the Nuclear Stockpile Safe, Secure, and Reliable; The Multibeam FabryÐPerot Velocimeter: Efficient Measurements of High Velocities; Theory and Modeling in Material Science; The Diamond Anvil Cell; Gamma-Ray Imaging Spectrometry; X-Ray Lasers and High-Density Plasma
Date: April 8, 1998
Creator: Storm, E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Explorer at Los Alamos: A library for the future (open access)

Explorer at Los Alamos: A library for the future

Since 1993, Los Alamos National Laboratory, has been developing World Wide Web (WWW) applications to facilitate access to vast quantities of information critical to the successful operation of a nuclear weapons facility Explorer is a web-based tool that integrates full-text search and retrieval technology, custom user in interface faces, user-friendly navigation tools, extremely large document collections, and data collection and workflow applications. Explorer`s first major thrust was to enable quick access to regulatory and policy information used by Department of Energy facilities throughout the country. Today, Explorer users can easily search document collections containing, millions of pages of information scattered across Web sites around the country. Over fifteen large applications containing multiple collections are searchable through Explorer, and the subject areas range from DOE regulations to quality management-related resources to technology transfer opportunities. Explorer has succeeded because it provides quick and easy access to stored data across the Web; it saves time and reduces costs in comparison with traditional information distribution, access, and retrieval methods.
Date: March 1, 1998
Creator: Waters, M. & McDonald, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bayesian stratified sampling to assess corpus utility (open access)

Bayesian stratified sampling to assess corpus utility

This paper describes a method for asking statistical questions about a large text corpus. The authors exemplify the method by addressing the question, ``What percentage of Federal Register documents are real documents, of possible interest to a text researcher or analyst?`` They estimate an answer to this question by evaluating 200 documents selected from a corpus of 45,820 Federal Register documents. Bayesian analysis and stratified sampling are used to reduce the sampling uncertainty of the estimate from over 3,100 documents to fewer than 1,000. A possible application of the method is to establish baseline statistics used to estimate recall rates for information retrieval systems.
Date: December 1998
Creator: Hochberg, J.; Scovel, C.; Thomas, T. & Hall, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comprehensive integrated planning: A process for the Oak Ridge Reservation, Oak Ridge, Tennessee (open access)

Comprehensive integrated planning: A process for the Oak Ridge Reservation, Oak Ridge, Tennessee

The Oak Ridge Comprehensive Integrated Plan is intended to assist the US Department of Energy (DOE) and contractor personnel in implementing a comprehensive integrated planning process consistent with DOE Order 430.1, Life Cycle Asset Management and Oak Ridge Operations Order 430. DOE contractors are charged with developing and producing the Comprehensive Integrated Plan, which serves as a summary document, providing information from other planning efforts regarding vision statements, missions, contextual conditions, resources and facilities, decision processes, and stakeholder involvement. The Comprehensive Integrated Plan is a planning reference that identifies primary issues regarding major changes in land and facility use and serves all programs and functions on-site as well as the Oak Ridge Operations Office and DOE Headquarters. The Oak Ridge Reservation is a valuable national resource and is managed on the basis of the principles of ecosystem management and sustainable development and how mission, economic, ecological, social, and cultural factors are used to guide land- and facility-use decisions. The long-term goals of the comprehensive integrated planning process, in priority order, are to support DOE critical missions and to stimulate the economy while maintaining a quality environment.
Date: May 1, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantum robots plus environments. (open access)

Quantum robots plus environments.

A quantum robot is a mobile quantum system, including an on board quantum computer and needed ancillary systems, that interacts with an environment of quantum systems. Quantum robots carry out tasks whose goals include making specified changes in the state of the environment or carrying out measurements on the environment. The environments considered so far, oracles, data bases, and quantum registers, are seen to be special cases of environments considered here. It is also seen that a quantum robot should include a quantum computer and cannot be simply a multistate head. A model of quantum robots and their interactions is discussed in which each task, as a sequence of alternating computation and action phases,is described by a unitary single time step operator T {approx} T{sub a} + T{sub c} (discrete space and time are assumed). The overall system dynamics is described as a sum over paths of completed computation (T{sub c}) and action (T{sub a}) phases. A simple example of a task, measuring the distance between the quantum robot and a particle on a 1D lattice with quantum phase path dispersion present, is analyzed. A decision diagram for the task is presented and analyzed.
Date: July 23, 1998
Creator: Benioff, P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Graphical User Interface to Visualize Surface Observations (open access)

Development of a Graphical User Interface to Visualize Surface Observations

Thousands of worldwide observing stations provide meteorological information near the earth's surface as often as once each hour. This surface data may be plotted on geographical maps to provide the meteorologist useful information regarding weather patterns for a region of interest. This report describes the components and applications of a graphical user interface which have been developed to visualize surface observations at any global location and time of interest.
Date: July 13, 1998
Creator: Buckley, R. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a Graphical User Interface to Visualize Surface Observations (open access)

Development of a Graphical User Interface to Visualize Surface Observations

Thousands of worldwide observing stations provide meteorological information near the earth's surface as often as once each hour. This surface data may be plotted on geographical maps to provide the meteorologist useful information regarding weather patterns for a region of interest. This report describes the components and applications of a graphical user interface which have been developed to visualize surface observations at any global location and time of interest.
Date: July 13, 1998
Creator: Buckley, Robert L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing public awareness for climate change: Support from international research programs (open access)

Developing public awareness for climate change: Support from international research programs

Developing regional and local public awareness and interest in global climate change has been mandated as an important step for increasing the ability for setting policy and managing the response to climate change. Research programs frequently have resources that could help reach regional or national goals for increasing the capacity for responding to climate change. To obtain these resources and target recipients appropriately, research investigators need clear statements of national and regional strategies or priorities as a guide. One such program, the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program, has a requirement to develop local or regional education enrichment programs at their observational sites in the central US, the tropical western Pacific (TWP), and on the north slope of alaska. ARM's scientific goals will result in a flow of technical data and as well as technical expertise that can assist with regional needs to increase the technical resources needed to address climate change issues. Details of the ARM education program in the Pacific will be presented.
Date: December 31, 1998
Creator: Barnes, F.J. & Clements, W.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
NIF Integrated Computer Controls System Description (open access)

NIF Integrated Computer Controls System Description

This System Description introduces the NIF Integrated Computer Control System (ICCS). The architecture is sufficiently abstract to allow the construction of many similar applications from a common framework. As discussed below, over twenty software applications derived from the framework comprise the NIF control system. This document lays the essential foundation for understanding the ICCS architecture. The NIF design effort is motivated by the magnitude of the task. Figure 1 shows a cut-away rendition of the coliseum-sized facility. The NIF requires integration of about 40,000 atypical control points, must be highly automated and robust, and will operate continuously around the clock. The control system coordinates several experimental cycles concurrently, each at different stages of completion. Furthermore, facilities such as the NIF represent major capital investments that will be operated, maintained, and upgraded for decades. The computers, control subsystems, and functionality must be relatively easy to extend or replace periodically with newer technology.
Date: January 26, 1998
Creator: VanArsdall, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quality assurance program plan fuel supply shutdown (open access)

Quality assurance program plan fuel supply shutdown

This Quality Assurance Program plan (QAPP) describes how the Fuel Supply Shutdown (FSS) project organization implements the quality assurance requirements of HNF-MP-599, Project Hanford Quality Assurance Program Description (QAPD) and the B and W Hanford Company Quality Assurance Program Plan (QAPP), FSP-MP-004. The QAPP applies to facility structures, systems, and components and to activities (e.g., design, procurement, testing, operations, maintenance, etc.) that could affect structures, systems, and components. This QAPP also provides a roadmap of applicable Project Hanford Policies and Procedures (PHPP) which may be utilized by the FSS project organization to implement the requirements of this QAPP.
Date: September 21, 1998
Creator: Metcalf, I. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pathways for the Oxidation of Sarin in Urban Atmospheres (open access)

Pathways for the Oxidation of Sarin in Urban Atmospheres

Terrorists have threatened and carried out chemicalhiological agent attacks on targets in major cities. The nerve agent sarin figured prominently in one well-publicized incident. Vapors disseminating from open containers in a Tokyo subway caused thousands of casualties. High-resolution tracer transport modeling of agent dispersion is at hand and will be enhanced by data on reactions with components of the urban atmosphere. As a sample of the level of complexity currently attainable, we elaborate the mechanisms by which sarin can decompose in polluted air. A release scenario is outlined involving the passage of a gas-phase agent through a city locale in the daytime. The atmospheric chemistry database on related organophosphorus pesticides is mined for rate and product information. The hydroxyl,radical and fine-mode particles are identified as major reactants. A review of urban air chernistry/rnicrophysics generates concentration tables for major oxidant and aerosol types in both clean and dirty environments. Organic structure-reactivity relationships yield an upper limit of 10-1' cm3 molecule-' S-* for hydrogen abstraction by hydroxyl. The associated midday loss time scale could be as little as one hour. Product distributions are difficult to define but may include nontoxic organic oxygenates, inorganic phosphorus acids, sarin-like aldehydes, and nitrates preserving cholinergic capabilities. …
Date: November 1, 1998
Creator: Streit, Gerald E.; Bossert, James E.; Gaffney, Jeffrey S.; Reisner, Jon; McNair, Laurie A.; Brown, Michael et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oak Ridge Dose Reconstruction annual report for calendar year 1997 (open access)

Oak Ridge Dose Reconstruction annual report for calendar year 1997

Calendar year 1997 was the third full year of work on the Oak Ridge Dose Reconstruction. Activities are summarized on the following individual project tasks: Task 1 -- Investigation of radioiodine releases from X-10 radioactive lanthanum processing; Task 2 -- Investigation of mercury releases from Y-12 lithium enrichment; Task 3 -- Investigation of PCBs in the environment near Oak Ridge; Task 4 -- Investigation of radionuclides released from White Oak Creek to the Clinch River; Task 5 -- Systematic searching of records repositories; Task 6 -- Evaluation of the quality of uranium monitoring data and a screening evaluation of potential off-site health risks; and Task 7 -- Performance of screening for additional materials not evaluated in the feasibility study.
Date: September 1, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library