Abstracts of contributed papers (open access)

Abstracts of contributed papers

This volume contains 571 abstracts of contributed papers to be presented during the Twelfth US National Congress of Applied Mechanics. Abstracts are arranged in the order in which they fall in the program -- the main sessions are listed chronologically in the Table of Contents. The Author Index is in alphabetical order and lists each paper number (matching the schedule in the Final Program) with its corresponding page number in the book.
Date: August 1, 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
High energy heavy ion experiments (open access)

High energy heavy ion experiments

This report contains a list of the major heavy ion experiments conducted at CERN and Brookhaven.
Date: November 1, 1994
Creator: Thomas, J. & Jacobs, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Communicating the Future: Best Practices for Communication of Science and Technology to the Public (open access)

Communicating the Future: Best Practices for Communication of Science and Technology to the Public

To advance the state of the art in science and technology communication to the public a conference was held March 6-8, 2002 at the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, MD. This report of the conference proceedings includes a summary statement by the conference steering committee, transcripts or other text summarizing the remarks of conference speakers, and abstracts for 48 "best practice" communications programs selected by the steering committee through an open competition and a formal peer review process. Additional information about the 48 best practice programs is available on the archival conference Web site at www.nist.gov/bestpractices.
Date: September 30, 2002
Creator: Porter, Gail
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proc. of the Workshop on Agent Simulation : Applications, Models, and Tools, Oct. 15-16, 1999 (open access)

Proc. of the Workshop on Agent Simulation : Applications, Models, and Tools, Oct. 15-16, 1999

The many motivations for employing agent-based computation in the social sciences are reviewed. It is argued that there exist three distinct uses of agent modeling techniques. One such use--the simplest--is conceptually quite close to traditional simulation in operations research. This use arises when equations can be formulated that completely describe a social process, and these equations are explicitly soluble, either analytically or numerically. In the former case, the agent model is merely a tool for presenting results, while in the latter it is a novel kind of Monte Carlo analysis. A second, more commonplace usage of computational agent models arises when mathematical models can be written down but not completely solved. In this case the agent-based model can shed significant light on the solution structure, illustrate dynamical properties of the model, serve to test the dependence of results on parameters and assumptions, and be a source of counter-examples. Finally, there are important classes of problems for which writing down equations is not a useful activity. In such circumstances, resort to agent-based computational models may be the only way available to explore such processes systematically, and constitute a third distinct usage of such models.
Date: October 4, 2000
Creator: Macal, C. M., ed. & Sallach, D., ed.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Revolutions and revelations (open access)

Revolutions and revelations

None
Date: February 1, 2005
Creator: Quigg, Chris
System: The UNT Digital Library
Revolutions and revelations (open access)

Revolutions and revelations

This is the concluding talk at ''Physics at Large Hadron Collider 2004''.
Date: February 1, 2005
Creator: Quigg, Chris
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic physics with hard X-rays from high brilliance synchrotron light sources (open access)

Atomic physics with hard X-rays from high brilliance synchrotron light sources

A century after the discovery of x rays, the experimental capability for studying atomic structure and dynamics with hard, bright synchrotron radiation is increasing remarkably. Tempting opportunities arise for experiments on many-body effects, aspects of fundamental photon-atom interaction processes, and relativistic and quantum-electrodynamic phenomena. Some of these possibilities are surveyed in general terms.
Date: August 1, 1996
Creator: Southworth, S. & Gemmell, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proc. Agent 2004 Conf. on Social Dynamics : Interaction, Reflexivity and Emergence (open access)

Proc. Agent 2004 Conf. on Social Dynamics : Interaction, Reflexivity and Emergence

I'd like to welcome you to the Agent 2004 conference. As most of you are aware, this conference is the fifth in a series of meetings that began in 1999. A conference followed the next year in 2000. The 2001 conference was skipped because of some conflicts with other conferences, and the conferences have proceeded annually since then. We have the proceedings of the previous conferences available here on CDs. One CD has the proceedings from 1999, 2000, and 2002; the other contains last year's proceedings. The purpose of these conferences is to advance the state of the computational social sciences and to integrate the social sciences with the decision sciences and something that is traditionally known as the management sciences. Those of you in the operations/research area are familiar with the traditional school of modeling simulation that emerged from that scientific area. This conference will bring together a different group of people to talk about the topic of agent-based theories and simulations. This fifth agent conference is one of a group of conferences held annually around the country. Most of you are probably aware of the CASOS Conference held at Carnegie Mellon University, usually in July. UCLA holds the …
Date: January 1, 2004
Creator: C. M. Macal, D. Sallach, M. J. North, eds.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 2 (open access)

Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 2

The Ninth National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR 95) was held at Union College in Schenectady, New York. This annual celebration of undergraduate scholarly activity continues to elicit strong nation-wide support and enthusiasm among both students and faculty. Attendance was nearly 1,650, which included 1,213 student oral and poster presenters. For the second year in a row, many student papers had to be rejected for presentation at NCUR due to conference size limitations. Thus, submitted papers for presentation at NCUR 95 were put through a careful review process before acceptance. Those students who have been selected to have their paper appear in these Proceedings have been through yet a second review process. As a consequence, their work has been judged to represent an impressive level of achievement at the undergraduate level. Volume 2 contains papers related to Engineering and Mathematics (41 papers) and Physical Science (18 papers).
Date: July 1, 1995
Creator: Yearout, R.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the 8th high energy heavy ion study (open access)

Proceedings of the 8th high energy heavy ion study

This was the eighth in a series of conferences jointly sponsored by the Nuclear Science Division of LBL and the Gesellschaft fuer Schwerionenforschung in West Germany. Sixty papers on current research at both relativistic and intermediate energies are included in this report. Topics covered consisted of: Equation of State of Nuclear Matter, Pion and High Energy Gamma Emission, Theory of Multifragmentation, Intermediate Energies, Fragmentation, Atomic Physics, Nuclear Structure, Electromagnetic Processes, and New Facilities planned for SIS-ESR. The latest design parameters of the Bevalac Upgrade Proposal were reviewed for the user community. Also, the design of a new electronic 4..pi.. detector, a time projection chamber which would be placed at the HISS facility, was presented.
Date: January 1, 1988
Creator: Harris, J.W. (ed.) & Wozniak, G.J. (ed.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental Physics at the Intensity Frontier (open access)

Fundamental Physics at the Intensity Frontier

None
Date: December 14, 2012
Creator: Hewett, J. L.; Weerts, H.; Brock, R.; Butler, J. N.; Casey, B. C. K.; Collar, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the OECD/CSNI workshop on transient thermal-hydraulic and neutronic codes requirements (open access)

Proceedings of the OECD/CSNI workshop on transient thermal-hydraulic and neutronic codes requirements

This is a report on the CSNI Workshop on Transient Thermal-Hydraulic and Neutronic Codes Requirements held at Annapolis, Maryland, USA November 5-8, 1996. This experts` meeting consisted of 140 participants from 21 countries; 65 invited papers were presented. The meeting was divided into five areas: (1) current and prospective plans of thermal hydraulic codes development; (2) current and anticipated uses of thermal-hydraulic codes; (3) advances in modeling of thermal-hydraulic phenomena and associated additional experimental needs; (4) numerical methods in multi-phase flows; and (5) programming language, code architectures and user interfaces. The workshop consensus identified the following important action items to be addressed by the international community in order to maintain and improve the calculational capability: (a) preserve current code expertise and institutional memory, (b) preserve the ability to use the existing investment in plant transient analysis codes, (c) maintain essential experimental capabilities, (d) develop advanced measurement capabilities to support future code validation work, (e) integrate existing analytical capabilities so as to improve performance and reduce operating costs, (f) exploit the proven advances in code architecture, numerics, graphical user interfaces, and modularization in order to improve code performance and scrutibility, and (g) more effectively utilize user experience in modifying and improving …
Date: July 1, 1997
Creator: Ebert, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supercomputer debugging workshop 1991 proceedings (open access)

Supercomputer debugging workshop 1991 proceedings

This report discusses the following topics on supercomputer debugging: Distributed debugging; use interface to debugging tools and standards; debugging optimized codes; debugging parallel codes; and debugger performance and interface as analysis tools. (LSP)
Date: January 1, 1991
Creator: Brown, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supercomputer debugging workshop 1991 proceedings (open access)

Supercomputer debugging workshop 1991 proceedings

This report discusses the following topics on supercomputer debugging: Distributed debugging; use interface to debugging tools and standards; debugging optimized codes; debugging parallel codes; and debugger performance and interface as analysis tools. (LSP)
Date: December 31, 1991
Creator: Brown, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Taking the initiative. A leadership conference for women in science and engineering (open access)

Taking the initiative. A leadership conference for women in science and engineering

The conference sprang from discussions on the current climate that women face in science, mathematics, engineering, and technology. The conference (and this document) is a beginning, not a culmination, of women`s learning leadership skills. Conferees were active, articulate, energetic, and ready to learn leadership qualities, some of which seem universal, others that appear to require skills in specific fields. After the introduction, the workshops and presentations are arranged under vision and direction, barriers, alignment and communication, and motivation and inspiration. Some statistics are presented on women degrees and employment in various fields.
Date: May 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Agent 2003 Conference on Challenges in Social Simulation (open access)

Agent 2003 Conference on Challenges in Social Simulation

Welcome to the Proceedings of the fourth in a series of agent simulation conferences cosponsored by Argonne National Laboratory and The University of Chicago. Agent 2003 is the second conference in which three Special Interest Groups from the North American Association for Computational Social and Organizational Science (NAACSOS) have been involved in planning the program--Computational Social Theory; Simulation Applications; and Methods, Toolkits and Techniques. The theme of Agent 2003, Challenges in Social Simulation, is especially relevant, as there seems to be no shortage of such challenges. Agent simulation has been applied with increasing frequency to social domains for several decades, and its promise is clear and increasingly visible. Like any nascent scientific methodology, however, it faces a number of problems or issues that must be addressed in order to progress. These challenges include: (1) Validating models relative to the social settings they are designed to represent; (2) Developing agents and interactions simple enough to understand but sufficiently complex to do justice to the social processes of interest; (3) Bridging the gap between empirically spare artificial societies and naturally occurring social phenomena; (4) Building multi-level models that span processes across domains; (5) Promoting a dialog among theoretical, qualitative, and empirical social …
Date: January 1, 2003
Creator: Clemmons, Margaret
System: The UNT Digital Library
Women's technical and professional symposium (open access)

Women's technical and professional symposium

This is the fourth LLNL-sponsored Women's Technical and Professional Symposium. This year's theme: ''Excellence through the Millennium,'' focuses on the cutting edge work being done at LLNL and the many contributions of women to our science and technology mission. We hope this Symposium gives each person attending a better idea of the broad scope of the Laboratory's mission and their place within the organization. It is easy to lose sight of the fact that we all work in support of science and technology despite the diversity of our experience. This Symposium provides an opportunity to reflect on our past and to begin to plan our future.
Date: October 1, 1999
Creator: Budil, K & Mack, L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 1 (open access)

Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 1

The Ninth National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR 95) was held at Union College in Schenectady, New York. This annual celebration of undergraduate scholarly activity continues to elicit strong nation-wide support and enthusiasm among both students and faculty. Attendance was nearly 1,650, which included 1,213 student oral and poster presenters. For the second year in a row, many student papers had to be rejected for presentation at NCUR due to conference size limitations. Thus, submitted papers for presentation at NCUR 95 were put through a careful review process before acceptance. Those students who have been selected to have their paper appear in these Proceedings have been through yet a second review process. As a consequence, their work has been judged to represent an impressive level of achievement at the undergraduate level. Volume 1 contains papers related to Arts and Humanities (52 papers), and Social and Behavioral Sciences (64 papers).
Date: July 1, 1995
Creator: Yearout, R.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 3 (open access)

Proceedings of the ninth national conference on undergraduate research, 1995. Volume 3

The Ninth National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR 95) was held at Union College in Schenectady, New York. This annual celebration of undergraduate scholarly activity continues to elicit strong nation-wide support and enthusiasm among both students and faculty. Attendance was nearly 1,650, which included 1,213 student oral and poster presenters. For the second year in a row, many student papers had to be rejected for presentation at NCUR due to conference size limitations. Thus, submitted papers for presentation at NCUR 95 were put through a careful review process before acceptance. Those students who have been selected to have their paper appear in these Proceedings have been through yet a second review process. As a consequence, their work has been judged to represent an impressive level of achievement at the undergraduate level. Volume 3 contains papers related to Biological Sciences (46 papers); Chemical Sciences (21 papers); and Environmental Sciences (7 papers).
Date: July 1, 1995
Creator: Yearout, R.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inelastic near-surface interactions. Proceedings of the Werner Brandt workshop (open access)

Inelastic near-surface interactions. Proceedings of the Werner Brandt workshop

This workshop is one of an annual series covering penetration phenomena of charged particles in matter. This specific workshop includes electron scattering, ion and atom scattering, stopping powers, and cluster ion impacts on solids. Abstracts were prepared for individual items in the proceedings for inclusion in the data base. (GHT)
Date: April 1, 1985
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the Agent 2002 Conference on Social Agents : Ecology, Exchange, and Evolution (open access)

Proceedings of the Agent 2002 Conference on Social Agents : Ecology, Exchange, and Evolution

Welcome to the ''Proceedings'' of the third in a series of agent simulation conferences cosponsored by Argonne National Laboratory and The University of Chicago. The theme of this year's conference, ''Social Agents: Ecology, Exchange and Evolution'', was selected to foster the exchange of ideas on some of the most important social processes addressed by agent simulation models, namely: (1) The translation of ecology and ecological constraints into social dynamics; (2) The role of exchange processes, including the peer dependencies they create; and (3) The dynamics by which, and the attractor states toward which, social processes evolve. As stated in the ''Call for Papers'', throughout the social sciences, the simulation of social agents has emerged as an innovative and powerful research methodology. The promise of this approach, however, is accompanied by many challenges. First, modeling complexity in agents, environments, and interactions is non-trivial, and these representations must be explored and assessed systematically. Second, strategies used to represent complexities are differentially applicable to any particular problem space. Finally, to achieve sufficient generality, the design and experimentation inherent in agent simulation must be coupled with social and behavioral theory. Agent 2002 provides a forum for reviewing the current state of agent simulation scholarship, …
Date: April 10, 2003
Creator: Macal, C., ed. & Sallach, D., ed.
System: The UNT Digital Library
1995 Department of Energy Records Management Conference (open access)

1995 Department of Energy Records Management Conference

The Department of Energy (DOE) Records Management Group (RMG) provides a forum for DOE and its contractor personnel to review and discuss subjects, issues, and concerns of common interest. This forum will include the exchange of information, and interpretation of requirements, and a dialog to aid in cost-effective management of the DOE Records Management program. Issues addressed by the RMG may result in recommendations for DOE-wide initiatives. Proposed DOE-wide initiatives shall be, provided in writing by the RMG Steering Committee to the DOE Records Management Committee and to DOE`s Office of ERM Policy, Records, and Reports Management for appropriate action. The membership of the RMG is composed of personnel engaged in Records Management from DOE Headquarters, Field sites, contractors, and other organizations, as appropriate. Selected papers are indexed separately for inclusion in the Energy Science and Technology Database.
Date: July 1, 1995
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental remediation 1991: ``Cleaning up the environment for the 21st Century``. Proceedings (open access)

Environmental remediation 1991: ``Cleaning up the environment for the 21st Century``. Proceedings

This report presents discussions given at a conference on environmental remediation, September 8--11, Pasco, Washington. Topics include: public confidence; education; in-situ remediation; Hanford tank operations; risk assessments; field experiences; standards; site characterization and monitoring; technology discussions; regulatory issues; compliance; and the UMTRA project. Individual projects are processed separately for the data bases.
Date: December 31, 1991
Creator: Wood, D. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proceedings of the 27th Seismic Research Review: Ground-Based Nuclear Explosion Monitoring Technologies (open access)

Proceedings of the 27th Seismic Research Review: Ground-Based Nuclear Explosion Monitoring Technologies

These proceedings contain papers prepared for the 27th Seismic Research Review: Ground-Based Nuclear Explosion Monitoring Technologies, held 20-22 September, 2005 in Rancho Mirage, California. These papers represent the combined research related to ground-based nuclear explosion monitoring funded by the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA), Air Force Technical Applications Center (AFTAC), Air Force Research Laboratory (AFRL), US Army Space and Missile Defense Command, and other invited sponsors. The scientific objectives of the research are to improve the United States capability to detect, locate, and identify nuclear explosions. The purpose of the meeting is to provide the sponsoring agencies, as well as potential users, an opportunity to review research accomplished during the preceding year and to discuss areas of investigation for the coming year. For the researchers, it provides a forum for the exchange of scientific information toward achieving program goals, and an opportunity to discuss results and future plans. Paper topics include: seismic regionalization and calibration; detection and location of sources; wave propagation from source to receiver; the nature of seismic sources, including mining practices; hydroacoustic, infrasound, and radionuclide methods; on-site inspection; and data processing.
Date: September 20, 2005
Creator: Wetovsky, Marvin A.; Benson, Jody & Patterson, Eileen F.
System: The UNT Digital Library