Construction and Operational Experience with a Superconducting Octupole Used to Trap Antihydrogen (open access)

Construction and Operational Experience with a Superconducting Octupole Used to Trap Antihydrogen

A superconducting octupole magnet has seen extensive service as part of the ALPHA experiment at CERN. ALPHA has trapped antihydrogen, a crucial step towards performing precision measurements of anti-atoms. The octupole was made at the Direct Wind facility by the Superconducting Magnet Division at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The magnet was wound with a six-around-one NbTi cable about 1 mm in diameter. It is about 300 mm long, with a radius of 25 mm and a peak field at the conductor of 4.04 T. Specific features of the magnet, including a minimal amount of material in the coil and coil ends with low multipole content, were advantageous to its use in ALPHA. The magnet was operated for six months a year for five years. During this time it underwent about 900 thermal cycles (between 4K and 100K). A novel operational feature is that during the course of data-taking the magnet was repeatedly shut off from its 950 A operating current. The magnet quenches during the shutoff, with a decay constant of 9 ms. Over the course of the five years, the magnet was deliberately quenched many thousands of times. It still performs well.
Date: September 6, 2011
Creator: Wanderer, P.; Escallier, J.; Marone, A. & Parker, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Zero and One Jet Combined NLO Analysis of the Top Quark Forward-backward Asymmetry (open access)

Zero and One Jet Combined NLO Analysis of the Top Quark Forward-backward Asymmetry

None
Date: September 6, 2013
Creator: Hoeche, Stefan; Huang, Junwu; Luisoni, Gionata; Schoenherr, Marek & Winter, Jan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Steady State Microbunching for High Brilliance and High Repetition Rate Storage Ring-Based Light Sources (open access)

Steady State Microbunching for High Brilliance and High Repetition Rate Storage Ring-Based Light Sources

Electron-based light sources have proven to be effective sources of high brilliance, high frequency radiation. Such sources are typically either linac-Free Electron Laser (FEL) or storage ring types. The linac-FEL type has high brilliance (because the beam is microbunched) but low repetition rate. The storage ring type has high repetition rate (rapid beam circulation) but comparatively low brilliance or coherence. We propose to explore the feasibility of a microbunched beam in a storage ring that promises high repetition rate and high brilliance. The steady-state-micro-bunch (SSMB) beam in storage ring could provide CW sources for THz, EUV, or soft X-rays. Several SSMB mechanisms have been suggested recently, and in this report, we review a number of these SSMB concepts as promising directions for high brilliance, high repetition rate light sources of the future. The trick of SSMB lies in the RF system, together with the associated synchrotron beam dynamics, of the storage ring. Considering various different RF arrangements, there could be considered a number of scenarios of the SSMB. In this report, we arrange these scenarios more or less in order of the envisioned degree of technical challenge to the RF system, and not in the chronological order of their original …
Date: September 6, 2012
Creator: Chao, Alex; Ratner, Daniel & Jiao, Yi
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceleration of Radiance for Lighting Simulation by Using Parallel Computing with OpenCL (open access)

Acceleration of Radiance for Lighting Simulation by Using Parallel Computing with OpenCL

We report on the acceleration of annual daylighting simulations for fenestration systems in the Radiance ray-tracing program. The algorithm was optimized to reduce both the redundant data input/output operations and the floating-point operations. To further accelerate the simulation speed, the calculation for matrix multiplications was implemented using parallel computing on a graphics processing unit. We used OpenCL, which is a cross-platform parallel programming language. Numerical experiments show that the combination of the above measures can speed up the annual daylighting simulations 101.7 times or 28.6 times when the sky vector has 146 or 2306 elements, respectively.
Date: September 6, 2011
Creator: Zuo, Wangda; McNeil, Andrew; Wetter, Michael & Lee, Eleanor
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE EFFECTS OF HYDROGEN, TRITIUM, AND HEAT TREATMENT ON THE DEFORMATION AND FRACTURE TOUGHNESS PROPERTIES OF STAINLESS STEEL (open access)

THE EFFECTS OF HYDROGEN, TRITIUM, AND HEAT TREATMENT ON THE DEFORMATION AND FRACTURE TOUGHNESS PROPERTIES OF STAINLESS STEEL

The deformation and fracture toughness properties of forged stainless steels pre-charged with tritium were compared to the deformation and fracture toughness properties of the same steels heat treated at 773 K or 873 K and precharged with hydrogen. Forged stainless steels pre-charged with tritium exhibit an aging effect: Fracture toughness values decrease with aging time after precharging because of the increase in concentration of helium from tritium decay. This study shows that forged stainless steels given a prior heat treatment and then pre-charged with hydrogen also exhibit an aging effect: Fracture toughness values decrease with increasing time at temperature. A microstructural analysis showed that the fracture toughness reduction in the heat-treated steels was due to patches of recrystallized grains that form within the forged matrix during the heat treatment. The combination of hydrogen and the patches of recrystallized grains resulted in more deformation twinning. Heavy deformation twinning on multiple slip planes was typical for the hydrogen-charged samples; whereas, in the non-charged samples, less twinning was observed and was generally limited to one slip plane. Similar effects occur in tritium pre-charged steels, but the deformation twinning is brought on by the hardening associated with decay helium bubbles in the microstructure.
Date: September 6, 2013
Creator: Morgan, M.; Tosten, M. & Chapman, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TF Inner Leg Space Allocation for Pilot Plant Design Studies (open access)

TF Inner Leg Space Allocation for Pilot Plant Design Studies

A critical design feature of any tokamak is the space taken up by the inner leg of the toroidal field (TF) coil. The radial build needed for the TF inner leg, along with shield thickness , size of the central solenoid and plasma minor radius set the major radius of the machine. The cost of the tokamak core roughly scales with the cube of the major radius. Small reductions in the TF build can have a big impact on the overall cost of the reactor. The cross section of the TF inner leg must structurally support the centering force and that portion of the vertical separating force that is not supported by the outer structures. In this paper, the TF inner leg equatorial plane cross sections are considered. Out-of- Plane (OOP) forces must also be supported, but these are largest away from the equatorial plane, in the inner upper and lower corners and outboard sections of the TF coil. OOP forces are taken by structures that are not closely coupled with the radial build of the central column at the equatorial plane. The "Vertical Access AT Pilot Plant" currently under consideration at PPPL is used as a starting point for …
Date: September 6, 2012
Creator: Zolfaghari, Peter H. Titus and Ali
System: The UNT Digital Library
Satellite Collision Modeling with Physics-Based Hydrocodes: Debris Generation Predictions of the Iridium-Cosmos Collision Event and Other Impact Events (open access)

Satellite Collision Modeling with Physics-Based Hydrocodes: Debris Generation Predictions of the Iridium-Cosmos Collision Event and Other Impact Events

Satellite collision debris poses risks to existing space assets and future space missions. Predictive models of debris generated from these hypervelocity collisions are critical for developing accurate space situational awareness tools and effective mitigation strategies. Hypervelocity collisions involve complex phenomenon that spans several time- and length-scales. We have developed a satellite collision debris modeling approach consisting of a Lagrangian hydrocode enriched with smooth particle hydrodynamics (SPH), advanced material failure models, detailed satellite mesh models, and massively parallel computers. These computational studies enable us to investigate the influence of satellite center-of-mass (CM) overlap and orientation, relative velocity, and material composition on the size, velocity, and material type distributions of collision debris. We have applied our debris modeling capability to the recent Iridium 33-Cosmos 2251 collision event. While the relative velocity was well understood in this event, the degree of satellite CM overlap and orientation was ill-defined. In our simulations, we varied the collision CM overlap and orientation of the satellites from nearly maximum overlap to partial overlap on the outermost extents of the satellites (i.e, solar panels and gravity boom). As expected, we found that with increased satellite overlap, the overall debris cloud mass and momentum (transfer) increases, the average debris …
Date: September 6, 2010
Creator: Springer, H. K.; Miller, W. O.; Levatin, J. L.; Pertica, A. J. & Olivier, S. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improvement of Quality in Publication of Experimental Thermophysical Property Data: Challenges, Assessment Tools, Global Implementation, and Online Support (open access)

Improvement of Quality in Publication of Experimental Thermophysical Property Data: Challenges, Assessment Tools, Global Implementation, and Online Support

Article on the improvement of quality in the publication of experimental thermophysical property data.
Date: September 6, 2013
Creator: Chirico, Robert D.; Frenkel, Michael; Magee, Joseph W.; Diky, Vladimir; Muzny, Chris D.; Kazakov, Andrei F. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Latent Profile Analysis of Violent Offenders Based on PCL-R Factor Scores: Criminogenic Needs and Recidivism Risk (open access)

A Latent Profile Analysis of Violent Offenders Based on PCL-R Factor Scores: Criminogenic Needs and Recidivism Risk

Article describes study where latent profile analysis was used to investigate if homogeneous latent classes of psychopathy exist within a sample of 215 adult male violent offenders from Berlin, Germany.
Date: September 6, 2019
Creator: Lehmann, Robert Johann Bernhard; Neumann, Craig S.; Hare, Robert Douglas; Biedermann, Jürgen; Dahle, Klaus-Peter & Mokros, Andreas
System: The UNT Digital Library
An investigation into using differential drag for controlling a formation of CubeSats (open access)

An investigation into using differential drag for controlling a formation of CubeSats

None
Date: September 6, 2011
Creator: Horsley, M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Late-Stage Formation of Short-Lived Radionuclides by Solar Energetic Particle Irradiation in the Early Solar System (open access)

Late-Stage Formation of Short-Lived Radionuclides by Solar Energetic Particle Irradiation in the Early Solar System

None
Date: September 6, 2011
Creator: Jacobsen, B; Matzel, J; Hutcheon, I D; Krot, A N; Yin, Q - & Nagashima, K
System: The UNT Digital Library
State of the world's raptors: Distributions, threats, and conservation recommendations (open access)

State of the world's raptors: Distributions, threats, and conservation recommendations

Article exploring the International Union for the Conservation of Nature's Red List to examine the conservation status, distributions, threats, and conservation recommendations for all 557 raptor species.
Date: September 6, 2018
Creator: McClure, Christopher J.W.; Westrip, James R.S.; Johnson, Jeff A.; Schulwitz, Sarah; Virani, Munir Z.; Davies, Robert et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library