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Maintaining ideal body weight counseling sessions (open access)

Maintaining ideal body weight counseling sessions

The purpose of this program is to provide employees with the motivation, knowledge and skills necessary to maintain ideal body weight throughout life. The target audience for this program, which is conducted in an industrial setting, is the employee 40 years of age or younger who is at or near his/her ideal body weight.
Date: October 9, 1980
Creator: Brammer, S. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-voltage test stand at Livermore (open access)

High-voltage test stand at Livermore

This paper describes the present design and future capability of the high-voltage test stand for neutral-beam sources at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. The stand's immediate use will be for testing the full-scale sources (120 kV, 65 A) for the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor. It will then be used to test parts of the sustaining source system (80 kV, 85 A) being designed for the Magnetic Fusion Test Facility. Following that will be an intensive effort to develop beams of up to 200 kV at 20 A by accelerating negative ions. The design of the test stand features a 5-MVA power supply feeding a vacuum tetrode that is used as a switch and regulator. The 500-kW arc supply and the 100-kW filament supply for the neutral-beam source are battery powered, thus eliminating one or two costly isolation transformers.
Date: October 9, 1977
Creator: Smith, M.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Facilities projects performance measurement system. [Fuels and Materials Examination Facility (EMEF); Fusion Material Irradiation Test (FMIT) facility] (open access)

Facilities projects performance measurement system. [Fuels and Materials Examination Facility (EMEF); Fusion Material Irradiation Test (FMIT) facility]

The two DOE-owned facilities at Hanford, the Fuels and Materials Examination Facility (FMEF), and the Fusion Materials Irradiation Test Facility (FMIT), are described. The performance measurement systems used at these two facilities are next described. (DLC)
Date: October 9, 1979
Creator: Erben, J.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermodynamic ground states of platinum metal nitrides (open access)

Thermodynamic ground states of platinum metal nitrides

We have systematically studied the thermodynamic stabilities of various phases of the nitrides of the platinum metal elements using density functional theory. We show that for the nitrides of Rh, Pd, Ir and Pt two new crystal structures, in which the metal ions occupy simple tetragonal lattice sites, have lower formation enthalpies at ambient conditions than any previously proposed structures. The region of stability can extend up to 17 GPa for PtN{sub 2}. Furthermore, we show that according to calculations using the local density approximation, these new compounds are also thermodynamically stable at ambient pressure and thus may be the ground state phases for these materials. We further discuss the fact that the local density and generalized gradient approximations predict different values of the absolute formation enthalpies as well different relative stabilities between simple tetragonal and the pyrite or marcasite structures.
Date: October 9, 2007
Creator: Aberg, D; Sadigh, B; Crowhurst, J & Goncharov, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contributions of kinematics and viscoelastic lap deformation on the suface figure during full aperture polishing of fused silica (open access)

Contributions of kinematics and viscoelastic lap deformation on the suface figure during full aperture polishing of fused silica

A typical optical fabrication process involves a series of basic process steps including: (1) shaping, (2) grinding, (3) polishing, and sometimes (4) sub-aperture tool finishing. With significant innovation and development over the years in both the front end (shaping using CNC machines) and the back end (sup-aperture tool polishing), these processes have become much more deterministic. However, the intermediate stages (full aperture grinding/polishing) in the process, which can be very time consuming, still have much reliance on the optician's insight to get to the desired surface figure. Such processes are not presently very deterministic (i.e. require multiple iterations to get desired figure). The ability to deterministically finish an optical surface using a full aperture grinding/polishing will aid optical glass fabricators to achieve desired figure in a more repeatable, less iterative, and more economical manner. Developing a scientific understanding of the material removal rate is a critical step in accomplishing this. In the present study, the surface figure and material removal rate of a fused silica workpiece is measured as a function of polishing time using Ceria based slurry on a polyurethane pad or pitch lap under a variety of kinematic conditions (motion of the workpiece and lap) and loading configurations. …
Date: October 9, 2007
Creator: Suratwala, T I; Steele, R A & Feit, M D
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Computational Modeling of Alloys:From ab initio and thermodynamics to heterogeneous precipitation. (open access)

The Computational Modeling of Alloys:From ab initio and thermodynamics to heterogeneous precipitation.

In this lecture we presented a methodology to obtain free energies from empirical potentials and applied it to the study of the phase diagram of FeCr. Subsequently, we used Metropolis Monte Carlo to analyze homogeneous and heterogeneous precipitation of the Cr rich solid solution {alpha}{prime}. These examples are part of our work in the area of steels for nuclear applications and can be found in several publications of our group cited as References.
Date: October 9, 2007
Creator: Caro, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
A micromechanical basis for partitioning the evolution of grainbridging in brittle materials (open access)

A micromechanical basis for partitioning the evolution of grainbridging in brittle materials

A micromechanical model is developed for grain bridging inmonolithic ceramics. Specifically, bridge formation of a single,non-equiaxed grain spanning adjacent grains is addressed. A cohesive zoneframework enables crack initiation and propagation along grainboundaries. The evolution of the bridge is investigated through avariance in both grain angle and aspect ratio. We propose that thebridging process can be partitioned into five distinct regimes ofresistance: propagate, kink, arrest, stall, and bridge. Although crackpropagation and kinking are well understood, crack arrest and subsequent"stall" have been largely overlooked. Resistance during the stall regimeexposes large volumes of microstructure to stresses well in excess of thegrain boundary strength. Bridging can occur through continued propagationor reinitiation ahead of the stalled crack tip. The driving forcerequired to reinitiate is substantially greater than the driving forcerequired to kink. In addition, the critical driving force to reinitiateis sensitive to grain aspect ratio but relatively insensitive to grainangle. The marked increase in crack resistance occurs prior to bridgeformation and provides an interpretation for the rapidly risingresistance curves which govern the strength of many brittle materials atrealistically small flaw sizes.
Date: October 9, 2006
Creator: Foulk, J. W., III; Cannon, R. M.; Johnson, G. C.; Klein, P. A. & Ritchie, R. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Hybrid Method for Accelerated Simulation of Coulomb Collisions in a Plasma (open access)

A Hybrid Method for Accelerated Simulation of Coulomb Collisions in a Plasma

If the collisional time scale for Coulomb collisions is comparable to the characteristic time scales for a plasma, then simulation of Coulomb collisions may be important for computation of kinetic plasma dynamics. This can be a computational bottleneck because of the large number of simulated particles and collisions (or phase-space resolution requirements in continuum algorithms), as well as the wide range of collision rates over the velocity distribution function. This paper considers Monte Carlo simulation of Coulomb collisions using the binary collision models of Takizuka & Abe and Nanbu. It presents a hybrid method for accelerating the computation of Coulomb collisions. The hybrid method represents the velocity distribution function as a combination of a thermal component (a Maxwellian distribution) and a kinetic component (a set of discrete particles). Collisions between particles from the thermal component preserve the Maxwellian; collisions between particles from the kinetic component are performed using the method of or Nanbu. Collisions between the kinetic and thermal components are performed by sampling a particle from the thermal component and selecting a particle from the kinetic component. Particles are also transferred between the two components according to thermalization and dethermalization probabilities, which are functions of phase space.
Date: October 9, 2007
Creator: Caflisch, R.; Wang, C.; Dimarco, G.; Cohen, B. & Dimits, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Material control study: a directed graph and fault tree procedure for adversary event set generation (open access)

Material control study: a directed graph and fault tree procedure for adversary event set generation

In work for the United States Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Lawrence Livermore Laboratory is developing an assessment procedure to evaluate the effectiveness of a potential nuclear facility licensee's material control (MC) system. The purpose of an MC system is to prevent the theft of special nuclear material such as plutonium and highly enriched uranium. The key in the assessment procedure is the generation and analysis of the adversary event sets by a directed graph and fault-tree methodology.
Date: October 9, 1978
Creator: Lambert, H. E.; Lim, J. J. & Gilman, F. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of 12-T Yin-Yang magnets operating in subcooled, superfluid helium. [Nb-Ti and Nb/sub 3/Sn] (open access)

Design of 12-T Yin-Yang magnets operating in subcooled, superfluid helium. [Nb-Ti and Nb/sub 3/Sn]

A conceptual design study of a large 12-T yin-yang pair of coils, typical of the plug coils envisioned for a tandem-mirror facility to follow MFTF, has been completed. Because of its larger size and field strength, the magnetic forces are much greater than those experienced on MFTF. The main purpose of this study, therefore, is to assess the feasibility of such a device, paying particular attention to mechanical stress and conductor strain. The conductor proposed operates at 15.6 kA and consists of a rectangular half-hard copper stabilizer with a Nb-Ti insert in the low-field regions and Nb/sub 3/Sn in the high field. The coil is divided into four sections in the longitudinal direction, with steel substructure to limit the winding stress to an acceptable level. The conductor is cryostatically stabilized in superfluid He at 1.8K and 1.2 atm, with an operating heat flux of 0.8 W.cm/sup -2/.
Date: October 9, 1981
Creator: Cornish, D. N.; Hoard, R. W. & Baldi, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design and test of-80 kV snubber core assemblies for MFTF sustaining-neutral-beam power supplies (open access)

Design and test of-80 kV snubber core assemblies for MFTF sustaining-neutral-beam power supplies

Core snubbers, located near the neutral beam source ends of the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF) Sustaining Neutral Beam Power Supply System (SNBPSS) source cables, protect the neutral beam source extractor grid wires from overheating and sputtering during internal sparkdowns. The snubbers work by producing an induced counter-emf which limits the fault current and by absorbing the capacitive energy stored on the 80 kV source cables and power supplies. A computer program STACAL was used in snubber magnetic design to choose appropriate tape wound cores to provide 400 ..cap omega.. resistance and 25 J energy absorption. The cores are mounted horizontally in a dielectric structure. The central source cable bundle passes through the snubber and terminates on three copper buses. Multilam receptacles on the buses connect to the source module jumper cables. Corona rings and shields limit electric field stresses to allow close clearances between snubbers. A filament circuit shunt bias winding wound on a dielectric cylinder surrounds the cores. The dc voltage holdoff of a single snubber has been tested. Current and voltage behavior during capacitor bank and source cable discharges are presented.
Date: October 9, 1981
Creator: Bishop, S. R.; Mayhall, D. J.; Wilson, J. H.; De Vore, K. R.; Ross, R. I. & Sears, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design, fabrication, and testing of the magnet liner supports for the Mirror Fusion Test Facility (open access)

Design, fabrication, and testing of the magnet liner supports for the Mirror Fusion Test Facility

Heat is radiated from both the vacuum vessel that houses the magnet and the heated plasma that exists at the central region of the magnets. Approximately 30 kW of heat will be transmitted to the 311 m/sup 2/ of magnet surface area from these two heat sources. We can reduce this heat load substantially by installing liquid nitrogen (LN)-filled panels around the magnets to counteract the 300/sup 0/K vessel wall temperature. When flowing the LN inside the panels, the temperature drops to 85/sup 0/K. These LN panels also serve as thermal protection for the helium pipings in the MFTF magnet system. However, near the plasma where a higher heat load is generated, we must add water panels to protect the LN panels. All the LN panels, water panels, and their manifoldings are called the magnet liners. Of the total of 344 pieces, 240 are used directly on the magnets. The support system that mounts these LN liner panels on the magnets is the topic of this paper.
Date: October 9, 1981
Creator: Chang, Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cryogenic magnet case and distributed structural materials for high-field superconducting magnets (open access)

Cryogenic magnet case and distributed structural materials for high-field superconducting magnets

The superconducting magnets of the Tokamak Ignition/Burn Experimental Reactor (TIBER II) will generate high magnetic fields over large bores. The resulting electromagnetic forces require the use of large volumes of distributed steel and thick magnet case for structural support. Here we review the design allowables, calculated loads and forces, and structural materials selection for TIBER II. 7 refs., 2 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: October 9, 1987
Creator: Summers, L. T.; Miller, J. R.; Kerns, J. A. & Myall, J. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnet and conductor developments for the Mirror Fusion Program (open access)

Magnet and conductor developments for the Mirror Fusion Program

The conductor development and the magnet design and construction for the MFTF are described. Future plans for the Mirror Program and their influence on the associated superconductor development program are discussed. Included is a summary of the progress being made to develop large, high-field, multifilamentary Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductors and the feasibility of building a 12-T yin-yang set of coils for the machine to follow MFTF. In a further look into the future, possible magnetic configurations and requirements for mirror reactors are surveyed.
Date: October 9, 1981
Creator: Cornish, D.N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Charm lifetime measurements from TASSO (open access)

Charm lifetime measurements from TASSO

Recent measurements by TASSO of the lifetimes of charmed mesons is reviewed. The lifetime reported for the D/sub s/ meson utilizes the entire data sample collected. The lifetime of the neutral charmed meson, D/sup o/, is from a subsample of the total data set. Special emphases is given to the experimental procedures used.
Date: October 9, 1987
Creator: Forden, G. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent results from the Crystal Barrel experiment (open access)

Recent results from the Crystal Barrel experiment

The Crystal Barrel experiment has been constructed and installed at the Low Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR) at CERN. It has been fully operational since late 1989. In this talk, recent results of meson spectroscopy in p[bar p]-annihilations are presented. The main emphasis is on all-neutral annihilations, the study of the strange quark content of the proton, and the investigation of the decay mode of il particles. A 2[sup ++] resonance decaying into [pi][degrees][pi][degrees]at a mass of 1515 [plus minus] 10 MeV with a width of 120 [plus minus] 10 MeV has been seen in a 3[pi][degrees] final state.
Date: October 9, 1991
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design considerations for ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) magnet systems (open access)

Design considerations for ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) magnet systems

The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) is now completing a definition phase as a beginning of a three-year design effort. Preliminary parameters for the superconducting magnet system have been established to guide further and more detailed design work. Radiation tolerance of the superconductors and insulators has been of prime importance, since it sets requirements for the neutron-shield dimension and sensitively influences reactor size. The major levels of mechanical stress in the structure appear in the cases of the inboard legs of the toroidal-field (TF) coils. The cases of the poloidal-field (PF) coils must be made thin or segmented to minimize eddy current heating during inductive plasma operation. As a result, the winding packs of both the TF and PF coils includes significant fractions of steel. The TF winding pack provides support against in-plane separating loads but offers little support against out-of-plane loads, unless shear-bonding of the conductors can be maintained. The removal of heat due to nuclear and ac loads has not been a fundamental limit to design, but certainly has non-negligible economic consequences. We present here preliminary ITER magnetic systems design parameters taken from trade studies, designs, and analyses performed by the Home Teams of the four ITER participants, …
Date: October 9, 1988
Creator: Henning, C. D. & Miller, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Buildup studies of a tandem mirror reactor with inboard thermal barriers (open access)

Buildup studies of a tandem mirror reactor with inboard thermal barriers

The build-up and quasi-steady state phases of the operation of the tandem mirror experiment, TMX, and of a tandem mirror machine with inboard thermal barriers, MFTF-B, have been simulated using a fluid model of the central cell and plug plasmas. The fluid model incorporates classical radial transport, three-dimensional cold gas transport in cylindrical geometry, and neutral beam transport corrected for finite-Larmor-orbit effects in both the central cell and yin yang end plugs.
Date: October 9, 1980
Creator: Gryczkowski, G. E. & Gilmore, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beta-delayed fission calculations for the astrophysical r-process (open access)

Beta-delayed fission calculations for the astrophysical r-process

We discuss RPA calculations of the Gamow-Teller properties of neutron-rich nuclei to study the effect of ..beta..-delayed fission and neutron emission on the production of Th, U and Pu chronometric nuclei in the astrophysical r-process. We find significant differences in the amount of ..beta..-delayed fission when compared with the recent calculations of Thielemann et al. (1983). In the simplest case of a constant abundance along the r-process path, however, the inferred production ratios in both calculations are similar.
Date: October 9, 1985
Creator: Meyer, B. S.; Howard, W. M.; Mathews, G. J.; Moeller, P. & Takahashi, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
['Kid critics' Fort Worth Star-Telegram, October 9, 1989] (open access)

['Kid critics' Fort Worth Star-Telegram, October 9, 1989]

An article written by Julie Gilberto for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram about the UNT led North Texas Regional Institute for Educators on the Visual Arts that aids teachers in combining art and regular coursework to better students' education. The piece features a look at students in a classroom where this idea is already being implemented.
Date: October 9, 1989
Creator: Gilberto, Julie
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shell-model calculations of beta-decay rates for s- and r-process nucleosyntheses (open access)

Shell-model calculations of beta-decay rates for s- and r-process nucleosyntheses

Examples of large-basis shell-model calculations of Gamow-Teller ..beta..-decay properties of specific interest in the astrophysical s- and r- processes are presented. Numerical results are given for: (1) the GT-matrix elements for the excited state decays of the unstable s-process nucleus /sup 99/Tc; and (2) the GT-strength function for the neutron-rich nucleus /sup 130/Cd, which lies on the r-process path. The results are discussed in conjunction with the astrophysics problems. 23 refs., 3 figs.
Date: October 9, 1985
Creator: Takahashi, K.; Mathews, G. J. & Bloom, S. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design considerations for ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) magnet systems: Revision 1 (open access)

Design considerations for ITER (International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor) magnet systems: Revision 1

The International Thermonuclear Experimental Reactor (ITER) is now completing a definition phase as a beginning of a three-year design effort. Preliminary parameters for the superconducting magnet system have been established to guide further and more detailed design work. Radiation tolerance of the superconductors and insulators has been of prime importance, since it sets requirements for the neutron-shield dimension and sensitively influences reactor size. The major levels of mechanical stress in the structure appear in the cases of the inboard legs of the toroidal-field (TF) coils. The cases of the poloidal-field (PF) coils must be made thin or segmented to minimize eddy current heating during inductive plasma operation. As a result, the winding packs of both the TF and PF coils includes significant fractions of steel. The TF winding pack provides support against in-plane separating loads but offers little support against out-of-plane loads, unless shear-bonding of the conductors can be maintained. The removal of heat due to nuclear and ac loads has not been a fundamental limit to design, but certainly has non-negligible economic consequences. We present here preliminary ITER magnet systems design parameters taken from trade studies, designs, and analyses performed by the Home Teams of the four ITER participants, …
Date: October 9, 1988
Creator: Henning, C. D. & Miller, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent results from the Crystal Barrel experiment (open access)

Recent results from the Crystal Barrel experiment

The Crystal Barrel experiment has been constructed and installed at the Low Energy Antiproton Ring (LEAR) at CERN. It has been fully operational since late 1989. In this talk, recent results of meson spectroscopy in p{bar p}-annihilations are presented. The main emphasis is on all-neutral annihilations, the study of the strange quark content of the proton, and the investigation of the decay mode of il particles. A 2{sup ++} resonance decaying into {pi}{degrees}{pi}{degrees}at a mass of 1515 {plus_minus} 10 MeV with a width of 120 {plus_minus} 10 MeV has been seen in a 3{pi}{degrees} final state.
Date: October 9, 1991
Creator: The Crystal Barrel Collaboration
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Inhomogeneities and Pulsation (open access)

Chemical Inhomogeneities and Pulsation

Major improvements in models of chemically peculiar stars have been achieved in the past few years. With these new models it has been possible to test quantitatively some of the processes involved in the formation of abundance anomalies and their effect on stellar structure. The models of metallic A (Am) stars have shown that a much deeper mixing has to be present to account for observed abundance anomalies. This has implications on their variability, which these models also reproduce qualitatively. These models also have implications for other chemically inhomogeneous stars such as HgMn B stars which are not known to be variable and {lambda} Booetis stars which can be. The study of the variability of chemically inhomogeneous stars can provide unique information on the dynamic processes occurring in many types of stars in addition to modeling of the evolution of their surface composition.
Date: October 9, 2001
Creator: Turcotte, S
System: The UNT Digital Library