Resource Type

Month

Language

An XML-based protocol for distributed event services (open access)

An XML-based protocol for distributed event services

A recent trend in distributed computing is the construction of high-performance distributed systems called computational grids. One difficulty we have encountered is that there is no standard format for the representation of performance information and no standard protocol for transmitting this information. This limits the types of performance analysis that can be undertaken in complex distributed systems. To address this problem, we present an XML-based protocol for transmitting performance events in distributed systems and evaluate the performance of this protocol.
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Gunter, Dan K.; Smith, Warren & Quesnel, Darcy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring the consistency of multiphase waste forms. (open access)

Monitoring the consistency of multiphase waste forms.

Methods are being developed for demonstrating that nonstandard high-level radioactive waste (HLW) forms meet the intent of the product consistency requirement in the Waste Acceptance System Requirements document (WASRD). That requirement was established for borosilicate HLW glasses ''to ensure a consistent glass product by controlling the vitrification process, consistency is necessary to reflect consideration for the waste package designs.'' [1] The test method specified in the WASRD for HLW glasses is the 7-day product consistency test (PCT). To meet the WASRD requirement, the response of an HLW glass in the PCT must be less than that of the environmental assessment (EA) glass. The EA glass is used as a benchmark ''so that conservative but realistic assessments of the engineered barrier system performance can be made.'' [1] The PCT and the WASRD requirement were developed to bound the behaviors of the wide range of borosilicate HLW glasses that will be produced at DOE facilities for the purpose of repository design. However, the need to demonstrate that the physical, chemical, and radiological properties of HLW forms have been constrained within acceptable (i.e., as-qualified) ranges will probably apply to all HLW waste forms. The PCT may not be the appropriate method for nonstandard …
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Ebert, W. L.; Lewis, M. A. & Johnson, S. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Renewable Liquid Optics with Magneto-electrostatic Control (open access)

Renewable Liquid Optics with Magneto-electrostatic Control

We suggest a new class of high-flux renewable optics, in particular, for the use at the X-ray free electron laser, LCLS, which is under discussion now. The size of optical elements we have in mind is from a fraction of a square centimeter to a few square centimeters. We suggest that working fluid be pressed through a porous substrate (made, e.g., of fused capillaries) to form a film, a few tens to a hundred microns thick. After the passage of an intense laser pulse, the liquid film is sucked back through the substrate by a reversed motion of the piston, and formed anew before the next pulse. The working surface of the film is made flat by capillary forces. We discuss the role of viscous, gravitational, and capillary forces in the dynamics of the film and show that the properly made film can be arbitrarily oriented with respect to the gravitational force. This makes the proposed optics very flexible. We discuss effects of vibrations of the supporting structures on the quality of optical elements. Limitations on the radiation intensity are formulated. We show how the shape of the film surface can be controlled by electrostatic and magnetic forces, allowing one …
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Ryutov, D & Toor, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Explosion in the Granite Field: Hardening and Softening Behavior in Rocks (open access)

Explosion in the Granite Field: Hardening and Softening Behavior in Rocks

Properties of rock materials under quasistatic conditions are well characterized in laboratory experiments. Unfortunately, quasistatic data alone are not sufficient to calibrate models for use to describe inelastic wave propagation associated with conventional and nuclear explosions, or with impact. First, rock properties are size-dependent. properties measured using laboratory samples on the order of a few centimeters in size need to be modified to adequately describe wave propagation in a problem on the order of a few hundred meters in size. Second, there is lack of data about the damage (softening) behavior of rock because most laboratory tests focus on the pre-peak hardening region with very little emphasis on the post-peak softening region. This paper presents a model for granite that accounts for both the hardening and softening of geologic materials, and also provides a simple description of rubblized rock. The model is shown to reproduce results of quasistatic triaxial experiments as well as peak velocity and peak displacement attenuation from a compendium of dynamic wave propagation experiments that includes US and French nuclear tests in granite.
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Lomov, I N; Antoun, T H & Glenn, L A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Minatom of Russia Situation and Crisis Center and the Automated Federal Information System for Nuclear Material Control and Accounting (open access)

Minatom of Russia Situation and Crisis Center and the Automated Federal Information System for Nuclear Material Control and Accounting

Under the Situation and Crisis Center (SCC) management, the Information Analytical Center (IAC) of the Ministry of Atomic Energy (Minatom) of Russia was created to oversee the operation of the Federal Nuclear Material Control and Accounting Information System (FIS). During 2000, the FIS achieved an important milestone in its development: the basic functions of the information system were implemented. This includes placing into operation the collecting and processing of nuclear material control and accounting (MC&A) information from the enterprises reporting to the FIS. The FIS began working with 14 Russian enterprises to develop and implement full-function reporting (i.e., reporting inventory and inventory changes including closeout and reconciliation between the FIS and enterprises). In 2001, the system will expand to include enterprise-level inventory information for all enterprises using nuclear materials in Russia. For this reason, at the end of 2000 through the beginning of 2001, five separate training sessions were held for over 100 enterprise personnel responsible for preparation and transfer of the reports to the FIS. Through the assistance of the Nuclear Material Protection, Control and Accounting (MPC&A) program, information systems for the accounting of nuclear materials are being installed at Russia enterprises. In creating the program for modernization of …
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Berchik, V. P.; Kasumova, L. A.; Babcock, R. A.; Heinberg, C. L. & Tynan, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Super-LOTIS/LOTIS/LITE: Prompt GRB Followup Experiments (open access)

Super-LOTIS/LOTIS/LITE: Prompt GRB Followup Experiments

LOTIS (Livermore Optical Transient Imaging System) and Super-LOTIS are automatic telescope systems that measure very prompt optical emission occurring within seconds of the gamma-ray energy release during a Gamma Ray Burst (GRB). Unlike hour-to-days delayed afterglow measurements, very early measurements will contain information about the GRB progenitor. To accomplish this, we developed and have been operating automated telescopes that rapidly image GRB coordinate error boxes in response to triggers distributed by the GRB Coordinate Distribution Network (GCN). LOTIS, located in California, consists of 4 cameras each with a different astronomical filter (B, V, R, open) that can respond to GRB triggers within 5 s. Super-LOTIS can point to any part of the sky within 30 s upon receipt of a GCN trigger and its sensitivity is as deep as V = 17-19 depending on the integration times. Since the shutdown of the CGRO, there has been no real-time GRE3 triggers that enable the LOTIS systems to measure real-time GRE3 counterpart fluxes as of May 2001. This paper describes performance of these systems. We also present our plan to replace the current optical CCD camera on the Super-LOTIS to a near infrared camera to be able to probe dusty GRB environment.
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Park, H. S.; Ables, E.; Barthelmy, S.; Bradshaw, M.; Cline, T.; Gehrels, N. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Material Management in Russia and New Federal Nuclear Material Control and Accounting Regulations (open access)

Nuclear Material Management in Russia and New Federal Nuclear Material Control and Accounting Regulations

The Russian Federation Ministry of Atomic Energy (Minatom) is the federal authority empowered with the management of state-owned nuclear materials, with the exception of military applications. The Russian Federal Nuclear Materials Control and Accounting Information System (FIS) is a key component in establishing an effective nuclear materials management system in the Russian Federation. In December 2000, the Russian government issued the decree to enter into force the regulation on the accounting and control of nuclear materials and directed the State System of Accounting and Control (SSAC) of nuclear materials should begin October 2001. This regulation establishes the basic accounting documents and the requirement to report them to the FIS to launch the State Nuclear Material Registry of nuclear materials. The Nuclear Material Registry contains information on agencies and operating organizations that use nuclear material, along with the kinds, quantity and other characteristics of nuclear material. Minatom will use the Registry and the supporting database and functionality that reside in the FIS for carrying out the functions of nuclear materials management. At the same time, the FIS provides for reporting from material balance areas (MBA). With American support, 14 Russian enterprises are reporting material balance area level information to the FIS …
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Martyanov, A. A.; Pitel, V. A.; Babcock, R. A.; Heinberg, C. L. & Tynan, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
VNIIEF-ORNL Joint Plutonium Measurements with NMIS and Results of Plutonium Attributes Preliminary Evaluations (open access)

VNIIEF-ORNL Joint Plutonium Measurements with NMIS and Results of Plutonium Attributes Preliminary Evaluations

Within the frameworks of TO No.007 between ORNL and VNIIEF on Nuclear Materials Identification System (NMIS) mastering at VNIIEF in July 2000 there had been finalized joint measurements, in which NMIS-technique equipment was used that had been placed at VNIIEF's disposal by ORNL, as well as VNIIEF-produced unclassified samples of fissile materials. In the report there are presented results of experimental data preliminary processing to obtain absolute values of some attributes used in plutonium shells measurements: values of their mass and thickness. Possibility of fissile materials parameters absolute values obtaining from measurement data essentially widens NMIS applicability to the tasks relevant to these materials inspections.
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Gurov, V. V.; Kuvshinov, M. I.; Popov, V. A.; Dubinin, V. P. & J. K. Mattingly, J. T. Mihalczo
System: The UNT Digital Library
Demand responsive programs - an emerging resource for competitive electricity markets? (open access)

Demand responsive programs - an emerging resource for competitive electricity markets?

The restructuring of regional electricity markets in the U.S. has been accompanied by numerous problems, including generation capacity shortages, transmission congestion, wholesale price volatility, and reduced system reliability. These problems have created significant new opportunities for technologies and business approaches that allow load serving entities and other aggregators, to control and manage the load patterns of their wholesale or retail end-users. These technologies and business approaches for manipulating end-user load shapes are known as Load Management or, more recently, Demand Responsive programs. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) is conducting case studies on innovative demand responsive programs and presents preliminary results for five case studies in this paper. These case studies illustrate the diversity of market participants and range of technologies and business approaches and focus on key program elements such as target markets, market segmentation and participation results; pricing scheme; dispatch and coordination; measurement, verification, and settlement; and operational results where available.
Date: June 25, 2001
Creator: Heffner, Grayson C. Dr. & Goldman, Charles A.
System: The UNT Digital Library