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Superconducting solenoids for an international muon coolingexperiment (open access)

Superconducting solenoids for an international muon coolingexperiment

None
Date: August 3, 2002
Creator: Green, M.A. & Rey, J.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DFBX boxes -- electrical and cryogenic distribution boxes for thesuperconducting magnets in the LHC straight sections (open access)

DFBX boxes -- electrical and cryogenic distribution boxes for thesuperconducting magnets in the LHC straight sections

None
Date: August 3, 2002
Creator: Zbasnik, Jon P.; Corradi, Carol A.; Gourlay, S.A.; Green, MichaelA.; Hafalia, Aurelio Q.; Kajiyama (Jr.), Yoichi et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical Isolation of ZnO by Ion Irradiation (open access)

Electrical Isolation of ZnO by Ion Irradiation

We demonstrate the formation of highly resistive single-crystal ZnO epilayers as a result of irradiation with MeV Li, O, and Si ions. Results show that the ion doses necessary for electrical isolation close-to-inversely depend on the number of ion-beam-generated atomic displacements. However, in all the cases studied, defect-induced electrical isolation of ZnO is unstable to rapid thermal annealing at temperatures above about 300 C . No significant improvement of thermal stability is found by varying ion mass, dose, and irradiation temperature (up to 350 C). Finally, a comparison of implant isolation in ZnO with that in GaN is presented.
Date: July 3, 2002
Creator: Kucheyev, S. O.; Jagadish, C.; Williams, J. S.; Deenapanray, P. N. K.; Yano, M.; Koike, K. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multiphase Advection and Radiation Diffusion with Material Interfaces on Unstructured Meshes (open access)

Multiphase Advection and Radiation Diffusion with Material Interfaces on Unstructured Meshes

A collection of numerical methods are presented for the advection or remapping of material properties on unstructured and staggered polyhedral meshes in arbitrary Lagrange-Eulerian calculations. The methods include several new procedures to track and capture sharp interface boundaries, and to partition radiation energy into multi-material thermal states. The latter is useful for extending and applying consistently single material radiation diffusion solvers to multi-material problems.
Date: October 3, 2002
Creator: Anninos, P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seismic Velocities Contain Information About Depth, Lithology, Fluid Content, and Microstructure (open access)

Seismic Velocities Contain Information About Depth, Lithology, Fluid Content, and Microstructure

Recent advances in field and laboratory methods for measuring elastic wave velocities provide incentive and opportunity for improving interpretation of geophysical data for engineering and environmental applications. Advancing the state-of-the-art of seismic imaging requires developing petrophysical relationships between measured velocities and the hydrogeology parameters and lithology. Our approach uses laboratory data and rock physics methods. Compressional (Vp) and shear (Vs) wave velocities, Vp/Vs ratios, and relative wave amplitudes show systematic changes related to composition, saturation, applied stress (analogous to depth), and distribution of clay for laboratory ultrasonic measurements on soils. The artificial soils were mixtures of Ottawa sand and a second phase, either Wyoming bentonite or peat moss used to represent clay or organic components found in natural soils. Compressional and shear wave velocities were measured for dry, saturated, and partially-saturated conditions, for applied stresses between about 7 and 100 kPa, representing approximately the top 5 m of the subsurface. Analysis of the results using rock physics methods shows the link between microstructure and wave propagation, and implications for future advances in seismic data interpretation. For example, we found that Vp in dry sand-clay mixtures initially increases as clay cements the sand grains and fills porosity, but then Vp decreases …
Date: January 3, 2002
Creator: Berge, P A & Bonner, B P
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photometric Calibration of an EUV Flat Field Spectrometer at the Advanced Light Source (open access)

Photometric Calibration of an EUV Flat Field Spectrometer at the Advanced Light Source

The photometric calibration of ail extreme ultraviolet flat field spectrometer has been done at the Advanced Light Source at LBNL. This spectrometer is used to record spectrum for atomic physics research from highly charged ions in plasmas created in the Livermore electron beam ion traps EBIT-I and SUPEREBIT. Two calibrations were done each with a different gold-coated grating, a 1200 {ell}/mm and a 2400 {ell}/mm, that covered 75-300{angstrom} and 15-160{angstrom}, respectively. The detector for this calibration was a back thinned CCD. The relative calibration was determined for several different incident angles for both gratings. Within the scatter of the data, the calibration was roughly insensitive to the incidence angle for the range of angles investigated.
Date: July 3, 2002
Creator: May, M.; Lepson, J.; Beiersdorfer, P.; Thorn, D.; Chen, H.; Hey, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Science and Technology and Counterterorrism (open access)

Science and Technology and Counterterorrism

Major scientific and technological breakthroughs played a pivotal role in our ability to win the Cold War. The possibility of a different type of war, in response to terrorism, has long been recognized. Indeed, countermeasures to address specific terrorist acts have been developed and are deployed, for example, at special sporting and political events. The current threat environment, however, has created an intense and compelling set of concerns; consequently, the challenge to the scientific Community to develop new concepts and products on an accelerated timeframe is clear. Also, the spectrum of terrorist threats is broad. It includes the use of conventional, chemical, biological, and nuclear and radiological weapons, not to mention cyber-based attacks. The imperatives for advances have been amplified now that attacks are clearly possible within the U.S. borders. For example, advanced sensors and detectors that are able to monitor the proliferation of all the above warfare agents and their movement at entry points into the U.S. are clearly needed. The investments over the last decades in research and development efforts at the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratories in nonproliferation have led unique technologies and detection capabilities that have proved useful; yet, many challenges remain. In particular, …
Date: April 3, 2002
Creator: Wadsworth, J
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tritium in the World Trade Center September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack: It's Possible Sources and Fate (open access)

Tritium in the World Trade Center September 11, 2001 Terrorist Attack: It's Possible Sources and Fate

Traces of tritiated water (HTO) were determined at World Trade Center (WTC) ground zero after the 9/11/01 terrorist attack. A method of ultralow-background liquid scintillation counting was used after distilling HTO from the samples. A water sample from the WTC sewer, collected on 9/13/01, contained 0.174{plus_minus}0.074 (2{sigma}) nCi/L of HTO. A split water sample, collected on 9/21/01 from the basement of WTC Building 6, contained 3.53{plus_minus}0.17 and 2.83{plus_minus}0.15 nCi/L, respectively. Several water and vegetation samples were analyzed from areas outside the ground zero, located in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and Kensico Reservoir. No HTO above the background was found in those samples. All these results are well below the levels of concern to human exposure. Several tritium radioluminescent (RL) devices were investigated as possible sources of the traces of tritium at ground zero. Tritium is used in self-luminescent emergency EXIT signs. No such signs were present inside the WTC buildings. However, it was determined that Boeing 767-222 aircraft operated by the United Airlines that hit WTC Tower 2 as well as Boeing 767-223ER operated by the American Airlines, that hit WTC Tower 1, had a combined 34.3 Ci of tritium at the time of impact. Other possible sources of tritium include …
Date: May 3, 2002
Creator: Parekh, P; Semkow, T; Husain, L; Haines, D; Woznial, G; Williams, P et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability Affects of Artificial Viscosity in Detonation Modeling (open access)

Stability Affects of Artificial Viscosity in Detonation Modeling

Accurate multi-dimensional modeling of detonation waves in solid HE materials is a difficult task. To treat applied problems which contain detonation waves one must consider reacting flow with a wide range of length-scales, non-linear equations of state (EOS), and material interfaces at which the detonation wave interacts with other materials. To be useful numerical models of detonation waves must be accurate, stable, and insensitive to details of the modeling such as the mesh spacing, and mesh aspect ratio for multi-dimensional simulations. Studies we have performed show that numerical simulations of detonation waves can be very sensitive to the form of the artificial viscosity term used. The artificial viscosity term is included in our ALE hydrocode to treat shock discontinuities. We show that a monotonic, second order artificial viscosity model derived from an approximate Riemann solver scheme can strongly damp unphysical oscillations in the detonation wave reaction zone, improving the detonation wave boundary wall interaction. These issues are demonstrated in 2D model simulations presented of the 'Bigplate' test. Results using LX-I 7 explosives are compared with numerical simulation results to demonstrate the affects of the artificial viscosity model.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Vitello, P & Souers, P C
System: The UNT Digital Library
A dynamic kernel modifier for linux (open access)

A dynamic kernel modifier for linux

Dynamic Kernel Modifier, or DKM, is a kernel module for Linux that allows user-mode programs to modify the execution of functions in the kernel without recompiling or modifying the kernel source in any way. Functions may be traced, either function entry only or function entry and exit; nullified; or replaced with some other function. For the tracing case, function execution results in the activation of a watchpoint. When the watchpoint is activated, the address of the function is logged in a FIFO buffer that is readable by external applications. The watchpoints are time-stamped with the resolution of the processor high resolution timers, which on most modem processors are accurate to a single processor tick. DKM is very similar to earlier systems such as the SunOS trace device or Linux TT. Unlike these two systems, and other similar systems, DKM requires no kernel modifications. DKM allows users to do initial probing of the kernel to look for performance problems, or even to resolve potential problems by turning functions off or replacing them. DKM watchpoints are not without cost: it takes about 200 nanoseconds to make a log entry on an 800 Mhz Pentium-Ill. The overhead numbers are actually competitive with other …
Date: September 3, 2002
Creator: Minnich, R. G. (Ronald G.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
S-Band High Duty Photo-Injection System. (open access)

S-Band High Duty Photo-Injection System.

None
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Wang, X. J.; Babzien, M.; Chang, X. Y.; Lynch, D.; Pjerov, S.; Woodle, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emittance Growth Due to the Laser Non-Uniformity in a Photoinjector. (open access)

Emittance Growth Due to the Laser Non-Uniformity in a Photoinjector.

None
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Zhou, F.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Babzien, M.; Chang, X. Y.; Doyuran, A.; Malone, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
NMR Chemical Shifts in Amino Acids: Effects of Environments, Electric Field, and Amine Group Rotation (open access)

NMR Chemical Shifts in Amino Acids: Effects of Environments, Electric Field, and Amine Group Rotation

The authors present calculations of NMR chemical shifts in crystalline phases of some representative amino acids such as glycine, alanine, and alanyl-alanine. To get an insight on how different environments affect the chemical shifts, they study the transition from the crystalline phase to completely isolated molecules of glycine. In the crystalline limit, the shifts are dominated by intermolecular hydrogen-bonds. In the molecular limit, however, dipole electric field effects dominate the behavior of the chemical shifts. They show that it is necessary to average the chemical shifts in glycine over geometries. Tensor components are analyzed to get the angle dependent proton chemical shifts, which is a more refined characterization method.
Date: March 3, 2002
Creator: Yoon, Young-Gui; Pfrommer, Bernd G.; Louie, Steven G. & Canning, Andrew
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Coherent Half Integer Resonance. (open access)

Studies of the Coherent Half Integer Resonance.

We present studies of space-charge-induced beam profile broadening at high intensities in the Proton Storage Ring (PSR) at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Previous work has associated the observed broadening in the vertical direction with the coherent half integer resonance. Here, we study the effect of the space charge environment on this resonance; specifically, we investigate the strength of the resonance versus beam intensity, longitudinal bunching factor, transverse lattice tune, and two different beam injection scenarios. For each case, detailed particle-in-cell simulations are combined with experimental results to elucidate the behavior and sensitivity of the beam resonance response.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Cousineau, S.; Holmes, J.; Galambos, J.; Macek, R.; Fedotov, A. & Wei, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive Corrosion Behavior of Alloy 22 in Multi-Ionic Aqueous Environments (open access)

Passive Corrosion Behavior of Alloy 22 in Multi-Ionic Aqueous Environments

In current waste packaging design, Alloy 22 (Ni-22Cr-13Mo-3W-3Fe) has been chosen as the candidate materials to fabricate a 2 cm outer layer of the high-level nuclear waste containers, as part of proposed geological repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. During the repository period, the container materials will be subject to the corrosion due to its exposure to the multi-ionic aqueous environments. Although Alloy 22 has demonstrated excellent corrosion resistance, but accumulation of small yearly corrosion rate for 10,000 or more years can be significant enough. The goal of this research is to seek alternative techniques to obtain a reasonably confident corrosion rate determination, since the conventional weight loss technique requires many years to achieve a detectable weight loss in Alloy 22 samples. This paper will discuss the latest experiment results in using potentiostatic technique to determine passive dissolution rates.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Lian, T.; Estill, J. C.; Hust, G. A.; Fix, D. V. & Rebak, R. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress report on VENUS (open access)

Progress report on VENUS

The construction of VENUS, a next generation superconducting Electron Cyclotron Resonance ion source designed to operate at 28 GHz, is complete. The cryostat including the superconducting magnet assembly was delivered in September 2001. During acceptance tests, the superconducting magnets produced an axial magnetic field strength of 4T at injection, 3T at extraction, and a radial field strength of 2T at the plasma chamber wall without any quenches. These fields are sufficient for optimum operation at 28 GHz. The cryogenic system for VENUS has been designed to operate at 4.2 K with two cryocoolers each providing up to 45 W of cooling at 50 K and 1.5 W at 4 K in a closed loop mode without further helium transfers. However, during the acceptance tests an excessive heat leak of about 3W was measured. In addition, the liquid helium heat exchanger did not work properly and had to be redesigned. The cryogenic system modifications will be described. In addition, an update on the installation of the ion source and its beam line components will be given.
Date: September 3, 2002
Creator: Leitner, Matthaeus A.; Leitner, Daniela; Abbott, Steve R.; Taylor, Clyde E. & Lyneis, Claude
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral measurements of the second harmonic of the SASE FEL radiation at APS. (open access)

Spectral measurements of the second harmonic of the SASE FEL radiation at APS.

We present the z-dependent spectral measurement results for the second harmonic of the SASE FEL radiation before and after saturation. The measurements were performed at the Advanced Photon Source FEL with the fundamental wavelength of 530 nm. The spectral properties of the second harmonic are compared with those of the fundamental and with the theoretical expectations.
Date: October 3, 2002
Creator: Sajaev, V. & Huang, Z.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Jet measurements at D0 using a KT algorithm (open access)

Jet measurements at D0 using a KT algorithm

D0 has implemented and calibrated a k{perpendicular} jet algorithm for the first time in a p{bar p} collider. We present two results based on 1992-1996 data which were recently published: the subjet multiplicity in quark and gluon jets and the central inclusive jet cross section. The measured ratio between subjet multiplicities in gluon and quark jets is consistent with theoretical predictions and previous experimental values. NLO pQCD predictions of the k{perpendicular} inclusive jet cross section agree with the D0 measurement, although marginally in the low p{sub T} range. We also present a preliminary measurement of thrust cross sections, which indicates the need to include higher than {alpha}{sub s}{sup 3} terms and resumation in the theoretical calculations.
Date: October 3, 2002
Creator: Elvira, V.Daniel
System: The UNT Digital Library
BEAM DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS IN THE RAPID CYCLING MEDICAL SYNCHROTRON. (open access)

BEAM DYNAMICS SIMULATIONS IN THE RAPID CYCLING MEDICAL SYNCHROTRON.

The Rapid Cycling Medical Synchrotron (RCMS) accelerator is under conceptual design at BNL. We report the results of the beam dynamics studies in the current design RCMS ring lattice with simulation program ORBIT++. In this paper, the designed RCMS ring lattice, the important physical parameters and the simulation program employed in this study are overviewed. The major elements and the numerical parameters included in the simulations are listed and discussed. The evolution of longitudinal beam properties, such as bunch length, bunch height and particle distributions, under RF voltage ramping are studied. The simulation results of the 6D beam dynamics during acceleration including phase space and emittance evolution are presented. Finally, the space charge effects such as tune shift and emittance growth in the RCMS ring are investigated and discussed.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Beebe-Wang, J.; D Imperio, N.; Luccio, A. U. & Zhang, S. Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficient imaging of crosshole electromagnetic data (open access)

Efficient imaging of crosshole electromagnetic data

None
Date: September 3, 2002
Creator: Kim, Hee Joon; Lee, Ki Ha & Wilt, Mike
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive damping in EDS maglev systems. (open access)

Passive damping in EDS maglev systems.

There continues to be strong interest in the subjects of damping and drag forces associated with electrodynamic suspension (EDS) systems. While electromagnetic drag forces resist the forward motion of a vehicle and therefore consume energy, damping forces control, at least in part, the response of the vehicle to disturbances. Ideally, one would like to reduce the drag forces as much as possible while retaining adequate damping forces to insure dynamic stability and satisfactory ride quality. These two goals turn out to be difficult to achieve in practice. It is well known that maglev systems tend to be intrinsically under damped. Consequently it is often necessary in a practical system design to enhance the damping passively or actively. For reasons of cost and simplicity, it is desirable to rely as much as possible on passive damping mechanisms. In this paper, rough estimates are made of the passive damping and drag forces caused by various mechanisms in EDS systems. No attention will be given to active control systems or secondary suspension systems which are obvious ways to augment passive damping mechanisms if the latter prove to be inadequate.
Date: May 3, 2002
Creator: Rote, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of an Accelerated Oxygen-14 Beam (open access)

Production of an Accelerated Oxygen-14 Beam

BEARS is an ongoing project to provide a light-ion radioactive-beam capability at the 88-Inch Cyclotron at LBNL. Light radioactive isotopes are produced at a 10 MeV proton medical cyclotron, transported 350 m via a high-speed gas transport capillary, cryogenically separated, and injected into the 88-Inch Cyclotron's ion source. The first radioactive beam successfully accelerated was Carbon-11 and beams of intensity more than 108 ions/sec have been utilized for experiments. Development of Oxygen-14 as the second BEARS beam presented considerable technical challenges, both due to its short half-life of 71 seconds and the radiation chemistry of oxygen in the target. The usual techniques developed for medical uses of Oxygen-15 involve the addition of significant amounts of carrier oxygen, something that would overload the ion source. As a solution, Oxygen-14 is produced as water in a carrier-free form, and is chemically converted in two steps to carbon dioxide, a form readily usable by the BEARS. This system has been built and is operational, and initial tests of accelerating an Oxygen-14 beam have been performed.
Date: May 3, 2002
Creator: Powell, James; O'Neil, James P. & Cerny, Joseph
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sns Extraction Kicker System and First Article Bpfn Test. (open access)

Sns Extraction Kicker System and First Article Bpfn Test.

The Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) extraction kicker system brings the proton beam from the accumulator ring through a beam transfer line into the target area. The 14 kicker magnets are located in one straight section. The kicker magnets are energized by 14 Blumlein type Pulse Forming Networks (BPFN). The first article of the SNS extraction kicker BPFN was assembled and tested at this laboratory. This paper describes the kicker BPFN system arrangement and parameters. The first article BPFN design and its main components used are explained. High voltage BPFN test results and the load current waveform are illustrated in this paper. Temperature measurements of the kicker ferrite blocks at full power showed only small or no heating. This paper discusses the modifications to the BPFN design, such as a saturating inductor and 25 Q termination, to minimize the transverse coupling impedance.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Mi, J.; Pai, C.; Davino, D.; Hahn, H.; Lambiase, R.; Lee, Y. Y. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Half Integer Resonance Crossing and Space Charge Limit. (open access)

Half Integer Resonance Crossing and Space Charge Limit.

We study the influence of space charge on the crossing of the second-order resonance and the associated space-charge limit in high-intensity rings. Two-dimensional simulation studies are compared and found to agree with the envelope models in the finding of an increased intensity limit due to the coherent frequency shift. We also discuss application of this effect to bunched beams and multi-turn injection painting, and the effect of high-order resonances and issues of the envelope instability.
Date: June 3, 2002
Creator: Fedotov, A. V. & Hofman, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library