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Current issues in prompt photon production (open access)

Current issues in prompt photon production

The authors give a brief account of recent theoretical developments in prompt photon production.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Laenen, E.; Sterman, G. & Vogelsang, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prompt Photon Production in Polarized Hadron Collisions. (open access)

Prompt Photon Production in Polarized Hadron Collisions.

We consider spin asymmetries for prompt photon production in collisions of longitudinally polarized hadrons. This reaction will be a key tool at the BNL-RHIC {rvec p}{rvec p} collider for determining the gluon spin density in a polarized proton. We study the effects of QCD corrections, such as all-order soft-gluon ''threshold'' resummations.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Vogelsang, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Open-Loop Adaptive Filtering for Speckle Reduction in Synthetic Aperture Radar Images (open access)

Open-Loop Adaptive Filtering for Speckle Reduction in Synthetic Aperture Radar Images

None
Date: October 25, 2000
Creator: ROHWER,JUDD A. & MAGOTRA,N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applications for Infrared Imaging Equipment in Photovoltaic Cell, Module, and System Testing (open access)

Applications for Infrared Imaging Equipment in Photovoltaic Cell, Module, and System Testing

None
Date: September 25, 2000
Creator: King, David L.; Kratochvil, Jay A.; Quintana, Michael A. & Mcmahon, T. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impacts of Shading and Glazing Combinations on Residential Energy Use in a Hot Dry Climate (open access)

Impacts of Shading and Glazing Combinations on Residential Energy Use in a Hot Dry Climate

A residential building in Tucson, Arizona, was studied to evaluate opportunities for reducing cooling energy use in a hot dry climate. The reduction of solar heat gain was strongly influenced by spectrally selective windows, architectural shading, and site shading from adjacent buildings. The study emphasized accurately modeling these features to account for effects on the energy load. Building performance was modeled using a detailed hourly energy simulation tool and was measured while unoccupied for a period of 12 days. Model inputs included direct measurements of the net air exchange rate, surface reflectance, and window transmittance. Model results showed good agreement with the direct measurements of cooling loads and air-conditioning energy use. A parametric study of annual energy use is presented showing the impacts of glazing type, architectural shading, site shading, and building orientation. It is important to understand these interactions to optimize energy savings in community-scale housing developments.
Date: August 25, 2000
Creator: Farrar-Nagy, S.; Anderson, R.; Hancock, C.E. (National Renewable Energy Laboratory) & Reeves, P. (Partnership for Resource Conservation)
System: The UNT Digital Library
FROM POLLUTER TO PROTECTOR: THE CHALLENGES OF CHANGING CULTURE, OPERATIONS AND IMAGE (open access)

FROM POLLUTER TO PROTECTOR: THE CHALLENGES OF CHANGING CULTURE, OPERATIONS AND IMAGE

Brookhaven National Laboratory is a US Department of Energy (DOE) multi-program research facility, located in Suffolk County in Long Island, New York. In 1997, groundwater monitoring revealed significant levels of tritium contamination from a reactor fuel pool. The public reaction was immediate and intense. In an unprecedented move, DOE terminated the contractor and rebid the Laboratory management contract. Brookhaven Science Associates (BSA), a partnership between Battelle and the State University of New York at Stony Brook, won the contract. BSA faced enormous challenges in the environmental area. One was changing the culture and mindset of staff and management with regard to environmental protection. Another was changing operations to fully integrate environmental stewardship into all facets of the Laboratory's missions. And finally, BSA needed to change the Laboratory's public image. This paper describes how BSA faced those challenges. DOE and BSA entered into a voluntary agreement with the US Environmental Protection Agency to conduct an in-depth evaluation of the environmental aspects and impacts of all activities onsite. A project was initiated to explore environmental problems associated with historical activities. BSA also has made significant investments in developing and implementing an Environmental Management System that is consistent with the ISO 14001 standard, …
Date: July 25, 2000
Creator: ZIMMERMAN,E.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electroweak symmetry breaking by extra dimensions (open access)

Electroweak symmetry breaking by extra dimensions

Electroweak symmetry breaking may be naturally induced by the observed quark and gauge fields in extra dimensions without a fundamental Higgs field. The authors show that a composite Higgs doublet can arise as a bound state of (t,b){sub L} and a linear combination of the Kaluza-Klein states of t{sub R}, due to QCD in extra dimensions. The top quark mass depends on the number of active t{sub R} Kaluza-Klein modes, and is consistent with the experimental value.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Cheng, Hsin-Chia & Hill, Bogdan A. Dobrescu and Christopher T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Suppression of erosion in the DIII-D divertor with detached plasmas (open access)

Suppression of erosion in the DIII-D divertor with detached plasmas

The ability to withstand disruptions makes carbon-based materials attractive for use as plasma-facing components in divertors. However, such materials suffer high erosion rates during attached plasma operation which, in high power long pulse machines, would give short component lifetimes and high tritium inventories. The authors present results from recent experiments in DIII-D, in which the Divertor Materials Evaluation System (DiMES) was used to examine erosion and deposition during short exposures to well defined plasma conditions. These studies show that during operation with detached plasmas, produced by gas injection, net erosion is suppressed everywhere in the divertor. Net deposition of carbon with deuterium was observed at the inner and outer strikepoints and in the private-flux region between strikepoints. For these low temperature plasmas (T{sub e} < 2eV), physical sputtering is eliminated. These results show that with detached plasmas, the location of carbon net erosion and the carbon impurity source, probably lies outside the divertor. Physical or chemical sputtering by charge-exchange neutrals or ions in the main plasma chamber is a probable source of carbon under these plasma conditions.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Wampler, William R.; Bastasz, Robert J.; Whyte, D. G.; Wong, C. P. C. & West, W. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electroweak measurements from hadron machines (open access)

Electroweak measurements from hadron machines

The discovery of the W and Z gauge bosons at the Sp{bar p}S in 1983 marked the beginning of direct electroweak measurements at a hadron machine. These measurements vindicated the tree level predictions of the Standard Model. The new generation of hadron collider machines now have data of such precision that the electroweak measurements are probing the quantum corrections to the Standard Model. The importance of these quantum corrections was recognized in the award of the 1999 Nobel Price. These corrections are being tested by a wide variety of measurements ranging from atomic parity violation in cesium to precision measurements at the Z pole and above in e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} collisions. In this article, the latest experimental electroweak data from hadron machines is reviewed. The author has taken a broad definition of a hadron machine to include the results from NuTeV ({nu}N collisions) and HERA (ep collisions) as well as the results of the Tevatron (p{bar p} collisions). This is not an exhaustive survey of all results, but a summary of the new results of the past year and in particular those results which have an influence on the indirect determination of the Higgs mass. This article will cover the …
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Lancaster, Mark
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-temperature batteries for geothermal and oil/gas borehole applications (open access)

High-temperature batteries for geothermal and oil/gas borehole applications

A literature survey and technical evaluation was carried out of past and present battery technologies with the goal of identifying appropriate candidates for use in geothermal borehole and, to a lesser extent, oil/gas boreholes. The various constraints that are posed by such an environment are discussed. The promise as well as the limitations of various candidate technologies are presented. Data for limited testing of a number of candidate systems are presented and the areas for additional future work are detailed. The use of low-temperature molten salts shows the most promise for such applications and includes those that are liquid at room temperature. The greatest challenges are to develop an appropriate electrochemical couple that is kinetically stable with the most promising electrolytes--both organic as well as inorganic--over the wide operating window that spans both borehole environments.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: GUIDOTTI,RONALD A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
New Phenomena I: Searches for new physics at CDF and D0 (open access)

New Phenomena I: Searches for new physics at CDF and D0

This paper summarizes results of recent searches for new phenomena with the CDF and D0 detectors at the Fermilab Tevatron. All results shown correspond to analysis from the past Run I data corresponding to a total integrated luminosity of {approximately} 100 pb{sup {minus}1} per experiment. In particular, the authors show new results from stop quark searches, neutral supersymmetric Higgs boson searches, a reinterpretation of the CDF second and third generation leptoquark searches in terms of leptoquark resonant production through technicolor interactions and, finally, they report a new D0 search for large extra space dimensions from high mass Drell-Yan dielectron and diphoton events.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Valls, Juan A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reexamination of spent fuel shipment risk estimates (open access)

Reexamination of spent fuel shipment risk estimates

The risks associated with the transport of spent nuclear fuel by truck and rail have been reexamined and compared to results published in NUREG-O170 and the Modal Study. The full reexamination considered transport of PWR and BWR spent fuel by truck and rail in four generic Type B spent fuel casks. Because they are typical, this paper presents results only for transport of PWR spent fuel in steel-lead steel casks. Cask and spent fuel response to collision impacts and fires were evaluated by performing three-dimensional finite element and one-dimensional heat transport calculations. Accident release fractions were developed by critical review of literature data. Accident severity fractions were developed from Modal Study truck and rail accident event trees, modified to reflect the frequency of occurrence of hard and soft rock wayside route surfaces as determined by analysis of geographic data. Incident-free population doses and the population dose risks associated with the accidents that might occur during transport were calculated using the RADTRAN 5 transportation risk code. The calculated incident-free doses were compared to those published in NUREG-O170. The calculated accident dose risks were compared to dose risks calculated using NUREG-0170 and Modal Study accident source terms. The comparisons demonstrated that both …
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Cook, J. R. & Sprung, Jeremy L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigations of chemical vapor deposition of GaN using synchrotron radiation (open access)

Investigations of chemical vapor deposition of GaN using synchrotron radiation

The authors apply synchrotron x-ray analysis techniques to probe the surface structure of GaN films during synthesis by metal-organic chemical vapor deposition (MOCVD). Their approach is to observe the evolution of surface structure and morphology in real time using grazing incidence x-ray scattering (GIXS). This technique combines the ability of x-rays to penetrate the chemical vapor deposition environment for in situ measurements, with the sensitivity of GIXS to atomic scale structure. In this paper they present examples from some of their studies of growth modes and surface evolution as a function of process conditions that illustrate the capabilities of synchrotron x-ray analysis during MOCVD growth. They focus on studies of the homoepitaxial growth mode, island coarsening dynamics, and effects of impurities.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Thompson, C.; Stephenson, G. B.; Eastman, J. A.; Munkholm, A.; Auciello, O.; Murty, M. V. R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal-sprayed, thin-film pyrite cathodes for thermal batteries -- Discharge-rate and temperature studies in single cells (open access)

Thermal-sprayed, thin-film pyrite cathodes for thermal batteries -- Discharge-rate and temperature studies in single cells

Using an optimized thermal-spray process, coherent, dense deposits of pyrite (FeS{sub 2}) with good adhesion were formed on 304 stainless steel substrates (current collectors). After leaching with CS{sub 2} to remove residual free sulfur, these served as cathodes in Li(Si)/FeS{sub 2} thermal cells. The cells were tested over a temperature range of 450 C to 550 C under baseline loads of 125 and 250 mA/cm{sup 2}, to simulate conditions found in a thermal battery. Cells built with such cathodes outperformed standard cells made with pressed-powder parts. They showed lower interracial resistance and polarization throughout discharge, with higher capacities per mass of pyrite. Post-treatment of the cathodes with Li{sub 2}O coatings at levels of >7% by weight of the pyrite was found to eliminate the voltage transient normally observed for these materials. Results equivalent to those of standard lithiated catholytes were obtained in this manner. The use of plasma-sprayed cathodes allows the use of much thinner cells for thermal batteries since only enough material needs to be deposited as the capacity requirements of a given application demand.
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: GUIDOTTI,RONALD A.; REINHARDT,FREDERICK W.; DAI,JINXIANG; XIAO,T. DANNY & REISNER,DAVID
System: The UNT Digital Library
A note on the transition from coupled plasticity and damage to decohesion in the evolution of solder failure (open access)

A note on the transition from coupled plasticity and damage to decohesion in the evolution of solder failure

A key issue of solder joint reliability is joint failure due to thermomechanical fatigue (TMF). TMF is caused by different coefficients of thermal expansion (CTEs) of the materials in an electronic package, combined with changes in the ambient temperature. Different CTEs result in cyclical strain in the assembly, and this strain is concentrated almost entirely in the solder because it is the most deformable portion of the package. Since solder alloy is at a significant fraction of its melting point even at room temperature, the cyclical strain enhances mass diffusion and causes dramatic changes in the alloy microstructure over time. As the microstructure changes and becomes coarser, the solder alloy weakens and eventually microcracks nucleate and grow in the joint, leading to component failure. the failure of solder joints is difficult to detect due to the inert nature of the electrical system. If the system is not on for extended periods then failures can not be observed. Therefore it is important to develop an advanced predictive capability which allows scientists and engineers to predict solder degradation and identify reliability problems in aging electronics early.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Chen, Zhen & Fang, Huei Eliot
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonintrusive ultrasonic sensor for monitoring and control of electroconsolidation{reg_sign} process. (open access)

Nonintrusive ultrasonic sensor for monitoring and control of electroconsolidation{reg_sign} process.

None
Date: September 25, 2000
Creator: Gopalsami, N.; Chien, H. T. & Goldberger, W. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization of the design for the LCLS undulator line. (open access)

Optimization of the design for the LCLS undulator line.

None
Date: August 25, 2000
Creator: Gluskin, E.; Vinokurov, N. A.; Dejus, R. J.; Emma, P.; Moog, E. R.; Nuhn, D. H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Evolution of Self-Organized Domain Structures: Pb on Cu(111) (open access)

The Evolution of Self-Organized Domain Structures: Pb on Cu(111)

None
Date: September 25, 2000
Creator: PLASS,RICHARD A.; LAST,JULIE A.; BARTELT,NORMAN C. & KELLOGG,GARY L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dual Porosity vs. Dual Permeability Models of Matrix Diffusion in Fractured Rock (open access)

Dual Porosity vs. Dual Permeability Models of Matrix Diffusion in Fractured Rock

None
Date: September 25, 2000
Creator: Ho, C.K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Minimum-time control of systems with Coloumb friction: Near global optima via mixed integer linear programming (open access)

Minimum-time control of systems with Coloumb friction: Near global optima via mixed integer linear programming

This work presents a method of finding near global optima to minimum-time trajectory generation problem for systems that would be linear if it were not for the presence of Coloumb friction. The required final state of the system is assumed to be maintainable by the system, and the input bounds are assumed to be large enough so that they can overcome the maximum static Coloumb friction force. Other than the previous work for generating minimum-time trajectories for non redundant robotic manipulators for which the path in joint space is already specified, this work represents, to the best of the authors' knowledge, the first approach for generating near global optima for minimum-time problems involving a nonlinear class of dynamic systems. The reason the optima generated are near global optima instead of exactly global optima is due to a discrete-time approximation of the system (which is usually used anyway to simulate such a system numerically). The method closely resembles previous methods for generating minimum-time trajectories for linear systems, where the core operation is the solution of a Phase I linear programming problem. For the nonlinear systems considered herein, the core operation is instead the solution of a mixed integer linear programming problem.
Date: April 25, 2000
Creator: Driessen, Brian & Sadegh, Nader
System: The UNT Digital Library
Superheavy dark Matter (open access)

Superheavy dark Matter

If there exists fields of mass of the order of 10{sup 13} GeV and large field inflation occurs, their interaction with classical gravitation will generate enough particles to give the universe critical density today regardless of their nongravitational coupling. In the standard dark matter scenarios, WIMPs are usually considered to have once been in local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE), and their present abundance is determined by their self-annihilation cross section. In that case, unitarity and the lower bound on the age of the universe constrains the mass of the relic to be less than 500 TeV. On the other hand, if the DM particles never attained LTE in the past, self-annihilation cross section does not determine their abundance. For example, axions, which may never have been in LTE, can have their abundance determined by the dynamics of the phase transition associated with the breaking of U(1){sub PQ}. These nonthermal relics (ones that never obtained LTE) are typically light. However, there are mechanisms that can produce superheavy (many orders of magnitude greater than the weak scale) nonthermal relics. Some of this is reviewed in reference 2. Although not known at the time when this talk was given, it is now known that …
Date: May 25, 2000
Creator: Chung, Daniel
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reciprocal-space and real-space analyses of compositional modulation in InAs/AlAs short-period superlattices (open access)

Reciprocal-space and real-space analyses of compositional modulation in InAs/AlAs short-period superlattices

The microstructure of lateral composition modulation in InAs/AlAs superlattices grown by MBE on InP is examined. The use of x-ray diffraction, TEM, AFM, and STEM to characterize the modulations is discussed. Combining the information from these techniques gives increased insight into the phenomenon and how to manipulate it. Diffraction measures the intensity of modulation and its wavelength, and is used to identify growth conditions giving strong modulation. The TEM and STEM analyses indicate that local compositions are modulated by as much as 0.38 InAs mole fraction. Plan-view images show that modulated structures consists of short ({approx_lt}0.2 {micro}m) In-rich wires with a 2D organization in a (001) growth plane. However, growth on miscut substrates can produce a single modulation along the miscut direction with much longer wires ({approx_gt}0.4 {micro}m), as desired for potential applications. Photoluminescence studies demonstrate that the modulation has large effects on the bandgap energy of the superlattice.
Date: January 25, 2000
Creator: Follstaedt, David M.; Lee, Stephen R.; Reno, John L.; Jones, Eric D.; Twesten, R. D.; Norman, A. G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A precise determination of the void percolation threshold for two distributions of overlapping spheres (open access)

A precise determination of the void percolation threshold for two distributions of overlapping spheres

The void percolation threshold is calculated for a distribution of overlapping spheres with equal radii, and for a binary sized distribution of overlapping spheres, where half of the spheres have radii twice as large as the other half. Using systems much larger than previous work, the authors determine a much more precise value for the percolation thresholds and correlation length exponent. The values for the percolation thresholds are shown to be significantly different, in contrast with previous, less precise works that speculated that the threshold might be universal with respect to sphere size distribution.
Date: January 25, 2000
Creator: RINTOUL,MARK DANIEL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Randomized metarounding (open access)

Randomized metarounding

The authors present a new technique for the design of approximation algorithms that can be viewed as a generalization of randomized rounding. They derive new or improved approximation guarantees for a class of generalized congestion problems such as multicast congestion, multiple TSP etc. Their main mathematical tool is a structural decomposition theorem related to the integrality gap of a relaxation.
Date: January 25, 2000
Creator: CARR,ROBERT D. & VEMPALA,SANTOSH
System: The UNT Digital Library