Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO98-025 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO98-025

Letter opinion issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Construction of section 3.05(c) of the Medical Patience Act (RQ-1042)
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Transcript of Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals Hearing: March 23, 1998 (open access)

Transcript of Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals Hearing: March 23, 1998

Transcript of a public hearing held by the Commission on Structural Alternatives for the Federal Courts of Appeals held March 23, 1998 in Atlanta, Georgia. This hearing includes testimony from judges and attorneys of the Eleventh Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals on the possible restructuring of the Eleventh Circuit Court.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: United States. Administrative Office of the United States Courts.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test report for the AY-102 ENRAF densitometer (open access)

Acceptance test report for the AY-102 ENRAF densitometer

On February 11, 1998, the AY-1 02, Riser 15E ENRAF Densitometer was acceptance tested per HNF-SD-WM-ATP-077. The test was performed at the Department of Energy`s Hanford Site, 200 East Area, building MO-407. The test validated the functionality of the Densitometer for use by project W-320, C-1 06 Retrieval. The purpose of the test procedure was to verify the functionality of the ENRAF Series 854 ATG densitometer. Typically, all ENRAF Series 854 ATGs are acceptance tested before transport to the field. The ATP, as performed for level gauges, sets default program values within the gauge and verifies the gauge`s force transducer calibration.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Huber, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test report for ENRAF control panel software (open access)

Acceptance test report for ENRAF control panel software

On March 5, 1998, the ENRAF Control Panel Software program was acceptance tested per HNF-1991 Revision 0. The test was performed at the Department of Energy`s Hanford Site, 200 West Area, building MO-281. The test validated the functionality of the software for use by project W-320, C-1 06 Retrieval. The purpose of the test procedure was to partially verify the functionality of the ENRAF Control Panel Software. The test cycled through the majority of functions within the program. Functions not tested will be tested per Operational Test Procedure OTP-320-01 0 at a later date. The following criteria was used to determine whether the software passed or failed the test. The gauge responds correctly (as described in vendor documentation, Reference 1) to all commands sent through the program. If gauge related error codes are encountered, they may be cleared either through the PET or the program. However, the program, while running, must provide some indication of all gauge related errors encountered. If any of the pass criteria are not met and cannot be immediately resolved. If the system crashes for reasons that are clearly related to program performance and cannot be immediately resolved.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Huber, J. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics results from polarized DIS. (open access)

Physics results from polarized DIS.

We have extracted polarized nucleon distributions from recent data at CERN, SLAC and DESY. The flavor-dependent valence and sea quark spin distributions are determined for each experiment. We take into account possible differences in the up and down sea distributions, and assume that the strange sea contribution is suppressed by mass effects. Physics results determined from different experiments are compared, including higher order corrections.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Ramsey, G. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Short range spin correlations in the CMR material La{sub 1.4}Sr{sub 1.6}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7}. (open access)

Short range spin correlations in the CMR material La{sub 1.4}Sr{sub 1.6}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7}.

The (La{sub 1{minus}} x Sr{sub x}){sub 3}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7} compounds are layered materials that exhibit higher magneto-resistance than the corresponding 3D manganite perovskites. Quasi-elastic neutron scattering on a polycrystalline sample of La{sub 1.4}Sr{sub 1.6}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7} shows that the spin fluctuation spectrum of the these layered CMR materials is qualitatively similar to those found in the perovskite manganites (La,Ca)MnO{sub 3}; their concentration, lifetime, and coherence length increase as T decreases to T{sub c}. Unlike the perovskites we find a lower spin-diffusion constant above T{sub c} of {approximately}5 meV {angstrom}{sup 2}.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Kelley, T. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 1996 Annual Report (open access)

Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, 1996 Annual Report

The Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics (IGPP) is a Multicampus Research Unit of the University of California (UC). IGPP was founded in 1946 at UC Los Angeles with a charter to further research in the earth and planetary sciences and in related fields. The Institute now has branches at UC campuses in Los Angeles, San Diego, and Riverside, and at Los Alamos and Lawrence Livermore national laboratories. The University-wide IGPP has played an important role in establishing interdisciplinary research in the earth and planetary sciences. For example, IGPP was instrumental in founding the fields of physical oceanography and space physics, which at the time fell between the cracks of established university departments. Because of its multicampus orientation, IGPP has sponsored important interinstitutional consortia in the earth and planetary sciences. Each of the five branches has a somewhat different intellectual emphasis as a result of the interplay between strengths of campus departments and Laboratory programs. The IGPP branch at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) was approved by the Regents of the University of California in 1982. IGPP-LLNL emphasizes research in seismology, geochemistry, cosmochemistry, and astrophysics. It provides a venue for studying the fundamental aspects of these fields, thereby complementing LLNL …
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Ryerson, F. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
U.N. Reform in the 1997 General Assembly (open access)

U.N. Reform in the 1997 General Assembly

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sponsorship and Cosponsorship of Senate Bills (open access)

Sponsorship and Cosponsorship of Senate Bills

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Frequency Interactions to Explain Madden Julian Oscillations and Intra Seasonal Oscillations. (open access)

Frequency Interactions to Explain Madden Julian Oscillations and Intra Seasonal Oscillations.

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Barr-Kumarakulasinghe, S. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gms-5 Ir and Visible Imagery for November 1996-February 1997 From the Arm External Data Center. (open access)

Gms-5 Ir and Visible Imagery for November 1996-February 1997 From the Arm External Data Center.

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Barr-Kumarakulasinghe, S. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Functional Categories of the Federal Budget (open access)

Functional Categories of the Federal Budget

This report discusses the functional categories, which provide a broad statement of budget priorities and facilitate the analysis of trends in related programs regardless of the type of financial transaction or agency organization.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Heniff, Bill, Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project W-320, 241-C-106 waste retrieval spare parts list (open access)

Project W-320, 241-C-106 waste retrieval spare parts list

Spare parts for equipment installed in the tank dome space or pump or valve pits should not be inventoried onsite due to the extensive, time-consuming work package planning, personnel/equipment mobilization, and funding requirements that are prerequisites to any repair or replacement. These issues provide adequate time to procure parts from offsite sources. All parts listed in this inventory can either be stocked in the DynCorp Tri-Cities Services, Inc., 2101-M Warehouse, or are available from the vendor/manufacturer.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Hays, W.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scalable pattern recognition for large-scale scientific data mining (open access)

Scalable pattern recognition for large-scale scientific data mining

Our ability to generate data far outstrips our ability to explore and understand it. The true value of this data lies not in its final size or complexity, but rather in our ability to exploit the data to achieve scientific goals. The data generated by programs such as ASCI have such a large scale that it is impractical to manually analyze, explore, and understand it. As a result, useful information is overlooked, and the potential benefits of increased computational and data gathering capabilities are only partially realized. The difficulties that will be faced by ASCI applications in the near future are foreshadowed by the challenges currently facing astrophysicists in making full use of the data they have collected over the years. For example, among other difficulties, astrophysicists have expressed concern that the sheer size of their data restricts them to looking at very small, narrow portions at any one time. This narrow focus has resulted in the loss of ``serendipitous`` discoveries which have been so vital to progress in the area in the past. To solve this problem, a new generation of computational tools and techniques is needed to help automate the exploration and management of large scientific data. This …
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Kamath, C. & Musick, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical review of the SWELL product. Second quarterly progress report (open access)

Technical review of the SWELL product. Second quarterly progress report

This progress report describes design and marketing efforts made to reduce the cost of the product, and reassess its market potential in light of reduced manufacturing costs and modified design. Marketing has looked at applications in agriculture, the turf grass industry, and golf coarse applications. The new controller offers energy efficiency in control of valves and minimization of costs associated with hard wired systems.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Alexanian, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technologies for water resources management: an integrated approach to manage global and regional water resources (open access)

Technologies for water resources management: an integrated approach to manage global and regional water resources

Recent droughts in California have highlighted and refocused attention on the problem of providing reliable sources of water to sustain the State`s future economic development. Specific elements of concern include not only the stability and availability of future water supplies in the State, but also how current surface and groundwater storage and distribution systems may be more effectively managed and upgraded, how treated wastewater may be more widely recycled, and how legislative and regulatory processes may be used or modified to address conflicts between advocates of urban growth, industrial, agricultural, and environmental concerns. California is not alone with respect to these issues. They are clearly relevant throughout the West, and are becoming more so in other parts of the US. They have become increasingly important in developing and highly populated nations such as China, India, and Mexico. They are critically important in the Middle East and Southeast Asia, especially as they relate to regional stability and security issues. Indeed, in almost all cases, there are underlying themes of `reliability` and `sustainability` that pertain to the assurance of current and future water supplies, as well as a broader set of `stability` and `security` issues that relate to these assurances--or lack thereof--to …
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Tao, W. C., LLNL
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ON THE INSTABILITY OF TROPICAL WESTERN PACIFIC WARM POOL DURING THE BOREAL WINTER AND SPRING (open access)

ON THE INSTABILITY OF TROPICAL WESTERN PACIFIC WARM POOL DURING THE BOREAL WINTER AND SPRING

A source of instability in the western Pacific warm pool is shown to be due to sea surface elevation variations caused by changes in the zonal sea-surface temperature (SST) gradient and the changes in the Pacific Ocean basin length in relation to the warm pool latitudinal location. The variation of the sea-surface elevation is measured by using the thermocline depth response calculated from a two-layer ocean. The warm pool is shown to be barely at equilibrium during the boreal late winter and early spring by comparing the measured thermocline at 110{degree}W, 0{degree}E with the calculated thermocline depth. Based on this analysis, a failure or reversal of the climatological zonal winds are apparently not a necessary precursor for the instability of the warm pool and initiation of a warm event. A warm event can be initiated by an increase in the size of the warm pool and/or an increase in zonal SST differences during the boreal/winter spring. This mechanism could be an alternate mechanism for El-Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) dynamics to that postulated by Bjeknes (1969).
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Barr-Kumarakulasinghe, S. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SURFACE CHARACTERIZATION DATA FOR THE ARM CART SITES. (open access)

SURFACE CHARACTERIZATION DATA FOR THE ARM CART SITES.

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: CIALELLA,A.T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
LIGA-fabricated compact mm-wave linear accelerator cavities. (open access)

LIGA-fabricated compact mm-wave linear accelerator cavities.

Millimeter-wave rf cavities for use in linear accelerators, free-electron lasers, and mm-wave undulatory are under development at Argonne National Laboratory. Typical cavity dimensions are in the 1000 mm range, and the overall length of the accelerator structure, which consists of 30-100 cavities, is about 50-100 mm. An accuracy of 0.2% in the cavity dimensions is necessary in order to achieve a high Q-factor of the cavity. To achieve this these structures are being fabricated using deep X-ray lithography, electroforming, and assembly (LIGA). The first prototype cavity structures are designed for 108 GHz and 2p/3-mode operation. Input and output couplers are integrated with the cavity structures. The cavities are fabricated on copper substrates by electroforming copper into 1-mm-thick PMMA resists patterned by deep x-ray lithography and polishing the copper down to the desired thickness. These are fabricated separately and subsequently assembled with precision spacing and alignment using microspheres, optical fibers, or microfabricated spacers/alignment pieces. Details of the fabrication process, alignment, and assembly work are presented in here.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Song, J.J.; Bajikar, S.S.; DeCarlo, F.; Kang, Y.W.; Kustom, R.L.; Mancini, D.C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
INTEGRATION OF MGDS DESIGN INTO THE LICENSING PROCESS (open access)

INTEGRATION OF MGDS DESIGN INTO THE LICENSING PROCESS

None
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: United States. Department of Energy.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quantifying Hydrometeor Advection and the Vertical Distribution of Cloud Fraction Over the Sgp Cart Site (open access)

Quantifying Hydrometeor Advection and the Vertical Distribution of Cloud Fraction Over the Sgp Cart Site

A single column model (SCM) is, in essence, an isolated grid column of a general circulation model (GCM). Hence, SCMs have rather demanding input data requirements, but do not suffer from problems associated with balance of a GCM. Among the initial conditions that must be used to describe the initial state of the SCM column are the vertical profile of the horizontal wind components and the vertical profiles of cloud water and ice. In addition, the large-scale divergence and advective tendencies of cloud water and ice must be supplied as external parameters. Finally, the liquid and ice cloud amount as a function of height within the SCM column are required for model evaluation. The scale of the SCM column over which the initial conditions, external parameters, and model evaluation fields must apply is relatively large ({approximately}300 km). To quantify atmospheric structure on this scale, the ARM SGP CART site is located within the NOAA wind profiler network and has boundary and extended measurement facilities in an area compatible with the scale requirements of SCMs. Over an area this size, however, there is often rich mesoscale structure. This mesoscale variability creates a sampling problem that can thwart even the most sophisticated …
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Miller, M. & Verlinde, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of Millimeter-Wave Cloud Radar Measurements for the Fall 1997 Cloud Iop (open access)

Comparison of Millimeter-Wave Cloud Radar Measurements for the Fall 1997 Cloud Iop

One of the primary objectives of the Fall 1997 IOP was to intercompare Ka-band (35GHz) and W-band (95GHz) cloud radar observations and verify system calibrations. During September 1997, several cloud radars were deployed at the Southern Great Plains (SGP) Cloud and Radiation Testbed (CART) site, including the full time operation 35 GHz CART Millimeter-wave Cloud Radar (MMCR), (Moran, 1997), the University of Massachusetts (UMass) single antenna 33GHz/95 GHz Cloud Profiling Radar System (CPRS), (Sekelsky, 1996), the 95 GHz Wyoming Cloud Radar (WCR) flown on the University of Wyoming King Air (Galloway, 1996), the University of Utah 95 GHz radar and the dual-antenna Pennsylvania State University 94 GHz radar (Clothiaux, 1995). In this paper the authors discuss several issues relevant to comparison of ground-based radars, including the detection and filtering of insect returns. Preliminary comparisons of ground-based Ka-band radar reflectivity data and comparisons with airborne radar reflectivity measurements are also presented.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Sekelsky, S. M.; Li, L.; Galloway, J.; Mcintosh, R. E.; Miller, M. A.; Clothiaux, E. E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reactor D and D at Argonne National Laboratory - lessons learned. (open access)

Reactor D and D at Argonne National Laboratory - lessons learned.

This paper focuses on the lessons learned during the decontamination and decommissioning (D and D) of two reactors at Argonne National Laboratory-East (ANL-E). The Experimental Boiling Water Reactor (EBWR) was a 100 MW(t), 5 MSV(e) proof-of-concept facility. The Janus Reactor was a 200 kW(t) reactor located at the Biological Irradiation Facility and was used to study the effects of neutron radiation on animals.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Fellhauer, C. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-dimensional ferromagnetic correlations above Tc in the Naturally layered CMR manganite La{sub 2-2x}Sr{sub 1+2x}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7} (x = 0.3-0.4). (open access)

Two-dimensional ferromagnetic correlations above Tc in the Naturally layered CMR manganite La{sub 2-2x}Sr{sub 1+2x}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7} (x = 0.3-0.4).

Neutron diffuse scattering in the form of rod-like features are observed in single crystals of the layered CMR material La{sub 2{minus}2x}Sr{sub 1+2x}Mn{sub 2}O{sub 7} (x=0.4,0.36), consistent with the presence of 2D ferromagnetic spin correlations. These diffuse features are observed over a wide temperature region, however, their coherence length does not appear to diverge at T{sub c}, although there is evidence of the development of three-dimensional correlations around ferromagnetic reflections of the 3D-ordered magnetic structure close to T{sub c}. Quasi-elastic neutron scattering on a ceramic sample of x = 0.3 shows that the lifetime of these ferromagnetic correlations increases at T {r_arrow} T{sub c}. They exhibit a spin-diffusion constant above T{sub c} of {approximately}5 meV {angstrom}{sup 2}, much lower than that reported for La{sub 2/3}Ca{sub 1/3}MnO{sub 3}. We discuss the relationship of these magnetic correlations to models of the ferromagnetic transition in CMR compounds.
Date: March 23, 1998
Creator: Argyriou, D. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library