Partner
UNT Libraries Government Documents Department
13,996
Oklahoma Historical Society
7,707
UNT Libraries Special Collections
4,396
Texas Historical Commission
561
UNT Libraries
554
Dallas Museum of Art
366
UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections
333
Sterling Municipal Library
320
UNT Music Library
296
Abilene Christian University Library
218
145 More
Collection
Office of Scientific & Technical Information Technical Reports
13,004
Oklahoma Publishing Company Photography Collection
4,960
Texas Digital Newspaper Program
3,813
KXAS-NBC 5 News Collection
2,647
Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program
2,082
Tocker Foundation Grant
1,874
LGBT Collections
702
Jim Argo Collection
630
Abilene Library Consortium
546
THC National Register Collection
459
292 More
Serial/Series Title
NBC News Clips
730
The Baytown Sun
313
The Altus Times
312
Sapulpa Daily Herald
310
The Chickasha Daily Express
309
The Perry Daily Journal
309
Dallas/Fort Worth Black Living Legends
271
Dallas/Fort Worth Black Living Legends, 1995
233
The Oklahoma Daily
208
23rd Annual Texas Folklife Festival
192
708 More
Degree Department
Music
85
Department of Psychology
55
College of Music
32
Department of Counseling, Development and Higher Education
31
Chemistry
21
Department of Teacher Education and Administration
19
Department of Biological Sciences
14
Graduate Studies in English
13
Department of Chemistry
11
Department of Physics
10
49 More
Degree Discipline
Degree Level
Country
States
Year
Month
Results:
1 - 24 of
33,102
next
A 1.8 K test facility for superconducting RF cavities
To demonstrate the feasibility of superconducting RF technology for a high energy e{sup +}/e{sup {minus}} collider, a research and development program has begun with collaborators from Europe, Asia, and North America. The immediate goal of the R&D program is to build and operate a 50 meter-long linac at DESY with 1.3 GHz superconducting RF cavities at a temperature of 1.8 K - 2.0 K and an accelerating gradient of 15 MV/meter. The refrigeration for the test system at DESY initially will have a capacity of about 100 W at 1.8 K, distributed among three test cryostats. In a second step, refrigeration will be upgraded to 200 W at 1.8 K in order to supply the 50 meter test linac. This paper describes the cryogenics of this test system.
Date:
April 1, 1994
Creator:
Horlitz, G.; Knopf, U.; Lange, R.; Petersen, B.; Sellmann, D.; Trines, D. et al.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
1/12-Scale scoping experiments to characterize double-shell tank slurry uniformity: Test plan
Million gallon double-shell tanks (DSTs) at Hanford are used to store transuranic, high-level, and low-level wastes. These wastes generally consist of a large volume of salt-laden solution covering a smaller volume of settled sludge primarily containing metal hydroxides. These wastes will be retrieved and processed into immobile waste forms suitable for permanent disposal. The current retrieval concept is to use submerged dual-nozzle pumps to mobilize the settled solids by creating jets of fluid that are directed at the tank solids. The pumps oscillate, creating arcs of high-velocity fluid jets that sweep the floor of the tank. After the solids are mobilized, the pumps will continue to operate at a reduced flow rate sufficient to maintain the particles in a uniform suspension. The objectives of these 1/12-scale scoping experiments are to determine how Reynolds number, Froude number, and gravitational settling parameter affect the degree of uniformity achieved during jet mixer pump operation in the full-scale double-shell tanks; develop linear models to predict the degree of uniformity achieved by jet mixer pumps operating in the full-scale double-shell tanks; apply linear models to predict the degree of uniformity that will be achieved in tank 241-AZ-101 and determine whether contents of that tank will …
Date:
October 1994
Creator:
Bamberger, J. A. & Liljegren, L. M.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
1-Dimensional simulation of thermal annealing in a commercial nuclear power plant reactor pressure vessel wall section
The objective of this work was to provide experimental heat transfer boundary condition and reactor pressure vessel (RPV) section thermal response data that can be used to benchmark computer codes that simulate thermal annealing of RPVS. This specific protect was designed to provide the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) with experimental data that could be used to support the development of a thermal annealing model. A secondary benefit is to provide additional experimental data (e.g., thermal response of concrete reactor cavity wall) that could be of use in an annealing demonstration project. The setup comprised a heater assembly, a 1.2 in {times} 1.2 m {times} 17.1 cm thick [4 ft {times} 4 ft {times} 6.75 in] section of an RPV (A533B ferritic steel with stainless steel cladding), a mockup of the {open_quotes}mirror{close_quotes} insulation between the RPV and the concrete reactor cavity wall, and a 25.4 cm [10 in] thick concrete wall, 2.1 in {times} 2.1 in [10 ft {times} 10 ft] square. Experiments were performed at temperature heat-up/cooldown rates of 7, 14, and 28{degrees}C/hr [12.5, 25, and 50{degrees}F/hr] as measured on the heated face. A peak temperature of 454{degrees}C [850{degrees}F] was maintained on the heated face until the concrete wall …
Date:
November 1, 1994
Creator:
Nakos, J. T.; Rosinski, S. T. & Acton, R. U.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
2-D Tomography With Bolometry in DIII-D
We have installed a 48-channel platinum-foil bolometer system on DIII-D achieve better spatial and temporal resolution of the radiated power in diverted discharges. Two 24-channel arrays provide complete plasma coverage with optimized views of the divertor. We have measured the divertor radiation profile for a series of radiative divertor and power balance experiments. We observe a rapid change in the magnitude and distribution of divertor radiation with heavy gas puffing. Unfolding the radiation profile with only two views requires us to treat the core and divertor radiation separately. The core radiation is fitted to a function of magnetic flux and is then subtracted from the divertor viewing chords. The divertor profile is then fit to a 2-D spline as a function of magnetic flux and poloidal angle.
Date:
July 1, 1994
Creator:
Leonard, A. W.; Meyer, W. H.; Geer, B.; Behne, D. M. & Hill, D. N.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
3-D research transport codes at Los Alamos
We describe 3-D research transport codes which have been developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory over the last three years. Some simple example calculations are presented.
Date:
October 1, 1994
Creator:
Morel, J. E.; McGhee, J. M. & Walters, W. F.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
3-D subsurface modeling within the framework of an environmental restoration information system: Prototype results using earthvision
As a result of the DOE Oak Ridge Reservation (DOE-ORR) placement on the EPA Superfund National Priorities List in December of 1989, all remedial activities, including characterization, remedial alternatives selection, and implementation of remedial measures, must meet the combined requirements of RCRA, CERCLA, and NEPA. The Environmental Restoration Program, therefore, was established with the mission of eliminating or reducing to prescribed safe levels the risks to the environment or to human health and safety posed by inactive and surplus DOE-ORR managed sites and facilities that have been contaminated by radioactive and surplus DOE-ORR managed sites and facilities that have been contaminated by radioactive, hazardous, or mixed wastes. In accordance with an established Federal Facilities Agreement (FFA), waste sites and facilities across the DOE-ORR have been inventoried, prioritized, and are being systematically investigated and remediated under the direction of Environmental Restoration. EarthVision, a product of Dynamic Graphics, Inc., that provides three-dimensional (3-D) modeling and visualization, was exercised within the framework of an environmental restoration (ER) decision support system. The goal of the prototype was to investigate framework integration issues including compatibility and value to decision making. This paper describes the ER program, study site, and information system framework; selected EarthVision results …
Date:
December 31, 1994
Creator:
Goeltz, R. T. & Zondlo, T. F.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
3-D TECATE/BREW: Thermal, stress, and birefringent ray-tracing codes for solid-state laser design
This report describes the physics, code formulations, and numerics that are used in the TECATE (totally Eulerian code for anisotropic thermo-elasticity) and BREW (birefringent ray-tracing of electromagnetic waves) codes for laser design. These codes resolve thermal, stress, and birefringent optical effects in 3-D stationary solid-state systems. This suite of three constituent codes is a package referred to as LASRPAK.
Date:
July 20, 1994
Creator:
Gelinas, R. J.; Doss, S. K. & Nelson, R. G.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
A 3-D time-dependent unstructured tetrahedral-mesh SP{sub N} method
We have developed a 3-D time-dependent multigroup SP{sub n} method for unstructured tetrahedral meshes. The SP{sub n} equations are expressed in a canonical form which allows them to be solved using standard diffusion solution techniques in conjunction with source iteration, diffusion-synthetic acceleration, and fission-source acceleration. A computational comparison of our SP{sub n} method with an even-parity S{sub n} method is given.
Date:
October 1, 1994
Creator:
Morel, J. E.; McGhee, J. M. & Larsen, E. W.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
3-D Turbulent Particle Dispersion Submodel Development. Quarterly Progress Report No. 3, October 15, 1991--January 15, 1992
Many practical combustion processes which use solid particles, liquid droplets, or slurries as fuels introduce these fuels into turbulent environments. Examples include spray combustion, pulverized coal and coal slurry combustion, fluidized beds, sorbent injection, and hazardous waste incineration. The interactions of the condensed phases with turbulent environments have not been well described. Such a description is complicated by the difficulty of describing turbulence in general, even in the absence of particles or droplets. But the complications in describing the dispersion and reaction of the condensed phases in turbulent environments do not stem entirely or even primarily from the uncertainties in the description of the turbulence. Theoretical descriptions of the turbulent dispersion of particles and droplets are not well established, even when the characteristics of the turbulence are known. Several new theoretical descriptions of the turbulent dispersion of particles an droplets have proposed over the past five years. It is the purpose of this project to explore the potential of two of these theories for coupling with the other aspects of three-dimensional, reacting, turbulent, particle-laden systems to proved computational simulations that could be useful for addressing industrial problems.
Date:
September 1, 1994
Creator:
Smith, P. J.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
3-D turbulent particle dispersion submodel development. Quarterly progress report No. 4, January 15, 1992--April 15, 1992
Many practical combustion processes which use solid particles, liquid droplets, or slurries as fuels introduce these fuels into turbulent environments. Examples include spray combustion, pulverized coal and coal slurry combustion, fluidized beds, sorbent injection, and hazardous waste incineration. The interactions of the condensed phases with turbulent environments have not been well described. Such a description is complicated by the difficulty of describing turbulence in general, even in the absence of particles or droplets. But the complications in describing the dispersion and reaction of the condensed phases in turbulent environments do not stem entirely or even primarily from the uncertainties in the description of the turbulence. Theoretical descriptions of the turbulent dispersion of particles and droplets are not well established, even when the characteristics of the turbulence are known. It is the purpose of this project to develop two different particle dispersion submodels (one each for dilute and dense phases), and couple them with existing fluid-dynamic heat transfer and reaction chemistry models to provide computational simulations capable of addressing industrial problems.
Date:
September 1, 1994
Creator:
Smith, P. J.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
4 MW Fast Wave Current Drive Upgrade for DIII-D
The DIII-D program has just completed a major addition to its ion cyclotron range of frequency (ICRF) systems. This upgrade project added two new fast wave current drive (FWCD) systems, with each system consisting of a 2 MW, 30 to 120 MHz transmitter, ceramic insulated transmission lines and tuner elements, and water-cooled four-strap antenna. With this addition of 4 MW of FWCD power to the original 2 MW, 30 to 60 MHz capability, experiments can be performed that will explore advanced tokamak plasma configurations by using the centrally localized current drive to effect current profile modifications.
Date:
September 1, 1994
Creator:
Callis, R. W.; Cary, W. P. & Baity, F. W.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
5 MW pulsed spallation neutron source, Preconceptual design study
This report describes a self-consistent base line design for a 5 MW Pulsed Spallation Neutron Source (PSNS). It is intended to establish feasibility of design and as a basis for further expanded and detailed studies. It may also serve as a basis for establishing project cost (30% accuracy) in order to intercompare competing designs for a PSNS not only on the basis of technical feasibility and technical merit but also on the basis of projected total cost. The accelerator design considered here is based on the objective of a pulsed neutron source obtained by means of a pulsed proton beam with average beam power of 5 MW, in {approx} 1 {mu}sec pulses, operating at a repetition rate of 60 Hz. Two target stations are incorporated in the basic facility: one for operation at 10 Hz for long-wavelength instruments, and one operating at 50 Hz for instruments utilizing thermal neutrons. The design approach for the proton accelerator is to use a low energy linear accelerator (at 0.6 GeV), operating at 60 Hz, in tandem with two fast cycling booster synchrotrons (at 3.6 GeV), operating at 30 Hz. It is assumed here that considerations of cost and overall system reliability may favor …
Date:
June 1, 1994
Creator:
unknown
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
7 excerpts from "visual haïku"
Access:
Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community
Recording of Warren Burt's 7 excerpts from "visual haïku". "Visual Haiku" was a set of 16 computer pieces made for Robert Randall's "Visual Haiku" project in 1994. All the music was made on various computer systems using software such as Band-in-a-Box, Sound Globs, M, Cool Edit and so on. Each of the "Visual Haiku" used algorithmic processes to assemble music which loudly and proudly proclaimed bad taste and slavish obeisance to commercial musical models, in keeping with the neo-Warholian aesthetic of Randall's work. "Visual Haiku" appear on the 2 CD set "Randelli's Selection" - on Scarlet Aardvark CD No. 47 A and B, available from www.warrenburt.com.
Date:
1994
Creator:
Burt, Warren, 1949-
Object Type:
Sound
System:
The UNT Digital Library
8. annual national conference of black physics students -- A summary report
The primary goals of the conference were to: (1) Develop a peer/mentor network within the African-American physics community; (2) Inform African-American students in physics of the various academic and professional opportunities; and (3) Bring important academic, economic and political issues and developments in the field to the attention of the students. The conference program was designed to fulfill these goals and optimize the students` exposure to physics as a professional and its real-life applications in both industry and academia.
Date:
December 31, 1994
Creator:
Valk, H.S.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
An 8-meter-long coupled cavity RFQ linac
A model has been constructed of an 8-m-long high energy (7 MeV) Radio-Frequency Quadrupole (RFQ) to prove the concept of a resonantly coupled RFQ. The model consists of four 2-in-long RFQ segments resonantly coupled together. A small gap (3 mm) between the vane tips, at the segment joints, provides capacitive coupling. This model is of a RFQ designed for a proposed Los Alamos Accelerator Performance Demonstration Facility (APDF). The RFQ, as designed, will operate cw at 350 kHz and accelerate a 100-mA beam of protons to 7 MeV.
Date:
September 1, 1994
Creator:
Young, L. M.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
A 10 GHz BANDWIDTH, SINGLE TRANSIENT, DIGITIZED OSCILLOSCOPE WITH 20 GHz CAPABILITY
EG&G/EM has developed an oscilloscope with a {minus}3 dB bandwidth greater than 10 GHz. Its rolloff characteristics are such that single-transient data greater than 20 GHz may be captured. A demountable CCD camera records the oscilloscope trace and is provided with PC-compatible capture and data processing software. The capabilities of the oscilloscope, camera, and its processing software are described and examples of the system`s performance is shown.
Date:
January 24, 1994
Creator:
Hudson, C. L.; Kocimski, S. M.; Spector, J.; Thomas, J. B. & Woodstra, R. R.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
10{times} reduction imaging at 13.4nm
A Schwarzschild imaging system has been designed to achieve 0.1 {mu}m resolution in a 0.4 mm diameter field of view when operated at a center wavelength of 13.4 nm. A decentered aperture is located on the convex primary resulting in an unobstructed numerical aperture of 0.08 and a corresponding depth of field of {plus_minus} 1 {mu}m. The Schwarzschild imaging objective is part of a five-reflection system containing the laser plasma source (LPS), condensing optics, turning mirror and reflection mask as shown in Figure 1. Extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation is generated by impinging a laser beam onto a copper target. The plasma source is driven by a Lambda Physik PLX 250 KrF excimer laser emitting 0.6 Joule, 20 ns pulses at a 200 Hz maximum repetition rate. Measurements of the source indicate that the full-width-half-maximum diameter is less than 100 {mu}m.
Date:
August 1, 1994
Creator:
Tichenor, D. A.; Kubiak, G. D. & Malinowski, M. E.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
A 10 um Resolution Secondary Emission Monitor for Fermilab's Targeting Station
Improvement in focusing the proton beam onto the antiproton production target necessitates the development of a higher resolution beam profile monitor. Two designs for the construction of a multiwire profile mointor grid are presented. The first is a conventional strung and tensioned Ti wire design. The second is a photo etched Ti grid of wires bonded to a ceramic substrate. Both have a central wire spacing of 125 {mu}m. The completed beam profile monitors are designed to operate in a 120 GeV beam pulse of 5 x 10{sup 12} protons with a 1.5{mu}s duration and will be installed in late 1993.
Date:
January 1, 1994
Creator:
Hurh, P.; O'Day, S.; Dombrowski, R. & Page, T.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
The 12-GeV/c beam transfer and absorber lines for the Superconducting Super Collider
The beam optics of the 12-GeV/c proton beam transfer line between the Low Energy Booster (LEB) and the Medium Energy Booster (MEB) at the Superconducting Super Collider is presented. The beam is extracted from the LEB vertically and is injected into the MEB through a vertical Lambertson magnet and a horizontal kicker. The beamline has high flexibility for amplitude and dispersion function matching. Effects of various errors in the transfer line are studied, and a beam position correction scheme is proposed. The beam optics of the 12-GeV/c absorber line transporting the beam from the LEB to an absorber during the LEB commissioning is also presented.
Date:
August 1, 1994
Creator:
Mao, N.; McGill, J.; Gerig, R. & Brown, K.
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
13. international conference on the application of accelerators in research and industry. Final performance technical report
This report summarizes attendance at the conference, describes its session subjects and other activities, names its sponsoring organizations, and references where the papers published for it may be found (in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Vol. B 99 (1995)).
Date:
1994~
Creator:
unknown
Object Type:
Report
System:
The UNT Digital Library
E-23 (1994)
Photograph of Norman FD E-23. Photo taken at the 1994 OSFA parade in Midwest City.
Date:
1994
Creator:
unknown
Object Type:
Photograph
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History
24-th Order high temperature expansion for the 3-d Ising model
The authors present the series for the free energy and their estimate for the critical exponent {alpha}, as computed by a recursive bookkeeping algorithm on the CM5. They begin with a discussion of the algorithm to compute the High-Temperature expansion on finite 3-D Ising lattices.
Date:
December 1, 1994
Creator:
Glaessner, U.; Schilling, K.; Bhanot, G. & Creutz, M.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
25-ps neutron detector for measuring ICF-target burn history
We have developed a fast, sensitive neutron detector for recording the fusion reaction-rate history of inertial-confinement fusion (ICF) experiments. The detector is based on the fast rise-time of a commercial plastic scintillator (BC-422) and has a response < 25 ps FWHM. A thin piece of scintillator material acts as a neutron-to-light converter. A zoom lens images scintillator light to a high-speed (15 ps) optical streak camera for recording. A retractable nose cone positions the scintillator between 1 and 50 cm from a target. A simultaneously recorded optical fiducial pulse allows the streak camera time base to be calibrated relative to the incident laser power. Burn histories have been measured for deuterium-tritium filled targets with yields ranging between 10{sup 8} and 2 {times} 10{sup 13} neutrons.
Date:
May 2, 1994
Creator:
Lerche, R. A.; Phillion, D. W. & Tietbohl, G. L.
Object Type:
Article
System:
The UNT Digital Library
E-26 (1994)
Photograph of Norman FD E-26. Photo taken at the 1994 OSFA parade in Midwest City.
Date:
1994
Creator:
unknown
Object Type:
Photograph
System:
The Gateway to Oklahoma History