Resource Type

An Automated Implementation of On-shell Methods for One-Loop Amplitudes (open access)

An Automated Implementation of On-shell Methods for One-Loop Amplitudes

None
Date: April 11, 2008
Creator: Berger, C.F.; Bern, Z.; Dixon, L.J.; Febres Cordero, F.; Forde, D.; Ita, H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SAVANNAH RIVER SITE CAPABILITIES FOR CONDUCTING INGESTION PATHWAY CONSEQUENCE ASSESSMENTS FOR EMERGENCY RESPONSE (open access)

SAVANNAH RIVER SITE CAPABILITIES FOR CONDUCTING INGESTION PATHWAY CONSEQUENCE ASSESSMENTS FOR EMERGENCY RESPONSE

Potential airborne releases of radioactivity from facilities operated for the U. S. Department of Energy at the Savannah River Site could pose significant consequences to the public through the ingestion pathway. The Savannah River National Laboratory has developed a suite of technologies needed to conduct assessments of ingestion dose during emergency response, enabling emergency manager at SRS to develop initial protective action recommendation for state agencies early in the response and to make informed decisions on activation of additional Federal assets that would be needed to support long-term monitoring and assessment activities.
Date: December 11, 2007
Creator: Hunter, C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Benchmarking and Equipment and Controls Assessment for a 'Big Box' Retail Chain (open access)

Benchmarking and Equipment and Controls Assessment for a 'Big Box' Retail Chain

The paper describes work to enable improved energy performance of existing and new retail stores belonging to a national chain and thereby also identify measures and tools that would improve the performance of 'big box' stores generally. A detailed energy simulation model of a standard store design was developed and used to: (1) demonstrate the benefits of benchmarking the energy performance of retail stores of relatively standard design using baselines derived from simulation, (2) identify cost-effective improvements in the efficiency of components to be incorporated in the next design cycle, and (3) use simulation to identify potential control strategy improvements that could be adopted in all stores, improving operational efficiency. The core enabling task of the project was to develop an energy model of the current standard design using the EnergyPlus simulation program. For the purpose of verification of the model against actual utility bills, the model was reconfigured to represent twelve existing stores (seven relatively new stores and five older stores) in different US climates and simulations were performed using weather data obtained from the National Weather Service. The results of this exercise, which showed generally good agreement between predicted and measured total energy use, suggest that dynamic benchmarking …
Date: June 11, 2008
Creator: Haves, Philip; Coffey, Brian & Williams, Scott
System: The UNT Digital Library
Response to Comment on "The National Ignition Facility Laser Performance Status" (open access)

Response to Comment on "The National Ignition Facility Laser Performance Status"

We appreciate Stephen Bodner's continuing interest in the performance of the NIF laser system. However, we find it necessary to disagree with the conclusions he reached in his comments [Appl. Opt. 47, XXX (2008)] on 'National Ignition Facility Laser Performance Status' [Appl. Opt. 46, 3276 (2007)]. In fact, repeated and ongoing tests of the NIF beamlines have demonstrated that NIF can be expected not only to meet or exceed its requirements as established in the mid-1990s in the document National Ignition Facility Functional Requirements and Primary Criteria [Revision 1.3, Report NIF-LLNL-93-058 (1994)], but also to have the flexibility that provides for successfully meeting an ever expanding range of mission goals, including those of ignition.
Date: December 11, 2007
Creator: Haynam, C A; Sacks, R A; Moses, E I; Manes, K; Haan, S & Spaeth, M L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Distributed Generation Investment by a Microgrid under Uncertainty (open access)

Distributed Generation Investment by a Microgrid under Uncertainty

This paper examines a California-based microgrid?s decision to invest in a distributed generation (DG) unit fuelled by natural gas. While the long-term natural gas generation cost is stochastic, we initially assume that the microgrid may purchase electricity at a fixed retail rate from its utility. Using the real options approach, we find a natural gas generation cost threshold that triggers DG investment. Furthermore, the consideration of operational flexibility by the microgrid increases DG investment, while the option to disconnect from the utility is not attractive. By allowing the electricity price to be stochastic, we next determine an investment threshold boundary and find that high electricity price volatility relative to that of natural gas generation cost delays investment while simultaneously increasing the value of the investment. We conclude by using this result to find the implicit option value of the DG unit when two sources of uncertainty exist.
Date: August 11, 2008
Creator: Marnay, Chris; Siddiqui, Afzal & Marnay, Chris
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uncertainty Detection for NIF Normal Pointing Images (open access)

Uncertainty Detection for NIF Normal Pointing Images

The National Ignition Facility at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory when completed in 2009, will deliver 192-beams aligned precisely at the center of the target chamber producing extreme energy densities and pressures. Video images of laser beams along the beam path are used by automatic alignment algorithms to determine the position of the beams for alignment purposes. However, noise and other optical effects may affect the accuracy of the calculated beam location. Realistic estimation of the uncertainty is necessary to assure that the beam is monitored within the clear optical path. When the uncertainty is above a certain threshold the automated alignment operation is suspended and control of the beam is transferred to a human operator. This work describes our effort to quantify the uncertainty of measurement of the most common alignment beam.
Date: September 11, 2007
Creator: Awwal, Abdul A.S.; Law, Clement & Ferguson, S. Walter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Determination of Apery-Like Identities forZeta(2n+2) (open access)

Experimental Determination of Apery-Like Identities forZeta(2n+2)

We document the discovery of two generating functions forzeta(2n+2), analogous to earlier work for zeta(2n+1) and zeta(4n+3),initiated by Koecher and pursued further by Borwein, Bradley andothers.
Date: May 11, 2005
Creator: Bailey, David H.; Borwein, Jonathan M. & Bradley, David M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fast Ignition relevant study of the flux of high intensity laser generated electrons via a hollow cone into a laser-imploded plasma (open access)

Fast Ignition relevant study of the flux of high intensity laser generated electrons via a hollow cone into a laser-imploded plasma

An integrated experiment relevant to fast ignition is described. A Cu doped CD spherical shell target is imploded around an inserted hollow Au cone by a six beam 600J, 1ns laser to a peak density of 4gcm{sup -3} and a diameter of 100 {micro}m. A 10 ps, 20TW laser pulse is focused into the cone at the time of peak compression. The flux of high-energy electrons through the imploded material is determined from the yield of Cu K{alpha} fluorescence by comparison with a Monte Carlo model and is estimated to carry 15% of the laser energy. Collisional and Ohmic heating are modeled. An electron spectrometer shows significantly greater reduction of the transmitted electron flux than is due to binary collisions and Ohmic potential. Enhanced scattering by instability-induced magnetic fields is suggested.
Date: October 11, 2005
Creator: Key, M.; Adam, J.; Akli, K.; Borgheshi, M.; Chen, M.; Evans, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mathematical Modeling of Cation Contamination in a Proton-exchange Membrane (open access)

Mathematical Modeling of Cation Contamination in a Proton-exchange Membrane

Transport phenomena in an ion-exchange membrane containing both H+ and K+ are described using multicomponent diffusion equations (Stefan-Maxwell). A model is developed for transport through a Nafion 112 membrane in a hydrogen-pump setup. The model results are analyzed to quantify the impact of cation contamination on cell potential. It is shown that limiting current densities can result due to a decrease in proton concentration caused by the build-up of contaminant ions. An average cation concentration of 30 to 40 percent is required for appreciable effects to be noticed under typical steady-state operating conditions.
Date: September 11, 2008
Creator: Weber, Adam & Delacourt, Charles
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutrino Physics with the IceCube Detector (open access)

Neutrino Physics with the IceCube Detector

IceCube is a cubic kilometer neutrino telescope under construction at the South Pole.The primary goal is to discover astrophysical sources of high energy neutrinos.We describe the detector and present results on atmospheric muon neutrinos from2006 data collected with nine detector strings.
Date: June 11, 2008
Creator: Collaboration, IceCube; Kiryluk, Joanna & Kiryluk, Joanna
System: The UNT Digital Library
Synthesis of cadmium telluride quantum wires and the similarity of their band gaps to those of equidiameter cadmium telluride quantum dots (open access)

Synthesis of cadmium telluride quantum wires and the similarity of their band gaps to those of equidiameter cadmium telluride quantum dots

High-quality colloidal CdTe quantum wires having purposefully controlled diameters in the range of 5-11 nm are grown by the solution-liquid-solid (SLS) method, using Bi-nanoparticle catalysts, cadmium octadecylphosphonate and trioctylphosphine telluride as precursors, and a TOPO solvent. The wires adopt the wurtzite structure, and grow along the [002] direction (parallel to the c axis). The size dependence of the band gaps in the wires are determined from the absorption spectra, and compared to the experimental results for high-quality CdTe quantum dots. In contrast to the predictions of an effective-mass approximation, particle-in-a-box model, and previous experimental results from CdSe and InP dot-wire comparisons, the band gaps of CdTe dots and wires of like diameter are found to be experimentally indistinguishable. The present results are analyzed using density functional theory under the local-density approximation by implementing a charge-patching method. The higher-level theoretical analysis finds the general existence of a threshold diameter, above which dot and wire band gaps converge. The origin and magnitude of this threshold diameter is discussed.
Date: July 11, 2008
Creator: Wang, Lin-Wang; Sun, Jianwei; Wang, Lin-Wang & Buhro, William E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
JAIDA, JAS3, WIRED4 and the AIDA tag library - Experience and New Developments (open access)

JAIDA, JAS3, WIRED4 and the AIDA tag library - Experience and New Developments

None
Date: April 11, 2008
Creator: Donszelmann, M.; Johnson, T.; Serbo, V. V. & Turri, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On the electronic configuration in Pu: spectroscopy and theory (open access)

On the electronic configuration in Pu: spectroscopy and theory

Photoelectron spectroscopy, synchrotron-radiation-based x-ray absorption, electron energy-loss spectroscopy, and density-functional calculations within the mixed-level and magnetic models, together with canonical band theory have been used to study the electron configuration in Pu. These methods suggest a 5f{sup n} configuration for Pu of 5 {le} n < 6, with n {ne} 6, contrary to what has recently been suggested in several publications. We show that the n = 6 picture is inconsistent with the usual interpretation of photoemission and x-ray absorption spectra. Instead, these spectra support the traditional conjecture of a 5f{sup 5} configuration in Pu as is obtained by density-functional theory. We further argue, based on 5f-band filling, that an n = 6 hypothesis is incompatible with the position of Pu in the actinide series and its monoclinic ground-state phase.
Date: October 11, 2006
Creator: Tobin, J G; Soderlind, P; Landa, A; Moore, K T; Schwartz, A J; Chung, B W et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contribution of Eu 4f states to the magnetic anisotropy of EuO (open access)

Contribution of Eu 4f states to the magnetic anisotropy of EuO

Anisotropic x-ray magnetic linear dichroism (AXMLD) provides a novel element-, site-, shell-, and symmetry-selective techniques to study the magnetic anisotropy induced by a crystalline electric field. The weak Eu2+ M4,5 AXMLD observed in EuO(001) indicates that the Eu 4f states are not rotationally invariant and hence contribute weakly to the magnetic anisotropy of EuO. The results are contrasted with those obtained for 3d transition metal oxides.
Date: September 11, 2008
Creator: Arenholz, E.; Schmehl, A.; Schlom, D.G. & van der Laan, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Computing Tools and Models for Accelerator Physics (open access)

Advanced Computing Tools and Models for Accelerator Physics

This paper is based on a transcript of my EPAC'08 presentation on advanced computing tools for accelerator physics. Following an introduction I present several examples, provide a history of the development of beam dynamics capabilities, and conclude with thoughts on the future of large scale computing in accelerator physics.
Date: June 11, 2008
Creator: Ryne, Robert & Ryne, Robert D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of Bunch Instabilities By the Nonlinear Vlasov-Fokker-Planck Equation (open access)

Study of Bunch Instabilities By the Nonlinear Vlasov-Fokker-Planck Equation

Instabilities of the bunch form in storage rings may be induced through the wake field arising from corrugations in the vacuum chamber, or from the wake and precursor fields due to coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR). For over forty years the linearized Vlasov equation has been applied to calculate the threshold in current for an instability, and the initial growth rate. Increasing interest in nonlinear aspects of the motion has led to numerical solutions of the nonlinear Vlasov equation, augmented with Fokker-Planck terms to describe incoherent synchrotron radiation in the case of electron storage rings. This opens the door to much deeper studies of coherent instabilities, revealing a rich variety of nonlinear phenomena. Recent work on this topic by the author and collaborators is reviewed.
Date: July 11, 2006
Creator: Warnock, Robert L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Protein-folding via divide-and-conquer optimization (open access)

Protein-folding via divide-and-conquer optimization

None
Date: July 11, 2004
Creator: Oliva, Ricardo; Crivelli, Silvia & Meza, Juan
System: The UNT Digital Library
BFKL resummation effects in gamma* gamma* to rho rho (open access)

BFKL resummation effects in gamma* gamma* to rho rho

We calculate the leading order BFKL amplitude for the exclusive diffractive process {gamma}*{sub L}(Q{sub 1}{sup 2}) {gamma}*{sub L}(Q{sub 2}{sup 2}) {yields} {rho}{sub L}{sup 0}{rho}{sub L}{sup 0} in the forward direction, which can be studied in future high energy e{sup +}e{sup -} linear colliders. The resummation effects are very large compared to the fixed-order calculation. We also estimate the next-to-leading logarithmic corrections to the amplitude by using a specific resummation of higher order effects and find a substantial growth with energy, but smaller than in the leading logarithmic approximation.
Date: August 11, 2005
Creator: Enberg, R.; Pire, B.; Szymanowski, L. & Wallon, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transverse momentum and centrality dependence of high-ptnon-photonic electron suppression in Au+Au collisions at $\sqrt{s_{NN}}$= 200 GeV (open access)

Transverse momentum and centrality dependence of high-ptnon-photonic electron suppression in Au+Au collisions at $\sqrt{s_{NN}}$= 200 GeV

The STAR collaboration at RHIC reports measurements of theinclusive yield of non-photonic electrons, which arise dominantly fromsemi-leptonic decays of heavy flavor mesons, over a broad range oftransverse momenta (1.2<pt<10 gevc) in pp, dAu, and AuAucollisions at sqrt sNN = 200 GeV. The non-photonic electron yieldexhibits unexpectedly large suppression in central AuAu collisions athigh pt, suggesting substantial heavy quark energy loss at RHIC. Thecentrality and \pt dependences of the suppression provide constraints ontheoretical models of suppression.
Date: July 11, 2006
Creator: Abelev, B. I.; Adams, J.; Aggarwal, M. M.; Ahammed, Z.; Amonett, J.; Anderson, B. D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of Biological Flow and Transport in Complex Geometries using Embedded Boundary / Volume-of-Fluid Methods (open access)

Simulation of Biological Flow and Transport in Complex Geometries using Embedded Boundary / Volume-of-Fluid Methods

None
Date: July 11, 2007
Creator: Trebotich, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supersymmetry with Small mu: Connections between Naturalness, DarkMatter, and (Possibly) Flavor (open access)

Supersymmetry with Small mu: Connections between Naturalness, DarkMatter, and (Possibly) Flavor

Weak scale supersymmetric theories often suffer from several naturalness problems: the problems of reproducing the correct scale for electroweak symmetry breaking, the correct abundance for dark matter, and small rates for flavor violating processes. We argue that the first two problems point to particular regions of parameter space in models with weak scale supersymmetry: those with a small {mu} term. This has an interesting implication on direct dark matter detection experiments. We find that, if the signs of the three gaugino mass parameters are all equal, we can obtain a solid lower bound on the spin-independent neutralino-nucleon cross section, {sigma}{sub SI}. In the case that the gaugino masses satisfy the unified mass relations, we obtain {sigma}{sub SI} {approx}&gt; 4 x 10{sup -46} cm{sup 2} (1 x 10{sup -46} cm{sup 2}) for fine-tuning in electroweak symmetry breaking no worse than 10% (5%). We also discuss a possibility that the three problems listed above are all connected to the hierarchy of fermion masses. This occurs if supersymmetry breaking and electroweak symmetry breaking (the Higgs fields) are coupled to matter fields with similar hierarchical structures. The discovery of {mu} {yields} e transition processes in near future experiments is predicted in such a framework.
Date: June 11, 2006
Creator: Kitano, Ryuichiro Kitano & Nomura, Yasunori
System: The UNT Digital Library
A multiplexed reverse transcriptase PCR assay for identification of viral respiratory pathogens at point-of-care (open access)

A multiplexed reverse transcriptase PCR assay for identification of viral respiratory pathogens at point-of-care

We have developed a nucleic acid-based assay that is rapid, sensitive, specific, and can be used for the simultaneous detection of 5 common human respiratory pathogens including influenza A, influenza B, parainfluenza type 1 and 3, respiratory syncytial virus, and adenovirus group B, C, and E. Typically, diagnosis on an un-extracted clinical sample can be provided in less than 3 hours, including sample collection, preparation, and processing, as well as data analysis. Such a multiplexed panel would enable rapid broad-spectrum pathogen testing on nasal swabs, and therefore allow implementation of infection control measures, and timely administration of antiviral therapies. This article presents a summary of the assay performance in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Limits of detection are provided for each targeted respiratory pathogen, and result comparisons are performed on clinical samples, our goal being to compare the sensitivity and specificity of the multiplexed assay to the combination of immunofluorescence and shell vial culture currently implemented at the UCDMC hospital. Overall, the use of the multiplexed RT-PCR assay reduced the rate of false negatives by 4% and reduced the rate of false positives by up to 10%. The assay correctly identified 99.3% of the clinical negatives, 97% of adenovirus, 95% …
Date: April 11, 2007
Creator: Letant, S. E.; Ortiz, J. I.; Tammero, L.; Birch, J. M.; Derlet, R. W.; Cohen, S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Asymmetric injection of cathodic arc plasma into a macroparticlefilter (open access)

Asymmetric injection of cathodic arc plasma into a macroparticlefilter

The cathodic arc plasmas produced by cathode spots usuallyinclude macroparticles, which is undesirable for many applications. Acommon way of removing macroparticles is to use curved solenoid filterswhich guide the plasma from the source to the substrate. In this work, anarc source with relatively small cathode is used, limiting the possiblelocations of plasma production. The relative position of cathodic arcsource and macroparticle filtered was systematically varied and thefiltered plasma current was recorded. It was found that axis-symmetricplasma injection leads to maximum throughput only if an anode aperturewas used, which limited the plasma to near-axis flow by scraping offplasma at larger angles to the axis. When the anode aperture was removed,more plasma could enter the filter. In this case, maximum filtered ioncurrent was achieved when the plasma was injected off-axis, namely offsetin the direction where the filter is curved. Such behavior wasanticipated because the plasma column in the filter is known to beshifted by ExB and centrifugal drift as well as by non-axis-symmetriccomponents of the magnetic field in the filter entrance and exit plane.The data have implications for plasma transport variations caused bydifferent spot locations on cathodes that are not small compared to thefilter cross section.
Date: February 11, 2004
Creator: Anders, Andre & MacGill, Robert A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial Self-Consistent 3D Electron-Cloud Simulations of the LHC Beam with the Code WARP+POSINST (open access)

Initial Self-Consistent 3D Electron-Cloud Simulations of the LHC Beam with the Code WARP+POSINST

We present initial results for the self-consistent beam-cloud dynamics simulations for a sample LHC beam, using a newly developed set of modeling capability based on a merge [1] of the three-dimensional parallel Particle-In-Cell (PIC) accelerator code WARP [2] and the electron-cloud code POSINST [3]. Although the storage ring model we use as a test bed to contain the beam is much simpler and shorter than the LHC, its lattice elements are realistically modeled, as is the beam and the electron cloud dynamics. The simulated mechanisms for generation and absorption of the electrons at the walls are based on previously validated models available in POSINST [3, 4].
Date: October 11, 2005
Creator: Vay, J; Furman, M A; Cohen, R H; Friedman, A & Grote, D P
System: The UNT Digital Library