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Towards a Sustainable Energy Balance: Progressive Efficiency and the Return of Energy Conservation (open access)

Towards a Sustainable Energy Balance: Progressive Efficiency and the Return of Energy Conservation

We argue that a primary focus on energy efficiency may not be sufficient to slow (and ultimately reverse) the growth in total energy consumption and carbon emissions. Instead, policy makers need to return to an earlier emphasis on"conservation," with energy efficiency seen as a means rather than an end in itself. We briefly review the concept of"intensive" versus"extensive" variables (i.e., energy efficiency versus energy consumption), and why attention to both consumption and efficiency is essential for effective policy in a carbon- and oil-constrained world with increasingly brittle energy markets. To start, energy indicators and policy evaluation metrics need to reflect energy consumption as well as efficiency. We introduce the concept of"progressive efficiency," with the expected or required level of efficiency varying as a function of house size, appliance capacity, or more generally, the scale of energy services. We propose introducing progressive efficiency criteria first in consumer information programs (including appliance labeling categories) and then in voluntary rating and recognition programs such as ENERGY STAR. As acceptance grows, the concept could be extended to utility rebates, tax incentives, and ultimately to mandatory codes and standards. For these and other programs, incorporating criteria for consumption as well as efficiency offers a path …
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Diamond, Rick; Harris, Jeff; Diamond, Rick; Iyer, Maithili; Payne, Christopher; Blumstein, Carl et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toward Fast Computation of Dense Image Correspondence on the GPU (open access)

Toward Fast Computation of Dense Image Correspondence on the GPU

Large-scale video processing systems are needed to support human analysis of massive collections of image streams. Video, from both current small-format and future large-format camera systems, constitutes the single largest data source of the near future, dwarfing the output of all other data sources combined. A critical component to further advances in the processing and analysis of such video streams is the ability to register successive video frames into a common coordinate system at the pixel level. This capability enables further downstream processing, such as background/mover segmentation, 3D model extraction, and compression. We present here our recent work on computing these correspondences. We employ coarse-to-fine hierarchical approach, matching pixels from the domain of a source image to the domain of a target image at successively higher resolutions. Our diamond-style image hierarchy, with total pixel counts increasing by only a factor of two at each level, improves the prediction quality as we advance from level to level, and reduces potential grid artifacts in the results. We demonstrate the quality our approach on real aerial city imagery. We find that registration accuracy is generally on the order of one quarter of a pixel. We also benchmark the fundamental processing kernels on the …
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Duchaineau, M; Cohen, J & Vaidya, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Soft X-ray Mirrors for the Linac Coherent Light Source (open access)

Soft X-ray Mirrors for the Linac Coherent Light Source

The Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) is a 0.15-1.5 nm wavelength free-electron laser (FEL) being constructed at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC) by a multi-institution consortium, including Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). One of LLNL's responsibilities involves the design and construction of two grazing-incidence mirror systems whose primary intent is to reduce radiation levels in the experimental halls by separating the FEL beam from unwanted high-energy photons. This paper discusses one of these systems, the Soft X-ray Offset Mirror System (SOMS) that will operate in the wavelength range 0.62-1.5 nm (0.827-2.00 keV). The unusual properties of the FEL beam translate to stringent specifications in terms of stability, material choice and mirror properties. It also precludes using approaches previously developed for synchrotron light sources. This situation has led us to a unique mirror design, consisting of a reflective boron carbide layer deposited on a silicon substrate. In the first part of this paper, we discuss the basic system requirements for the SOMS and motivate the need for these novel reflective elements. In the second part of this paper, we discuss the development work we have performed, including simulation and experimental verification of the boron carbide coating properties, and the expected …
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Pivovaroff, M. J.; Bionta, R. M.; Mccarville, T. J.; Soufli, R. & Stefan, P. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Editorial (open access)

Editorial

The Tenth International Conference on Accelerator Mass Spectrometry (AMS-10) was held from September 5-10 at the University of California, Berkeley campus. The conference attracted 305 attendees from 26 countries who gave 144 platform presentations and presented a total of 170 posters. The conference opened with a special tribute to the late Roy Middleton, which was followed by a companion session on 'ion sourcery'. A plenary talk by Wally Broecker on his '53 years in the Radiocarbon Trenches', provided thought-provoking challenges to commonly accepted paradigms. A workshop on issues in the estimation of isotopic ratios and evaluations of activities from AMS measurements preceded the conference and a workshop on AMS in low-dose bioscience concluded it. Conference attendees had ample opportunity to sample local sights and mid-week excursions to the Napa Valley wine region and the Monterey Bay Aquarium were well attended. The social highlight of the conference was a dinner cruise on San Francisco Bay aboard the San Francisco Belle, which toured the bay on a clear evening and afforded spectacular views of the city front as well as the Bay and Golden Gate bridges. The proceedings of AMS-10 contain 140 peer-reviewed papers that detail recent developments in AMS technology and …
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Knezovich, J; Brown, T; Buchholz, B; Finkel, B; Guilderson, T; Kashgarian, M et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrostatic Modeling of Vacuum Insulator Triple Junctions (open access)

Electrostatic Modeling of Vacuum Insulator Triple Junctions

A comprehensive matrix of 60 tests was designed to explore the effect of calcium chloride vs. sodium chloride and the ratio R of nitrate concentration over chloride concentration on the repassivation potential of Alloy 22. Tests were conducted using the cyclic potentiodynamic polarization (CPP) technique at 75 C and at 90 C. Results show that at a ratio R of 0.18 and higher nitrate was able to inhibit the crevice corrosion in Alloy 22 induced by chloride. Current results fail to show in a consistent way a different effect on the repassivation potential of Alloy 22 for calcium chloride solutions than for sodium chloride solutions.
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Tully, L. K.; White, A. D.; Goerz, D. A.; Javedani, J. B. & Houck, T. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Detonation Propagation and Diffraction with Compliant Confinement (open access)

A Study of Detonation Propagation and Diffraction with Compliant Confinement

A previous computational study of diffracting detonations with the ignition-and-growth model demonstrated that contrary to experimental observations, the computed solution did not exhibit dead zones. For a rigidly confined explosive it was found that while diffraction past a sharp corner did lead to a temporary separation of the lead shock from the reaction zone, the detonation re-established itself in due course and no pockets of unreacted material were left behind. The present investigation continues to focus on the potential for detonation failure within the ignition-and-growth (IG) model, but now for a compliant confinement of the explosive. The aim of the present paper is two fold. First, in order to compute solutions of the governing equations for multi-material reactive flow, a numerical method of solution is developed and discussed. The method is a Godunov-type, fractional-step scheme which incorporates an energy correction to suppress numerical oscillations that would occur near the material interface separating the reactive material and the inert confiner for standard conservative schemes. The numerical method uses adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) on overlapping grids, and the accuracy of solutions is well tested using a two-dimensional rate-stick problem for both strong and weak inert confinements. The second aim of the paper …
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Banks, J; Schwendeman, D; Kapila, A & Henshaw, W
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flux analysis of central metabolic pathways in the Fe(III)-reducing organism Geobacter metallireducens via 13C isotopiclabeling (open access)

Flux analysis of central metabolic pathways in the Fe(III)-reducing organism Geobacter metallireducens via 13C isotopiclabeling

We analyzed the carbon fluxes in the central metabolism ofGeobacter metallireducens strain GS-15 using 13C isotopomer modeling.Acetate labeled in the 1st or 2nd position was the sole carbon source,and Fe-NTA was the sole terminal electron acceptor. The measured labeledacetate uptake rate was 21 mmol/gdw/h in the exponential growth phase.The resulting isotope labeling pattern of amino acids allowed an accuratedetermination of the in vivo global metabolic reaction rates (fluxes)through the central metabolic pathways using a computational isotopomermodel. The model indicated that over 90 percent of the acetate wascompletely oxidized to CO2 via a complete tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cyclewhile reducing iron. Pyruvate carboxylase and phosphoenolpyruvatecarboxykinase were present under these conditions, but enzymes in theglyoxylate shunt and malic enzyme were absent. Gluconeogenesis and thepentose phosphate pathway were mainly employed for biosynthesis andaccounted for less than 3 percent of total carbon consumption. The modelalso indicated surprisingly high reversibility in the reaction betweenoxoglutarate and succinate. This step operates close to the thermodynamicequilibrium possibly because succinate is synthesized via a transferasereaction, and its product, acetyl-CoA, inhibits the conversion ofoxoglutarate to succinate. These findings enable a better understandingof the relationship between genome annotation and extant metabolicpathways in G. metallireducens.
Date: August 13, 2007
Creator: Tang, Yinjie J.; Chakraborty, Romy; Martin, Hector Garcia; Chu,Jeannie; Hazen, Terry C. & Keasling, Jay D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Office of Educational Programs, 2008 Summer Internship Symposium and Poster Session (open access)

Office of Educational Programs, 2008 Summer Internship Symposium and Poster Session

None
Date: August 13, 2008
Creator: White,K.; Morris, M.; Osiecki, C. & Blackburn, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of \mathcal{B}(\tau^{-}\-->\bar{K^{0}}\pi^{-}\nu_{\tau}) Using the \babar Detector (open access)

Measurement of \mathcal{B}(\tau^{-}\-->\bar{K^{0}}\pi^{-}\nu_{\tau}) Using the \babar Detector

A preliminary measurement of the branching fraction {Beta}({tau}{sup -} {yields} K{sub S}{sup 0}{pi}{sup -}{nu}{sub {tau}}) is made using 384.6 fb{sup -1} of e{sup +}e{sup -} collision data provided by the PEP-II collider, operating primarily at {radical}s = 10.58 GeV, and recorded using the BABAR detector. From this they measure: {Beta}({tau}{sup -} {yields} {bar K}{sup 0}{pi}{sup -}{nu}{sub {tau}}) = (0.840 {+-} 0.004(stat) {+-} 0.023(syst))%. This result is the most precise measurement to date and is consistent with the world average.
Date: August 13, 2008
Creator: Wren, A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Observation of B0 -> chi_c0 K*0 and Evidence of B+ -> chi_c0 K*+ (open access)

Observation of B0 -> chi_c0 K*0 and Evidence of B+ -> chi_c0 K*+

The authors present the observation of the decay B{sup 0} {yields} {chi}{sub c0}K*{sup 0} as well as evidence of B{sup +} {yields} {chi}{sub c0}K*{sup +}, with an 8.9 and a 3.6 standard deviation significance, respectively, using a data sample of 454 million {Upsilon}(4S) {yields} B{bar B} decays collected with the BABAR detector at the PEP-II B meson factory located at the Standard Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). The measured branching fractions are: {Beta}(B{sup 0} {yields} {chi}{sub c0}K*{sup 0}) = (1.7 {+-} 0.3 {+-} 0.2) x 10{sup -4} and {Beta}(B{sup +} {yields} {chi}{sub c0}K*{sup +}) = (1.4 {+-} 0.5 {+-} 0.2) x 10{sup -4}, where the first quoted errors are statistical and the second are systematic. They obtain a branching fraction upper limit of {Beta}(B{sup +} {yields} {chi}{sub c0}K*{sup +}) < 2.1 x 10{sup -4} at the 90% confidence level.
Date: August 13, 2008
Creator: Aubert, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparisons of HVAC Simulations between EnergyPlus and DOE-2.2 for Data Centers (open access)

Comparisons of HVAC Simulations between EnergyPlus and DOE-2.2 for Data Centers

This paper compares HVAC simulations between EnergyPlus and DOE-2.2 for data centers. The HVAC systems studied in the paper are packaged direct expansion air-cooled single zone systems with and without air economizer. Four climate zones are chosen for the study - San Francisco, Miami, Chicago, and Phoenix. EnergyPlus version 2.1 and DOE-2.2 version 45 are used in the annual energy simulations. The annual cooling electric consumption calculated by EnergyPlus and DOE-2.2 are reasonablely matched within a range of -0.4percent to 8.6percent. The paper also discusses sources of differences beween EnergyPlus and DOE-2.2 runs including cooling coil algorithm, performance curves, and important energy model inputs.
Date: August 13, 2008
Creator: Hong, Tianzhen; Sartor, Dale; Mathew, Paul & Yazdanian, Mehry
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-Ray Microcalorimeters With Germanium Resistance Thermometers (open access)

X-Ray Microcalorimeters With Germanium Resistance Thermometers

We report on the current of our work on x-ray microcalorimeters for use as high resolution x-ray spectrometers. To maximize the x-ray collecting area and the signal to noise ratio, the total heat capacity of the device must be minimized. This is best achieved if the calorimeter is divided into two components, a thermal sensor and an x-ray absorber. The thermal sensor is a neutron transmutation doped (NTD) germanium resistor made as small as possible to minimize the heat capacity of the calorimeter. The thermistor can be attached to a thin x-ray absorber with large area and low heat capacity fabricated from superconducting materials such as niobium. We discuss results from our most recent studies of such superconducting absorbers and present the x-ray spectra obtained with these composite microcalorimeters at a temperature of 0.1 K. An energy resolution of 19 eV FWHM has been measured. 14 refs., 3 figs.
Date: August 13, 1990
Creator: Labov, S.; Silver, E.; Pfafman, T.; Wai, Y. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)); Beeman, J.; Goulding, F. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bragg Crystal Polarimeter for the Spectrum-X-Gamma Mission (open access)

Bragg Crystal Polarimeter for the Spectrum-X-Gamma Mission

We are designing a Bragg crystal polarimeter for the focal plane of the SODART telescope on the Spectrum-X-Gamma mission. A mosaic graphite crystal will be oriented at 45{degree} to the optic axis of the telescope, thereby preferentially reflecting those x-rays which satisfy the Bragg condition and have electric vectors that are perpendicular to the plane defined by the incident and reflected photons. The reflected x-rays will be detected by an imaging proportional counter with the image providing direct x-ray aspect information. The crystal will be {approx}50 {mu}m thick to allow x-rays with energies {ge}4 keV to be transmitted to a lithium block mounted below the graphite. The lithium is used to measure the polarization of these high energy x-rays by exploiting the polarization dependence of Thomson scattering. The development of thin mosaic graphite crystals is discussed and recent reflectivity, transmission, and uniformity measurements are presented. 8 refs., 11 figs., 1 tab.
Date: August 13, 1990
Creator: Holley, J.; Silver, E.; Ziock, K.P. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)); Novick, R.; Kaaret, P. (Columbia Univ., New York, NY (USA). Columbia Astrophysics Lab.); Weisskopf, M. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A time-frequency smoothing algorithm for cyclic spectral analysis (open access)

A time-frequency smoothing algorithm for cyclic spectral analysis

A hybrid smoothing algorithm is described that smooths first in time and then in frequency. The time-frequency smoothing algorithm is designed to compute estimates of the cyclic (cross) spectrum along lines of constant cycle frequency. A variation on the algorithm, one that incorporates the One Bit Spectral Correlation Algorithm (OBSCA), is also described. A simulation study is presented that evaluates the algorithms.
Date: August 13, 1992
Creator: Roberts, R. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stabilization of the external kink and other MHD issues. Summary report (open access)

Stabilization of the external kink and other MHD issues. Summary report

An MHD workshop entitled ``Stabilization of the External Kink and Other MHD Issues`` was held June 1993. This is a summary report of activities at that workshop, structured to respond to the three questions in the charge (letter from J. Willis). The experimental and theoretical status of these issues, and the R&D needs in each area, are addressed. We discuss the potential impact on the TPX and ITER programs of these issues. The workshop participants came from a broad and diverse range of institutions in the fusion program, including international participants. As a result, we believe the summary here reflects some consensus of the community on these very important program issues, and that the TPX and ITER programs will benefit from these discussions. The title of the workshop was chosen to indicate both our knowledge and our uncertainty of MHD phenomena limiting {beta} and causing disruptions in tokamaks. The purpose was to bring together theorists and experimentalist in order to assess our current understanding of the external kink instability at high {beta}, and to assess the potential for passive or active stabilization of the dominant modes. We also outlined the R&D needed for TPX and other future devices. Not only …
Date: August 13, 1993
Creator: Freidberg, J. P.; Goldston, R. J.; Jardin, S. C.; Neilson, G. H.; Rosenbluth, M. N.; Taylor, T. S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proton Beam Focusing and Heating in Petawatt Laser-Solid Interactions (open access)

Proton Beam Focusing and Heating in Petawatt Laser-Solid Interactions

It has recently been demonstrated that femtosecond-laser generated proton beams may be focused. These protons, following expansion of the Debye sheath, emit off the inner concave surface of hemispherical shell targets irradiated at their outer convex pole. The sheath normal expansion produces a rapidly converging proton beam. Such focused proton beams provide a new and powerful means to achieve isochoric heating to high temperatures. They are potentially important for measuring the equation of state of materials at high energy density and may provide an alternative route to fast ignition. We present the first results of proton focusing and heating experiments performed at the Petawatt power level at the Gekko XII Laser Facility at ILE Osaka Japan. Solid density Aluminum slabs are placed in the proton focal region at various lengths. The degree of proton focusing is measured via XUV imaging of Planckian emission of the heated zone. Simultaneous with the XUV measurement a streaked optical imaging technique, HISAK, gave temporal optical emission images of the focal region. Results indicate excellent coupling between the laser-proton conversion and subsequent heating.
Date: August 13, 2003
Creator: Snavely, R. A.; Gu, P.; King, J.; Hey, D.; Akli, K.; Zhang, B. B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization and Harmonization of Radiation Monitoring at Nuclear Facilities Through ISO 14001 Compliance (open access)

Optimization and Harmonization of Radiation Monitoring at Nuclear Facilities Through ISO 14001 Compliance

None
Date: August 13, 2004
Creator: Rauhut, K A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proposal for Reduction of Transverse Emittance of Bnl 200 Mev Linac. (open access)

Proposal for Reduction of Transverse Emittance of Bnl 200 Mev Linac.

BNL has a plan to upgrade the AGS proton beam from the current 0.14 MW to higher than 1.0 MW and beyond for a neutrino facility which consists of two major subsystems. First is a 1.45 GeV superconducting linac (SCL) to replace the Booster as injector for the AGS. Second is the performance upgrade for the AGS itself for the higher intensity and repetition rate. For high intensity proton accelerators, such as the upgraded AGS, there are very stringent limitations on uncontrolled beam losses. A direct effect of increased linac beam emittance is the halohail generation in the circulating beam. Studies show the estimated halohail generation in the beam for the present normalized RMS emittance of the linac beam is unacceptable. To reduce the transverse emittance of the 200 MeV linac, the existing radio frequency quadrupole linac (RFQ) has to be relocated closer to drift tube linac (DTL) tank 1 to meet the emittance requirement for AGS injection with low loss. This paper will present the various options of matching between RFQ and DTL, and chopping options in the low energy beam transport (LEBT).
Date: August 13, 2004
Creator: Raparia, D.; Alessij.; Beebe-Wang, J. & Weng, W. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability of Numerical Interface Conditions for Fluid/Structure Interaction (open access)

Stability of Numerical Interface Conditions for Fluid/Structure Interaction

In multi physics computations, where a compressible fluid is coupled with a linearly elastic solid, it is standard to enforce continuity of the normal velocities and of the normal stresses at the interface between the fluid and the solid. In a numerical scheme, there are many ways that the velocity- and stress-continuity can be enforced in the discrete approximation. This paper performs a normal mode analysis to investigate the stability of different numerical interface conditions for a model problem approximated by upwind type of finite difference schemes. The analysis shows that depending on the ratio of densities between the solid and the fluid, some numerical interface conditions are stable up to the maximal CFL-limit, while other numerical interface conditions suffer from a severe reduction of the stable CFL-limit. The paper also presents a new interface condition, obtained as a simplified charcteristic boundary condition, that is proved to not suffer from any reduction of the stable CFL-limit. Numerical experiments in one space dimension show that the new interface condition is stable also for computations with the non-linear Euler equations of compressible fluid flow coupled with a linearly elastic solid.
Date: August 13, 2009
Creator: Banks, J W & Sjogreen, B
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 Water & Aqueous Solutions (open access)

2010 Water & Aqueous Solutions

Water covers more than two thirds of the surface of the Earth and about the same fraction of water forms the total mass of a human body. Since the early days of our civilization water has also been in the focus of technological developments, starting from converting it to wine to more modern achievements. The meeting will focus on recent advances in experimental, theoretical, and computational understanding of the behavior of the most important and fascinating liquid in a variety of situations and applications. The emphasis will be less on water properties per se than on water as a medium in which fundamental dynamic and reactive processes take place. In the following sessions, speakers will discuss the latest breakthroughs in unraveling these processes at the molecular level: Water in Solutions; Water in Motion I and II; Water in Biology I and II; Water in the Environment I and II; Water in Confined Geometries and Water in Discussion (keynote lecture and poster winners presentations).
Date: August 13, 2010
Creator: Ben-Amotz, Dor
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hexagon Functions and the Three-loop Remainder Function (open access)

Hexagon Functions and the Three-loop Remainder Function

None
Date: August 13, 2013
Creator: Dixon, Lance J.; Drummond, James M.; von Hippel, Matt & Pennington, Jeffrey
System: The UNT Digital Library
ROCK DEFORMATION 2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, AUGUST 8-13, 2010 (open access)

ROCK DEFORMATION 2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, AUGUST 8-13, 2010

Creep in the crust and mantle is commonly considered a steady-state process. This view prevails despite the fact that earthquakes do not represent steady-state and at the base of the seismogenic zone, for example, the stresses that drive creep must vary with the earthquake cycle. The contribution of transient versus steady-state behavior is not easy to determine from naturally-deformed brittle or plastic rocks and our view of steady-state depends on whether we consider geological or shorter time-scales. Perhaps we avoid a non steady-state picture because we lack appropriate descriptive or quantitative tools. The aim of the 2010 Gordon Research Conference (GRC) in rock deformation is to explore what we know about non steady-state deformation and how we might advance our understanding through geological and geophysical field investigations, laboratory experiments and modeling. This will require an appraisal of the applicability of steady-state concepts as well as an exploration of transient behavior, in which processes and physical properties cycle between different states as might be the case during earthquake cycles, and transitions in behavior, where finite strain or changing environmental conditions lead to changes in processes and properties. Conference sessions will cover seven broad and interlinked topics. (1) What is steady state?; …
Date: August 13, 2010
Creator: Prior, David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Restoration Program Control Management System (open access)

Environmental Restoration Program Control Management System

Environmental Restoration managers need to demonstrate that their programs are under control. Unlike most industrial programs, the public is heavily involved in Environmental Restoration activities. The public is demanding that the country prove that real progress is being made towards cleaning up the environment. A Program Control Management System can fill this need. It provides a structure for planning, work authorization, data accumulation, data analysis and change control. But it takes time to implement a control system and the public is losing its patience. This paper describes critical items essential to the quick development and implementation of a successful control system.
Date: August 13, 1992
Creator: Duke, R. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Proliferation Risks of Fusion Energy: Clandestine Production, Covert Production, and Breakout (open access)

Proliferation Risks of Fusion Energy: Clandestine Production, Covert Production, and Breakout

Nuclear proliferation risks from fusion associated with access to weapon-usable material can be divided into three main categories: 1) clandestine production of fissile material in an undeclared facility, 2) covert production of such material in a declared and safeguarded facility, and 3) use of a declared facility in a breakout scenario, in which a state begins production of fissile material without concealing the effort. In this paper we address each of these categories of risk from fusion. For each case, we find that the proliferation risk from fusion systems can be much lower than the equivalent risk from fission systems, if commercial fusion systems are designed to accommodate appropriate safeguards.
Date: August 13, 2009
Creator: R.J. Goldston, A. Glaser, A.F. Ross
System: The UNT Digital Library