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A sendmail. cf scheme for a large network (open access)

A sendmail. cf scheme for a large network

Like most large networked sites our users depend heavily on the electronic mail system for both internal and off-site communications. Unfortunately the sendmail.cf file, which is used to control the behavior of the sendmail program, is somewhat cryptic and difficult to decipher for the neophyte. So, on one hand you have a highly visible, frequently used utility, and on the other hand a not-so-easily acquired system administration forte. Here is the sendmail topology of our site, what premises we based it on, and the parts of the sendmail.cf files which support the topology.
Date: August 14, 1991
Creator: Darmohray, T.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The shell model approach: Key to hadron structure (open access)

The shell model approach: Key to hadron structure

A shell model approach leads to a simple constituent quark model for hadron structure in which mesons and baryons consist only of constituent quarks. Hadron masses are the sums of the constituent quark effective masses and a hyperfine interaction inversely proportional to the product of these same masses. Hadron masses and magnetic moments are related by the assumption that the same effective mass parameter appears in the additive mass term, the hyperfine interaction, and the quark magnetic moment, both in mesons and baryons. The analysis pinpoints the physical assumptions needed for each relation and gives two new mass relations. Application to weak decays and recent polarized EMC data confirms conclusions previously obtained that the current quark contribution to the spin structure of the proton vanishes, but without need for the questionable assumption of SU(3) symmetry relating hyperon decays and proton structure. SU(3) symmetry breaking is clarified. 24 refs.
Date: August 14, 1989
Creator: Lipkin, H.J. (Weizmann Inst. of Science, Rehovoth (Israel). Dept. of Nuclear Physics)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Complexity and Synchronization (open access)

Complexity and Synchronization

This article discusses complexity and synchronization in decision making and information transmission.
Date: August 14, 2009
Creator: Turalska, Malgorzata; Lukovic, Mirko; West, Bruce J. & Grigolini, Paolo
System: The UNT Digital Library
SQUID-Detected Magnetic Resonance Imaging in MicroteslaFields (open access)

SQUID-Detected Magnetic Resonance Imaging in MicroteslaFields

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has developed into a powerful clinical tool for imaging the human body (1). This technique is based on nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) of protons (2, 3) in a static magnetic field B{sub 0}. An applied radiofrequency pulse causes the protons to precess about B{sub 0} at their Larmor frequency {nu}{sub 0} = ({gamma}/2{pi})B{sub 0}, where {gamma} is the gyromagnetic ratio; {gamma}/2{pi} = 42.58 MHz/tesla. The precessing protons generate an oscillating magnetic field and hence a voltage in a nearby coil that is amplified and recorded. The application of three-dimensional magnetic field gradients specifies a unique magnetic field and thus an NMR frequency in each voxel of the subject, so that with appropriate encoding of the signals one can acquire a complete image (4). Most clinical MRI systems involve magnetic fields generated by superconducting magnets, and the current trend is to higher magnetic fields than the widely used 1.5-T systems (5). Nonetheless, there is ongoing interest in the development of less expensive imagers operating at lower fields. Commercially available 0.2-T systems based on permanent magnets offer both lower cost and a more open access than their higher-field counterparts, at the expense of signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) and spatial resolution. …
Date: August 14, 2006
Creator: Moessle, Michael; Hatridge, Michael & Clarke, John
System: The UNT Digital Library
Holographic optical elements for the extreme-ultravioletregime (open access)

Holographic optical elements for the extreme-ultravioletregime

As the development of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography progresses, interest grows in the extension of traditional optical components to the EUV regime. The strong absorption of EUV by most materials and its extremely short wavelength, however, makes it very difficult to implement many components that are commonplace in the longer wavelength regimes. One such component is the diffractive optical element used, for example, in illumination systems to efficiently generate modified pupil fills. Here we demonstrate the fabrication and characterization of EUV binary phase-only computer-generated holograms allowing arbitrary far-field diffraction patterns to be generated.
Date: August 14, 2006
Creator: Naulleau, Patrick P.; Salmassi, Farhad; Gullikson, Eric M. & Anderson, Erik H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The National Ignition Facility and the Golden Age of High Energy Density Science (open access)

The National Ignition Facility and the Golden Age of High Energy Density Science

The National Ignition Facility (NIF) is a 192-beam Nd:glass laser facility being constructed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) to conduct research in inertial confinement fusion (ICF) and high energy density (HED) science. When completed, NIF will produce 1.8 MJ, 500 TW of ultraviolet light, making it the world's largest and highest-energy laser system. The NIF is poised to become the world's preeminent facility for conducting ICF and fusion energy research and for studying matter at extreme densities and temperatures.
Date: August 14, 2007
Creator: Moses, Edward
System: The UNT Digital Library
Amplitude variations on the Extreme Adaptive Optics testbed (open access)

Amplitude variations on the Extreme Adaptive Optics testbed

High-contrast adaptive optics systems, such as those needed to image extrasolar planets, are known to require excellent wavefront control and diffraction suppression. At the Laboratory for Adaptive Optics on the Extreme Adaptive Optics testbed, we have already demonstrated wavefront control of better than 1 nm rms within controllable spatial frequencies. Corresponding contrast measurements, however, are limited by amplitude variations, including those introduced by the micro-electrical-mechanical-systems (MEMS) deformable mirror. Results from experimental measurements and wave optic simulations of amplitude variations on the ExAO testbed are presented. We find systematic intensity variations of about 2% rms, and intensity variations with the MEMS to be 6%. Some errors are introduced by phase and amplitude mixing because the MEMS is not conjugate to the pupil, but independent measurements of MEMS reflectivity suggest that some error is introduced by small non-uniformities in the reflectivity.
Date: August 14, 2007
Creator: Evans, Julia; Thomas, Sandrine; Dillon, Daren; Gavel, Donald; Phillion, Donald & Macintosh, Bruce
System: The UNT Digital Library
Panofsky Agonisters: 1950 Loyalty Oath at Berkeley; Pief navigates the crisis (open access)

Panofsky Agonisters: 1950 Loyalty Oath at Berkeley; Pief navigates the crisis

In 1949-1951 the University of California was traumatized and seriously damaged by a Loyalty Oath controversy. Wolfgang K. H. Panofsky, a young and promising physics professor and researcher at Lawrence's Radiation Laboratory, was caught up in the turmoil.
Date: August 14, 2008
Creator: Jackson, John David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of the Beam Delivery System for the International Linear Collider (open access)

Design of the Beam Delivery System for the International Linear Collider

The beam delivery system for the linear collider focuses beams to nanometer sizes at its interaction point, collimates the beam halo to provide acceptable background in the detector and has a provision for state-of-the art beam instrumentation in order to reach the ILCs physics goals. This paper describes the design details and status of the baseline configuration considered for the reference design and also lists alternatives.
Date: August 14, 2007
Creator: Seryi, A.; Amann, J.; Arnold, R.; Asiri, F.; Bane, K.; Bellomo, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ultra-Intense-laser produced high-Z backlighters for Compton Radiography (open access)

Ultra-Intense-laser produced high-Z backlighters for Compton Radiography

None
Date: August 14, 2007
Creator: Tommasini, R
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detecting the limits of regulatory element conservation anddivergence estimation using pairwise and multiple alignments (open access)

Detecting the limits of regulatory element conservation anddivergence estimation using pairwise and multiple alignments

Background: Molecular evolutionary studies of noncodingsequences rely on multiple alignments. Yet how multiple alignmentaccuracy varies across sequence types, tree topologies, divergences andtools, and further how this variation impacts specific inferences,remains unclear. Results: Here we develop a molecular evolutionsimulation platform, CisEvolver, with models of background noncoding andtranscription factor binding site evolution, and use simulated alignmentsto systematically examine multiple alignment accuracy and its impact ontwo key molecular evolutionary inferences: transcription factor bindingsite conservation and divergence estimation. We find that the accuracy ofmultiple alignments is determined almost exclusively by the pairwisedivergence distance of the two most diverged species and that additionalspecies have a negligible influence on alignment accuracy. Conservedtranscription factor binding sites align better than surroundingnoncoding DNA yet are often found to be misaligned at relatively shortdivergence distances, such that studies of binding site gain and losscould easily be confounded by alignment error. Divergence estimates frommultiple alignments tend to be overestimated at short divergencedistances but reach a tool specific divergence at which they cease toincrease, leading to underestimation at long divergences. Our moststriking finding was that overall alignment accuracy, binding sitealignment accuracy and divergence estimation accuracy vary greatly acrossbranches in a tree and are most accurate for terminal branches connectingsister taxa and least …
Date: August 14, 2006
Creator: Pollard, Daniel A.; Moses, Alan M.; Iyer, Venky N. & Eisen,Michael B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spin observables for nucleon-nucleon elastic scattering at large momentum transfer (open access)

Spin observables for nucleon-nucleon elastic scattering at large momentum transfer

We discuss amplitudes for elastic nucleon-nucleon scattering at high energy. The helicity-conserving amplitudes are modeled using a combination of the quark-interchange and the Landshoff mechanisms of perturbative QCD. The relative normalization of these two sets of amplitudes involves a leading order form factor'' which we determine empirically. Our theoretically motivated amplitudes provide an economical description of a large body of existing data and make nontrivial predictions for spin observables. 8 refs., 4 figs.
Date: August 14, 1990
Creator: Ramsey, G.P. (Loyola Univ., Chicago, IL (USA). Dept. of Physics Argonne National Lab., IL (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics of multimuon events from fourth generation quarks at the SSC (superconducting super collider) (open access)

Characteristics of multimuon events from fourth generation quarks at the SSC (superconducting super collider)

Multimuon events can be a distinctive signature for pair production of t-quarks or 4th generation quarks at the SSC. In this paper we address aspects of the multimuon event topology relevant to detector design for the SSC. In particular, we discuss energy measurement, rapidity range, segmentation and the need for hadronic calorimetry in a dedicated muon detector.
Date: August 14, 1987
Creator: Baer, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of power-factor correction in the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade magnet power supply (open access)

Application of power-factor correction in the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade magnet power supply

The magnet power supply for the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade (TMX Upgrade) contains 24 groups of dc rectifiers that feed the water-cooled magnets. Each group consists of five or less rectifiers, connected in series. All 24 are current-regulating, using phase-controlled bilateral thyristors in the rectifier transformer primaries. The electric utility system must furnish reactive power to these phase-controlled thyristors as well as to the cmmutating diodes in the rectifier bridges.
Date: August 14, 1981
Creator: Corvin, W. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical simulation of secondary electron orbits near an electron beam propagating in a low pressure gas (open access)

Numerical simulation of secondary electron orbits near an electron beam propagating in a low pressure gas

A numerical simulation has been constructed to obtain a detailed, quantitative estimate of the electromagnetic fields generated in a recently-proposed collective accelerator scheme for electrons. The code treats the secondary electrons by particle simulation and the beam dynamics by a time-dependent envelope model. The simulation gives a fully relativistic description of secondary electrons moving in selfconsistent electromagnetic fields. The calculations are made using coordinates t, x, y, z for the electrons and t, ct-z, r for the axisymmetric electromagnetic fields and currents. Code results showing the axial electric field dependence on the configuration of the ultrashort U.V. laser pulse will be given. 4 refs., 4 figs.
Date: August 14, 1985
Creator: Teague, M. R. & Yu, S. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organic acid modeling and model validation: Workshop summary (open access)

Organic acid modeling and model validation: Workshop summary

A workshop was held in Corvallis, Oregon on April 9--10, 1992 at the offices of E S Environmental Chemistry, Inc. The purpose of this workshop was to initiate research efforts on the entitled Incorporation of an organic acid representation into MAGIC (Model of Acidification of Groundwater in Catchments) and testing of the revised model using Independent data sources.'' The workshop was attended by a team of internationally-recognized experts in the fields of surface water acid-bass chemistry, organic acids, and watershed modeling. The rationale for the proposed research is based on the recent comparison between MAGIC model hindcasts and paleolimnological inferences of historical acidification for a set of 33 statistically-selected Adirondack lakes. Agreement between diatom-inferred and MAGIC-hindcast lakewater chemistry in the earlier research had been less than satisfactory. Based on preliminary analyses, it was concluded that incorporation of a reasonable organic acid representation into the version of MAGIC used for hindcasting was the logical next step toward improving model agreement.
Date: August 14, 1992
Creator: Sullivan, T.J. & Eilers, J.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states (open access)

Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states

It is well known that any multimode positive definite quadratic Hamiltonian can be transformed into a hamiltonian of uncoupled harmonic oscillators. Based on this theorem, the multimode thermal squeezed coherent states are constructed in terms of density operators. Decoherence of multimode thermal squeezed coherent states in investigated via the characteristic function and it is shown that the decohered (reduced) states are still thermal squeezed coherent states in general.
Date: August 14, 1992
Creator: Yeh, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Infinite-mode squeezed coherent states and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics (phase-space-picture approach) (open access)

Infinite-mode squeezed coherent states and non-equilibrium statistical mechanics (phase-space-picture approach)

The phase-space-picture approach to quantum non-equilibrium statistical mechanics via the characteristic function of infinite- mode squeezed coherent states is introduced. We use quantum Brownian motion as an example to show how this approach provides an interesting geometrical interpretation of quantum non-equilibrium phenomena.
Date: August 14, 1992
Creator: Yeh, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Electronics for the ATF2 Interaction Point Region Beam Position Monitor (open access)

Development of Electronics for the ATF2 Interaction Point Region Beam Position Monitor

Nanometer resolution beam position monitors have been developed to measure and control beam position stability at the interaction point region of ATF2. The position of the beam has to be measured to within a few nanometers at the interaction point. In order to achieve this performance, electronics for the low-Q IP-BPM was developed. Every component of the electronics have been simulated and checked on the bench and using the ATF2 beam. We will explain each component and define their working range. Then, we will show the performance of the electronics measured with beam signal. ATF2 is a final focus test beam line for ILC in the framework of the ATF international collaboration. The new beam line was constructed to extend the extraction line at ATF, KEK, Japan. The first goal of ATF2 is the acheiving of a 37 nm vertical beam size at focal point (IP). The second goal is to stabilize the beam at the focal point at a few nanometer level for a long period in order to ensure the high luminosity. To achieve these goals a high resolution IP-BPM is essential. In addition for feedback applications a low-Q system is desirable.
Date: August 14, 2012
Creator: Kim, Youngim; U., /Kyungpook Natl.; Heo, Ae-young; U., /Kyungpook Natl.; Kim, Eun-San; U., /Kyungpook Natl. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tissue phenotype depends on reciprocal interactions between the extracellular matrix and the structural organization of the nucleus (open access)

Tissue phenotype depends on reciprocal interactions between the extracellular matrix and the structural organization of the nucleus

What determines the nuclear organization within a cell and whether this organization itself can impose cellular function within a tissue remains unknown. To explore the relationship between nuclear organization and tissue architecture and function, we used a model of human mammary epithelial cell acinar morphogenesis. When cultured within a reconstituted basement membrane (rBM), HMT-3522 cells form polarized and growth-arrested tissue-like acini with a central lumen and deposit an endogenous BM. We show that rBM-induced morphogenesis is accompanied by relocalization of the nuclear matrix proteins NuMA, splicing factor SRm160, and cell cycle regulator Rb. These proteins had distinct distribution patterns specific for proliferation, growth arrest, and acini formation, whereas the distribution of the nuclear lamina protein, lamin B, remained unchanged. NuMA relocalized to foci, which coalesced into larger assemblies as morphogenesis progressed. Perturbation of histone acetylation in the acini by trichostatin A treatment altered chromatin structure, disrupted NuMA foci, and induced cell proliferation. Moreover, treatment of transiently permeabilized acini with a NuMA antibody led to the disruption of NuMA foci, alteration of histone acetylation, activation of metalloproteases, and breakdown of the endogenous BM. These results experimentally demonstrate a dynamic interaction between the extracellular matrix, nuclear organization, and tissue phenotype. They further …
Date: August 14, 1998
Creator: Lelie'vre, S. A.; Weaver, V. M.; Nickerson, J. A.; Larabell, C. A.; Bhaumik, A.; Petersen, O. W. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The National Ignition Campaign: Status and Progress (open access)

The National Ignition Campaign: Status and Progress

None
Date: August 14, 2012
Creator: Moses, Edward
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation Studies of the X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Oscillator (open access)

Simulation Studies of the X-Ray Free-Electron Laser Oscillator

Simulations of the x-ray free-electron laser (FEL) oscillator are presented that include transverse effects and realistic Bragg crystal properties with the two-dimensional code GINGER. In the present cases considered the radiation divergence is much narrower than the crystal acceptance, and the numerical algorithm can be simplified by ignoring the finite angular bandwidth of the crystal. In this regime GINGER shows that the saturated x-ray pulses have 109 photons and are nearly Fourier-limited with peak powers in excess of 1 MW. Wealso include preliminary results for a four-mirror cavity that can be tuned in wavelength over a few percent, with future plans to incorporate the full transverse response of the Bragg crystals into GINGER to more accurately model this tunable source.
Date: August 14, 2009
Creator: Lindberg, R. R.; Shyd'ko, Y.; Kim, K. J. & Fawley, W. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fel Gain Length and Taper Measurements at Lcls (open access)

Fel Gain Length and Taper Measurements at Lcls

We present experimental studies of the gain length and saturation power level from 1.5 nm to 1.5 Angstroms at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). By disrupting theFEL process with an orbit kick, we are able to measure the X-ray intensity as a function of undulator length. This kick method is cross-checked with the method of removing undulator sections. We also study the FEL-induced electron energy loss after saturation to determine the optimal taper of the undulator K values. The experimental results are compared to theory and simulations.
Date: August 14, 2009
Creator: Ratner, D.; Fawley, W. M.; Brachmann, A.; Decker, F. J.; Ding, Y.; Dowell, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE SECOND STAGE OF FERMI@ELETTRA: A SEEDED FEL IN THE SOFT X-RAY SPECTRAL RANGE (open access)

THE SECOND STAGE OF FERMI@ELETTRA: A SEEDED FEL IN THE SOFT X-RAY SPECTRAL RANGE

The second stage of the FERMI FEL, named FEL-2, is based on the principle of high-gain harmonic generation and relies on a double-seeded cascade. Recent developments stimulated a revision of the original setup, which was designed to cover the spectral range between 40 and 10 nm. The numerical simulations we present here show that the nominal (expected) electron-beam performance allows extension of the FEL spectral range down to 4 nm. A significant amount of third harmonic power can be also expected. We also show that the proposed setup is flexible enough for exploiting future developments of new seed sources, e.g., high harmonic generation in gases.
Date: August 14, 2009
Creator: Allaria, E.; DeNinno, G. & Fawley, W. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library