Resource Type

Language

Equipoise-2: A Two-Dimensional, Two-Group, Neutron-Diffusion Code for the IBM-7090 Computer (open access)

Equipoise-2: A Two-Dimensional, Two-Group, Neutron-Diffusion Code for the IBM-7090 Computer

Equipoise-2, a two-dimensional, two-group neutron-diffusion code in R-Z geometry, has been programmed for the IBM-7090 computer. This code was designed to permit the running of large numbers of cases without requiring excessive machine time. Typical running times are of the order of one to three minutes per case for a 1000-point problems. The maximum number of mesh points that can be used is 1444.
Date: November 21, 1960
Creator: Fowler, T. B. & Tobias, Melvin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Servo System for Magnetic Controlled Constant Intensity Flat Top Beam Spill-Out (open access)

Servo System for Magnetic Controlled Constant Intensity Flat Top Beam Spill-Out

A uniform intensity flat top spill-out cannot be obtained by manual control for two reasons: 1. The horizontal density of the internal beam of the Cosmotron is far from uniform. As a result, a manually controlled linear motion of the internal beam into a target will result in a non-uniform spill-out intensity. 2. Stability requirements of the Cosmotron magnet voltage are not easily met without feedback because of inherent component stability. The proposed servo system will sense the external beam intensity, and correct the magnet voltage to keep this intensity constant. This servo must operate through the transfer function of the main ignitron system and the flat top filter. Both of those transfer functions impose special problems.
Date: November 21, 1961
Creator: Cottingham, J. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Review of the MPC's for Natural Thorium (open access)

A Review of the MPC's for Natural Thorium

The possible hazards from the refining and processing of thorium are of wide interest in atomic energy work. A review of the data available was made at Hanford in the last year to support consultations on the hazards of radioisotopes with other plants which may handle thorium. Since a major discrepancy between the published values of air MPC's and the metabolic data was noted, a review of the calculations on thorium was made in order to obtain the best estimates available. This document tabulates the pertinent data and applies them to the calculation of the MPC of thorium.
Date: November 21, 1955
Creator: Healy, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Sensitive Particle Ionization Chamber for Neutron Detection (open access)

A Sensitive Particle Ionization Chamber for Neutron Detection

Abstract. A particle ionization chamber of sensitivity sufficient to detect a source of one neutron per second has been used to measure the neutron yield from a thick target of sulfur upon bombardment with polonium alpha particles. The high-geometry boron trifluoride chamber used had an efficiency of 1.9 percent for fission neutrons. The neutron yield from a thick target of sulfur was measured by this instrument and found to be .0035 +- .0013 neutrons per million incident polonium alpha particles.
Date: November 21, 1944
Creator: Sturm, William J. & Dabbs, John
System: The UNT Digital Library
Argonne National Laboratory Biology Division Quarterly Report: August to October, 1946 (open access)

Argonne National Laboratory Biology Division Quarterly Report: August to October, 1946

From introductory paragraph: "This is the first quarterly report of the Biology Division of the Argonne National Laboratory. During the three-month period covered by this report, a large share of the time of many investigators has been spent in collating work done under the Biology Section of the Metallurgical laboratory for publication in the Plutonium Project Record. The large amount of work done under wartime pressure has made this, as in other divisions and projects, an important part of the transition to the post-war period."
Date: November 21, 1946
Creator: Bruss, Austin M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
[TDNA Membership Status Report] (open access)

[TDNA Membership Status Report]

A membership status report for the Texas Daily Newspaper Associations board of directors meeting to be held on November 30, 2006 at the Headliners Club in Austin, Texas. The document reports that TDNA expects to receive $405,405 in member dues for 2006, $389,925 from newspapers and $15,480 from associate members. Details of the dues are included in the document.
Date: November 21, 2006
Creator: Texas Daily Newspaper Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
[TNDA Legislative Report] (open access)

[TNDA Legislative Report]

A legislative report for the Texas Daily Newspaper Association board of directors meeting to be held on November 30, 2006. The report states that nothing happened to hurt the newspaper industry's position heading into the 80th Legislature in 2007.
Date: November 21, 2006
Creator: Texas Daily Newspaper Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
[TDNA Membership Services Info] (open access)

[TDNA Membership Services Info]

A membership services information document for the Texas Daily Newspaper Association board of directors meeting on December 1, 2005 at the Headliners Club in Austin, Texas. The document gives the association members details on what is currently happening within the organization and how the association can help the Texas newspapers.
Date: November 21, 2005
Creator: Texas Daily Newspaper Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
[TDNA Administrative Report, December 2005] (open access)

[TDNA Administrative Report, December 2005]

An administrative report for the Texas Daily Newspaper Association board of directors meeting December 1, 2005. The document serves as a mean to update the board of directors, as well as association members, what is happening within TDNA as well as explain future goals and accomplishes.
Date: November 21, 2005
Creator: Texas Daily Newspaper Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
[TDNA Introduction to the 2007 Budget Draft] (open access)

[TDNA Introduction to the 2007 Budget Draft]

An introduction to the 2007 budget draft for the Texas Daily Newspaper Association board of directors meeting to be held on November 30, 2006 at the Headliners Club in Austin, Texas. The report states that TDNA's surplus fund balance will exceed $100,000 and could reach $150,000 by the end of 2007, and the remaining document details the expected income and expenses for the association.
Date: November 21, 2006
Creator: Texas Daily Newspaper Association
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Minutes of the Regular Meeting Stonewall Democrats of Texas Executive Committee] (open access)

[Minutes of the Regular Meeting Stonewall Democrats of Texas Executive Committee]

Minutes of executive committee meeting of the Stonewall Democrats of Texas. Included in the descriptive text are briefings of various reports and bylaws and articles.
Date: November 21, 1999
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Lesbian and Gay Democrats of Texas] (open access)

[Lesbian and Gay Democrats of Texas]

Treasurer's report for the Board of Directors meeting on November 21, 1999, regarding the collection of membership dues.
Date: November 21, 1999
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Treasurer's Report Board of Directors Meeting (open access)

Treasurer's Report Board of Directors Meeting

Treasurer's report for the Board of Directors meeting on November 21, 1999. Included is a list of Lesbian/Gay Democrats of Texas members with contact information. There is also a list consisting of Lesbian/Gay Democrats of Texas 1998-2000 officers' contact information.
Date: November 21, 1999
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Minutes of the Regular Meeting Stonewall Democrats of Texas Executive Committee] (open access)

[Minutes of the Regular Meeting Stonewall Democrats of Texas Executive Committee]

Minutes of executive committee meeting of the Stonewall Democrats of Texas. Included in the descriptive text are briefings of various reports and bylaws and articles.
Date: November 21, 1999
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pelletizing/reslurrying as a means of distributing and firing clean coal (open access)

Pelletizing/reslurrying as a means of distributing and firing clean coal

The objective of this study is to develop technology that permits the practical and economic preparation, storage, handling, and transportation of coal pellets, which can be reslurried into Coal water fuels (CWF) suitable for firing in small- and medium-size commercial and industrial boilers, furnaces, and engines. The project includes preparing coal pellets and capsules from wet filter cake that can be economically stored, handled, transported, and reslurried into a CWF that can be suitably atomized and fired at the user site. The wet cakes studied were prepared from ultra-fine (95% -325 mesh) coal beneficiated by advanced froth-flotation techniques. The coals studied included two eastern bituminous coals, one from Virginia (Elkhorn) and one from Illinois (Illinois No. 6) and one western bituminous coal from Utah (Sky Line coal).
Date: November 21, 1991
Creator: Conkle, H. N.; Raghavan, J. K.; Smit, F. J. & Jha, M. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of BeO ceramic disks for thermally stimulated exoelectron dosimetry (open access)

Evaluation of BeO ceramic disks for thermally stimulated exoelectron dosimetry

BeO ceramic disks were evaluated for application as dosimeters for both penetrating and non-penetrating radiation. Response to penetrating radiation was measured as thermoluminescence (TL) and to non-penetrating radiation as thermally stimulated exoelectron emission (TSEE). Field experiments demonstrated that both TSEE and TL responses from BeO can monitor diverse radiation fields. BeO disks in a passive dosimeter were found to be sensitive to a lower exposure level of 100 pCi-day/liter of radon. The depth of the more active exoelectron layer in BeO was found to be 4 ..mu..m. A second less active, exoelectron layer extends to a depth of at least 16 ..mu..m.
Date: November 21, 1975
Creator: Bush, J. R.; Keeler, J. B. & Piret, J. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Programs to control motor vehicle emissions in the state of Texas (open access)

Programs to control motor vehicle emissions in the state of Texas

Report on reducing motor vehicle emissions in Texas. Contains recommendations, technical results, discussions, and estimations of emissions.
Date: November 21, 1980
Creator: Texas Air Control Board
System: The Portal to Texas History
An Examination of the Effects of Be Grain Size (open access)

An Examination of the Effects of Be Grain Size

During the WBS4 review almost a year ago in January, and in more recent discussions of needed capsule characterization, I was struck by three pieces of information related to machined Be capsules: (1) that the speed of sound (and perhaps other properties) in Be grains is markedly different in orthogonal directions, (2) that the grain size in the best refined bulk Be samples is 10 to 15 {micro}m, and that these grains in the best case are randomly oriented, and (3) that we are concerned about capsule homogeneity on the level of 1 part in 10{sup 4}, presumably over angular length scales corresponding to the maximum in the growth curve. It seems to me that the first two points might be inconsistent with the third, and this led me to attempt to model the effect of randomly oriented Be grains on the radially dependent properties of a capsule.
Date: November 21, 2000
Creator: Cook, R
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogen isotope exchange in metal hydride columns (open access)

Hydrogen isotope exchange in metal hydride columns

Several metal hydrides were shown to act as chromatographic media for hydrogen isotopes. The procedure was to equilibrate a column of hydride with flowing hydrogen, inject a small quantity of tritium tracer, and observe its elution behavior. Characteristic retention times were found. From these and the extent of widening of the tritium band, the heights equivalent to a theoretical plate could be calculated. Values of around 1 cm were obtained. The following are the metals whose hydrides were studied, together with the temperature ranges in which chromatographic behavior was observed: vanadium, 0 to 70/sup 0/C; zirconium, 500 to 600/sup 0/C; LaNi/sub 5/, -78 to +30/sup 0/C; Mg/sub 2/Ni, 300 to 375/sup 0/C; palladium, 0 to 70/sup 0/C. A dual-temperature isotope separation process based on hydride chromatography was demonstrated. In this, a column was caused to cycle between two temperatures while being supplied with a constant stream of tritium-traced hydrogen. Each half-cycle was continued until ''breakthrough,'' i.e., until the tritium concentration in the effluent was the same as that in the feed. Up to that point, the effluent was enriched or depleted in tritium, by up to 20%.
Date: November 21, 1977
Creator: Wiswall, R.; Reilly, J.; Bloch, F. & Wirsing, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Freshwater Flow Charts - 1995 (open access)

Freshwater Flow Charts - 1995

This report covers the following: (1) Explanation of Charts Showing Freshwater Flow in 1995; (2) Estimated U.S. Freshwater Flow in 1995 (chart); (3) Estimated California Freshwater Flow in 1995 (chart); (4) Estimated New Mexico Freshwater Flow in 1995 (chart); and (5) Web locations and credits.
Date: November 21, 2003
Creator: Kaiper, G V
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical Resistivity Modeling of a Permeable Reactive Barrier for Vista Engineering Technologies: Summary (open access)

Electrical Resistivity Modeling of a Permeable Reactive Barrier for Vista Engineering Technologies: Summary

We have performed a numerical modeling study that evaluated the capacity of electrical resistance tomography (ERT) to detect flaws in a passive reactive barrier (PRB). The model barrier is based on a real barrier described in the literature Slater and Binley (2003). It consists of highly conducting, granular iron emplaced within a trench. We assumed that the barrier was filled with a mixture of iron and sand, and that vertical electrode arrays were embedded within the barrier. We have considered (a) characterization and (b) monitoring scenarios. For (a), the objective is to use tomographs of absolute resistivity to detect construction flaws and inhomogeneities in iron distribution shortly after installation. For (b), the objective is to use resistivity change tomographs to detect iron oxidation and barrier plugging as a function of time. The study considered varying PRB hole sizes and locations. For any given model, a hole was located right next to and near the center of an electrode array (maximum sensitivity and resolution expected), at the center between two electrode arrays (moderate sensitivity and resolution), or near the bottom centered between the two arrays (minimum sensitivity and resolution). We also considered various hole sizes. The smallest hole considered had a …
Date: November 21, 2003
Creator: Ramirez, A L & Daily, W D
System: The UNT Digital Library
Challenges in Microbial Database Interoperability Interagency Microbe Project Working Group (open access)

Challenges in Microbial Database Interoperability Interagency Microbe Project Working Group

Currently, data of interest to microbial researchers is spread across hundreds of web-accessible data sources, each with a unique interface and data format. Researchers interact with a few of these sites when they analyze their data, but are not able to utilize the majority of them on a regular basis. There are two significant challenges that must be overcome to integrate this environment and allow researchers to efficiently perform data analysis across the entire set of relevant data, or at least a significant portion of it. The first is to provide consistent access to the large numbers of distributed, heterogeneous data sets that are currently distributed over the web. The second is to define the semantics of the data provided by the individual sites in such a way that semantic conflicts can be identified and, ideally, resolved. The first step in establishing any integrated environment, from a data warehouse to a multi-database system, is provide consistent access to all of the relevant sources. While the type of access required will vary based on the integration strategy chosen--for example federated systems use query-based access while warehouses may prefer access to the underlying database--the essence of this challenge remains the same. Thus, …
Date: November 21, 2001
Creator: Critchlow, Terence
System: The UNT Digital Library
New Millennium Program - Space Technology 6 (ST6) (open access)

New Millennium Program - Space Technology 6 (ST6)

In order to view exo-solar planets and to improve our knowledge of the early universe, it is important to field very large, 100-meter-class, space telescopes. To be able to practically and affordably field such instruments, it is essential to develop membrane optics that are both lighter and more compactly packagable than present space optics. The authors demonstrate a significant breakthrough in membrane optics utilizing thin diffractive lenses instead of reflective films. The uniqueness of this approach is that diffractive lenses utilize globally-flat, easily supported, membranes, and are many orders-of-magnitude less sensitive to out-of-plane surface errors than are reflective optics. Their flight-validation experiment will launch, deploy, and optically test a lightweight diffractive lens. This lens will be built from multiple thin glass sheets, each optically patterned as a diffractive lens panel and then joined together to form a multi-segment foldable lens. the folded-up lens is tightly packaged to survive launch loads and supported after deployment by an outer rim. Its optical PSF performance is then measured by using a three-component system consisting of the diffractive lens, linked by tethers to an optical-beacon on one side, and a sensor-pod on the other.
Date: November 21, 2000
Creator: Hyde, R.; Satter, C.; Hoyt, R.; Early, J.; Dixit, S.; Weisberg, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and Issues (open access)

U.S. Strategic Nuclear Forces: Background, Developments, and Issues

This report reviews the ongoing programs that will affect the expected size and shape of the U.S. strategic nuclear force structure. It includes information of the historic structure and changes over time as well as details about each category of delivery vehicle--land-based intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBMs), submarine launched ballistic missiles (SLBMs), and heavy bombers--focusing on their current deployments and ongoing and planned modernization programs. The report concludes with a discussion of issues related to decisions about the future of the U.S. strategic nuclear force.
Date: November 21, 2018
Creator: Woolf, Amy F.
System: The UNT Digital Library