3-D Hydrodynamic Modeling in a Geospatial Framework (open access)

3-D Hydrodynamic Modeling in a Geospatial Framework

3-D hydrodynamic models are used by the Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) to simulate the transport of thermal and radionuclide discharges in coastal estuary systems. Development of such models requires accurate bathymetry, coastline, and boundary condition data in conjunction with the ability to rapidly discretize model domains and interpolate the required geospatial data onto the domain. To facilitate rapid and accurate hydrodynamic model development, SRNL has developed a pre- and post-processor application in a geospatial framework to automate the creation of models using existing data. This automated capability allows development of very detailed models to maximize exploitation of available surface water radionuclide sample data and thermal imagery.
Date: August 24, 2006
Creator: Bollinger, J.; Alfred Garrett, A.; Larry Koffman, L. & David Hayes, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
3w Transmitted Beam Diagnostic at the Omega Laser Facility (open access)

3w Transmitted Beam Diagnostic at the Omega Laser Facility

A 3{omega} transmitted beam diagnostic has been commissioned on the Omega Laser at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics, University of Rochester [Soures et.al., Laser Part. Beams 11 (1993)]. Transmitted light from one beam is collected by a large focusing mirror and directed onto a diagnostic platform. The near field of the transmitted light is imaged; the system collects information from twice the original f-cone of the beam. Two gated optical cameras capture the near field image of the transmitted light. Thirteen spatial positions around the measurement region are temporally resolved using fast photodiodes to allow a measure of the beam spray evolution. The Forward stimulated Raman scattering and forward simulated Brillion scattering are spectrally and temporally resolved at 5 independent locations within twice the original f-cone. The total transmitted energy is measured in two spectral bands ({delta}{lambda} < 400 nm and {delta}{lambda} > 400 nm).
Date: April 24, 2006
Creator: Froula, D. H.; Rekow, V.; Sorce, C.; Piston, K.; Knight, R.; Alvarez, S. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerator Physics Code Web Repository (open access)

Accelerator Physics Code Web Repository

In the framework of the CARE HHH European Network, we have developed a web-based dynamic accelerator-physics code repository. We describe the design, structure and contents of this repository, illustrate its usage, and discuss our future plans, with emphasis on code benchmarking.
Date: October 24, 2006
Creator: Zimmermann, F.; Basset, R.; Bellodi, G.; Benedetto, E.; Dorda, U.; Giovannozzi, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anodic Kinetics of NiCriMo Alloys during Localized Corrosion (open access)

Anodic Kinetics of NiCriMo Alloys during Localized Corrosion

This report talks about Anodic Kinetics of NiCriMo Alloys during Localized Corrosion
Date: February 24, 2006
Creator: He, David X. & Newman, Roger C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessment of Candidate Molten Salt Coolants for the Advanced High Temperature Reactor (AHTR) (open access)

Assessment of Candidate Molten Salt Coolants for the Advanced High Temperature Reactor (AHTR)

The Advanced High-Temperature Reactor (AHTR) is a novel reactor design that utilizes the graphite-matrix high-temperature fuel of helium-cooled reactors, but provides cooling with a high-temperature fluoride salt. For applications at temperatures greater than 900 C the AHTR is also referred to as a Liquid-Salt-Cooled Very High-Temperature Reactor (LS-VHTR). This report provides an assessment of candidate salts proposed as the primary coolant for the AHTR based upon a review of physical properties, nuclear properties, and chemical factors. The physical properties most relevant for coolant service were reviewed. Key chemical factors that influence material compatibility were also analyzed for the purpose of screening salt candidates. Some simple screening factors related to the nuclear properties of salts were also developed. The moderating ratio and neutron-absorption cross-section were compiled for each salt. The short-lived activation products, long-lived transmutation activity, and reactivity coefficients associated with various salt candidates were estimated using a computational model. Table A presents a summary of the properties of the candidate coolant salts. Certain factors in this table, such as melting point, vapor pressure, and nuclear properties, can be viewed as stand-alone parameters for screening candidates. Heat-transfer properties are considered as a group in Sect. 3 in order to evaluate the …
Date: March 24, 2006
Creator: Williams, D.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Basic Research Needs for Solid-State Lighting. Report of the Basic Energy Sciences Workshop on Solid-State Lighting, May 22-24, 2006 (open access)

Basic Research Needs for Solid-State Lighting. Report of the Basic Energy Sciences Workshop on Solid-State Lighting, May 22-24, 2006

The workshop participants enthusiastically concluded that the time is ripe for new fundamental science to beget a revolution in lighting technology. SSL sources based on organic and inorganic materials have reached a level of efficiency where it is possible to envision their use for general illumination. The research areas articulated in this report are targeted to enable disruptive advances in SSL performance and realization of this dream. Broad penetration of SSL technology into the mass lighting market, accompanied by vast savings in energy usage, requires nothing less. These new ?good ideas? will be represented not by light bulbs, but by an entirely new lighting technology for the 21st century and a bright, energy-efficient future indeed.
Date: May 24, 2006
Creator: Phillips, J. M.; Burrows, P. E.; Davis, R. F.; Simmons, J. A.; Malliaras, G. G.; So, F. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Birds of a Feather: Supporting Secure Systems (open access)

Birds of a Feather: Supporting Secure Systems

Over the past few years Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory has begun the process of moving to a diskless environment in the Secure Computer Support realm. This movement has included many moving targets and increasing support complexity. We would like to set up a forum for Security and Support professionals to get together from across the Complex and discuss current deployments, lessons learned, and next steps. This would include what hardware, software, and hard copy based solutions are being used to manage Secure Computing. The topics to be discussed include but are not limited to: Diskless computing, port locking and management, PC, Mac, and Linux/UNIX support and setup, system imaging, security setup documentation and templates, security documentation and management, customer tracking, ticket tracking, software download and management, log management, backup/disaster recovery, and mixed media environments.
Date: April 24, 2006
Creator: Braswell, H. V., III
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Certification of Completion of Level-2 Milestone 464: Complete Phase 1 Integration of Site-Wide Global Parallel File System (SWGPFS) (open access)

Certification of Completion of Level-2 Milestone 464: Complete Phase 1 Integration of Site-Wide Global Parallel File System (SWGPFS)

There has been substantial development of the Lustre parallel filesystem prior to the configuration described below for this milestone. The initial Lustre filesystems that were deployed were directly connected to the cluster interconnect, i.e. Quadrics Elan3. That is, the clients (OSSes) and Meta-data Servers (MDS) were all directly connected to the cluster's internal high speed interconnect. This configuration serves a single cluster very well, but does not provide sharing of the filesystem among clusters. LLNL funded the development of high-efficiency ''portals router'' code by CFS (the company that develops Lustre) to enable us to move the Lustre servers to a GigE-connected network configuration, thus making it possible to connect to the servers from several clusters. With portals routing available, here is what changes: (1) another storage-only cluster is deployed to front the Lustre storage devices (these become the Lustre OSSes and MDS), (2) this ''Lustre cluster'' is attached via GigE connections to a large GigE switch/router cloud, (3) a small number of compute-cluster nodes are designated as ''gateway'' or ''portal router'' nodes, and (4) the portals router nodes are GigE-connected to the switch/router cloud. The Lustre configuration is then changed to reflect the new network paths. A typical example of …
Date: January 24, 2006
Creator: Heidelberg, S T; Fitzgerald, K J; Richmond, G H & Wartens, H A
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization Plan for Soils Around Drain Line PLA-100115 (open access)

Characterization Plan for Soils Around Drain Line PLA-100115

This Characterization Plan supports the Hazardous Waste Management Act/Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (HWMA/RCRA) closure of soils that may have been contaminated by releases from drain line PLA-100115, located within the Idaho Nuclear Technology and Engineering Center at the Idaho National Laboratory Site. The requirements to address the closure of soils contaminated by a potential release from this line in a characterization plan was identified in the "HWMA/RCRA Less Than 90-day Generator Closure Report for the VES-SFE-126."
Date: May 24, 2006
Creator: Shanklin, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CHARACTERIZING THE YUCCA MOUNTAIN SITE FOR DEVELOPING SEISMIC DESIGN GROUND MOTIONS (open access)

CHARACTERIZING THE YUCCA MOUNTAIN SITE FOR DEVELOPING SEISMIC DESIGN GROUND MOTIONS

Yucca Mountain, Nevada is the designated site for the first long-term geologic repository to safely dispose spent nuclear fuel and high-level nuclear waste in the U.S. Yucca Mountain consists of stacked layers of welded and non-welded volcanic tuffs. Site characterization studies are being performed to assess its future performance as a permanent geologic repository. These studies include the characterization of the shear-wave velocity (Vs) structure of the repository block and the surface facilities area. The Vs data are an input in the calculations of ground motions for the preclosure seismic design and for postclosure performance assessment and therefore their accurate estimation is needed. Three techniques have been employed: 24 downhole surveys, 15 suspension seismic logging surveys and 95 spectral-analysis-of-surface-waves (SASW) surveys have been performed to date at the site. The three data sets were compared with one another and with Vs profiles developed from vertical seismic profiling data collected by the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and with Vs profiles developed independently by the University of Nevada, Reno using the refraction microtremor technique. Based on these data, base case Vs profiles have been developed and used in site response analyses. Since the question of adequate sampling arises in site characterization programs …
Date: February 24, 2006
Creator: S. Upadhyaya, I. Wong, R. Kulkarni, K. Stokoe, M. Dober, W. Silva, and R. Quittmeyer
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Closure of the Averaged Equations for Disperse Two-Phase Flow by Direct Numerical Simulation: Final Report (open access)

Closure of the Averaged Equations for Disperse Two-Phase Flow by Direct Numerical Simulation: Final Report

The report briefly describes the activities carried out in the course of the project. A first line of research was the development of systematic closure relations for averaged equations for disperse multiphase flow. A second line was the development of efficient numerical methods for the simulation of Navier-Stokes flows with many suspended particles. The report also lists the 21 journal articles in which this work is more fully decsribed.
Date: March 24, 2006
Creator: Prosperetti, Andrea
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Closure of the Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) History & Status & Future Plans (open access)

Closure of the Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) History & Status & Future Plans

In 1993, the US Department of Energy (DOE) decided to shut down the Fast Flux Test Facility (FFTF) due to lack of national missions that justified the annual operating budget of approximately $88M/year. The initial vision was to ''deactive'' the facility to an industrially and radiologically safe condition to allow long-term, minimal surveillance storage until approximately 2045. This approach would minimize near term cash flow and allow the radioactive decay of activated components. The final decontamination and decommissioning (D and D) would then be performed using then-current methodology in a safe and efficient manner. the philosophy has now changed to close coupling the initial deactivation with final D and D. This paper presents the status of the facility and focuses on the future challenge of sodium removal.
Date: February 24, 2006
Creator: Farabee, O. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
COMPARISON OF NATURAL BACKGROUND DOSE RATES FOR RESIDENTS OF THE AMARGOSA VALLEY, NV, TO THOSE IN LEADVILLE, CO, AND THE STATES OF COLORADO AND NEVADA (open access)

COMPARISON OF NATURAL BACKGROUND DOSE RATES FOR RESIDENTS OF THE AMARGOSA VALLEY, NV, TO THOSE IN LEADVILLE, CO, AND THE STATES OF COLORADO AND NEVADA

In the latter half of 2005, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) published a Proposed Rule (40 CFR Part 197) for establishing a dose rate standard for limiting radionuclide releases from the proposed Yucca Mountain high-level radioactive waste repository during the time period from 10{sup 4} to 10{sup 6} years after closure. The proposed standard was based on the difference in the estimated total dose rate from natural background in the Amargosa Valley and the ''average annual background radiation'' for the State of Colorado. As defined by the USEPA, ''natural background radiation consists of external exposures from cosmic and terrestrial sources, and internal exposures from indoor exposures to naturally-occurring radon''. On the basis of its assessments, the USEPA estimated that the difference in the dose rate in the two identified areas was 3.5 mSv y{sup -1}. The purpose of this review was to provide an independent evaluation and review of this estimate. One of the first observations was that, because site-specific dose rate measurements for the Amargosa Valley ''were not available'', the dose rates for various sources of natural background in that area, used by the USEPA in its assessment, were based on modifications of the average values for the …
Date: February 24, 2006
Creator: Sun, D. Moeller and L. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of the Acceptability of Various Oil Shale Processes (open access)

Comparison of the Acceptability of Various Oil Shale Processes

None
Date: November 24, 2006
Creator: Burnham, A K & McConaghy, J R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual Design of an Antiproton Generation and Storage Facility (open access)

Conceptual Design of an Antiproton Generation and Storage Facility

The Antiproton Generation and Storage Facility (AGSF) creates copious quantities of antiprotons, for bottling and transportation to remote cancer therapy centers. The #12;first step in the generation and storage process is to accelerate an intense proton beam down the Main Linac for injection into the Main Ring, which is a Rapid Cycling Synchrotron that accelerates the protons to high energy. The beam is then extracted from the ring into a transfer line and into a Proton Target. Immediately downstream of the target is an Antiproton Collector that captures some of the antiprotons and focuses them into a beam that is transported sequentially into two antiproton rings. The Precooler ring rapidly manipulates antiproton bunches from short and broad (in momentum) to long and thin. It then performs some preliminary beam cooling, in the fraction of a second before the next proton bunch is extracted from the Main Ring. Pre-cooled antiprotons are passed on to the Accumulator ring before the next antiprotons arrive from the target. The Accumulator ring cools the antiprotons, compressing them into a dense state that is convenient for mass storage over many hours. Occasionally the Accumulator ring decelerates a large number of antiprotons, injecting them into a Deceleration …
Date: October 24, 2006
Creator: Peggs, Stephen
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coulomb Excitation of the 242mAm Isomer (open access)

Coulomb Excitation of the 242mAm Isomer

The {sup 242m}Am isomer, a well-known candidate for photo-depopulation research, has been studied in this first ever Coulomb excitation of a nearly pure ({approx} 98%) isomer target. Thirty new states, including a new rotational band built on a K{sup {pi}} = 6{sup -} state have been identified. Strong K-mixing results in nearly equal populations of the K{sup {pi}} = 5{sup -} and 6{sup -} states. Newly identified states have been assigned to the K{sup {pi}} = 3{sup -} rotational band, the lowest states of which are known to decay into the ground-state band. Implications regarding K-mixing and Coulomb excitation paths to the ground state are discussed.
Date: October 24, 2006
Creator: Hayes, A. B.; Cline, D.; Moody, K. J.; Wu, C. Y.; Becker, J. A.; Carpenter, M. P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
T. D. Lee: Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions and the Riken Brookhaven Center. (open access)

T. D. Lee: Relativistic Heavy Ion Collisions and the Riken Brookhaven Center.

This paper presents the history of Professor T. D. Lee's seminal work on the theory of relativistic heavy ion collisions, and the founding and development of the Riken Brookhaven Center. A number of anecdotes are given about Prof. Lee, and his strong positive effect on his colleagues, particularly young physicists.
Date: November 24, 2006
Creator: McLerran, L. & Samios, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dalitz Plot Analysis of the Decay B+ -> K+K+K- (open access)

Dalitz Plot Analysis of the Decay B+ -> K+K+K-

None
Date: May 24, 2006
Creator: Aubert, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Dark Matter Properties at High-Energy Collider (open access)

Determination of Dark Matter Properties at High-Energy Collider

If the cosmic dark matter consists of weakly-interacting massive particles, these particles should be produced in reactions at the next generation of high-energy accelerators. Measurements at these accelerators can then be used to determine the microscopic properties of the dark matter. From this, we can predict the cosmic density, the annihilation cross sections, and the cross sections relevant to direct detection. In this paper, we present studies in supersymmetry models with neutralino dark matter that give quantitative estimates of the accuracy that can be expected. We show that these are well matched to the requirements of anticipated astrophysical observations of dark matter. The capabilities of the proposed International Linear Collider (ILC) are expected to play a particularly important role in this study.
Date: February 24, 2006
Creator: Baltz, Edward A.; Battaglia, Marco; Peskin, Michael E. & Wizansky, Tommer
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing Livestock Facility Type Information from USDA Agricultural Census Data for Use in Epidemiological and Economic Models (open access)

Developing Livestock Facility Type Information from USDA Agricultural Census Data for Use in Epidemiological and Economic Models

The epidemiological and economic modeling of livestock diseases requires knowing the size, location, and operational type of each livestock facility within the US. At the present time, the only national database of livestock facilities that is available to the general public is the USDA's 2002 Agricultural Census data, published by the National Agricultural Statistics Service, herein referred to as the 'NASS data.' The NASS data provides facility data at the county level for various livestock types (i.e., beef cows, milk cows, cattle on feed, other cattle, total hogs and pigs, sheep and lambs, milk goats, and angora goats). However, the number and sizes of facilities for the various livestock types are not independent since some facilities have more than one type of livestock, and some livestock are of more than one type (e.g., 'other cattle' that are being fed for slaughter are also 'cattle on feed'). In addition, any data tabulated by NASS that could identify numbers of animals or other data reported by an individual respondent is suppressed by NASS and coded with a 'D.'. To be useful for epidemiological and economic modeling, the NASS data must be converted into a unique set of facility types (farms having similar …
Date: October 24, 2006
Creator: Melius, C; Robertson, A & Hullinger, P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Alternative Glass Formulations for Vitrification of Excess Plutonium - SEM/XRD Analyses (open access)

Development of Alternative Glass Formulations for Vitrification of Excess Plutonium - SEM/XRD Analyses

None
Date: April 24, 2006
Creator: Crawford, Charles L.; Marra, J. C.; Peeler, D. K. & Bibler, N. E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Materials Resistant to Metal Dusting Degradation. (open access)

Development of Materials Resistant to Metal Dusting Degradation.

Metal dusting corrosion has been a serious problem in the petroleum and petrochemical industries, such as reforming and syngas production systems. This form of deterioration has led to worldwide material loss for 50 years. For the past three years, we have studied the mechanism of metal dusting for Fe- and Ni-base alloys. In this report, we present a correlation between the weight loss and depth of pits that form in Ni-base alloys. Nickel-base alloys were also tested at 1 and 14.8 atm (210 psi), in a high carbon activity environment. Higher system pressure was found to accelerate corrosion in most Ni-base alloys. To reduce testing time, a pre-pitting method was developed. Mechanical scratches on the alloy surface led to fast metal dusting corrosion. We have also developed preliminary data on the performance of weldments of several Ni-base alloys in a metal dusting environment. Finally, Alloy 800 tubes and plates used in a reformer plant were examined by scanning electron microscopy, energy dispersive X-ray, and Raman spectroscopy. The oxide scale on the surface of the Alloy 800 primarily consists of Fe{sub 1+x}Cr{sub 2-X}O{sub 4} spinel phase with high Fe content. Carbon can diffuse through this oxide scale. It was discovered that …
Date: April 24, 2006
Creator: Natesan, K. & Zeng, Z.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discovery of a z = 6.1 Radio-Loud Quasar in the NDWFS (open access)

Discovery of a z = 6.1 Radio-Loud Quasar in the NDWFS

From examination of only 4 deg{sup 2} of sky in the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey (NDWFS) region, we have identified the first radio-loud quasar at a redshift z > 6. The object, FIRST J1427385+331241, was discovered by matching the FLAMEX IR survey to FIRST survey radio sources with NDWFS counterparts. One candidate z > 6 quasar was found, and spectroscopy with the Keck II telescope confirmed its identification, yielding a redshift z = 6.12. The object is a Broad Absorption Line (BAL) quasar with an optical luminosity of M{sub B} {approx} -26.9 and a radio-to-optical flux ratio {approx} 60. Two Mg II absorptions systems are present at redshifts of z = 2.18 and z = 2.20. We briefly discuss the implications of this discovery for the high-redshift quasar population.
Date: July 24, 2006
Creator: McGreer, I D; Becker, R H; Helfand, D J & White, R L
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dsdp5 User Guide - Software for Semidefinite Programming. (open access)

Dsdp5 User Guide - Software for Semidefinite Programming.

DSDP implements the dual-scaling algorithm for semidefinite programming. The source code of this interior-point solver, written entirely in ANSI C, is freely available. The solver can be used as a subroutine library, as a function within the Matlab environment, or as an executable that reads and writes to files. Initiated in 1997, DSDP has developed into an efficient and robust general-purpose solver for semidefinite programming. Although the solver is written with semidefinite programming in mind, it can also be used for linear programming and other constraint cones. The features of DSDP include the following: a robust algorithm with a convergence proof and polynomially bounded complexity under mild assumptions on the data, primal and dual solutions, feasible solutions when they exist or approximate certificates of infeasibility, initial points that can be feasible or infeasible, relatively low memory requirements for an interior-point method, sparse and low-rank data structures, extensibility that allows applications to customize the solver and improve its performance, a subroutine library that enables it to be linked to larger applications, scalable performance for large problems on parallel architectures, and a well-documented interface and examples of its use. The package has been used in many applications and tested for efficiency, robustness, …
Date: January 24, 2006
Creator: Benson, S. J.; Ye, Y. & Science, Mathematics and Computer
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library