105-C overbore 40 tube test process tube assembly flow and pressure drop calibration test (open access)

105-C overbore 40 tube test process tube assembly flow and pressure drop calibration test

The object of this test is to determine the hydraulic characteristics of the proposed overbore process tube assembly designs which are to be installed on 105-C reactor for the 40 tube overbore fuel element test.
Date: July 6, 1961
Creator: Etheridge, E. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2001 Gordon Research Conference on Laser Diagnostics in Combustion. Final Progress Report (open access)

2001 Gordon Research Conference on Laser Diagnostics in Combustion. Final Progress Report

None
Date: July 6, 2001
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2009 Photosynthesis to be held June 28 - July 3, 2009 (open access)

2009 Photosynthesis to be held June 28 - July 3, 2009

The capture of solar energy by photosynthesis has had a most profound influence on the development and sustenance of life on earth. It is the engine that has driven the proliferation of life and, as the source of both energy and oxygen, has had a major hand in shaping the forms that life has taken. Both ancient and present day photosynthetic carbon fixation is intimately tied to issues of immediate human concern, global energy and global warming. Decreasing our reliance on fossil fuels by tapping photosynthesis in a more direct way is an attractive goal for sustainable energy. Meeting this challenge means understanding photosynthetic energy conversion at a molecular level, a task requiring perspectives ranging through all disciplines of science. Researchers in photosynthesis have a strong history of working across conventional boundaries and engaging in multidisciplinary collaborations. The Gordon conference in photosynthesis has been a key focal point for the dissemination of new results and the establishment of powerful research collaborations. In this spirit the 2009 Gordon conference on biophysical aspects of photosynthesis will bring together top international researchers from diverse and complementary disciplines, all working towards understanding how photosynthesis converts light into the stable chemical energy that powers so …
Date: July 6, 2009
Creator: Bruce, Doug
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Accelerated Evolution of Conserved Noncoding Sequences in theHuman Genome (open access)

Accelerated Evolution of Conserved Noncoding Sequences in theHuman Genome

Genomic comparisons between human and distant, non-primatemammals are commonly used to identify cis-regulatory elements based onconstrained sequence evolution. However, these methods fail to detect"cryptic" functional elements, which are too weakly conserved amongmammals to distinguish from nonfunctional DNA. To address this problem,we explored the potential of deep intra-primate sequence comparisons. Wesequenced the orthologs of 558 kb of human genomic sequence, coveringmultiple loci involved in cholesterol homeostasis, in 6 nonhumanprimates. Our analysis identified 6 noncoding DNA elements displayingsignificant conservation among primates, but undetectable in more distantcomparisons. In vitro and in vivo tests revealed that at least three ofthese 6 elements have regulatory function. Notably, the mouse orthologsof these three functional human sequences had regulatory activity despitetheir lack of significant sequence conservation, indicating that they arecryptic ancestral cis-regulatory elements. These regulatory elementscould still be detected in a smaller set of three primate speciesincluding human, rhesus and marmoset. Since the human and rhesus genomesequences are already available, and the marmoset genome is activelybeing sequenced, the primate-specific conservation analysis describedhere can be applied in the near future on a whole-genome scale, tocomplement the annotation provided by more distant speciescomparisons.
Date: July 6, 2006
Creator: Prambhakar, Shyam; Noonan, James P.; Paabo, Svante & Rubin, EdwardM.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive Impedance Analysis of Grooved Surface using the Finite Element Method (open access)

Adaptive Impedance Analysis of Grooved Surface using the Finite Element Method

Grooved surface is proposed to reduce the secondary emission yield in a dipole and wiggler magnet of International Linear Collider. An analysis of the impedance of the grooved surface based on adaptive finite element is presented in this paper. The performance of the adaptive algorithms, based on an element-element h refinement technique, is assessed. The features of the refinement indicators, adaptation criteria and error estimation parameters are discussed.
Date: July 6, 2007
Creator: Wang, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in ANL reactor physics methods inspired by A. F. Henry. (open access)

Advances in ANL reactor physics methods inspired by A. F. Henry.

None
Date: July 6, 2001
Creator: Khalil, H. S.; Taiwo, T. A.; Yang, W. S. & Finck, P. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analog simulation of VSR withdrawal rates (open access)

Analog simulation of VSR withdrawal rates

None
Date: July 6, 1961
Creator: Nilson, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of the Wakefield Effects in the PEP-II SLAC B-FACTORY (open access)

Analysis of the Wakefield Effects in the PEP-II SLAC B-FACTORY

We present the history and analysis of different wake field effects throughout the operational life of the PEP-II SLAC B-factory. Although the impedance of the high and low energy rings is small, the intense high current beams generated a lot of power. The effects from these wake fields are: heating and damage of vacuum beam chamber elements like RF seals, vacuum valves , shielded bellows, BPM buttons and ceramic tiles; vacuum spikes, vacuum instabilities and high detector background; beam longitudinal and transverse instabilities. We also discuss the methods used to eliminate these effects. Results of this analysis and the PEP-II experience may be very useful in the design of new storage rings and light sources.
Date: July 6, 2009
Creator: Novokhatski, A; Seeman, J.; Sullivan, M.; Wienands, U. & /SLAC
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applying observations of work activity in designing prototype data analysis tools (open access)

Applying observations of work activity in designing prototype data analysis tools

Designers, implementers, and marketers of data analysis tools typically have different perspectives than users. Consequently, data analysis often find themselves using tools focused on graphics and programming concepts rather than concepts which reflect their own domain and the context of their work. Some user studies focus on usability tests late in development; others observe work activity, but fail to show how to apply that knowledge in design. This paper describes a methodology for applying observations of data analysis work activity in prototype tool design. The approach can be used both in designing improved data analysis tools, and customizing visualization environments to specific applications. We present an example of user-centered design for a prototype tool to cull large data sets. We revisit the typical graphical approach of animating a large data set from the point of view of an analysis who is culling data. Field evaluations using the prototype tool not only revealed valuable usability information, but initiated in-depth discussions about user`s work, tools, technology, and requirements.
Date: July 6, 1993
Creator: Springmeyer, R. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Asymmetry and Risk (open access)

Asymmetry and Risk

None
Date: July 6, 2011
Creator: Goodwin, B T
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam Diagnostic by Outside Beam Chamber Fields (open access)

Beam Diagnostic by Outside Beam Chamber Fields

Fields induced by a beam and penetrated outside the beam pipe can be used for a beam diagnostic. Wires placed in longitudinal slots in the outside wall of the beam pipe can work as a beam pickup. This has very small beam-coupling impedance and avoids complications of having a feed-through. The signal can be reasonably high at low frequencies. We calculate the beam-coupling impedance due to a long longitudinal slot in the resistive wall and the signal induced in a wire placed in such a slot and shielded by a thin screen from the beam. We present a field waveform at the outer side of a beam pipe, obtained as a result of calculations and measurements. Such kind of diagnostic can be used in storage rings, synchrotron light sources, and free electron lasers, like LINAC coherent light source.
Date: July 6, 2009
Creator: Novokhatski, A; Heifets, S. & Aleksandrov, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Berkeley Program Offers New Option for Financing Residential PV Systems (open access)

Berkeley Program Offers New Option for Financing Residential PV Systems

Readily accessible credit has often been cited as a necessary ingredient to open up the market for residential photovoltaic (PV) systems. Though financing does not reduce the high up-front cost of PV, by spreading that cost over some portion of the system's life, financing can certainly make PV systems more affordable. As a result, a number of states have, in the past, set up special residential loan programs targeting the installation of renewable energy systems and/or energy-efficiency improvements and often featuring low interest rates, longer terms and no-hassle application requirements. Historically, these loan programs have had mixed success (particularly for PV), for a variety of reasons, including a historical lack of homeowner interest in PV, a lack of program awareness, a reduced appeal in a low-interest-rate environment, and a tendency for early PV adopters to be wealthy and not in need of financing. Some of these barriers have begun to fade. Most notably, homeowner interest in PV has grown in some states, particularly those that offer solar rebates. The passage of the Energy Policy Act of 2005 (EPAct 2005), however, introduced one additional roadblock to the success of low-interest PV loan programs: a residential solar investment tax credit (ITC), subject …
Date: July 6, 2008
Creator: Bolinger, Mark A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Booster Synchrotron RF System Upgrade for SPEAR3 (open access)

Booster Synchrotron RF System Upgrade for SPEAR3

Recent progress at the SPEAR3 includes the increase in stored current from 100 mA to 200 mA and top-off injection to allow beamlines to stay open during injection. Presently the booster injects 3.0 GeV beam to SPEAR3 three times a day. The stored beam decays to about 150 mA between the injections. The growing user demands are to increase the stored current to the design value of 500 mA, and to maintain it at a constant value within a percent or so. To achieve this goal the booster must inject once every few minutes. For improved injection efficiency, all RF systems at the linac, booster and SPEAR3 need to be phase-locked. The present booster RF system is basically a copy of the SPEAR2 RF system with 358.5 MHz and 40 kW peak RF power driving a 5-cell RF cavity for 1.0 MV gap voltage. These requirements entail a booster RF system upgrade to a scaled down version of the SPEAR3 RF system of 476.3 MHz with 1.2 MW cw klystron output power capabilities. We will analyze each subsystem option for their merits within budgetary and geometric space constraints. A substantial portion of the system will come from the decommissioned PEP-II …
Date: July 6, 2012
Creator: Park, Sanghyun & Corbett, Jeff
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bootstrapping Multi-Parton Loop Amplitudes in QCD (open access)

Bootstrapping Multi-Parton Loop Amplitudes in QCD

The authors present a new method for computing complete one-loop amplitudes, including their rational parts, in non-supersymmetric gauge theory. This method merges the unitarity method with on-shell recursion relations. It systematizes a unitarity-factorization bootstrap approach previously applied by the authors to the one-loop amplitudes required for next-to-leading order QCD corrections to the processes e{sup +}e{sup -} {yields} Z, {gamma}* {yields} 4 jets and pp {yields} W + 2 jets. We illustrate the method by reproducing the one-loop color-ordered five-gluon helicity amplitudes in QCD that interfere with the tree amplitude, namely A{sub 5;1}(1{sup -}, 2{sup -}, 3{sup +}, 4{sup +}, 5{sup +}) and A{sub 5;1}(1{sup -}, 2{sup +}, 3{sup -}, 4{sup +}, 5{sup +}). Then we describe the construction of the six- and seven-gluon amplitudes with two adjacent negative-helicity gluons, A{sub 6;1}(1{sup -}, 2{sup -}, 3{sup +}, 4{sup +}, 5{sup +}, 6{sup +}) and A{sub 7;1}(1{sup -}, 2{sup -}, 3{sup +}, 4{sup +}, 5{sup +}, 6{sup +}, 7{sup +}), which uses the previously-computed logarithmic parts of the amplitudes as input. They present a compact expression for the six-gluon amplitude. No loop integrals are required to obtain the rational parts.
Date: July 6, 2005
Creator: Bern, Zvi; Dixon, Lance J. & Kosower, David A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
D-Branes in Curved Space (open access)

D-Branes in Curved Space

This thesis is a study of D-branes in string compactifications. In this context, D-branes are relevant as an important component of the nonperturbative spectrum, as an incisive probe of these backgrounds, and as a natural stringy tool for localizing gauge interactions. In the first part of the thesis, we discuss half-BPS D-branes in compactifications of type II string theory on Calabi-Yau threefolds. The results we describe for these objects are pertinent both in their role as stringy brane-worlds, and in their role as solitonic objects. In particular, we determine couplings of these branes to the moduli determining the closed-string geometry, both perturbatively and non-perturbatively in the worldsheet expansion. We provide a local model for transitions in moduli space where the BPS spectrum jumps, and discuss the extension of mirror symmetry between Calabi-Yau manifolds to the case when D-branes are present. The next section is an interlude which provides some applications of D-branes to other curved backgrounds of string theory. In particular, we discuss a surprising phenomenon in which fundamental strings moving through background Ramond-Ramond fields dissolve into large spherical D3-branes. This mechanism is used to explain a previously-mysterious fact discovered via the AdS-CFT correspondence. Next, we make a connection between …
Date: July 6, 2005
Creator: McGreevy, John Austen
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Briefing presented to the Senior Staff Advisory Committee, Energy Research Development Administration (open access)

Briefing presented to the Senior Staff Advisory Committee, Energy Research Development Administration

This report is made up of slides presented at the briefing on recommendations for the incorporation of MOPPS-like detail into the BNL/DRI model. Major subjects are: fundamental purpose of energy planning; ERDA planning; hierarchical framework of production functions/models; recommendation; and management plan for implementation of recommendation. (MCW)
Date: July 6, 1977
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bunch Length Measurements With Laser/SR Cross-Correlation (open access)

Bunch Length Measurements With Laser/SR Cross-Correlation

By operating SPEAR3 in low-{alpha} mode the storage ring can generate synchrotron radiation pulses of order 1ps. Applications include pump-probe x-ray science and the production of THz radiation in the CSR regime. Measurements of the bunch length are difficult, however, because the light intensity is low and streak cameras typically provide resolution of only a few ps. Tests are now underway to resolve the short bunch length using cross-correlation between a 60-fs Ti:Sapphire laser and the visible SR beam in a BBO crystal. In this paper we report on the experimental setup, preliminary measurements and prospects for further improvement.
Date: July 6, 2012
Creator: Miller, Timothy; Daranciang, Dan; Lindenberg, Aaron; Corbett, Jeff; Fisher, Alan; Goodfellow, John et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration of LSST Instrumental and Atmospheric Photometric Passbands (open access)

Calibration of LSST Instrumental and Atmospheric Photometric Passbands

The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will continuously image the entire sky visible from Cerro Pachon in northern Chile every 3-4 nights throughout the year. The LSST will provide data for a broad range of science investigations that require better than 1% photometric precision across the sky (repeatability and uniformity) and a similar accuracy of measured broadband color. The fast and persistent cadence of the LSST survey will significantly improve the temporal sampling rate with which celestial events and motions are tracked. To achieve these goals, and to optimally utilize the observing calendar, it will be necessary to obtain excellent photometric calibration of data taken over a wide range of observing conditions - even those not normally considered 'photometric'. To achieve this it will be necessary to routinely and accurately measure the full optical passband that includes the atmosphere as well as the instrumental telescope and camera system. The LSST mountain facility will include a new monochromatic dome illumination projector system to measure the detailed wavelength dependence of the instrumental passband for each channel in the system. The facility will also include an auxiliary spectroscopic telescope dedicated to measurement of atmospheric transparency at all locations in the sky during LSST …
Date: July 6, 2011
Creator: Burke, David L.; Axelrod, T.; Barrau, Aurelien; Baumont, Sylvain; Blondin, Stephane; Claver, Chuck et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cavity Alignment Using Beam Induced Higher Order Modes Signals in the TTF Linac (open access)

Cavity Alignment Using Beam Induced Higher Order Modes Signals in the TTF Linac

Each nine cell superconducting (SC) accelerator cavity in the TESLA Test Facility (TTF) at DESY [1] has two higher order mode (HOM) couplers that efficiently remove the HOM power [2]. They can also provide useful diagnostic signals. The most interesting modes are in the first 2 cavity dipole passbands. They are easy to identify and their amplitude depends linearly on the beam offset from the cavity axis making them excellent beam position monitors (BPM). By steering the beam through an eight-cavity cryomodule, we can use the HOM signals to estimate internal residual alignment errors and minimize wakefield related beam emittance growth. We built and tested a time-domain based waveform recorder system that captures information from each mode in these two bands on each beam pulse. In this paper we present a preliminary experimental study of the single-bunch generated HOM signals at the TTF linac including estimates of cavity alignment precision and HOM BPM resolution.
Date: July 6, 2005
Creator: Ross, M.; Frisch, J.; Hacker, K. E.; Jones, R. M.; McCormick, D.; O'Connell, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization, Transport and Remedial Options for Radioactive Strontium and Cesium Contaminated Sites (open access)

Characterization, Transport and Remedial Options for Radioactive Strontium and Cesium Contaminated Sites

None
Date: July 6, 1999
Creator: Mason, C.; Lu, N. & Conca, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Classical two-slit interference effects in double photoionization of molecular hydrogen at high energies (open access)

Classical two-slit interference effects in double photoionization of molecular hydrogen at high energies

Recent experiments on double photoionization of H$_2$ with photon energies between 160 and 240 eV have revealed body-frame angular distributions that suggest classical two-slit interference effects may be present when one electron carries most of the available energy and the second electron is not observed. We report precise quantum mechanical calculations that reproduce the experimental findings. They reveal that the interpretation in terms of classical diffraction is only appropriate atsubstantially higher photon energies. At the energies considered in the experiment we offer an alternative explanation based on the mixing of two non-diffractive contributions by circularly polarized light.
Date: July 6, 2008
Creator: Horner, Daniel A.; Miyabe, Shungo; Rescigno, Thomas N; McCurdy, C. William; Morales, Felipe & Martin, Fernando
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coated Metal Articles and Method of Making (open access)

Coated Metal Articles and Method of Making

The method of protectively coating metallic uranium which comprises dipping the metallic uranium in a molten alloy comprising about 20-75% of copper and about 80-25% of tin, dipping the coated uranium promptly into molten tin, withdrawing it from the molten tin and removing excess molten metal, thereupon dipping it into a molten metal bath comprising aluminum until it is coated with this metal, then promptly withdrawing it from the bath.
Date: July 6, 2004
Creator: Boller, Ernest R. & Eubank, Lowell D.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
A cold mass support system based on the use of oriented fiberglassepoxy rods in bending (open access)

A cold mass support system based on the use of oriented fiberglassepoxy rods in bending

This report describes a cold mass support system based on the use of oriented fiberglassepoxy rods in bending.
Date: July 6, 2002
Creator: Green, Michael A.; Corradi, Carol A.; LaMantia, Roberto F. & Zbasnik, Jon P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) Facility General Service Helium System Design Description (open access)

Cold Vacuum Drying (CVD) Facility General Service Helium System Design Description

This document describes the Cold Vacuum Drying Facility general service helium system (GSHe). The GSHe is a general service facility process support system, but does include safety-class systems, structures and components providing protection to the offsite public. The GSHe also performs safety-significant functions that provide protection to onsite workers. The GSHe essential function is to provide helium to support process functions during all phases of facility operations. GSHe helium is used to purge the cask and the MCO in order to maintain their internal atmospheres below hydrogen flammability concentrations. The GSHe also supplies helium to purge the PWC lines and components and the VPS vacuum pump.
Date: July 6, 1999
Creator: Farwick, C. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library