Acceleration and deceleration phase nonlinear Rayleigh-Taylor growth at spherical interfaces (open access)

Acceleration and deceleration phase nonlinear Rayleigh-Taylor growth at spherical interfaces

The Layzer model for the nonlinear evolution of bubbles in the Rayleigh-Taylor instability has recently been generalized to the case of spherically imploding interfaces [D. S. Clark and M. Tabak, to appear, PRE (2005).]. The spherical case is more relevant to, e.g., inertial confinement fusion or various astrophysical phenomena when the convergence is strong or the perturbation wavelength is comparable to the interface curvature. Here, the model is further extended to the case of bubble growth during the deceleration (stagnation) phase of a spherical implosion and to the growth of spikes during both the acceleration and deceleration phases. Differences in the nonlinear growth rates for both bubbles and spikes are found when compared with planar results. The model predictions are verified by comparison with numerical hydrodynamics simulations.
Date: April 8, 2005
Creator: Clark, D S & Tabak, M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aggregation kinetics in a model colloidal suspension (open access)

Aggregation kinetics in a model colloidal suspension

The authors present molecular dynamics simulations of aggregation kinetics in a colloidal suspension modeled as a highly asymmetric binary mixture. Starting from a configuration with largely uncorrelated colloidal particles the system relaxes by coagulation-fragmentation dynamics to a structured state of low-dimensionality clusters with an exponential size distribution. The results show that short range repulsive interactions alone can give rise to so-called cluster phases. For the present model and probably other, more common colloids, the observed clusters appear to be equilibrium phase fluctuations induced by the entropic inter-colloidal attractions.
Date: August 8, 2005
Creator: Bastea, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Angularly resolved measurements of ion energy of vacuum arc plasmas (open access)

Angularly resolved measurements of ion energy of vacuum arc plasmas

None
Date: April 8, 2005
Creator: Anders, Andre & Yushkov, George Yu.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automated Microwave Low Power Testing Techniques for NLC (open access)

Automated Microwave Low Power Testing Techniques for NLC

As part of the Next Linear Collider (NLC) collaboration, the NLC structures group at Fermilab has started an R&D program to fabricate NLC accelerator structures in cooperation with commercial companies in order to prepare for mass production of RF structures. To build the Next Linear Collider, thousands accelerator structures containing a million cells are needed. Our primary goal is to explore the feasibility of making these structures in an industrial environment. On the other hand the structure mass production requires ''industrialized''microwave quality control techniques to characterize these structures at different stages of production as efficiently as possible. We developed several automated set-ups based on different RF techniques that are mutually complementary address this problem.
Date: July 8, 2005
Creator: Carter, H.; Finley, D.; Gonin, I.; Khabibullin, T.; Romanov, G.; Sun, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cherenkov Radiation from e+e- Pairs and Its Effect on nu e InducedShowers (open access)

Cherenkov Radiation from e+e- Pairs and Its Effect on nu e InducedShowers

We calculate the Cherenkov radiation from an e{sup +}e{sup -} pair at small separations, as occurs shortly after a pair conversion. The radiation is reduced (compared to that from two independent particles) when the pair separation is smaller than the wavelength of the emitted light. We estimate the reduction in light in large electromagnetic showers, and discuss the implications for detectors that observe Cherenkov radiation from showers in the Earth's atmosphere, as well as in oceans and Antarctic ice.
Date: June 8, 2005
Creator: Mandal, Sourav K.; Klein, Spencer R. & Jackson, J. David
System: The UNT Digital Library
Classical Theory of Compton Scattering: Assessing the Validity of the Dirac-Lorentz Equation (open access)

Classical Theory of Compton Scattering: Assessing the Validity of the Dirac-Lorentz Equation

None
Date: February 8, 2005
Creator: Hartemann, F V; Gibson, D J & Kerman, A K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Climate Change in Lowland Central America During the Late Deglacial and Early Holocene (open access)

Climate Change in Lowland Central America During the Late Deglacial and Early Holocene

The transition from arid glacial to moist early Holocene conditions represented a profound change in northern lowland Neotropical climate. Here we report a detailed record of changes in moisture availability during the latter part of this transition ({approx}11,250 to 7,500 cal yr BP) inferred from sediment cores retrieved in Lake Peten Itza, northern Guatemala. Pollen assemblages demonstrate that a mesic forest had been largely established by {approx}11,250 cal yr BP, but sediment properties indicate that lake level was more than 35 m below modern stage. From 11,250 to 10,350 cal yr BP, during the Preboreal period, lithologic changes in sediments from deep-water cores (>50 m below modern water level) indicate several wet-dry cycles that suggest distinct changes in effective moisture. Four dry events (designated PBE1-4) occurred at 11,200, 10,900, 10,700, and 10,400 cal yr BP and correlate with similar variability observed in the Cariaco Basin titanium record and glacial meltwater pulses into the Gulf of Mexico. After 10,350 cal yr BP, multiple sediment proxies suggest a shift to a more persistently moist early Holocene climate. Comparison of results from Lake Peten Itza with other records from the circum-Caribbean demonstrates a coherent climate response during the entire span of our record. …
Date: February 8, 2005
Creator: Hillesheim, M. B.; Hodell, D. A.; Leyden, B. W.; Brenner, M.; Curtis, J. H.; Anselmetti, F. S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Combined Experimental and Computational Approach for the Design of Mold Topography that Leads to Desired Ingot Surface and Microstructure in Aluminum Casting. (open access)

A Combined Experimental and Computational Approach for the Design of Mold Topography that Leads to Desired Ingot Surface and Microstructure in Aluminum Casting.

Solidification of Aluminum alloys is modeled on uneven surfaces characterized by sinusoidal curves. Wavelengths and amplitudes of these surfaces are varied to study the effect of changing surface topography on fluid flow, macrosegregation and inverse segregation in the solidifying alloy. Solidification is initiated by convective heat removal from the uneven surfaces and simulations are carried out in both vertical and horizontal configurations. Stabilized finite element methods, recently used for modeling solidification in the presence of shrinkage and buoyancy driven flows, are used to discretize and solve the governing transport equations derived by volume averaging. The effect of varying amplitudes and wavelengths is observed in heat transfer, fluid-flow, macrosegregation and inverse segregation processes. In vertical solidification, inverse segregation, that usually occurs at the bottom of the cavities, is studied for different sinusoidal topographies quantified by a particular wavelength and amplitude. The fluid flow here is driven by a combination of shrinkage and thermosolutal buoyancy. Shrinkage driven flow arises due to different densities of solid and liquid phases. During horizontal solidification of an Aluminum alloy from uneven surfaces, thermosolutal buoyancy plays a dominant role in fluid flow and the effect of shrinkage is neglected by assuming the individual phase densities to be …
Date: August 8, 2005
Creator: Dr. Zabaras, N., Samanta, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Communication Optimizations for Fine-Grained UPCApplications (open access)

Communication Optimizations for Fine-Grained UPCApplications

Global address space languages like UPC exhibit high performance and portability on a broad class of shared and distributed memory parallel architectures. The most scalable applications use bulk memory copies rather than individual reads and writes to the shared space, but finer-grained sharing can be useful for scenarios such as dynamic load balancing, event signaling, and distributed hash tables. In this paper we present three optimization techniques for global address space programs with fine-grained communication: redundancy elimination, use of split-phase communication, and communication coalescing. Parallel UPC programs are analyzed using static single assignment form and a data flow graph, which are extended to handle the various shared and private pointer types that are available in UPC. The optimizations also take advantage of UPC's relaxed memory consistency model, which reduces the need for cross thread analysis. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the analysis and optimizations using several benchmarks, which were chosen to reflect the kinds of fine-grained, communication-intensive phases that exist in some larger applications. The optimizations show speedups of up to 70 percent on three parallel systems, which represent three different types of cluster network technologies.
Date: July 8, 2005
Creator: Chen, Wei-Yu; Iancu, Costin & Yelick, Katherine
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Comparison and Evaluation of Three Fiber Composite Failure Criteria (open access)

The Comparison and Evaluation of Three Fiber Composite Failure Criteria

Three specific failure criteria for the transversely isotropic fiber composite case will be discussed. All three use the polynomial expansion method. The three criteria are the Tsai-Wu criterion, the Hashin criterion and the Christensen criterion. All three criteria will be given in forms that admit direct and easy comparison, which has not usually been done. The central differences between these three criteria will be discussed, and steps will be taken toward the evaluation of them.
Date: February 8, 2005
Creator: Christensen, R M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coordination Complexes of Decamethylytterbocene with4,4'-Disubstituted Bipyridines: An Experimental Study of Spin Coupling inLanthanide Complexes (open access)

Coordination Complexes of Decamethylytterbocene with4,4'-Disubstituted Bipyridines: An Experimental Study of Spin Coupling inLanthanide Complexes

The paramagnetic 1:1 coordination complexes of (C5Me5)2Ybwith a series of 4,4'-disubstituted bipyridines, bipy-X, where X is Me,tert-Bu, OMe, Ph, CO2Me, and CO2Et have been prepared. All of thecomplexes are paramagnetic and the values of the magnetic susceptibilityas a function of temperature show that these values are less thanexpected for the cation, [(C5Me5)2Yb(III)(bipy-X)]+, which have beenisolated as the cation-anion ion-pairs[(C5Me5)2Yb(III)(bipy-X)]+[(C5Me5)2YbI2]f fnfn where X is CO2Et, OMe andMe. The 1H NMR chemical shifts (293 K) for the methine resonances locatedat the 6,6' site in the bipy-X ring show a linear relationship with thevalues of chiT (300 K) for the neutral complexes which illustrates thatthe molecular behavior does not depend upon the phase with one exception,viz., (C5Me5)2Yb(bipy-Me). Single crystals of the 4,4'-dimethylbipyridinecomplex undergo an irreversible, abrupt first order phase change at 228 Kthat shatters the single crystals. The magnetic susceptibility,represented in a delta vs. T plot, on this complex, in polycrystallineform undergoes reversible abrupt changes in the temperature regime 205 -212 K, which is suggested to be due to the way the individual molec ularunits pack in the unit cell. A qualitative model is proposed thataccounts for the sub-normal magnetic moments in theseytterbocene-bipyridine complexes.
Date: December 8, 2005
Creator: Walter, Marc D.; Berg, David J. & Andersen, Richard A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dark Energy Stars (open access)

Dark Energy Stars

Event horizons and closed time-like curves cannot exist in the real world for the simple reason that they are inconsistent with quantum mechanics. Following ideas originated by Robert Laughlin, Pawel Mazur, Emil Mottola, David Santiago, and the speaker it is now possible to describe in some detail what happens physically when one approaches and crosses a region of space-time where classical general relativity predicts there should be an infinite red shift surface. This quantum critical physics provides a new perspective on a variety of enigmatic astrophysical phenomena including supernovae explosions, gamma ray bursts, positron emission, and dark matter.
Date: March 8, 2005
Creator: Chapline, G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Drift compression of an intense neutralized ion beam (open access)

Drift compression of an intense neutralized ion beam

Longitudinal compression of a velocity-tailored, intense neutralized K{sup +} beam at 300 keV, 25 mA has been demonstrated. The compression takes place in a 1-2 m drift section filled with plasma to provide space-charge neutralization. An induction cell produces a head-to-tail velocity ramp that longitudinally compresses the neutralized beam, enhancing the beam peak current by a factor of 50 and producing a pulse duration of about 3 ns. This measurement has been confirmed independently with two different diagnostic systems.
Date: September 8, 2005
Creator: Roy, P. K.; Yu, S. S.; Henestroza, E.; Anders, A.; Bieniosek, F. M.; Coleman, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dry Air Oxidation of Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel (open access)

Dry Air Oxidation of Commercial Spent Nuclear Fuel

None
Date: February 8, 2005
Creator: Hanson, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of rare-earth doping in RCrSb3 (R = La, Pr, Sm, and Gd) (open access)

Effect of rare-earth doping in RCrSb3 (R = La, Pr, Sm, and Gd)

We report on the electrical resistivity and magnetic susceptibility of La or Gd doped RCrSb{sub 3} (R=La, Pr, Sm, and Gd). Single crystals were grown by increasing the nominal dopant by 25%. In general, two magnetic ordering transitions are found, T{sub C1} is attributed to ferromagnetic ordering of the itinerant Cr sub-lattice, and, at lower temperatures, T{sub C2} is attributed to ordering of the localized rare-earth sub-lattice. Alloying on the rare-earth site varies the de Gennes factor, DG = (g-1){sup 2}J(J+1), and dT{sub C1}/d(DG) = -2K, while dT{sub C2}/d(DG) = 5K. These ordering temperatures are found to converge at GdCrSb{sub 3}, where a single ferrimagnetic transition is found at T{sub C2} = 86 K due to an anti-alignment of the itinerant Cr moments and the localized rare-earth moments. Initially, for DG < 3.5, the rare-earth moments are found to align ferromagnetically, and the paramagnetic Weiss temperature decreases at the same rate as T{sub C1}. But for DG > 4.5, the rare-earth sub-lattice anti-alignes with respect to the Cr sub-lattice, and the Weiss temperature decreases five times as fast. In the region between (3.5 < DG < 4.5), a first order phase transition is found at T{sub C2}.
Date: November 8, 2005
Creator: Jackson, D. D. & Fisk, Z.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Solution Annealing on Alloy 22 Weld Properties (open access)

The Effect of Solution Annealing on Alloy 22 Weld Properties

The effect of solution annealing temperature on the microstructure and observed corrosion attack mode in Alloy 22 welds was assessed. Specimens were examined in the as-welded state as well as solution annealed for 20 minutes at temperatures ranging from 1075 C to 1300 C. The microstructures of the specimens were first mapped using electron backscatter diffraction to determine the grain structure evolution due to solution annealing. Full recrystallization of the fusion zone was only observed in the 1200 C and 1300 C specimens, although the 1300 C specimen showed abnormal grain growth. As-welded, 1121 C and 1200 C specimens were also subjected to electrochemical testing in a 6 molal NaCl + 0.9 molal KNO{sub 3} environment to initiate crevice corrosion. Examination of the specimen surfaces after corrosion testing showed that in the as-welded specimen, corrosion was present in both the weld dendrites as well as around the secondary phases. However, the specimen solution annealed at 1121 C showed corrosion only at secondary phases and the specimen annealed at 1200 C showed pitting corrosion only in a handful of grains.
Date: November 8, 2005
Creator: El-Dasher, B S & Torres, S G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effective Medium Theories for Multicomponent Poroelastic Composites (open access)

Effective Medium Theories for Multicomponent Poroelastic Composites

In Biot's theory of poroelasticity, elastic materials contain connected voids or pores and these pores may be filled with fluids under pressure. The fluid pressure then couples to the mechanical effects of stress or strain applied externally to the solid matrix. Eshelby's formula for the response of a single ellipsoidal elastic inclusion in an elastic whole space to a strain imposed at a distant boundary is a very well-known and important result in elasticity. Having a rigorous generalization of Eshelby's results valid for poroelasticity means that the hard part of Eshelby's work (in computing the elliptic integrals needed to evaluate the fourth-rank tensors for inclusions shaped like spheres, oblate and prolate spheroids, needles and disks) can be carried over from elasticity to poroelasticity--and also thermoelasticity--with only relatively minor modifications. Effective medium theories for poroelastic composites such as rocks can then be formulated easily by analogy to well-established methods used for elastic composites. An identity analogous to Eshelby's classic result has been derived [Physical Review Letters 79:1142-1145 (1997)] for use in these more complex and more realistic problems in rock mechanics analysis. Descriptions of the application of this result as the starting point for new methods of estimation are presented, including …
Date: February 8, 2005
Creator: Berger, E. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electro-Weak Penguin and Leptonic Decays in BaBar (open access)

Electro-Weak Penguin and Leptonic Decays in BaBar

Electro-weak penguin and leptonic decays provide an indirect probe for physics beyond the Standard Model and contribute to the determination of Standard Model parameters. Copious quantities of B mesons produced at the B-Factories permit precision measurements of the electro-weak penguin decays and searches for leptonic decays. We review the current experimental status of b {yields} s(d){gamma}, B{sup 0} {yields} D*{sup 0}{gamma}, b {yields} s{ell}{sup +}{ell}{sup -} and finally B{sup +} {yields} {tau}{sup +}{nu}{sub {tau}} decays at BABAR.
Date: September 8, 2005
Creator: Di Lodovico, F. & /Queen Mary, U. of London
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electromagnetic Shower Reconstruction for theSilicon Detector (open access)

Electromagnetic Shower Reconstruction for theSilicon Detector

This report presents a two-pass reconstruction algorithm for electromagnetic showers, based on studies with simulated photons in the highly segmented Silicon Tungsten calorimeter of the Silicon Detector concept for the International Linear Collider. It is shown that the initial reconstruction and identification of the dense shower cores allows shower separation down to 3 cm distance between two photons on the calorimeter surface. First results are shown for the subsequent collection of unassociated hits around the shower cores necessary to reconstruct complete energy deposits by individual particles.
Date: December 8, 2005
Creator: Meyer, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of a novel UHMWPE bearing for applications in precision slideways (open access)

Evaluation of a novel UHMWPE bearing for applications in precision slideways

This paper presents a novel slideway bearing design comprised of a thin-film (0.1 mm-0.2 mm) of ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) bound to a rigid hemispherical substrate. Two prototype bearing designs were fabricated and tested to characterize the coefficient of friction (dynamic and static) and wear of the polymer. In addition, similar bearings were incorporated into a kinematically constrained rectilinear carriage to determine the repeatability of motion during multiple traverses. The first bearing had a radius of curvature on the order of 2.38 mm incorporating an UHMWPE film thickness between 0.1 mm and 0.2 mm. The friction coefficient was measured to be between 0.155 and 0.189 for normal loads of 11.5 N and 2.2 N, respectively at a surface speed of 4.2 mm {center_dot} s{sup -1}. This bearing failed after a traverse of approximately 700 m at a load of 11.5 N. A similar evaluation procedure was carried out on a bearing of radius 6.35 mm resulting in a friction coefficient between 0.125 and 0.185 at loads of 27.8 N and 2.2 N, respectively, and the bearing endured a traverse of over 2.2 km at a load of approximately 28 N (in both air and vacuum conditions) with a surface …
Date: March 8, 2005
Creator: Buice, E. S.; Yang, H.; Smith, S. T.; Hocken, R. J. & Seugling, R. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field investigation of the drift shadow (open access)

Field investigation of the drift shadow

A drift shadow is an area immediately beneath an undergroundvoidthat, in theory, will be relatively drier than the surrounding rockmass. Numerical and analytical models of water flow through unsaturatedrock predict the existence of a drift shadow, but field tests confirmingits existence have yet to be performed. Proving the existence of driftshadows and understanding their hydrologic and transport characteristicscould provide a better understanding of how contaminants move in thesubsurface if released from waste emplacement drifts such as the proposednuclear waste repository at Yucca Mountain, Nevada. We describe the fieldprogram that will be used to investigate the existence of a drift shadowand the corresponding hydrological process at the Hazel-Atlas silica-sandmine located at the Black Diamond Mines Regional Preserve in Antioch,California. The location and configuration of this mine makes it anexcellent site to observe and measure drift shadow characteristics. Themine is located in a porous sandstone unit of the Domengine Formation, anapproximately 230 meter thick series of interbedded Eocene-age shales,coals, and massive-bedded sandstones. The mining method used at the minerequired the development of two parallel drifts, one above the other,driven along the strike of the mined sandstone stratum. Thisconfiguration provides the opportunity to introduce water into the rockmass in the upper drift and …
Date: September 8, 2005
Creator: Su, Grace W.; Kneafsey, Timothy J.; Ghezzehei, Teamrat A.; Marshall, Brian D. & Cook, Paul J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fish Movement and Dietary History Derived from Otolith (delta)13C (open access)

Fish Movement and Dietary History Derived from Otolith (delta)13C

Habitat use and food web linkages are critical data for fish conservation and habitat restoration efforts, particularly for threatened salmonids species. Otolith microchemistry has been shown to be a powerful tool for reconstructing fish movement, but over small distances (kilometers), geology-derived differences in otolith chemistry are rare. Here, we demonstrate that otolith {sup 13}C/{sup 12}C ratio (i.e. {delta}{sup 13}C) of anadromous steelhead trout can be used to distinguish residence in small streams from residence in larger streams and rivers. While previous research has shown that water dissolved inorganic carbon {delta}{sup 13}C is the primary source of carbon in otoliths, the downstream change in food {delta}{sup 13}C in this watershed appears to be the primary control on otolith {delta}{sup 13}C. As a result, this method can also be applied to the problem of reconstructing feeding history at a location.
Date: September 8, 2005
Creator: Weber, P K; Finlay, J C; Power, M E; Phillis, C C; Ramon, C E; Eaton, G F et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gratings for High-Energy Petawatt Lasers (open access)

Gratings for High-Energy Petawatt Lasers

To enable high-energy petawatt laser operation we have developed the processing methods and tooling that produced both the world's largest multilayer dielectric reflection grating and the world's highest laser damage resistant gratings. We have successfully delivered the first ever 80 cm aperture multilayer dielectric grating to LLNL's Titan Intense Short Pulse Laser Facility. We report on the design, fabrication and characterization of multilayer dielectric diffraction gratings.
Date: November 8, 2005
Creator: Nguyen, H T; Britten, J. A.; Carlson, T. C.; Nissen, J. D.; Summers, L. J.; Hoaglan, C. R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Growth Curve Models for the Analysis of Phenotype Arrays for a Systems Biology Overview of Yersinia pestis (open access)

Growth Curve Models for the Analysis of Phenotype Arrays for a Systems Biology Overview of Yersinia pestis

The Phenotype MicroArray technology of Biolog, Inc. (Hayward, CA) measures the respiration of cells as a function of time in thousands of microwells simultaneously, and thus provides a high-throughput means of studying cellular phenotypes. The microwells contain compounds involved in a number of biochemical pathways, as well as chemicals that test the sensitivity of cells against antibiotics and stress. While the PM experimental workflow is completely automated, statistical methods to analyze and interpret the data are lagging behind. To take full advantage of the technology, it is essential to develop efficient analytical methods to quantify the information in the complex datasets resulting from PM experiments. We propose the use of statistical growth-curve models to rigorously quantify observed differences in PM experiments, in the context of the growth and metabolism of Yersinia pestis cells grown under different physiological conditions. The information from PM experiments complement genomic and proteomic results and can be used to identify gene function and in drug development. Successful coupling of phenomics results with genomics and proteomics will lead to an unprecedented ability to characterize bacterial function at a systems biology level.
Date: September 8, 2005
Creator: Fodor, I. K.; Holtz-Morris, A. E. & McCutchen-Maloney, S. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library