8 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

The Eight New Synthetic Elements (open access)

The Eight New Synthetic Elements

In an early continuation of the investigation of the radioactive isotopes of element number 43 (technetium) Segre and Seaborg produced by the deuteron and neutron bombardment of molybdenum the isotope Tc{sup 99}, which they observed to decay by means of an isomeric transition with a half-life of 6.6 hours to a lower isomeric state with a half-life greater than 40 years. The upper isomeric state of this isotope was observed by Segre and C. S. Wu to be produced in the fission of uranium and more recently R. P. Schumann and also D. C. Lincoln and W. H Sullivan working on the Plutonium Project of the Manhattan District have independently observed the beta-particles of half-life about 10 years due to the lower isomeric state. Later work by E. E. Motta and G. E. Boyd sets a more accurate value of 9.4 x 10{sup 5} years for this half-life. Since this isotope is formed in rather large amounts, namely, a fission yield of 6.2%, in the slow neutron induced fission of uranium it is now possible to isolate technetium in weighable amounts and in rather substantial quantities. For example, a uranium pile operating at a power level of 10{sup 5} kw …
Date: November 1, 1947
Creator: Seaborg, Glenn T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Networking with China (open access)

Networking with China

This paper presents the history and current status Of computer networking between IHEP in Beijing, China and the rest of the world, starting with no links at the beginning of 1987 thru X.25 public networks and dial up links, to the installing, in March 1993, of one of the first dedicated 64 kbps satellite computer links between China and the outside world. In May 1994, IHEP became the first Chinese institution to have a fully operational world-wide Internet connection. Experience with this dedicated link between SLAC and IHEP will be presented together with future plans to add a land line between KEK and IHEP and to extend the links within China.
Date: April 1, 1944
Creator: Cottrell, R. L. A.; Granieri, C.; Fan, Lan; Xu, Rongsheng & Karita, Yukio
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stars in Photographic Emulsions Initiated by Deuterons Part II. Theoretical (open access)

Stars in Photographic Emulsions Initiated by Deuterons Part II. Theoretical

The theory of high energy nuclear stars depends on a theory of nuclear transparency and on a theory of nuclear evaporation. The transparency can be computed on the basis of a model proposed by R. Serber as soon as the interactions between the nucleons and the incident particle are known. The evaporation can be computed on the basis of the statistical model of the nucleus as soon as the nuclear entropy and binding energies of the evaporated particles are known. The calculations have been formulated with approximate values for the above interactions, entropies, and binding energies; and by means of various mathematical methods: a method of averages, a method of reaction integrals, and one using diffusion equations. Probability distributions have been obtained for the number of prongs per star, and distributions are being computed for the energy and angle of a prong. The results are in qualitative agreement with the observations on photographic emulsions described in Part I.
Date: January 1, 1948
Creator: Horning, Wendell & Baumhoff, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Eight New Synthetic Elements (open access)

The Eight New Synthetic Elements

None
Date: November 1, 1947
Creator: Seaborg, Glenn T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of Mesons by the 184-inch Berkeley Cyclotron (open access)

Production of Mesons by the 184-inch Berkeley Cyclotron

The authors have observed tracks which they believe to be due to mesons in photographic plates placed near a target bombarded by 380 Mev alpha particles. For a 10-minute exposure in the cyclotron, about 50 meson tracks are found along the 3-inch edge of a photographic plate. The mass has been determined by measuring the bending in the magnetic field and the range in emulsion. From the first 50 meson tracks measured they find a mass of 313 {+-} 16 electron masses. It is highly probable that these mesons are the heavy mesons described by Lattes, Occhialini, and Powell.
Date: January 1, 1948
Creator: Gardner, Eugene & Lattes, C. M. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of Mesons by the 184-inch Berkeley Cyclotron Part I. Experimental Arrangement (open access)

Production of Mesons by the 184-inch Berkeley Cyclotron Part I. Experimental Arrangement

The authors have observed traks which they believe to be due to mesons in photographic plates placed near a ta5rget bombarded by 380 Mev alpha particles. The plates used were Ilford Nuclear Research Plates, type C.2. the identification of the particles responsible for the tracks was first made on the basis of the appearance of the tracks; they show the same type of scattering and variation of grain density with residual range found in cosmic ray meson tracks and about two-thirds of them produce observable stars at the end of their range. For a 10-minute exposure in the cyclotron, about 50 meson tracks are found along the 3-inch edge of a photographic plate. Carbon, beryllium, copper, and uranium have been used so far as target materials, and all are found to give mesons. When a carbon target was bombarded with 300 Mev alpha particles, mesons were found but with reduced yield.
Date: April 1, 1948
Creator: Gardner, Eugene & Lattes, C. M. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health and safety conference (open access)

Health and safety conference

This report provides a summary of the Health and Safety Conference held April 1948 at Chicago, Illinois. Representatives of Argonne National Laboratory, Rochester University, University of California Radiation Laboratory, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory, New York Memorial Hospital, as well as a Canadian group and an United Kingdom group. Many topics were discussed some of which were plutonium in urine, toxicity of beryllium, and relative toxicity of radioelements.
Date: April 1, 1948
Creator: Rudolph, D.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The University of Texas Health Program ...A Statement by the Vice-President In Charge of Medical Education (open access)

The University of Texas Health Program ...A Statement by the Vice-President In Charge of Medical Education

A statement by Dr. Chauncey D. Leake on the University of Texas Health Program, reprinted as a booklet from the Spring 1943 edition of Texas Reports on Biology and Medicine. Leake discusses civil responsibility for public health, efforts to treat cancer and mental illnesses, hygiene, the U. of Texas Medical Branch's research and services, pediatrics, and geriatrics.
Date: January 1, 1943
Creator: Leake, Chauncey Depew, 1896-1978
System: The Portal to Texas History