Resource Type

15 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Effective File I/O Bandwidth Benchmark (open access)

Effective File I/O Bandwidth Benchmark

The effective I/O bandwidth benchmark (b{_}eff{_}io) covers two goals: (1) to achieve a characteristic average number for the I/O bandwidth achievable with parallel MPI-I/O applications, and (2) to get detailed information about several access patterns and buffer lengths. The benchmark examines ''first write'', ''rewrite'' and ''read'' access, strided (individual and shared pointers) and segmented collective patterns on one file per application and non-collective access to one file per process. The number of parallel accessing processes is also varied and well-formed I/O is compared with non-well formed. On systems, meeting the rule that the total memory can be written to disk in 10 minutes, the benchmark should not need more than 15 minutes for a first pass of all patterns. The benchmark is designed analogously to the effective bandwidth benchmark for message passing (b{_}eff) that characterizes the message passing capabilities of a system in a few minutes. First results of the b{_}eff{_}io benchmark are given for IBM SP and Cray T3E systems and compared with existing benchmarks based on parallel Posix-I/O.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Rabenseifner, R. & Koniges, A. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
National energy use of consumer electronics in 1999 (open access)

National energy use of consumer electronics in 1999

The major consumer electronics in U.S. homes accounted for nearly 7 percent of U.S. residential electricity consumption in 1999. We attribute more than half of this figure (3.6 percent) to televisions, videocassette recorders, and DVD players, and nearly one-third (1.8 percent) to audio products. Set-top boxes currently account for a relatively small fraction of residential electricity use (0.7 percent), but we expect this end-use to grow quickly with the proliferation of digital set-top boxes, which currently use 40 percent more energy per unit than the average TV set. In all, these consumer electronics plus telephone products consumed 75 TWh in the U.S. in 1999, half of which was consumed while the products were not in use. This energy use is expected to grow as products with new or advanced functionality hit the market.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Rosen, Karen; Meier, Alan & Zandelin, Stefan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Small Optical Components for the National Ignition Facility (open access)

Small Optical Components for the National Ignition Facility

The National Ignition Facility will be the largest laser system in the world. The facility, currently under construction, requires over 25,000 small optical components. The small-optics requirements and latest procurement strategy will be presented.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Taylor, J R; Chow, R & Bissinger, H D
System: The UNT Digital Library
Morphologies of uranium deposits produced during electrorefining of EBR-II spent nuclear fuel (open access)

Morphologies of uranium deposits produced during electrorefining of EBR-II spent nuclear fuel

The morphologies of U metal samples from deposits produced by electrorefining of Experimental Breeder Reactor-II (EBR-II) spent fuel were examined using scanning electron microscopy, energy- and wavelength-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, and metallography. The morphologies were analyzed to find correlations with the chemistry of the samples, the ER run conditions, and the deposit performance. A rough correlation was observed between morphology and Zr concentration; samples with Zr contents greater than approximately 200 ppm showed fine-grained, polycrystalline dendritic morphologies, while samples with Zr contents less than approximately 100 ppm were comprised of agglomerations or linked chains of rhomboidal single crystals. There were few correlations found between morphology, run conditions, and deposit performance.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Totemeier, T. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An implicit time-stepping scheme for rigid body dynamics with Coulomb friction (open access)

An implicit time-stepping scheme for rigid body dynamics with Coulomb friction

In this paper a new time-stepping method for simulating systems of rigid bodies is given. Unlike methods which take an instantaneous point of view, the method is based on impulse-momentum equations, and so does not need to explicitly resolve impulsive forces. On the other hand, the method is distinct from previous impulsive methods in that it does not require explicit collision checking and it can handle simultaneous impacts. Numerical results are given for one planar and one three-dimensional example, which demonstrate the practicality of the method, and its convergence as the step size becomes small.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Stewart, David & Trinkle, Jeffrey C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Utilizing benchmark data from the ANL-ZPR diagnostic cores program (open access)

Utilizing benchmark data from the ANL-ZPR diagnostic cores program

The support of the criticality safety community is allowing the production of benchmark descriptions of several assemblies from the ZPR Diagnostic Cores Program. The assemblies have high sensitivities to nuclear data for a few isotopes. This can highlight limitations in nuclear data for selected nuclides or in standard methods used to treat these data. The present work extends the use of the simplified model of the U9 benchmark assembly beyond the validation of k{sub eff}. Further simplifications have been made to produce a data testing benchmark in the style of the standard CSEWG benchmark specifications. Calculations for this data testing benchmark are compared to results obtained with more detailed models and methods to determine their biases. These biases or corrections factors can then be applied in the use of the less refined methods and models. Data testing results using Versions IV, V, and VI of the ENDF/B nuclear data are presented for k{sub eff}, f{sup 28}/f{sup 25}, c{sup 28}/f{sup 25}, and {beta}{sub eff}. These limited results demonstrate the importance of studying other integral parameters in addition to k{sub eff} in trying to improve nuclear data and methods and the importance of accounting for methods and/or modeling biases when using data …
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Schaefer, R. W. & McKnight, R. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
APPLICATIONS OF THE JEFFERSON LAB FREE ELECTRON LASER FOR PHOTOBIOLOGY. (open access)

APPLICATIONS OF THE JEFFERSON LAB FREE ELECTRON LASER FOR PHOTOBIOLOGY.

None
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: DYLLA,H.F.; BENSON,S.V.; NEIL,G.R.; SHINN,M.; AUSTIN,R.H. & SUTHERLAND,J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability characterizations of fixtured rigid bodies with Coulomb friction (open access)

Stability characterizations of fixtured rigid bodies with Coulomb friction

This paper formally introduces several stability characterizations of fixtured three-dimensional rigid bodies initially at rest and in unilateral contact with Coulomb friction. These characterizations, weak stability and strong stability, arise naturally from the dynamic model of the system, formulated as a complementarity problem. Using the tools of complementarity theory, these characterizations are studied in detail to understand their properties and to develop techniques to identify the stability classifications of general systems subjected to known external loads.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Pang, J. S. & Trinkle, Jeffrey C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Highly-Efficient Buried-Oxide-Waveguide Laser by Selective Oxidation (open access)

Highly-Efficient Buried-Oxide-Waveguide Laser by Selective Oxidation

An edge-emitting buried-oxide waveguide (BOW) laser structure employing lateral selective oxidation of AlGaAs layers above and below the active region for waveguiding and current confinement is presented. This laser configuration has the potential for very small lateral optical mode size and high current confinement and is well suited for integrated optics applications where threshold current and overall efficiency are paramount. Optimization of the waveguide design, oxide layer placement, and bi-parabolic grading of the heterointerfaces on both sides of the AlGaAs oxidation layers has yielded 95% external differential quantum efficiency and 40% wall-plug efficiency from a laser that is very simple to fabricate and does not require epitaxial regrowth of any kind.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Vawter, Gregory A.; Spahn, Olga B.; Allerman, Andrew A. & Gao, Ying
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-dimensional control of light in a two-dimensional photonic crystal slab (open access)

Three-dimensional control of light in a two-dimensional photonic crystal slab

A two-dimensional (2D) photonic crystal is an attractive alternative and complimentary to its 3D counterpart, due to fabrication simplicity. A 2D crystal, however, confines light only in the 2D plane, but not in the third direction, the z-direction. Earlier experiments show that such a 2D system can exist, providing that the boundary effect in z-direction is negligible and that light is collimated in the 2D plane. Nonetheless, the usefulness of such 2D crystals is limited because they are incapable of guiding light in z-direction, which leads to diffraction loss. This drawback presents a major obstacle for realizing low-loss 2D crystal waveguides, bends and thresholdless lasers. A recent theoretical calculation, though, suggests a novel way to eliminate such a loss with a 2D photonic crystal slab. The concept of a lightcone is introduced as a criterion for fully guiding and controlling light. Although the leaky modes of a crystal slab have been studied, there have until now no experimental reports on probing its guided modes and band gaps. In this paper, a waveguide-coupled 2D photonic crystal slab is successfully fabricated from a GaAs/Al{sub x}O{sub y} material system and its intrinsic transmission properties are studied. The crystal slab is shown to have …
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Chow, Kai-Cheung; Lin, Shawn-Yu; Johnson, S. G.; Villeneuve, P. R.; Joannopoulos, J. D.; Wendt, Joel R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
THE DEEP ULTRA-VIOLET FREE ELECTRON LASER (DUV-FEL) AT BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LABORATORY. (open access)

THE DEEP ULTRA-VIOLET FREE ELECTRON LASER (DUV-FEL) AT BROOKHAVEN NATIONAL LABORATORY.

None
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Johnson, E. D.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Dimauro, L. F.; Graves, W. S.; Hesse, R. N.; Krinsky, S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Space searches with a quantum robot (open access)

Space searches with a quantum robot

Quantum robots are described as mobile quantum computers and ancillary systems that move in and interact with arbitrary environments. Their dynamics is given as tasks which consist of sequences of alternating computation and action phases. A task example is considered in which a quantum robot searches a space region to find the location of a system. The possibility that the search can be more efficient than a classical search is examined by considering use of Grover's Algorithm to process the search results. This is problematic for two reasons. One is the removal of entanglements generated by the (reversible) search process. The other is that (ignoring the entanglement problem), the search process in 2 dimensional space regions is no more efficient than a classical search. However quantum searches of higher dimensional space regions are more efficient than classical searches. Reasons why quantum robots are interesting independent of these results are briefly summarized.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Benioff, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron-gun-controlled thin film mirrors for remote sensing applications (open access)

Electron-gun-controlled thin film mirrors for remote sensing applications

The ultimate limitation in obtainable resolution and sensitivity for space-based imaging systems is the size of the optical collecting aperture. Large collecting apertures are at odds with maintaining low launch costs and with current launch vehicle configurations. Development of a deployable mirror is one approach being considered to satisfy these conflicting requirements. The focus of this research is to develop fundamental technology toward the realization of deployable electron-gun-controlled piezoelectric thin films mirrors as shown below. A bimorph layer of film will bend in response to an applied electric field and can therefore be deformed into desirable shapes using a scanning electron gun. Surface curvature measurements govern the electron gun scanning strategy, yielding distributed shape corrections.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: HENSON,TAMMY D.; REDMOND,JAMES M.; WEHLBURG,JOSEPH C.; MARTIN,JEFFREY W. & MAIN,JOHN A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rapid, automated gas chromatographic detection of organic compounds in ultra-pure water (open access)

Rapid, automated gas chromatographic detection of organic compounds in ultra-pure water

An automated gas chromatography was used to analyze water samples contaminated with trace (parts-per-billion) concentrations of organic analytes. A custom interface introduced the liquid sample to the chromatography. This was followed by rapid chromatographic analysis. Characteristics of the analysis include response times less than one minute and automated data processing. Analytes were chosen based on their known presence in the recycle water streams of semiconductor manufacturers and their potential to reduce process yield. These include acetone, isopropanol, butyl acetate, ethyl benzene, p-xylene, methyl ethyl ketone and 2-ethoxy ethyl acetate. Detection limits below 20 ppb were demonstrated for all analytes and quantitative analysis with limited speciation was shown for multianalyte mixtures. Results are discussed with respect to the potential for on-line liquid process monitoring by this method.
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: MOWRY,CURTIS DALE; BLAIR,DIANNA S.; MORRISON,DENNIS J.; REBER,STEPHEN D. & RODACY,PHILIP J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
WebDB Component Builder - Lessons Learned (open access)

WebDB Component Builder - Lessons Learned

Oracle WebDB is the easiest way to produce web enabled lightweight and enterprise-centric applications. This concept from Oracle has tantalized our taste for simplistic web development by using a purely web based tool that lives nowhere else but in the database. The use of online wizards, templates, and query builders, which produces PL/SQL behind the curtains, can be used straight ''out of the box'' by both novice and seasoned developers. The topic of this presentation will introduce lessons learned by developing and deploying applications built using the WebDB Component Builder in conjunction with custom PL/SQL code to empower a hybrid application. There are two kinds of WebDB components: those that display data to end users via reporting, and those that let end users update data in the database via entry forms. The presentation will also discuss various methods within the Component Builder to enhance the applications pushed to the desktop. The demonstrated example is an application entitled HOME (Helping Other's More Effectively) that was built to manage a yearly United Way Campaign effort. Our task was to build an end to end application which could manage approximately 900 non-profit agencies, an average of 4,100 individual contributions, and $1.2 million dollars. …
Date: February 15, 2000
Creator: Macedo, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library