High performance inertial fusion targets (open access)

High performance inertial fusion targets

Inertial confinement fusion (ICF) designs are considered which may have very high gains (approximately 1000) and low power requirements (<100 TW) for input energies of approximately one megajoule. These include targets having very low density shells, ultra thin shells, central ignitors, magnetic insulation, and non-ablative acceleration.
Date: August 24, 1977
Creator: Nuckolls, J.H.; Bangerter, R.O.; Lindl, J.D.; Mead, W.C. & Pan, Y.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulations of intermediate density laser fusion targets: recent progress in design and analysis (open access)

Simulations of intermediate density laser fusion targets: recent progress in design and analysis

The attainment of low-adiabat compression to high final state density is essential for achieving high gain thermonuclear micro-implosions. Using 1- and 2-dimensional numerical simulations with LASNEX, the target performance which can be expected and the limitations imposed by absorption heating, and transport for targets designed to reach 100 x liquid DT density (20g/cm/sup 3/) are discussed. The requirements imposed by the need for low preheat, adequate implosion symmetry, and the behavior of fluid instabilities are discussed for these recent target designs. Methods for diagnosis of density are discussed.
Date: August 24, 1977
Creator: Mead, W. C.; Lindl, J. D.; Nuckolls, J. H.; Larsen, J. T.; Bailey, D. S. & Pan, Y. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extending the cereus group genomics to putative food-borne pathogens of different toxicity (open access)

Extending the cereus group genomics to putative food-borne pathogens of different toxicity

The cereus group represents sporulating soil bacteriacontaining pathogenic strains which may cause diarrheic or emetic foodpoisoning outbreaks. Multiple locus sequence typing revealed a presencein natural samples of these bacteria of about thirty clonal complexes.Application of genomic methods to this group was however biased due tothe major interest for representatives closely related to B. anthracis.Albeit the most important food-borne pathogens were not yet defined,existing dataindicate that they are scattered all over the phylogenetictree. The preliminary analysis of the sequences of three genomesdiscussed in this paper narrows down the gaps in our knowledge of thecereus group. The strain NVH391-98 is a rare but particularly severefood-borne pathogen. Sequencing revealed that the strain must be arepresentative of a novel bacterial species, for which the name Bacilluscytotoxis is proposed. This strain has a reduced genome size compared toother cereus group strains. Genome analysis revealed absence of sigma Bfactor and the presence of genes encoding diarrheic Nhe toxin, notdetected earlier. The strain B. cereus F837/76 represents a clonalcomplex close to that of B. anthracis. Including F837/76, three such B.cereus strains had been sequenced. Alignment of genomes suggests that B.anthracis is their common ancestor. Since such strains often emerge fromclinical cases, they merit a special attention. The …
Date: August 24, 2006
Creator: Lapidus, Alla; Goltsman, Eugene; Auger, Sandrine; Galleron, Nathalie; Segurens, Beatrice; Dossat, Carole et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Testing Large CICC in Short Sample Configuration and Predicting Their Performance in Large Magnets (open access)

Testing Large CICC in Short Sample Configuration and Predicting Their Performance in Large Magnets

It is well known that large Nb3Sn Cable-in-Conduit Conductors (CICC) do not always completely utilize current carrying capacity of the strands they are made of. The modern state of theory is not accurate enough to eliminate CICC full scale testing. Measuring properties of large CICC is not a simple task due to variety of parameters that need to be controlled, like temperature, exposure of all the strands to the peak magnetic field, mass flow and particular nonuniform current distribution. The paper presents some measurement issues of CICC testing in a short sample test facility, particularly, conditions for uniform current distribution and effect of twist pitches on the critical current.
Date: August 24, 2007
Creator: Martovetsky, N. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Examples of the Zeroth Theorem of the History of Science (open access)

Examples of the Zeroth Theorem of the History of Science

The zeroth theorem of the history of science, enunciated byE. P. Fischer, states that a discovery (rule,regularity, insight) namedafter someone (often) did not originate with that person. I present fiveexamples from physics: the Lorentz condition partial muAmu = 0 definingthe Lorentz gauge of the electromagnetic potentials; the Dirac deltafunction, delta(x); the Schumann resonances of the earth-ionospherecavity; the Weizsacker-Williams method of virtual quanta; the BMTequation of spin dynamics. I give illustrated thumbnail sketches of boththe true and reputed discoverers and quote from their "discovery"publications.
Date: August 24, 2007
Creator: Jackson, J.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High gain FEL amplification of charge modulation caused by a hadron (open access)

High gain FEL amplification of charge modulation caused by a hadron

In scheme of coherent electron cooling (CeC) [1,2], a modulation of electron beam density induced by a copropagation hadron is amplified in high gain FEL. The resulting amplified modulation of electron beam, its shape, form and its lethargy determine number of important properties of the coherent electron cooling. In this talk we present both analytical and numerical (using codes RON [3] and Genesis [4]) evaluations of the corresponding Green functions. We also discuss influence of electron beam parameters on the FEL response.
Date: August 24, 2008
Creator: Litvinenko, V.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Hao, Y.; Kayran, D.; Pozdeyev, E.; Wang, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-Situ observation of wet oxidation kinetics on Si (100) via ambient pressure x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (open access)

In-Situ observation of wet oxidation kinetics on Si (100) via ambient pressure x-ray photoemission spectroscopy

The initial stages of wet thermal oxidation of Si(100)-(2x1) have been investigated by in-situ ambient pressure x-ray photoemission spectroscopy (APXPS), including chemical-state resolution via Si 2p core-level spectra. Real-time growth rates of silicon dioxide have been monitored at 100 mTorr of water vapor. This pressure is considerably higher than in any prior study using XPS. Substrate temperatures have been varied between 250 and 500 C. Above a temperature of {approx} 400 C, two distinct regimes, a rapid and a quasi-saturated one, are identified and growth rates show a strong temperature dependence which cannot be explained by the conventional Deal-Grove model.
Date: August 24, 2007
Creator: Hussain, Zahid; Rossi, Massimiliano; Mun, Bongjin S.; Enta, Yoshiharu; Fadley, Charles S.; Lee, Ki-Suk et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Searching for plasmas with anomalous dispersion in the soft X-ray regime (open access)

Searching for plasmas with anomalous dispersion in the soft X-ray regime

Over the last decade the electron density of plasmas has been measured using X-ray laser interferometers in the 14 to 47 nm wavelength regime. With the same formula used in decades of experiments with optical interferometers, the data analysis assumes the index of refraction is due only to the free electrons, which makes the index less than one. Over the last several years, interferometer experiments in C, Al, Ag, and Sn plasmas have observed plasmas with index of refraction greater than one at 14 or 47 nm and demonstrated unequivocally that the usual formula for calculating the index of refraction is not always valid as the contribution from bound electrons can dominate the free electrons in certain cases. In this paper we search for other materials with strong anomalous dispersion that could be used in X-ray laser interferometer experiments to help understand this phenomena. An average atom code is used to calculate the plasma properties. This paper discusses the calculations of anomalous dispersion in Ne and Na plasmas near 47 nm and Xe plasmas near 14 nm. With the advent of the FLASH X-ray free electron laser in Germany and the LCLS X-FEL coming online at Stanford in 2 years …
Date: August 24, 2007
Creator: Nilsen, J; Johnson, W R & Cheng, K T
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser-Plasma Interactions in High-Energy Density Plasmas (open access)

Laser-Plasma Interactions in High-Energy Density Plasmas

Laser-plasma interactions (LPI) have been studied experimentally in high-temperature, high-energy density plasmas. The studies have been performed using the Omega laser at the Laboratory for Laser Energetics (LLE), Rochester, NY. Up to 10 TW of power was incident upon reduced-scale hohlraums, distributed in three laser beam cones. The hot hohlraums fill quickly with plasma. Late in the laser pulse, most of the laser energy is deposited at the laser entrance hole, where most of the LPI takes place. Due to the high electron temperature, the stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) spectrum extends well beyond {omega}{sub 0}/2, due to the Bohm-Gross shift. This high-temperature, high-energy density regime provides a unique opportunity to study LPI beyond inertial confinement fusion (ICF) conditions.
Date: August 24, 2005
Creator: Constantin, C. G.; Baldis, H. A.; Schneider, M. B.; Hinkel, D. E.; Langdon, A. B.; Seka, W. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress with FEL-based coherent electron cooling (open access)

Progress with FEL-based coherent electron cooling

Cooling intense high-energy hadron beams remains a major challenge for accelerator physics. Synchrotron radiation is too feeble, while efficiency of two other cooling methods falls rapidly either at high bunch intensities (i.e. stochastic cooling of protons) or at high energies (i.e. e-cooling). The possibility of coherent electron cooling, based on high-gain FEL and ERL, was presented at last FEL conference [1]. This scheme promises significant increases in luminosities of modern high-energy hadron and electron-hadron colliders, such as LHC and eRHIC. In this paper we report progress made in the past year on the development of this scheme of coherent electron cooling (CeC), results of analytical and numerical evaluation of the concept as well our prediction for LHC and RHIC. We also present layout for proof-of-principle experiment at RHIC using our R&amp;D ERL which is under construction.
Date: August 24, 2008
Creator: Litvinenko, V.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Blaskiewicz, M.; Hao, Y.; Kayran, D.; Pozdeyev, E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relativistic nuclear fluid dynamics and VUU kinetic theory (open access)

Relativistic nuclear fluid dynamics and VUU kinetic theory

Relativistic kinetic theory may be used to understand hot dense hadronic matter. We address the questions of collective flow and pion production in a 3 D relativistic fluid dynamic model and in the VUU microscopic theory. The GSI/LBL collective flow and pion data point to a stiff equation of state. The effect of the nuclear equation of state on the thermodynamic parameters is discussed. The properties of dense hot hadronic matter are studied in Au + Au collisions from 0.1 to 10 GeV/nucleon. 22 refs., 5 figs.
Date: August 24, 1987
Creator: Molitoris, J.J.; Hahn, D.; Alonso, C.; Collazo, I.; D'Alessandris, P.; McAbee, T. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Creation of ultra-high-pressure shocks by the collision of laser-accelerated disks: experiment and theory (open access)

Creation of ultra-high-pressure shocks by the collision of laser-accelerated disks: experiment and theory

We have used the SHIVA laser system to accelerate carbon disks to speeds in excess of 100 km/sec. The 3KJ/3 ns pulse, on a 1 mm diameter spot of a single disk produced a conventional shock of about 5 MB. The laser energy can, however, be stored in kinetic motion of this accelerated disk and delivered (reconverted to thermal energy) upon impact with another carbon disk. This collision occurs in a time much shorter than the 3 ns pulse, thus acting as a power amplifier. The shock pressures measured upon impact are estimated to be in the 20 MB range, thus demonstrating the amplification power of this colliding disk technique in creating ultra-high pressures. Theory and computer simulations of this process will be discussed, and compared with the experiment.
Date: August 24, 1983
Creator: Rosen, M. D.; Phillion, D. W.; Price, R. H.; Campbell, E. M.; Obenschain, S. P.; Whitlock, R. R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Examination of coherency criteria for high velocity jets (open access)

Examination of coherency criteria for high velocity jets

An examination of a coherency criteria for high velocity jets is discussed in this paper. An analysis of the classical Pugh, Eichelberger, Rostoker jetting theory is used to develop an equation that defines the maximum coherent jet velocity as a function of the liner material sound speed, the liner beta angle, and the magnitude direction of the liner collapse velocity vector. The liner material sound speed is assumed to be the liner material shock velocity at the time of liner material collapse. This shock velocity is a function of the collapse pressure in the stagnation region and thus varies with time and position along the liner. The analysis indicates that coherent jets at velocities greater than three times the liner shock velocity are possible with some combinations of the beta and collapse vector angles while incoherent jets at velocities equal to two times the liner shock velocity could occur with other combinations. The objectives of this paper are to examine the theory used to calculate jet velocity and to develop a criteria for calculating the maximum coherent jet tip velocity. 13 refs., 6 figs.
Date: August 24, 1990
Creator: Murphy, M.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Local critical current measurements on (Bi,Pb) sub 2 Sr sub 2 Ca sub 2 Cu sub 3 O sub x tape with an electromagnetic probe (open access)

Local critical current measurements on (Bi,Pb) sub 2 Sr sub 2 Ca sub 2 Cu sub 3 O sub x tape with an electromagnetic probe

The ability to measure critical currents in high {Tc} superconducting tapes on a local scale is valuable for optimizing the fabrication process. This paper describes the use of induced currents from a small noncontacting electromagnetic probe to determine the critical current density in a (Bi,Pb){sub 2}Sr{sub 2}Ca{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x}/Ag tape on a local scale. The technique forces full field penetration into the tape locally and infers the critical current density from the Bean critical state model, accounting for the Ag overlayers. Critical current images of the till can be obtained by scanning the probe over the tape surface with spatial resolution on the order of 1.0 mm. Results for tapes with different microstructures we discussed.
Date: August 24, 1992
Creator: Telschow, K.L.; O'Brien, T.K. (EG and G Idaho, Inc., Idaho Falls, ID (United States)); Lanagan, M.T. & Kaufman, D.Y. (Argonne National Lab., IL (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Primary Factors Governing Hydraulic Fractures in Heterogeneous Stratified Porous Formations (open access)

Primary Factors Governing Hydraulic Fractures in Heterogeneous Stratified Porous Formations

Some primary material, macrostructural and tectonic features of typical geological formations are identified, insofar as they affect the hydraulic fracturing operation whereby suitably treated fluid is pumped into massive crack(s) underground: the retardation or channeling due to strata interfaces, discontinuities and other heterogeneities is roughly characterized, in the context of fully three-dimensional crack shape evolution, and the initiation from oriented boreholes is discussed in detail. A general-purpose numerical scheme is described, efficiently based on a physically transparent distribution of discontinuity multipoles (or dislocations) and the solution of resulting singular integral equations, which permits precise quantification of these effects: in particular, the barriers provided by adjacent stiffer and tougher strata are properly rationalized and the roles of inelastic slippage, blunting, branching, arrest, and re-initiation are placed in more transparent perspective. Stabilization effects due to alterations of pore-fluid pressure (and hence effective decohering stress), or the flux of formation fluid into the open region near to the crack tip, are described as potentially unfavorable for hydrofrac containment. However, the dominant time-dependent mechanism of frac fluid penetration into the narrow crack aperture attracts most attention: this process is very naturally and tractably incorporated in our comprehensive numerical formulation so that realistic simulation of …
Date: August 24, 1978
Creator: Cleary, M. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Magnetic hysteresis and flux creep of YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x} grown by the melt-powder-melt-growth (MPMG) process (open access)

Magnetic hysteresis and flux creep of YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x} grown by the melt-powder-melt-growth (MPMG) process

Magnetic hysteresis and flux creep of melt-powder-melt-growth (MPMG) YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub x} containing nominal 0, 25 and 40 mole% Y{sub 2}BaCuO{sub 5} (21 1) were measured in the temperature range of 5 to 80 K and in magnetic fields up to 5 T. With the introduced fine dispersion of second phase 211 particles, the critical magnetization current density J{sub c} shows a weak field dependence over a wide range of temperature, and the effective pinning energy U{sub eff} is much enhanced. From these results, a functional expression U{sub eff}(J,T) = {minus} U{sub o} G(T) (J {vert_bar}J{sub i}){sup n} is obtained, where G(T) = [1 {minus} (T{vert_bar}T{sub x}){sup 2}]{sup 2} with Tx = 82.5 K near the irreversibility temperature. The observed power-law relationship of U{sub eff}(J, T) clearly demonstrates two of three regimes as predicted by the theory of collective flux creep, namely n = 3/2 and 7/9 for J < J{sub c} and J {much_lt} J{sub c}, respectively. In addition, the divergence of U{sub eff} at low current densities also suggests the existence of a vortex-glass state.
Date: August 24, 1992
Creator: Kung, P. J.; McHenry, M. E.; Maley, M. P.; Willis, J. O.; Murakami, M. & Tanaka, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of Electron Impact Collisional Excitation Cross Sections of Ni to Ga-Like Gold (open access)

Measurement of Electron Impact Collisional Excitation Cross Sections of Ni to Ga-Like Gold

None
Date: August 24, 2004
Creator: May, M.; Beiersdorfer, P.; Jordan, N.; Scofield, J.; Reed, K.; Hansen, S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics and Applications of NIS Junctions (open access)

Physics and Applications of NIS Junctions

This paper reviews the physics and applications of Normal-Insulator-Superconductor (NIS) tunnel junctions. The current-voltage properties of NIS junctions are diode-like with a strong temperature dependence. Hence, these structures can be used as sensitive thermometers at temperatures well below the energy gap, {Delta}, of the superconducting electrode. For junction voltages comparable to {Delta}/q, current flow removes energy from the normal electrode. This property has been exploited to build refrigerators capable of cooling thin-film circuits from 0.3 K to 0.1 K. Calorimeters and bolometers for the detection of X-rays and millimeter-wave radiation, respectively, have successfully been built from NIS junctions. NIS junctions have also been used to probe the superconducting state. Finally, recent ideas for the use of NIS junctions as simple circuit elements are described.
Date: August 24, 2001
Creator: Ullom, J N
System: The UNT Digital Library
"Applications and future trends in polymer materials for green energy systems: from energy generation and storage, to CO2 capture and transportaion" (open access)

"Applications and future trends in polymer materials for green energy systems: from energy generation and storage, to CO2 capture and transportaion"

Presentation describes United Technologies Research Center's recent work in green energy systems, including APRA-E project content to create a synthetic analogue of the carbonic anhydrase enzyme and incorporate it into a membrane for CO2 separation from the flue gas of a coal power plant.
Date: August 24, 2010
Creator: Zafiris, George
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 ROCK DEFORMATION: FEEDBACK PROCESSES IN ROCK DEFORMATION GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, AUGUST 19-24, 2012 (open access)

2012 ROCK DEFORMATION: FEEDBACK PROCESSES IN ROCK DEFORMATION GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, AUGUST 19-24, 2012

Topics covered include: Failure At High Confining Pressure; Fluid-assisted Slip, Earthquakes & Fracture; Reaction-driven Cracking; Fluid Transport, Deformation And Reaction; Localized Fluid Transport And Deformation; Earthquake Mechanisms; Subduction Zone Dynamics And Crustal Growth.
Date: August 24, 2012
Creator: Kelemen, Peter
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical engineering problems associated with construction of the Shiva Laser Fusion Facility (open access)

Optical engineering problems associated with construction of the Shiva Laser Fusion Facility

The Shiva laser system is part of a new 20 terawatt laser facility at Lawrence Livermore Laboratory. The system contains more than $5,000,000 worth of optics. This paper discusses the various optical components, typical component quantities and specification, and the problem of laser damage to components.
Date: August 24, 1977
Creator: Godwin, R. O.; Bliss, E. S.; Glaze, J. A.; O'Neal, W. C.; Patton, H. G.; Summers, M. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Emergence of the Persistent Spin Helix in Semiconductor Quantum Wells (open access)

Emergence of the Persistent Spin Helix in Semiconductor Quantum Wells

According to Noether's theorem, for every symmetry in nature there is a corresponding conservation law. For example, invariance with respect to spatial translation corresponds to conservation of momentum. In another well-known example, invariance with respect to rotation of the electron's spin, or SU(2) symmetry, leads to conservation of spin polarization. For electrons in a solid, this symmetry is ordinarily broken by spin-orbit (SO) coupling, allowing spin angular momentum to flow to orbital angular momentum. However, it has recently been predicted that SU(2) can be recovered in a two-dimensional electron gas (2DEG), despite the presence of SO coupling. The corresponding conserved quantities include the amplitude and phase of a helical spin density wave termed the 'persistent spin helix' (PSH). SU(2) is restored, in principle, when the strength of two dominant SO interactions, the Rashba ({alpha}) and linear Dresselhaus ({beta}{sub 1}), are equal. This symmetry is predicted to be robust against all forms of spin-independent scattering, including electron-electron interactions, but is broken by the cubic Dresselhaus term ({beta}{sub 3}) and spin-dependent scattering. When these terms are negligible, the distance over which spin information can propagate is predicted to diverge as {alpha} {yields} {beta}{sub 1}. Here we observe experimentally the emergence of the …
Date: August 24, 2011
Creator: Koralek, Jake; Weber, Chris; Orenstein, Joe; Bernevig, Andrei; Zhang, Shoucheng; Mack, Shawn et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Beam Polarization Measurement Using Touschek Lifetime Technique (open access)

Electron Beam Polarization Measurement Using Touschek Lifetime Technique

Electron beam loss due to intra-beam scattering, the Touschek effect, in a storage ring depends on the electron beam polarization. The polarization of an electron beam can be determined from the difference in the Touschek lifetime compared with an unpolarized beam. In this paper, we report on a systematic experimental procedure recently developed at Duke FEL laboratory to study the radiative polarization of a stored electron beam. Using this technique, we have successfully observed the radiative polarization build-up of an electron beam in the Duke storage ring, and determined the equilibrium degree of polarization and the time constant of the polarization build-up process.
Date: August 24, 2012
Creator: Sun, Changchun; Li, Jingyi; Mikhailov, Stepan; Popov, Victor; Wu, Wenzhong; Wu, Ying et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polar Kerr Effect Measurements of YBa_2Cu_3O_6+x: Evidence for Broken Symmetry Near the Pseudogap Temperature (open access)

Polar Kerr Effect Measurements of YBa_2Cu_3O_6+x: Evidence for Broken Symmetry Near the Pseudogap Temperature

Polar Kerr effect in the high-Tc superconductor YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub 6+x} was measured at zero magnetic field with high precision using a cyogenic Sagnac fiber interferometer. We observed non-zero Kerr rotations of order {approx} 1 {micro}rad appearing near the pseudogap temperature T*, and marking what appears to be a true phase transition. Anomalous magnetic behavior in magnetic-field training of the effect suggests that time reversal symmetry is already broken above room temperature.
Date: August 24, 2011
Creator: Xia, Jing
System: The UNT Digital Library