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Wave (open access)

Wave

From this investigation, I hoped to answer the following questions. 1) Was there a relationship between the apparent disorder evident at a boundary area and the wave form? 2. Was the wave configuration an archetypal motif? 3. If there was an archetypal wave form, did its presence transcend the use of a scientific medium?
Date: October 1989
Creator: Fernandes, Leslie
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crystal and molecular structure of organophosphorus insecticides (open access)

Crystal and molecular structure of organophosphorus insecticides

The crystal and molecular structures of the following organophosphorus (OP) insecticides have been determined by three-dimensional X-ray analysis: ronnel (0,0-dimethyl 0-2,4,5 trichlorophenyl phosphorothioate), ronnel oxon (0,0-dimethyl 0-2,4,5 trichlorophenyl phosphate), bomophos (0-(4-bromo-2,5-dichlorophenyl) 0,0-dimethyl phosphorothioate), Ruelene (0-(4-tert-Butyl-2-chlorophenyl)-0-methyl-N-methyl phosphoroamidate), fospirate (0,0-dimethyl 0-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphate) and chlorpyrifos (0,0-diethyl 0-3,5,6-trichloro-2-pyridyl phosphorothioate). Phosphorus to meta hydrogen distances for the respective compounds are: 5.51, 5.49, 5.42, (5.68, 5.13), 5.79 and 5.78 A. All of these distances fall well within the range of literature values cited for the intramolecular active site-separation distance for insect acetylcholinesterase (AChE), yet are well outside that for mammalian AChE. In addition the crystal structure of ronnel displays a hydrogen-sulfur intermolecular interaction in the b direction and a phosphorus which is readily accessible for phosphorylation of AChE. The structure of ronnel oxon is quite similar to that of ronnel. CNDO 11 molecular orbital calculations are presented to show the charge distribution in the compound. A likely intramolecular hydrogen bond in bromophos restricts rotation about the phenolic C-O bond. The configuration of Ruelene is substantiated by CNDO 11 molecular orbital calculations and van der Waals arguments and features a possible weak intramolecular hydrogen bond which somewhat restricts rotation about the phenolic C-O bond. Charge density information …
Date: October 1, 1977
Creator: Baughman, R. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical shift anisotropies of /sup 1/H in H/sub 2/O(s), H/sub 2/S(s), and C/sub 6/H/sub 6/(s) (open access)

Chemical shift anisotropies of /sup 1/H in H/sub 2/O(s), H/sub 2/S(s), and C/sub 6/H/sub 6/(s)

The proton NMR in powdered samples of H/sub 2/O(s), H/sub 2/S(s), and C/sub 6/H/sub 6/(s) have been studied by multiple pulse line narrowing techniques. The resultant spectra provide nuclear magnetic shielding tensors that are (at least approximately) axially symmetric. The anisotropy is 34.2 +- 1.0 ppM for ice, 11.1 +- 1.0 ppM for the highest-temperature phase of solid hydrogen sulfide, and -5.3 +- 0.3 for benzene. Comparisons are made with previous experimental and theoretical work.
Date: October 1, 1977
Creator: Ryan, L. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the W + gamma Production in Proton - Anti-proton Collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV (open access)

Measurement of the W + gamma Production in Proton - Anti-proton Collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV

The authors present a measurement of the {bar p}p {yields} W{gamma} + X {yields} e{nu}{gamma} + X production cross section using data form the Collider Detector at Fermilab. The p{bar p} collisions were provided by the Tevatron Collider at a center of mass energy of 1.96 TeV. Electroweak theory includes the trilinear vector boson coupling, WW{gamma}, which contributes to the e{nu}{gamma} final state. The electron decay channel of the W provides a clean sample to study the production of diboson pairs. The measurement of the production cross section tests the structure of the non-Abelian character of Electroweak theory.
Date: October 1, 2004
Creator: Kirby, Michael H. & U., /Duke
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search for leptoquarks in jet topolgy with missing transverse energy using the D0 detector (open access)

Search for leptoquarks in jet topolgy with missing transverse energy using the D0 detector

The D0 experiment, located at the Fermilab National Accelerator Laboratory in the US, is used to study proton-anti-proton collisions at a center of mass energy of 1.96 TeV. The experiment's data acquisition system is based on a sophisticated trigger system used to select potentially interesting events. The Level 2 Silicon Track Trigger (L2STT) is part of the trigger system that provides precise reconstruction of charged particle tracks allowing the selection of events that contain the decays of long lived particles. For example, such particles appear in the decay of the Higgs boson into a pair of bottom quarks. The design of the L2STT preprocessor has greatly benefited from recent advances in electronics technology. The preprocessor has been recently installed and will be used to further optimize the triggering strategy of the experiment. Leptoquarks would mediate hypothetical new interactions between the quarks and leptons of the Standard Model. The existence of such particles would be evidence for physics beyond that model. In this thesis, a direct search for leptoquarks is performed in the jets and missing transverse energy final state. For this analysis, a trigger had to be developed along with a tool to precisely determine its efficiency. An analysis of …
Date: October 1, 2004
Creator: Zabi, Alexandre
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct measurement of the W boson decay width in proton-antiproton collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV (open access)

Direct measurement of the W boson decay width in proton-antiproton collisions at s**(1/2) = 1.96-TeV

This dissertation describes a direct measurement of the W boson total decay width, {Lambda}{sub W}, using the D0 detector at the Fermilab Tevatron Collider. The measurement uses an integrated luminosity of 177.3 pb{sup -1} data, collected during the 2002-2003 run. The width is determined from the shape of the transverse mass distribution, M{sub T}, by fitting the data in the tail region 100 < M{sub T} < 200 GeV. The result if {Lambda}{sub W} = 2.011 {+-} 0.093(stat) {+-} 0.107(syst) GeV.
Date: October 1, 2004
Creator: Zhu, Jun-jie
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Investigation of the Influence of Initial Conditions on Rayleigh-Taylor Mixing (open access)

An Investigation of the Influence of Initial Conditions on Rayleigh-Taylor Mixing

Experiments and direct numerical simulations (DNS) have been performed to examine the effects of initial conditions on the dynamics of a Rayleigh-Taylor unstable mixing layer. Experiments were performed on a water channel facility to measure the interfacial and velocity perturbations initially present at the two-fluid interface in a small Atwood number mixing layer. The experimental measurements have been parameterized for use in numerical simulations of the experiment. Two- and three-dimensional DNS of the experiment have been performed using the parameterized initial conditions. It is shown that simulations implemented with initial velocity and density perturbations, rather than density perturbations alone, are required to match experimentally-measured statistics and spectra. Data acquired from both the experiment and numerical simulations are used to examine the role of initial conditions on the evolution of integral-scale, turbulence, and mixing statistics. Early-time turbulence and mixing statistics are shown to be strongly-dependent upon the early-time transition of the initial perturbation from a weakly-nonlinear to a strongly-nonlinear flow.
Date: October 4, 2004
Creator: Mueschke, N J & Schilling, O
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Direct Search for Dirac Magnetic Monopoles (open access)

A Direct Search for Dirac Magnetic Monopoles

Magnetic monopoles are highly ionizing and curve in the direction of the magnetic field. A new dedicated magnetic monopole trigger at CDF, which requires large light pulses in the scintillators of the time-of-flight system, remains highly efficient to monopoles while consuming a tiny fraction of the available trigger bandwidth. A specialized offline reconstruction checks the central drift chamber for large dE/dx tracks which do not curve in the plane perpendicular to the magnetic field. We observed zero monopole candidate events in 35.7 pb{sup -1} of proton-antiproton collisions at {radical}s = 1.96 TeV. This implies a monopole production cross section limit {sigma} < 0.2 pb for monopoles with mass between 100 and 700 GeV, and, for a Drell-Yan like pair production mechanism, a mass limit m > 360 GeV.
Date: October 1, 2004
Creator: Mulhearn, Michael James
System: The UNT Digital Library
B Quark Tagging and Cross-Section Measurement in Quark Pair Production at d0 (open access)

B Quark Tagging and Cross-Section Measurement in Quark Pair Production at d0

None
Date: October 1, 2004
Creator: Greder, Sebastien & /Louis Pasteur U., Strasbourg I /Strasbourg, IReS
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of DNA supercoiling in vivo and in vitro (open access)

Studies of DNA supercoiling in vivo and in vitro

This thesis describes a number of diverse experiments whose common theme is to elaborate some aspect of DNA supercoiling. The torsion elastic constant of DNA is measure as a function of superhelix density using the technique of picosecond Time Resolved Fluorescence Polarization Anisotropy (FPA) of intercalated ethidium bromide. The results agree with theories which predict that the anisotropy decay should vary with the square root of the relative viscosity. This experiment furthermore demonstrates a sensitivity of FPA to a change in torsion elastic constant of less than 10%. A number of covalently closed DNA samples, ranging in superhelix density from = {minus}0.123 to {plus}0.042, are then examined. A novel method for measuring changes in local supercoiling on a large PNA molecule which is sensitive to changes in supercoiling of regions of chromosomal DNA as short as 1 kilobase in length is presented. Study of chromosomal supercoiling regulating anaerobic gene expression in the facultative photosynthetic bacterium, Rhodobacter capsulatus showed that no stable change in chromosomal supercoiling upon a shift from aerobic respiratory growth to anaerobic photosynthetic conditions. Studies to detect transient changes in DNA supercoiling indicate that DNA downstream from heavily transcribed genes for the photosynthetic reaction center are relaxed or …
Date: October 1, 1990
Creator: Cook, D. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Studies of the Stimulated Brillouin Scattering Instability in the Saturated Regime (open access)

Experimental Studies of the Stimulated Brillouin Scattering Instability in the Saturated Regime

An experimental study of the stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) instability has investigated the effects of velocity gradients and kinetic effects on the saturation of ion-acoustic waves in a plasma. For intensities less than I < 1.5 x 10{sup 15} W cm{sup -2}, the SBS instability is moderated primarily by velocity gradients, and for intensities above this threshold, nonlinear trapping is invoked to saturate the instability. We report direct evidence of detuning of SBS by a velocity gradient which was achieved by directly measuring the frequency shift of the SBS driven acoustic wave relative to the local resonant acoustic frequency. Furthermore, a novel use of Thomson scattering has allowed us to gather direct evidence of kinetic effects associated with the SBS process. Specifically, a measured two-fold increase of the ion temperature has been linked with laser beam excitation of ion-acoustic waves to large amplitudes by the SBS instability. Ion-acoustic waves were excited to large amplitude with a 2{omega} 1.2-ns long interaction beam with intensities up to 5 x 10{sup 15} W cm{sup -2}. The local frequency, amplitude, and spatial range of these waves were measured with a 3{omega} 200ps Thomson-scattering probe beam. These detailed and accurate measurements in well-characterized plasma conditions …
Date: October 29, 2002
Creator: Froula, D
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermocapillary and arc phenomena in stainless steel welds (open access)

Thermocapillary and arc phenomena in stainless steel welds

Goal was to study effect of power level and distribution on thermocapiilary-induced weld shape and of arc factors on weld shape. Thermocapillarity was apparent in both conduction mode EB welds and GTA welds, particularly in the former. A non-Gaussian arc distribution is suggested for accounting for the differences between the twoss processes. At higher current levels (200--300 A), plasma shear force also contributes to weld shape development. Evidence suggests that thermocapillary flow reversal is not a factor in normal GTA welds; EDB flow reversal occurs only at high power density levels where the keyhole mode is present.
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: Pierce, S. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Temperature dependence of CsI(Tl) gamma-ray excited scintillation characteristics (open access)

Temperature dependence of CsI(Tl) gamma-ray excited scintillation characteristics

Gamma-ray excited emission spectrum, absolute scintillation yield, rise and decay time constants, and thermoluminescence emissions of CsI(Tl) were measured at {minus}100 to +50 C, for crystals from 4 different vendors. The thermoluminescence glow curves were the only property that varied significantly from crystal to crystal; room temperature operation in current mode could be susceptible to temperature fluctuations. The CsI(Tl) emission spectrum has emission bands peaking around 400 and 560 nm; the former band disappears between {minus}50 and {minus}75 C. The RT absolute scintillation yield was calculated to be 65,500{plus_minus}4,100 photons/MeV. The two primary decay time constants increases about exponentially with inverse temperature. An ultra-fast decay component was confirmed. Applications are discussed.
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Temperature and Motility on the Advective Transport of a Deep Subsurface Bacteria Through Saturated Sediment (open access)

The Effects of Temperature and Motility on the Advective Transport of a Deep Subsurface Bacteria Through Saturated Sediment

Replicate column experiments were done to quantify the effects of temperature and bacterial motility on advective transport through repacked, but otherwise unaltered, natural aquifer sediment. The bacteria used in this study, A0500, was a flagellated, spore-forming rod isolated from the deep subsurface at DOE`s Savannah River Laboratory. Motility was controlled by turning on flagellar metabolism at 18{degrees}C but off at 40{degrees}C. Microspheres were used to independently quantify the effects of temperature on the sticking efficiency ({alpha}), estimated using a steady-state filtration model. The observed greater microsphere removal at the higher temperature agreed with the physical-chemical model, but bacteria removal at 18{degrees}C was only half that at 4{degrees}C. The sticking efficiency for non-motile A0500 (4{degrees}C) was over three times that of the motile A0500 (18{degrees}C), 0.073 versus 0.022 respectively. Analysis of complete breakthrough curves using a non-steady, kinetically limited, transport model to estimate the time scales of attachment and detachment suggested that motile A 0500 bacteria traveled twice as far as non-motile A 0500 bacteria before becoming attached. Once attached, non-motile colloids detached on the time scale of 9 to 17 days. The time scale for detachment of motile A0500 bacteria was shorter, 4 to 5 days. Results indicate that bacterial …
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: McCaulou, D. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anodic oxygen-transfer electrocatalysis at iron-doped lead dioxide electrodes (open access)

Anodic oxygen-transfer electrocatalysis at iron-doped lead dioxide electrodes

The research illustrated in this thesis was performed under the guidance of Professor Dennis C. Johnson beginning in March 1987. Chapter 2 concentrates on the development and electrocatalytic properties of iron-doped {beta}-PbO{sub 2} films on noble-metal substrates. Chapter 3 focuses attention on the preparation and characterization of iron-doped {beta}-PbO{sub 2} films on titanium substrates (Fe-PbO{sub 2}/Ti). Chapter 4 discusses anodic evolution of ozone at Fe-PbO{sub 2}/Ti electrodes. Chapter 5 describes electrochemical incineration of p-benzoquinone (BQ) at Fe-PbO{sub 2}/Ti electrodes. In addition, the Appendix includes another published paper which is a detailed study of {alpha}-PbO{sub 2} films deposited on various types of stainless steel substrates.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Feng, Jianren
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid chromatographic method for determination of water in soils and the optimization of anion separations by capillary zone electrophoresis (open access)

Liquid chromatographic method for determination of water in soils and the optimization of anion separations by capillary zone electrophoresis

A liquid chromatographic method for the determination of water in soil or clay samples is presented. In a separate study, the optimization of electrophoretic separation of alkylated phenolate ions was optimized by varying the pH and acetonitrile concentration of the buffer solutions.
Date: October 1, 1994
Creator: Benz, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Risk factors for work-related symptoms in northern California office workers (open access)

Risk factors for work-related symptoms in northern California office workers

In most episodes of health complaints reported in office buildings in the last-twenty years, causal factors have not been identified. In order to assess risk factors for work-related symptoms in office workers, a reanalysis was performed of previous studies, and an epidemiologic study was conducted. The reanalysis of data, showed remarkable agreement among studies. Air-conditioned buildings were consistently associated with higher prevalence of headache, lethargy, and eye, nose, or throat problems. Humidification was not a necessary factor for this higher prevalence. Mechanical ventilation without air-conditioning was not associated with higher symptom prevalence. A study was conducted among 880 office workers, within 12 office buildings selected without regard to worker complaints, in northern California. A number of factors were found associated with prevalence of work-related symptoms, after adjustment in a logistic regression model for personal, psychosocial, job, workspace, and building factors. Two different ventilation types were associated with increases Ln symptom prevalence, relative to workers in naturally ventilated buildings: mechanical supply and exhaust ventilation, without air conditioning and with operable windows; and air-conditioning with sealed windows. No study buildings were humidified. In both these ventilation types, the highest odds ratios (ORs) found were for skin symptoms (ORs-5.0, 5.6) and for tight …
Date: October 1, 1991
Creator: Mendell, M. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of wavelength shifters for spectral separation of barium fluoride emissions (open access)

Evaluation of wavelength shifters for spectral separation of barium fluoride emissions

BaF{sub 2} has the advantage over other scintillators, when comparing radiation hardness, scintillation decay time, and fast scintillation yield. Since the fast BaF{sub 2} emissions have peak wavelengths of 220, 195, and 170 nm, a wavelength shifter (WLS) is needed. Organic fluors were evaluated as WLS components. Results indicate that spectral separation using WLS is possible, but not to the extent desired; other techniques must be used also. Alternative scintillators, such as CeF{sub 3}, should be investigated.
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: DeVol, Timonthy A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collision dynamics of methyl radicals and highly vibrationally excited molecules using crossed molecular beams (open access)

Collision dynamics of methyl radicals and highly vibrationally excited molecules using crossed molecular beams

The vibrational to translational (V{yields}T) energy transfer in collisions between large highly vibrationally excited polyatomics and rare gases was investigated by time-of-flight techniques. Two different methods, UV excitation followed by intemal conversion and infrared multiphoton excitation (IRMPE), were used to form vibrationally excited molecular beams of hexafluorobenzene and sulfur hexafluoride, respectively. The product translational energy was found to be independent of the vibrational excitation. These results indicate that the probability distribution function for V{yields}T energy transfer is peaked at zero. The collisional relaxation of large polyatomic molecules with rare gases most likely occurs through a rotationally mediated process. Photodissociation of nitrobenzene in a molecular beam was studied at 266 nm. Two primary dissociation channels were identified including simple bond rupture to produce nitrogen dioxide and phenyl radical and isomerization to form nitric oxide and phenoxy radical. The time-of-flight spectra indicate that simple bond rupture and isomerization occurs via two different mechanisms. Secondary dissociation of the phenoxy radicals to carbon monoxide and cyclopentadienyl radicals was observed as well as secondary photodissociation of phenyl radical to give H atom and benzyne. A supersonic methyl radical beam source is developed. The beam source configuration and conditions were optimized for CH{sub 3} production from …
Date: October 1, 1991
Creator: Chu, P. M. Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium Data and Decontamination Factors Needed for the Development of Evaporator Technology for Use in Volume Reduction of Radioactive Waste Streams (open access)

Determination of Vapor-Liquid Equilibrium Data and Decontamination Factors Needed for the Development of Evaporator Technology for Use in Volume Reduction of Radioactive Waste Streams

A program is currently in progress at Argonne National Laboratory to evaluate and develop evaporator technology for concentrating radioactive waste streams. By concentrating radioactive waste streams, disposal costs can be significantly reduced. To effectively reduce the volume of waste, the evaporator must achieve high decontamination factors so that the distillate is sufficiently free of radioactive material. One technology that shows a great deal of potential for this application is being developed by LICON, Inc. In this program, Argonne plans to apply LICON`s evaporator designs to the processing of radioactive solutions. Concepts that need to be incorporated into the design of the evaporator include, criticality safety, remote operation and maintenance, and materials of construction. To design an effective process for concentrating waste streams, both solubility and vapor-liquid equilibrium data are needed. The key issue, however, is the high decontamination factors that have been demonstrated by this equipment. Two major contributions were made to this project. First, a literature survey was completed to obtain available solubility and vapor-liquid equilibrium data. Some vapor-liquid data necessary for the project but not available in the literature was obtained experimentally. Second, the decontamination factor for the evaporator was determined using neutron activation analysis (NAA).
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: Betts, S. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mini-ADA Compiler Project (open access)

Mini-ADA Compiler Project

The Ada language is one of the most controversial topics in computer science today. Ada was originally designed as a solution to the software maintenance problems encountered by the United States Department of Defense[2], and as a multi-purpose language to be used particularly in an embedded computer system[7]. Never before has a project been undertaken. The Ada language does not simply entail the construction of a new compiler or a new language definition, it is this and a great deal more.
Date: October 1983
Creator: Chang, Kai
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rare event simulation in radiation transport (open access)

Rare event simulation in radiation transport

This dissertation studies methods for estimating extremely small probabilities by Monte Carlo simulation. Problems in radiation transport typically involve estimating very rare events or the expected value of a random variable which is with overwhelming probability equal to zero. These problems often have high dimensional state spaces and irregular geometries so that analytic solutions are not possible. Monte Carlo simulation must be used to estimate the radiation dosage being transported to a particular location. If the area is well shielded the probability of any one particular particle getting through is very small. Because of the large number of particles involved, even a tiny fraction penetrating the shield may represent an unacceptable level of radiation. It therefore becomes critical to be able to accurately estimate this extremely small probability. Importance sampling is a well known technique for improving the efficiency of rare event calculations. Here, a new set of probabilities is used in the simulation runs. The results are multiple by the likelihood ratio between the true and simulated probabilities so as to keep the estimator unbiased. The variance of the resulting estimator is very sensitive to which new set of transition probabilities are chosen. It is shown that a zero …
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: Kollman, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Superconducting submillimeter and millimeter wave detectors (open access)

Superconducting submillimeter and millimeter wave detectors

The series of projects described in this dissertation was stimulated by the discovery of high temperature superconductivity. Our goal was to develop useful applications which would be competitive with the current state of technology. The high-{Tc} microbolometer was developed into the most sensitive direct detector of millimeter waves, when operated at liquid nitrogen temperatures. The thermal boundary resistance of thin YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}0{sub 7-{delta}} films was subsequently measured and provided direct evidence for the bolometric response of high-{Tc} films to fast (ns) laser pulses. The low-{Tc} microbolometer was developed and used to make the first direct measurements of the frequency dependent optical efficiency of planar lithographed antennas. The hot-electron microbolometer was invented less than a year prior to the writing of this dissertation. Our analysis, presented here, indicates that it should be possible to attain up to two orders of magnitude higher sensitivity than that of the best available direct detectors when operated at the same temperature. The temperature readout scheme for this device could also be used to measure the intrinsic interaction between electrons and phonons in a metal with a sensitivity that is five orders of magnitude better than in previous measurements. Preliminary measurements of quasiparticle trapping effects …
Date: October 20, 1992
Creator: Nahum, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurements of gluon spin-sensitive quantities at the Z{sup 0} resonance (open access)

Measurements of gluon spin-sensitive quantities at the Z{sup 0} resonance

Measurements have been made of the scaled jet energies (x{sub 1}, x{sub 2}, x{sub 3}) and the Ellis-Karliner angle (cos{theta}{sub EK}), which are sensitive to the spill of the gluon, in the 3-jet hadronic events from the e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} annihilation at the Z{sup 0} resonance. The experiment is performed with the SLD detector at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). The data used in this analysis was collected during the 1992 physics run, which includes 10,252 hadronic Z{sup 0} events that have CDC information written out. Only charged tracks measured in the central drift chamber are used for the measurements of the above variables. The raw data are found to be in good agreement with the Monte Carlo simulations passing the same set of track and event selection cuts. A bin-to-bin correction is done for the distributions of x{sub 1}, x{sub 2}, x{sub 3}, and cos{theta}{sub EK} to account for the effects of hadronization, detector acceptance and resolution. The corrected data is compared to the parton level distributions of x{sub 1}, x{sub 2}, x{sub 3}, and cos{theta}{sub EK} simulated from the vector QCD model and the scalar gluon model respectively. The systematic errors, calculated for all the bins in …
Date: October 1, 1993
Creator: Fan, C. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library