Design of a superconducting wiggler system (open access)

Design of a superconducting wiggler system

We present a wiggler system based on currently available superconducting technology. The system is designed to provide maximum central field of 4.4 tesla with a specified period length of 160 mm and a gap of 40 mm, while meeting the field quality requirements along all axes. Also included are preliminary cost estimates and a survey of world-wide RandD efforts on superconducting wiggler systems. 12 refs., 6 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: October 5, 1988
Creator: Shen, S. S.; Miller, J. R.; Heim, J. R. & Slack, D. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An essay on discrete foundations for physics (open access)

An essay on discrete foundations for physics

We base our theory of physics and cosmology on the five principles of finiteness, discreteness, finite computability, absolute non- uniqueness, and strict construction. Our modeling methodology starts from the current practice of physics, constructs a self-consistent representation based on the ordering operator calculus and provides rules of correspondence that allow us to test the theory by experiment. We use program universe to construct a growing collection of bit strings whose initial portions (labels) provide the quantum numbers that are conserved in the events defined by the construction. The labels are followed by content strings which are used to construct event-based finite and discrete coordinates. On general grounds such a theory has a limiting velocity, and positions and velocities do not commute. We therefore reconcile quantum mechanics with relativity at an appropriately fundamental stage in the construction. We show that events in different coordinate systems are connected by the appropriate finite and discrete version of the Lorentz transformation, that 3-momentum is conserved in events, and that this conservation law is the same as the requirement that different paths can ''interfere'' only when they differ by an integral number of deBroglie wavelengths. 38 refs., 12 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: October 5, 1988
Creator: Noyes, H. P. & McGoveran, D. O.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Internal Beam Dump System for RHIC (open access)

Internal Beam Dump System for RHIC

None
Date: October 5, 1988
Creator: J., Claus
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation From Muons At RHIC (open access)

Radiation From Muons At RHIC

None
Date: October 5, 1988
Creator: Stevens, A. J. & Foelsche, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rotating liquid blanket with no first wall for fusion reactors (open access)

Rotating liquid blanket with no first wall for fusion reactors

A toroidal vortex of liquid FLiBe (LiF + BeF/sub 2/) is suggested for the blanket of a fusion reactor. Because this system has no solid first wall, it might avoid many of the problems that accompany conventional blanket design. The liquid is sustained by nozzles that inject a continuous layer of cool liquid on the inner surface. A second set of nozzles sends a stream of droplets across the diverted scrape-off layer or edge plasma to carry its heat away. The feasibility issues of most importance are judged to be avoiding turbulent breakup of the vortex and preventing too much contamination of the plasma by the evaporating FLiBe. 6 refs., 5 figs., 1 tab.
Date: October 5, 1988
Creator: Moir, Ralph W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library