Resource Type

States

Beryllium usage in fusion blankets and beryllium data needs. [None] (open access)

Beryllium usage in fusion blankets and beryllium data needs. [None]

Increasing numbers of designers are choosing beryllium for fusion reactor blankets because it, among all nonfissile materials, produces the highest number (2.5 neutron in an infinite media) of neutrons per 14-MeV incident neutron. In amounts of about 20 cm of equivalent solid density, it can be used to produce fissile material, to breed all the tritium consumed in ITER from outboard blankets only, and in designs to produce Co-60. The problem is that predictions of neutron multiplication in beryllium are off by some 10 to 20% and appear to be on the high side, which means that better multiplication measurements and numerical methods are needed. The n,2n reactions result in two helium atoms, which cause radiation damage in the form of hardening at low temperatures (<300/degree/C) and swelling at high temperatures (>300/degree/C). The usual way beryllium parts are made is by hot pressing the powder. A lower cost method is to cold press and then sinter. There is no radiation damage data on this form of beryllium. The issues of corrosion, safety relative to the release of the tritium built-up inside beryllium, and recycle of used beryllium are also discussed. 10 figs.
Date: April 6, 1988
Creator: Moir, Ralph W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sources of hot electrons in laser-plasma interaction with emphasis on Raman and turbulence absorption (open access)

Sources of hot electrons in laser-plasma interaction with emphasis on Raman and turbulence absorption

Heating targets with high power lasers results in a sizable fraction of the absorbed energy going into electrons of temperature much greater than thermal which can pre-heat the pellet core and accelerate fast ion blowoff which results in poor momentum transfer and hence poor compression efficiency. The present emphasis is to build lasers of higher frequency, ..omega../sub 0/, which at the same W/cm/sup 2/ results in more absorption into cooler electrons. Two physical reasons are that the laser can propagate to a higher electron density, n, infinity..omega../sub 0//sup 2/ resulting in more collisional inverse bremsstrahlung absorption proportional to n, and because the hot temperatures from some plasma absorption processes increase as the oscillatory velocity of an electron in the laser electric field v/sub 0//c = eE/(m/sub e/..omega../sub 0/). The heated electron temperatures from other plasma processes (Raman for example approx.(m/sub e//2)v/sup 2//sub phase/ and the higher laser frequency helps by increasing the competing collisional absorption and decreasing the Raman gain.
Date: April 6, 1982
Creator: Estabrook, K.; Kruer, W. L.; Phillion, D. W.; Turner, R. E. & Campbell, E. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A HIGH-RESOLUTION HIGH-LUMINOSITY BETA-RAY SPECTROMETER DESIGN EMPLOYING AZIMUTHALLY VARYING MAGNETIC FIELDS (open access)

A HIGH-RESOLUTION HIGH-LUMINOSITY BETA-RAY SPECTROMETER DESIGN EMPLOYING AZIMUTHALLY VARYING MAGNETIC FIELDS

A double-focusing magnetic field for a spectrometer of the flat type which gives radial focusing to roughly the sixth order, and which utilizes azimuthal variation of the field coefficients, has been devised.
Date: April 6, 1966
Creator: Bergkvist, Karl-Erik & Sessler, Andrew M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Discovery of Non-random Spatial Distribution of Impacts in the Stardust Cometary Collector (open access)

Discovery of Non-random Spatial Distribution of Impacts in the Stardust Cometary Collector

We report the discovery that impacts in the Stardust cometary collector are not distributed randomly in the collecting media, but appear to be clustered on scales smaller than {approx} 10 cm. We also report the discovery of at least two populations of oblique tracks. We evaluated several hypotheses that could explain the observations. No hypothesis was consistent with all the observations, but the preponderance of evidence points toward at least one impact on the central Whipple shield of the spacecraft as the origin of both clustering and low-angle oblique tracks. High-angle oblique tracks unambiguously originate from a non-cometary impact on the spacecraft bus just forward of the collector.
Date: April 6, 2007
Creator: Westphal, A. J.; Bastien, R. K.; Borg, J.; Bridges, J.; Brownlee, D. E.; Burchell, M. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ionization-Induced Electron Trapping in Ultrarelativistic Plasma Wakes (open access)

Ionization-Induced Electron Trapping in Ultrarelativistic Plasma Wakes

The onset of trapping of electrons born inside a highly relativistic, 3D beam-driven plasma wake is investigated. Trapping occurs in the transition regions of a Li plasma confined by He gas. Li plasma electrons support the wake, and higher ionization potential He atoms are ionized as the beam is focused by Li ions and can be trapped. As the wake amplitude is increased, the onset of trapping is observed. Some electrons gain up to 7.6 GeV in a 30.5 cm plasma. The experimentally inferred trapping threshold is at a wake amplitude of 36 GV/m, in good agreement with an analytical model and PIC simulations.
Date: April 6, 2007
Creator: Oz, E.; Deng, S.; Katsouleas, T.; Muggli, P.; Barnes, C. D.; Blumenfeld, I. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FUNCTIONALIZED LATERAL SURFACE COATED LASERS FOR CHEM-BIO DETECTION (open access)

FUNCTIONALIZED LATERAL SURFACE COATED LASERS FOR CHEM-BIO DETECTION

None
Date: April 6, 2007
Creator: GODDARD, L L; BOND, T C; COLE, G D & BEHYMER, E M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficient Analysis of Live and Historical Streaming Data and itsApplication to Cybersecurity (open access)

Efficient Analysis of Live and Historical Streaming Data and itsApplication to Cybersecurity

Applications that query data streams in order to identifytrends, patterns, or anomalies can often benefit from comparing the livestream data with archived historical stream data. However, searching thishistorical data in real time has been considered so far to beprohibitively expensive. One of the main bottlenecks is the update costsof the indices over the archived data. In this paper, we address thisproblem by using our highly-efficient bitmap indexing technology (calledFastBit) and demonstrate that the index update operations aresufficiently efficient for this bottleneck to be removed. We describe ourprototype system based on the TelegraphCQ streaming query processor andthe FastBit bitmap index. We present a detailed performance evaluation ofour system using a complex query workload for analyzing real networktraffic data. The combined system uses TelegraphCQ to analyze streams oftraffic information and FastBit to correlate current behaviors withhistorical trends. We demonstrate that our system can simultaneouslyanalyze (1) live streams with high data rates and (2) a large repositoryof historical stream data.
Date: April 6, 2007
Creator: Reiss, Frederick; Stockinger, Kurt; Wu, Kesheng; Shoshani, Arie & Hellerstein, Joseph M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ionizing radiation predisposes non-malignant human mammaryepithelial cells to undergo TGF beta-induced epithelial to mesenchymaltransition (open access)

Ionizing radiation predisposes non-malignant human mammaryepithelial cells to undergo TGF beta-induced epithelial to mesenchymaltransition

Transforming growth factor {beta}1 (TGF{beta}) is a tumor suppressor during the initial stage of tumorigenesis, but it can switch to a tumor promoter during neoplastic progression. Ionizing radiation (IR), both a carcinogen and a therapeutic agent, induces TGF{beta}, activation in vivo. We now show that IR sensitizes human mammary epithelial cells (HMEC) to undergo TGF{beta}-mediated epithelial to mesenchymal transition (EMT). Non-malignant HMEC (MCF10A, HMT3522 S1 and 184v) were irradiated with 2 Gy shortly after attachment in monolayer culture, or treated with a low concentration of TGF{beta} (0.4 ng/ml), or double-treated. All double-treated (IR+TGF{beta}) HMEC underwent a morphological shift from cuboidal to spindle-shaped. This phenotype was accompanied by decreased expression of epithelial markers E-cadherin, {beta}-catenin and ZO-1, remodeling of the actin cytoskeleton, and increased expression of mesenchymal markers N-cadherin, fibronectin and vimentin. Furthermore, double-treatment increased cell motility, promoted invasion and disrupted acinar morphogenesis of cells subsequently plated in Matrigel{trademark}. Neither radiation nor TGF{beta} alone elicited EMT, even though IR increased chronic TGF{beta} signaling and activity. Gene expression profiling revealed that double treated cells exhibit a specific 10-gene signature associated with Erk/MAPK signaling. We hypothesized that IR-induced MAPK activation primes non-malignant HMEC to undergo TGF{beta}-mediated EMT. Consistent with this, Erk phosphorylation were …
Date: April 6, 2007
Creator: Andarawewa, Kumari L.; Erickson, Anna C.; Chou, William S.; Costes, Sylvain; Gascard, Philippe; Mott, Joni D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of gas phase reactions of uranium with selected oxidizers and fluoromethanes (open access)

Studies of gas phase reactions of uranium with selected oxidizers and fluoromethanes

A crossed molecular beam study was made of the reactions of U with inorganic oxidizers (O/sub 2/, NO, SO/sub 2/, N/sub 2/O, CO/sub 2/), water, alcohols, acetone, and halogenated methanes. Results show that U in the gas phase behaves very much like most other heavy metals, and may be called a heavy Ba or Sn atom. 8 figures. (DLC)
Date: April 6, 1979
Creator: Lang, N. C. & Stern, R. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Modeling ferrite electromagnetic response in the time domain (open access)

Modeling ferrite electromagnetic response in the time domain

The behavior of ferrite loads commonly found in induction accelertors has important consequences for the performance of these accelerators. Previous work by the authors on modeling the electromagnetic fields in induction cavities has focussed upon use of a simple, phenomenological model for the process of magnetization reversal in these ferrite loads. In this paper we consider a model for magnetization reversal which is more deeply rooted in theory, and present a simulation of the reversal process based upon this model for an idealized set of boundary conditions. 7 refs., 3 figs.
Date: April 6, 1989
Creator: Johnson, J.; DeFord, J. F. & Craig, G. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An optical technique for the direct measurement of the 2-D spectral density of a passive scalar in a turbulent flow (open access)

An optical technique for the direct measurement of the 2-D spectral density of a passive scalar in a turbulent flow

A new optical technique for quantitatively measuring the spectral density of passive scalar fluctuations in a turbulent flow has been developed. The technique exploits the photorefractive properties of BaTiO{sub 3} to separate the optical signal of the turbulent field from the coherent illumination background. It is a major improvement over existing techniques in that it is non-intrusive, has excellent frequency response and spatial resolution, and is capable of simultaneously measuring two components of the three-dimensional spectral density, {Phi}{theta}({kappa}). The technique is thus especially well suited to the directly study of anisotropic flows. We have applied this technique to study the spectrum of temperature fluctuations in a fully developed turbulent channel flow with heat addition. The flow is highly anisotropic, yet the spectrum in directions transverse to the flow is seen to exhibit an inertial--convective subrange behavior which is characteristic of isotropic flows. The spectral behavior in the flow direction, due to the direct influence of the mean strain rate, is observed to be markedly different. 17 refs., 7 figs.
Date: April 6, 1990
Creator: Robey, H.F.; Albrecht, G.F. & Moore, T.R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Mobile Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (MICBM) simulation (open access)

The Mobile Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (MICBM) simulation

The purpose of this project was to investigate the capability of blending traditional discrete event simulation techniques with artificial intelligence technology. In order to fully demonstrate the capabilities of such a simulation environment, a difficult class of simulation problem was selected for the project: a military C/sup 3/ (command, control, and communication) simulation. The hardware chosen for the project was a Symbolics LISP machine running an artificial intelligence shell called Knowledge Engineering Environment (KEE). This environment provided a powerful simulation capability in which human decision-making processes could be readily represented.
Date: April 6, 1987
Creator: Roberts, D. J.; Morgeson, J. D.; Dreicer, J. & Egdorf, H. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Longitudinal bunching of electrons in the Advanced Test Accelerator (open access)

Longitudinal bunching of electrons in the Advanced Test Accelerator

The Advanced Test Accelerator (ATA) is a linear induction accelerator for electrons with design goals of 50 MeV and 10 kA. The accelerator consists of a 2.5 to 3 MeV injector and 170 accelerating units, each unit capable of an applied voltage up to 350 kV. At a number of positions in the accelerator, the return current in the beam pipe is measured as a function of time as the beam passes that position. The measuring device, a four quadrant addition, is somewhat sensitive to the transverse position of the beam centroid as well as transverse distribution of current in the beam. Therefore a time-dependent signal may indicate time-dependent transverse motion or beam structure as well as an axial modulation of the beam current. These signals sometimes exhibit spikes and notches on the leading and trailing edges of the beam pulse. The presence of these rapidly varying signals during the rise and fall of the current stimulated this work. 2 references, 4 figures.
Date: April 6, 1984
Creator: Neil, V.K.; Caporaso, G.J. & Paul, A.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
TIBER-II cost models and estimates (open access)

TIBER-II cost models and estimates

This report consists of a series of viewgraphs dealing with cost associated with construction of a thermonuclear power plant. (JDH)
Date: April 6, 1987
Creator: Thomson, S.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Denton Record-Chronicle 'Local/State', April 6, 1994] (open access)

[Denton Record-Chronicle 'Local/State', April 6, 1994]

An article from the 'Local/State' section of the Denton Record-Chronicle written by Tim Leenerts. The piece covers the newly named director of the Greater Denton Arts Council Janet L. Harreld and her career and education history.
Date: April 6, 1994
Creator: Leenerts, Tim
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of U-5 prototype undulator effects on the beam dynamics (open access)

Simulation of U-5 prototype undulator effects on the beam dynamics

The APS prototype undulator U-5 has been installed at NSLS VUV ring. Its effects on the beam behaviour have been simulated with tracking codes TEAPOT and RACETRACK. The tune shift, the distortion of betatron function, the chromaticity, the transverse coupling, and some of the amplitude-dependent effects on the VUV ring have been compared and are presented in this paper.
Date: April 6, 1992
Creator: Qian, Y. L. & Turner, L. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texture splats for 3D vector and scalar field visualization (open access)

Texture splats for 3D vector and scalar field visualization

Volume Visualization is becoming an important tool for understanding large 3D datasets. A popular technique for volume rendering is known as splatting. With new hardware architectures offering substantial improvements in the performance of rendering texture mapped objects, we present textured splats. An ideal reconstruction function for 3D signals is developed which can be used as a texture map for a splat. Extensions to the basic splatting technique are then developed to additionally represent vector fields.
Date: April 6, 1993
Creator: Crawfis, R. A. & Max, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flow volumes for interactive vector field visualization (open access)

Flow volumes for interactive vector field visualization

Flow volumes are the volumetric equivalent of stream lines. They provide more information about the vector field being visualized than do stream lines or ribbons. Presented is an efficient method for producing flow volumes, composed of transparently rendered tetrahedra, for use in an interactive system. The problems of rendering, subdivision, sorting, rendering artifacts, and user interaction are dealt with.
Date: April 6, 1993
Creator: Max, N.; Becker, B. & Crawfis, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the polarization of the K-shell resonance line emission of S13+ and S14+ at relativistic electron beam energies. (open access)

Measurement of the polarization of the K-shell resonance line emission of S13+ and S14+ at relativistic electron beam energies.

We have measured the polarization of the heliumlike sulfur resonance line 1s2p {sup 1}P{sub 1} {yields} 1s{sup 2} {sup 1}S{sub 0}, and of the blend of the lithiumlike sulfur resonance lines 1s2s2p {sup 2}P{sub 3/2} {yields} 1s{sup 2}2s {sup 2}S{sub 1/2} and 1s2s2p {sup 2}P{sub 1/2} {yields} 1s{sup 2}2s {sup 2}S{sub 1/2} as a function of electron beam energy from near threshold to 144 keV. These lines were excited with the LLNL high-energy electron beam ion trap and measured using a newly modified two-crystal technique. Our results test polarization predictions in an energy regime where few empirical results have been reported. We also present calculations of the polarization using two different methods, and good agreement is obtained.
Date: April 6, 2004
Creator: Robbins, D; Faenov, A Y; Pikuz, T; Chen, H; Beiersdorfer, P; May, M et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Thermal Sprayed Aluminum and Stainless Steel Coatings for Clean Laser Enclosures (open access)

Characterization of Thermal Sprayed Aluminum and Stainless Steel Coatings for Clean Laser Enclosures

Surfaces of steel structures that enclose high-fluence, large-beam lasers have conventional and unconventional requirements. Aside from rust prevention, the surfaces must resist laser-induced degradation and the contamination of the optical components. The latter requires a surface that can be precision cleaned to low levels of particulate and organic residue. In addition, the surface treatment for the walls should be economical to apply because of the large surface areas involved, and accommodating with intricate joint geometries. Thermal sprayed coatings of aluminum (Al) and stainless steel are candidate surface materials. Coatings are produced and characterized for porosity, smoothness, and hardness. These properties have a bearing on the cleanliness of the coating. The laser resistance of Al and 3 16L coatings are given. The paper summarizes the characterization of twin-wire-arc deposited Al, high-velocity-oxygen-fueled (HVOF) deposited Al, flame-sprayed 316L, and HVOF deposited316L. The most promising candidate coating is that of HVOF Al. This Al coating has the lowest porosity (8%) compared the other three coatings and relatively low hardness (100 VHN). The as-deposited roughness (Ra) is 433 pinches, but after a quick sanding by hand, the roughness decreased to 166 pinches. Other post-coat treatments are discussed. HVOF aluminum coatings are demonstrated. Al coatings are …
Date: April 6, 2000
Creator: Chow, R; Decker, T A; Gansert, R V & Gansert, D
System: The UNT Digital Library
The DNA sequence and biology of human chromosome 19 (open access)

The DNA sequence and biology of human chromosome 19

Chromosome 19 has the highest gene density of all human chromosomes, more than double the genome-wide average. The large clustered gene families, corresponding high GC content, CpG islands and density of repetitive DNA indicate a chromosome rich in biological and evolutionary significance. Here we describe 55.8 million base pairs of highly accurate finished sequence representing 99.9% of the euchromatin portion of the chromosome. Manual curation of gene loci reveals 1,461 protein-coding genes and 321 pseudogenes. Among these are genes directly implicated in Mendelian disorders, including familial hypercholesterolemia and insulin-resistant diabetes. Nearly one quarter of these genes belong to tandemly arranged families, encompassing more than 25% of the chromosome. Comparative analyses show a fascinating picture of conservation and divergence, revealing large blocks of gene orthology with rodents, scattered regions with more recent gene family expansions and deletions, and segments of coding and non-coding conservation with the distant fish species Takifugu.
Date: April 6, 2004
Creator: Grimwood, J.; Gordon, L. A.; Olsen, A.; Terry, A.; Schmutz, J.; Lamerdin, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon Nanotube-Based Permeable Membranes (open access)

Carbon Nanotube-Based Permeable Membranes

A membrane of multiwalled carbon nanotubes embedded in a silicon nitride matrix was fabricated for use in studying fluid mechanics on the nanometer scale. Characterization by fluorescent tracer diffusion and scanning electron microscopy suggests that the membrane is void-free near the silicon substrate on which it rests, implying that the hollow core of the nanotube is the only conduction path for molecular transport. Assuming Knudsen diffusion through this nanotube membrane, a maximum helium transport rate (for a pressure drop of 1 atm) of 0.25 cc/sec is predicted. Helium flow measurements of a nanoporous silicon nitride membrane, fabricated by sacrificial removal of carbon, give a flow rate greater than 1x10{sup -6} cc/sec. For viscous, laminar flow conditions, water is estimated to flow across the nanotube membrane (under a 1 atm pressure drop) at up to 2.8x10{sup -5} cc/sec (1.7 {micro}L/min).
Date: April 6, 2004
Creator: Holt, J K; Park, H G; Bakajin, O; Noy, A; Huser, T & Eaglesham, D
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Products of the Thermal Decomposition of CH3CHO (open access)

The Products of the Thermal Decomposition of CH3CHO

We have used a heated 2 cm x 1 mm SiC microtubular (mu tubular) reactor to decompose acetaldehyde: CH3CHO + DELTA --&gt; products. Thermal decomposition is followed at pressures of 75 - 150 Torr and at temperatures up to 1700 K, conditions that correspond to residence times of roughly 50 - 100 mu sec in the mu tubular reactor. The acetaldehyde decomposition products are identified by two independent techniques: VUV photoionization mass spectroscopy (PIMS) and infrared (IR) absorption spectroscopy after isolation in a cryogenic matrix. Besides CH3CHO, we have studied three isotopologues, CH3CDO, CD3CHO, and CD3CDO. We have identified the thermal decomposition products CH3(PIMS), CO (IR, PIMS), H (PIMS), H2 (PIMS), CH2CO (IR, PIMS), CH2=CHOH (IR, PIMS), H2O (IR, PIMS), and HC=CH (IR, PIMS). Plausible evidence has been found to support the idea that there are at least three different thermal decomposition pathways for CH3CHO: Radical decomposition: CH3CHO + DELTA --&gt; CH3 + [HCO] --&gt; CH3 + H + CO Elimination: CH3CHO + DELTA --&gt; H2 + CH2=C=O. Isomerization/elimination: CH3CHO + DELTA --&gt; [CH2=CH-OH] --&gt; HC=CH + H2O. Both PIMS and IR spectroscopy show compelling evidence for the participation of vinylidene, CH2=C:, as an intermediate in the decomposition of vinyl …
Date: April 6, 2011
Creator: Vasiliou, AnGayle; Piech, Krzysztof M.; Zhang, Xu; Nimlos, Mark R.; Ahmed, Musahid; Golan, Amir et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PEP-X: An Ultimate Storage Ring Based on Fourth-Order Geometric Achromats (open access)

PEP-X: An Ultimate Storage Ring Based on Fourth-Order Geometric Achromats

We have designed an 'ultimate' storage ring for the PEP-X light source that achieves the diffraction limited emittances (at 1.5 {angstrom}) of 12 pm-rad in both horizontal and vertical planes with a 4.5-GeV beam. These emittances include the contribution of intrabeam scattering at a nominal current of 200 mA in 3300 bunches. This quality beam in conjunction with a conventional 4-m undulator in a straight section can generate synchrotron radiation having a spectral brightness above 10{sup 22} [photons/s/mm{sup 2}/mrad{sup 2}/0.1% BW] at a 10 keV photon energy. The high coherence at the diffraction limit makes PEP-X competitive with 4th generation light sources based on an energy recovery linac. In addition, the beam lifetime is several hours and the dynamic aperture is large enough to allow off-axis injection. The alignment and stability tolerances, though challenging, are achievable. A ring with all these properties is only possible because of several major advances in mitigating the effects of nonlinear resonances.
Date: April 6, 2012
Creator: Cai, Yunhai; Bane, Karl; Hettel, Robert; Nosochkov, Yuri & Wang, Min-Huey
System: The UNT Digital Library