Off-Gas Treatment in Berkeley Enclosures (open access)

Off-Gas Treatment in Berkeley Enclosures

"In the past ten years quantities of alpha-, beta-, gamma- and neutron-emitting isotopes handled in enclosures have increased from microcuries to kilocuries. Contaminated-atmosphere problems have increased accordingly. Developments at Berkeley are reviewed with particular emphasis on recent equipment, viz: a multiple-purpose gas scrubber and a total-capture system for slug-dissolver off gas."
Date: January 7, 1957
Creator: Thaxter, M. D.; Cantelow, H. P. & Burk, C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ARC Research : Some Considerations on the Application of the A-48 to the Sherwood Program (open access)

ARC Research : Some Considerations on the Application of the A-48 to the Sherwood Program

The following document describes suggestions on the application of the A-48 ion accelerator beam currents to the Sherwood Program.
Date: November 7, 1955
Creator: Hiskes, John R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics of the Ion Thrust System (open access)

Physics of the Ion Thrust System

Abstract: A study has been made of the source, acceleration, and neutralization of ions for application to space propulsion. A summary is made in this paper of some of the most important problems in this area and their solutions.
Date: October 7, 1959
Creator: Fox, Raymond
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermodynamics of the Aqueous Ions of Americium (open access)

Thermodynamics of the Aqueous Ions of Americium

Thesis discussing the heats of reduction, oxidation potentials, and measurements of autoreduction and disproportionation for aqueous ions of americium.
Date: April 7, 1954
Creator: Gunn, Stuart Richard
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Collapse : The Shock Heating of a Plasma (open access)

Collapse : The Shock Heating of a Plasma

There have been numerous independent suggestions to use high speed shocks to heat deuterium gas to thermonuclear temperature (E. Teller, R.R. Wilson, H. Grad, W. Marshall)², and extensive experimental work in this field is being carried on by, e.g., Kolb³, and S. Janes⁴. Our own work in this field has been directed towards a fundamental understanding of the strong shock process in the limit of no particle collision, to find out if within this limit the ion heating following the passage of the shock is large enough to give rise to a thermonuclear reaction.
Date: March 7, 1958
Creator: Colgate, Stirling A. & Wright, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Explosives as Applied to Mining and Mineral Industries (open access)

Nuclear Explosives as Applied to Mining and Mineral Industries

Presentation at the National Western Mining Conference of the Colorado Mining Association, Denver, Colorado, February 7, 1959. Thank you for your invitation to discuss here today some of the aspects of nuclear explosions in mining and mineral industries. I should like this afternoon to dwell briefly upon: (1) The phenology of a nuclear explosion underground. What happens; with what energies are we concerned, and what may be the scientific and industrial results of such an explosion? (2) The safety or radiological hazards involved. If mining men hope someday to use this new and potentially useful source of packaged power, what are some of the problems we may face? First let me emphasize that the nine underground test explosions thus far have resulted in a wealth of data and interesting information which prove that radioactivity and radioactive fall-out can be completely controlled, that seismic effects are relatively minor, that appreciable amounts of heat and shock are generated, that this power might be utilized to serve a useful purpose and that the debris in an explosion area can be worked soon after the detonation.
Date: February 7, 1959
Creator: Rabb, David D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Accelerators Requiring High Peak Power Pulse Modulators (open access)

Electron Accelerators Requiring High Peak Power Pulse Modulators

The Astron, a thermo-nuclear fusion research machine, requires the injection of high-energy electron at 5 MEV emery level +- 1/2 %, 200 amperes, 60 pulses per second, 0.3 usec pulse width. The accelerator will work by the induction principle with approximately 500 magnetic cores, each 1/2 inch thick lined up on centers. Each core will be pulsed by a single primary turn and the electrons forming the secondary will experience a voltage acceleration equivalent to the primary voltage upon passing by each core. The coupling in this arrangement has been tested and it is very nearly unity.
Date: June 7, 1960
Creator: Smith, Vernon L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral Lines of Curium from 3100 A to 4200 A (open access)

Spectral Lines of Curium from 3100 A to 4200 A

Abstract: Fifty-four spectral lines of curium are listed together with estimated intensities. A brief description of the manner of taking the spectra and of measuring the lines are given.
Date: April 7, 1948
Creator: Conway, John G. & Moore, Milton F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physics Division Quarterly Report:  November and December, 1949 and January, 1950 (open access)

Physics Division Quarterly Report: November and December, 1949 and January, 1950

Quarterly summary report of studies conducted through the Radiation Laboratory, University of California. Some results reported in the report may be of a preliminary or incomplete nature.
Date: February 7, 1950
Creator: Lawrence Radiation Laboratory
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Metabolism of Certain Fission Products and Plutonium (open access)

Studies of the Metabolism of Certain Fission Products and Plutonium

A short survey of some of the metabolic relationships of the elements, cerium, colurbium, plutonium, strontium, yttrium, and zirconium is presented. While the results of internally deposited radium have not been investigated in these experiments, they have been extensively studies by others. Because so much is known of its biological effects, it has been included in this historical survey.
Date: August 7, 1950
Creator: Kawin, Bergane; Copp, D. H. & Hamilton, J. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theoretical Study of a Source of Intermediate Energy Neutrons (open access)

Theoretical Study of a Source of Intermediate Energy Neutrons

Abstract. An analysis is made of a proposal to obtain neutrons of 15-25 Kev energy by moderating fast neutrons in aluminum and then reflecting off titanium. The fluxes calculated do not significantly exceed those obtainable from a standard antimony-beryllium photoneutron source. Two appendices treat aspects of the transport of neutrons through a slab of finite thickness.
Date: January 7, 1954
Creator: Bludman, Sidney A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correction to the Debye-Huckel Theory (open access)

Correction to the Debye-Huckel Theory

In a recent paper, Bowers and Salpeter described a method for calculating the correlation energy of a classical one-component electron gas. The same problem has been considered by Meeron, Friedman, and Abe, using methods involving the summation of cert infinite classes of diagrams. While the relation between these theories and that of Bowers and Saltpeter is not year clear, it is interesting to note that Abe obtained an equivalent expression by approximating an integral. We have calculated the contribution to the equation of state using Abe's original expression and we found that the equation is valid only for certain values and it gives a correction of the wrong sign. On the other hand, our results are comparable to those which Bowers and Salpeter obtain from higher approximations.
Date: October 7, 1960
Creator: Trulio, John G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tory II-A  Aerothermodynamics. Part I (open access)

Tory II-A Aerothermodynamics. Part I

This report is a summary of the aerothermodynamic calculations that have been made during the evaluation of the Tory II-A reactor. A presentation is made of the computational techniques developed, the materials properties utilized, and the calculational results obtained. In addition, relations fundamental to the analysis are discussed
Date: December 7, 1960
Creator: Uthe, P. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
MTA Quarterly Progress Report - March, April, May, 1952 (open access)

MTA Quarterly Progress Report - March, April, May, 1952

Quarterly report on projects - special M.T.A. distribution
Date: August 7, 1952
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Cowboy : Close-in Pressure Measurements with Tourmaline Crystals on Tamped Detonations (open access)

Project Cowboy : Close-in Pressure Measurements with Tourmaline Crystals on Tamped Detonations

In January and February, 1960, Lawrence Radiation Laboratory personnel conducted a series of experiments in Phase II of Project Cowboy in which tourmaline crystal transducers, located very close (3 to 50 feet) to tamped high explosive detonations, detected dynamic elasto-plastic stress waves generated in salt. The detonations occurred 110 feet below the 800-foot working level of the Carey Salt Mine, near Winnfield, Louisiana. These experiments were designed to measure dynamic stress conditions resulting from explosion in the earth media, of which little is known at present, and to provide data for comparative calculations on seismic disturbances from tamped explosions and from explosion in large underground cavities. Eleatic stress waves of 1 kilobar magnitude were observed, with velocities of about 15,000 ft/sec. Inelastic stress waves up to 6 kilobars in magnitude were measured. Velocities for these waves were in the range 9000 to 12,000 ft/sec.
Date: November 7, 1960
Creator: Lindsay, William F.; Heusinkveld, Myron; Villaire, Alfred E. & Krause, Otto H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Note on Estimating the Energies of the Arizona and Ungava Meteorite Craters (open access)

Note on Estimating the Energies of the Arizona and Ungava Meteorite Craters

In the course of the cratering studies conducted as part of the Plowshare Program, the dependence of crater dimensions on depth of burst and the scaling laws relating crater dimensions to total energy release have been derived for chemical explosions in the desert alluvium of the Nevada Test Site. The desert alluvium is a lightly cemented sand and gravel, which was chosen for study because the first nuclear cratering explosions were fired in the medium and it was of interest to compare the nuclear and chemical explosion in the same medium. Shoemaker of the U.S. Geological Survey recently completed a detailed analysis of the Arizona Meteorite Crater and, through direct comparison with the nuclear explosion results in Nevada, arrived at an effective depth burst for the meteorite. He also reconstructed the original size and shape of the crater, and determined the limit of brecciation.
Date: December 7, 1960
Creator: {{{name}}}
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Total Neutron Yield From Targets Bombarded by Deuterons and Protons (open access)

Total Neutron Yield From Targets Bombarded by Deuterons and Protons

The total number of neutrons emitted from various targets bombarded by high energy deuterons and protons was measured by using a solution of MnSO<sub>4 to thermalize and capture the neutrons. The methods of monitoring the number of particles striking the target and of calibrating the neutron detecxting apparatus are discussed in detail. Deuterons of energies to 230 Mev and protons of energies to 345 Mev were used. Targets ranging from lithium to uranium were used and were backed by secondary targets of uranium and thorium. The yields are expressed in terms of the number of neutrons emitted per incident particle. Uranium targets gave the highest yield.
Date: January 7, 1953
Creator: Crandall, Walter E. & Millburn, George P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library