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Report of the Working Group on Media Accelerators (open access)

Report of the Working Group on Media Accelerators

A summary is given of the activities of those in the Media Accelerator Group. Attention was focused on the Inverse Cherenkov Accelerator, the Laser Focus Accelerator, and the Beat Wave Accelerator. For each of these the ultimate capability of the concept was examined as well as the next series of experiments which needs to be performed in order to advance the concept.
Date: April 12, 1982
Creator: Sessler, Andrew M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Letting The Sun Shine On Solar Costs: An Empirical InvestigationOf Photovoltaic Cost Trends In California (open access)

Letting The Sun Shine On Solar Costs: An Empirical InvestigationOf Photovoltaic Cost Trends In California

None
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Wiser, Ryan; Bolinger, Mark; Cappers, Peter & Margolis, Robert
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Exact Solution of Transport in Porous Media with Equilibrium and Kinetic Reactions (open access)

An Exact Solution of Transport in Porous Media with Equilibrium and Kinetic Reactions

This paper presents an analytical solution of reactive transport with equilibrium and kinetic reactions. A benchmark model of A {leftrightarrow} B {leftrightarrow} C {yields} chain reactions is developed for the purpose of verifying numerical computer codes and qualifying mathematical models. A reaction matrix is derived for both the equilibrium and first-order kinetic reactions and further decoupled as a diagonal matrix. Therefore, the partial differential equations (PDEs) coupled by the reaction matrix can be transformed into independent PDEs, for which closed-form solutions exist or can be derived. The analytical solution derived in this paper is compared with numerical results.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Lu, X. & Sun, Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pressure-Induced Antifluorite-to-Anticotunnite Phase Transition in Lithium Oxide (open access)

Pressure-Induced Antifluorite-to-Anticotunnite Phase Transition in Lithium Oxide

Using synchrotron angle-dispersive x-ray diffraction (ADXD) and Raman spectroscopy on samples of Li{sub 2}O pressurized in a diamond anvil cell, we observed a reversible phase change from the cubic antifluorite ({alpha}, Fm-3m) to orthorhombic anticotunnite ({beta}, Pnma) phase at 50({+-}5) GPa at ambient temperature. This transition is accompanied by a relatively large volume collapse of 5.4 ({+-}0.8)% and large hysteresis upon pressure reversal (P{sub down} at {approx} 25 GPa). Contrary to a recent study, our data suggest that the high-pressure {beta}-phase (B{sub o} = 188 {+-} 12 GPa) is substantially stiffer than the low-pressure {alpha}-phase (B{sub o} = 90 {+-} 1 GPa). A relatively strong and pressure-dependent preferred orientation in {beta}-Li{sub 2}O is observed. The present result is in accordance with the systematic behavior of antifluorite-to-anticotunnite phase transitions occurring in the alkali-metal sulfides.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Lazicki, A.; Yoo, C.; Evans, W. J. & Pickett, W. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma-Ray Imaging With Coaxial HPGe Detector (open access)

Gamma-Ray Imaging With Coaxial HPGe Detector

We report on the first experimental demonstration of Compton imaging of gamma rays with a single coaxial high-purity germanium (HPGe) detector. This imaging capability is realized by two-dimensional segmentation of the outside contact in combination with digital pulse-shape analysis, which enables to image gamma rays in 4{pi} without employing a collimator. We are able to demonstrate the ability to image the 662keV gamma ray from a {sup 137}Cs source with preliminary event selection with an angular accuracy of 5 degree with an relative efficiency of 0.2%. In addition to the 4{pi} imaging capability, such a system is characterized by its excellent energy resolution and can be implemented in any size possible for Ge detectors to achieve high efficiency.
Date: April 12, 2005
Creator: Niedermayr, T.; Vetter, K.; Mihailescu, L.; Schmid, G. J.; Beckedahl, D.; Kammeraad, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Space propulsion by fusion in a magnetic dipole (open access)

Space propulsion by fusion in a magnetic dipole

A conceptual design is discussed for a fusion rocket propulsion system based on the magnetic dipole configuration. The dipole is found to have features well suited to space applications. Example parameters are presented for a system producing a specific power of 1 kW/kg, capable of interplanetary flights to Mars in 90 days and to Jupiter in a year, and of extra-solar-system flights to 1000 astronomical units (the Tau mission) in 20 years. This is about 10 times better specific power toward 10 kW/kg are discussed, as in an approach to implementing the concept through proof-testing on the moon. 21 refs., 14 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: April 12, 1991
Creator: Teller, E.; Glass, A.J.; Fowler, T.K. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)); Hasegawa, A. (AT and T Bell Labs., Murray Hill, NJ (USA)) & Santarius, J.F. (Wisconsin Univ., Madison, WI (USA). Fusion Technology Inst.)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Workshop on effects of chromium coating on Nb{sub 3}Sn superconductor strand: Proceedings (open access)

Workshop on effects of chromium coating on Nb{sub 3}Sn superconductor strand: Proceedings

This report discusses the following topics: Chromium coating on superconductor strand -- an overview; technology of chromium plating; comparison of wires plated by different platers; search for chromium in copper; strand manufactures` presentations; chromium plating at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory; a first look at a chromium plating process development project tailored for T.P.X. and I.T.E.R. strand; and influence of chromium diffusion and related phenomena on the reference ratios of bare and chromium plated Nb{sub 3}Sn strand.
Date: April 12, 1994
Creator: unknown
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Power Picosecond Laser Pulse Recirculation (open access)

High Power Picosecond Laser Pulse Recirculation

We demonstrate a nonlinear crystal-based short pulse recirculation cavity for trapping the second harmonic of an incident high power laser pulse. This scheme aims to increase the efficiency and flux of Compton-scattering based light sources. We demonstrate up to 36x average power enhancement of frequency doubled sub-millijoule picosecond pulses, and 17x average power enhancement of 177 mJ, 10 ps, 10 Hz pulses.
Date: April 12, 2010
Creator: Shverdin, M Y; Jovanovic, I; Semenov, V A; Betts, S M; Brown, C; Gibson, D J et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Use of the Density-Law-Invariant Parameters for Criticality Safety Assessment (open access)

The Use of the Density-Law-Invariant Parameters for Criticality Safety Assessment

None
Date: April 12, 2013
Creator: Huang, S & Chou, P
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Analysis of the Effects of Photovoltaic Energy Systems on Residential Selling Prices in California. (open access)

An Analysis of the Effects of Photovoltaic Energy Systems on Residential Selling Prices in California.

An increasing number of homes with existing photovoltaic (PV) energy systems have sold in the U.S., yet relatively little research exists that estimates the marginal impacts of those PV systems on the sales price. A clearer understanding of these effects might influence the decisions of homeowners, home buyers and PV home builders. This research analyzes a large dataset of California homes that sold from 2000 through mid-2009 with PV installed. Across a large number of hedonic and repeat sales model specifications and robustness tests, the analysis finds strong evidence that homes with PV systems sold for a premium over comparable homes without. The effects range, on average, from approximately $3.9 to $6.4 per installed watt (DC), with most models coalescing near $5.5/watt, which corresponds to a premium of approximately $17,000 for a 3,100 watt system. The research also shows that, as PV systems age, the premium enjoyed at the time of home sale decreases. Additionally, existing homes with PV systems are found to have commanded a larger sales price premium than new homes with similarly sized PV systems. Reasons for this discrepancy are suggested, yet further research is warranted in this area as well as a number of other areas …
Date: April 12, 2011
Creator: Cappers, Peter; Wiser, Ryan; Thayer, Mark & Hoen, Ben
System: The UNT Digital Library
{beta}{sup +} decay and cosmic-ray half-lives of {sup 143}Pm and {sup 144}Pm (open access)

{beta}{sup +} decay and cosmic-ray half-lives of {sup 143}Pm and {sup 144}Pm

The positron decay partial half-lives of {sup 143}Pm and {sup 144}Pm are needed to assess the viability of elemental Pm as a cosmic-ray clock. We have conducted experiments to measure the {beta}{sup +} branches of these isotopes; we find {beta}{sup +} branches of these isotopes; we find {beta}{sup +} branches of <5.7 {times}10{sup {minus}8} for {sup 143}Pm and <8{times}10{sup {minus} 7} for {sup 144}Pm. Through these branches are a factor of 20 lower than the previous experimental limits, the resulting partial half-lives are still too uncertain to permit any firm conclusions.
Date: April 12, 1993
Creator: Hindi, M. M.; da Cruz, M. T. F.; Larimer, R. M.; Lesko, K. T.; Norman, E. B.; Sur, B. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy Smart Management of Scientific Data (open access)

Energy Smart Management of Scientific Data

Scientific data centers comprised of high-powered computing equipment and large capacity disk storage systems consume considerable amount of energy. Dynamic power management techniques (DPM) are commonly used for saving energy in disk systems. These involve powering down disks that exhibit long idle periods and placing them in standby mode. A file request from a disk in standby mode will incur both energy and performance penalties as it takes energy (and time) to spin up the disk before it can serve a file. For this reason, DPM has to make decisions as to when to transition the disk into standby mode such that the energy saved is greater than the energy needed to spin it up again and the performance penalty is tolerable. The length of the idle period until the DPM decides to power down a disk is called idlenessthreshold. In this paper, we study both analytically and experimentally dynamic power management techniques that save energy subject to performance constraints on file access costs. Based on observed workloads of scientific applications and disk characteristics, we provide a methodology for determining file assignment to disks and computing idleness thresholds that result in significant improvements to the energy saved by existing DPMsolutions …
Date: April 12, 2009
Creator: Otoo, Ekow; Rotem, Dron & Tsao, Shih-Chiang
System: The UNT Digital Library
Challenges of Algebraic Multigrid across Multicore Architectures (open access)

Challenges of Algebraic Multigrid across Multicore Architectures

Algebraic multigrid (AMG) is a popular solver for large-scale scientific computing and an essential component of many simulation codes. AMG has shown to be extremely efficient on distributed-memory architectures. However, when executed on modern multicore architectures, we face new challenges that can significantly deteriorate AMG's performance. We examine its performance and scalability on three disparate multicore architectures: a cluster with four AMD Opteron Quad-core processors per node (Hera), a Cray XT5 with two AMD Opteron Hex-core processors per node (Jaguar), and an IBM BlueGene/P system with a single Quad-core processor (Intrepid). We discuss our experiences on these platforms and present results using both an MPI-only and a hybrid MPI/OpenMP model. We also discuss a set of techniques that helped to overcome the associated problems, including thread and process pinning and correct memory associations.
Date: April 12, 2010
Creator: Baker, A H; Gamblin, T; Schulz, M & Yang, U M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Do Photovoltaic Energy Systems Effect Residential Selling Prices? Results from a California Statewide Investigation. (open access)

Do Photovoltaic Energy Systems Effect Residential Selling Prices? Results from a California Statewide Investigation.

An increasing number of homes in the U.S. have sold with photovoltaic (PV) energy systems installed at the time of sale, yet relatively little research exists that provides estimates of the marginal impacts of those PV systems on home sale prices. This research analyzes a large dataset of California homes that sold from 2000 through mid-2009 with PV installed. We find strong evidence that homes with PV systems sold for a premium over comparable homes without PV systems during this time frame. Estimates for this premium expressed in dollars per watt of installed PV range, from roughly $4 to $6.4/watt across the full dataset, to approximately $2.3/watt for new homes, to more than $6/watt for existing homes. A number of ideas for further research are suggested.
Date: April 12, 2011
Creator: Hoen, Ben; Cappers, Pete; Wiser, Ryan & Thayer, Mark
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prospects for trivalent rare earth molecular vapor lasers for fusion (open access)

Prospects for trivalent rare earth molecular vapor lasers for fusion

The dynamical properties of three types of RE/sup 3 +/ molecular vapors were considered: (1) rare earth trihalogens, (2) rare earth trihalogens complexed with transition metal trihalogens, and (3) rare earth chelates. Radiative and nonradiative (unimolecular and bimolecular) transition probabilities have been calculated using phenomenological models predicted on the unique electronic structure of the triply ionized RE ion (well shielded ground electronic configuration of equivalent of electrons). Although all the lanthanide ions have been treated in some detail, specific results are presented for the Nd/sup 3 +/ and Tb/sup 3 +/ ions to illustrate the systematics of these vapors as a class of new laser media. Once verified, these phenomenological models will provide a powerful tool for the directed experimental exploration of these systems. Because of the structural similarity to the triply ionized actinides, comments offered here for the lanthanide rare earth series generally apply to gaseous actinide lasers which are also under consideration.
Date: April 12, 1976
Creator: Krupke, W. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Benchmark Studies of Induced Radioactivity Produced in LHC Materials, Pt II Specific Activities (open access)

Benchmark Studies of Induced Radioactivity Produced in LHC Materials, Pt II Specific Activities

A new method to estimate remanent dose rates, to be used with the Monte Carlo code FLUKA, was benchmarked against measurements from an experiment that was performed at the CERN-EU high-energy reference field facility. An extensive collection of samples of different materials were placed downstream of and laterally to a copper target, intercepting a positively charged mixed hadron beam with a momentum of 120 GeV/c. Emphasis was put on the reduction of uncertainties such as careful monitoring of the irradiation parameters, the use of different instruments to measure dose rates, detailed elemental analyses of the irradiated materials and detailed simulations of the irradiation experiment. Measured and calculated dose rates are in good agreement.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Brugger, M.; Mayer, S.; Roesler, S.; Ulrici, L.; Khater, H.; Prinz, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hose Instability and Wake Generation By An Intense Electron Beam in a Self-Ionized Gas (open access)

Hose Instability and Wake Generation By An Intense Electron Beam in a Self-Ionized Gas

The propagation of an intense relativistic electron beam through a gas that is self-ionized by the beam's space charge and wakefields is examined analytically and with 3D particle-in-cell simulations. Instability arises from the coupling between a beam and the offset plasma channel it creates when it is perturbed. The traditional electron hose instability in a preformed plasma is replaced with this slower growth instability depending on the radius of the ionization channel compared to the electron blowout radius. A new regime for hose stable plasma wakefield acceleration is suggested.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Deng, S.; Barnes, C. D.; Clayton, C. E.; O'Connell, C.; Decker, F. J.; Fonseca, R. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite Element Analysis of JNES/NUPEC Seismic Shear Wall Cyclic and Shaking Table Test Data. (open access)

Finite Element Analysis of JNES/NUPEC Seismic Shear Wall Cyclic and Shaking Table Test Data.

This paper describes a finite element analysis to predict the JNES/NUPEC cyclic and shaking table RC shear wall test data, as part of a collaborative agreement between the U.S. NRC and JNES to study seismic issues important to the safe operation of commercial nuclear power plant (NPP) structures, systems and components (SSC). The analyses described in this paper were performed using ANACAP reinforced concrete models. The paper describes the ANACAP analysis models and discusses the analysis comparisons with the test data. The ANACAP capability for modeling nonlinear cyclic characteristics of reinforced concrete shear wall structures was confirmed by the close comparisons between the ANACAP analysis results and the JNES/NUPEC cyclic test data. Reasonable agreement between the analysis results and the test data was demonstrated for the hysteresis loops and the shear force orbits, in terms of both the overall shape and the cycle-to-cycle comparisons. The ANACAP simulation analysis of the JNES/NUPEC shaking table test was also performed, which demonstrated that the ANACAP dynamic analysis with concrete material model is able to capture the progressive degrading behavior of the shear wall as indicated from the test data. The ANACAP analysis also predicted the incipient failure of the shear wall, reasonably close …
Date: April 12, 2007
Creator: Xu, Jim; Nie, Jinsuo; Hofmayer, Charles & Ali, Syed
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of total ion flux in vacuum Arc discharges (open access)

Measurement of total ion flux in vacuum Arc discharges

A vacuum arc ion source was modified allowing us to collections from arc plasma streaming through an anode mesh. The mesh had ageometric transmittance of 60 percent, which was taken into account as acorrection factor. The ion current from twenty-two cathode materials wasmeasured at an arc current of 100 A. The ion current normalized by thearc current was found to depend on the cathode material, with valuesinthe range from 5 percent to 11 percent. The normalized ion current isgenerally greater for light elements than for heavy elements. The ionerosion rates were determined fromvalues of ion currentand ion chargestates, which were previously measured in the same experimental system.The ion erosion rates range from 12-94 mu g/C.
Date: April 12, 2004
Creator: Anders, Andre; Oks, Efim M.; Yushkov, Georgy Yu. & Brown, Ian G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-Sided Pyramid Wavefront Sensor in the Direct Phase Mode (open access)

Two-Sided Pyramid Wavefront Sensor in the Direct Phase Mode

The two-sided pyramid wavefront sensor has been extensively simulated in the direct phase mode using a wave optics code. The two-sided pyramid divides the focal plane so that each half of the core only interferes with the speckles in its half of the focal plane. A relayed image of the pupil plane is formed at the CCD camera for each half. Antipodal speckle pairs are separated so that a pure phase variation causes amplitude variations in the two images. The phase is reconstructed from the difference of the two amplitudes by transforming cosine waves into sine waves using the Hilbert transform. There are also other corrections which have to be applied in Fourier space. The two-sided pyramid wavefront sensor performs extremely well: After two or three iterations, the phase error varies purely in y. The two-sided pyramid pair enables the phase to be completely reconstructed. Its performance has been modeled closed loop with atmospheric turbulence and wind. Both photon noise and read noise were included. The three-sided and four-sided pyramid wavefront sensors have also been studied in direct phase mode. Neither performs nearly as well as does the two-sided pyramid wavefront sensor.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Phillion, D & Baker, K
System: The UNT Digital Library
Extending the size-parameter range for plane-wave light scattering from infinite homogeneous circular cylinders (open access)

Extending the size-parameter range for plane-wave light scattering from infinite homogeneous circular cylinders

We have developed an algorithm that extends the possible size-parameter range for the calculation of plane-wave light scattering from infinite homogeneous circular cylinders using a Mie-type analysis. Our algorithm is based on the calculation of the ratios of Bessel functions instead of calculating the Bessel functions or their logarithmic derivatives directly. We have found that this algorithm agrees with existing methods (when those methods converge). We have also found that our algorithm converges in cases of very large size parameters, in which case other algorithms often do not.
Date: April 12, 2005
Creator: Hau-Riege, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Report of the Event Tag Review and Recommendation Group (open access)

Report of the Event Tag Review and Recommendation Group

In order to facilitate access to the large volumes of data (multiple petabytes per year) which will be produced during data taking and Monte Carlo production at ATLAS, work has proceeded on building a system of event-level metadata to allow selections of a subset of events to use as input to an analysis. This was included in the ATLAS Computing Model and was first studied and implemented by the Physics Analysis Tools group based on the decisions of the ESD/AOD Task Force. They used tools developed and supported by the CERN IT group and the ATLAS Database group. During 2005 this structure was put through various tests and evaluations. Also, work by physicists on reconstruction and analysis led to an improved understanding of the requirements on the TAG. This report addresses the effect of these new inputs on the previous work with regard to content and the infrastructure needed to support it.
Date: April 12, 2006
Creator: Group, ATLAS; Assamagan, Kétévi A.; Barberis, Dario; Bentvelsen, Stan; Brooijmans, Gustaaf; Cranmer, Kyle et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Flexible Reservation Algorithm for Advance Network Provisioning (open access)

A Flexible Reservation Algorithm for Advance Network Provisioning

Many scientific applications need support from a communication infrastructure that provides predictable performance, which requires effective algorithms for bandwidth reservations. Network reservation systems such as ESnet's OSCARS, establish guaranteed bandwidth of secure virtual circuits for a certain bandwidth and length of time. However, users currently cannot inquire about bandwidth availability, nor have alternative suggestions when reservation requests fail. In general, the number of reservation options is exponential with the number of nodes n, and current reservation commitments. We present a novel approach for path finding in time-dependent networks taking advantage of user-provided parameters of total volume and time constraints, which produces options for earliest completion and shortest duration. The theoretical complexity is only O(n2r2) in the worst-case, where r is the number of reservations in the desired time interval. We have implemented our algorithm and developed efficient methodologies for incorporation into network reservation frameworks. Performance measurements confirm the theoretical predictions.
Date: April 12, 2010
Creator: Balman, Mehmet; Chaniotakis, Evangelos; Shoshani, Arie & Sim, Alex
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of a conceptual design of a mirror reactor for a Fusion Engineering Research Facility (FERF) (open access)

Summary of a conceptual design of a mirror reactor for a Fusion Engineering Research Facility (FERF)

None
Date: April 12, 1974
Creator: Taylor, C.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library