States

PEPC LRU: Ball Support Assembly (open access)

PEPC LRU: Ball Support Assembly

The PEPC LRU upper ball support assembly consists of a ball and a pneumatic air cylinder/conical seat latching mechanism to be attached to the optics support frame,and a ball attached to the PEPC LRU. Both components are designed to allow manual positioning in three axes. Upon insertion of the PEPC LRU into the structure, the upper pneumatic cylinder is actuated to latch the two assemblies together through the conical seat device to grab the lower ball to support the LRU weight. To be conservative, the design load for the assembly is 1500 pounds (the prototype PEPC LRU weight was measured to be near 1380 pounds).
Date: May 14, 1999
Creator: Alger, T
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Case study of isosurface extraction algorithm performance (open access)

Case study of isosurface extraction algorithm performance

Isosurface extraction is an important and useful visualization method. Over the past ten years, the field has seen numerous isosurface techniques published leaving the user in a quandary about which one should be used. Some papers have published complexity analysis of the techniques yet empirical evidence comparing different methods is lacking. This case study presents a comparative study of several representative isosurface extraction algorithms. It reports and analyzes empirical measurements of execution times and memory behavior for each algorithm. The results show that asymptotically optimal techniques may not be the best choice when implemented on modern computer architectures.
Date: December 14, 1999
Creator: Sutton, P M; Hansen, C D; Shen, H & Schikore, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technical Exchange on Improved Design and Performance of High Level Waste Melters - Final Report (open access)

Technical Exchange on Improved Design and Performance of High Level Waste Melters - Final Report

Technical Exchange on Improved Design and Performance of High Level Waste Melters - Final Report
Date: September 14, 1999
Creator: Sundaram, S. K.; Elliott, Michael L. & Bickford, Dennis F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spectral partitioning in diffraction tomography (open access)

Spectral partitioning in diffraction tomography

The scattering mechanism of diffraction tomography is described by the integral form of the Helmholtz equation. The goal of diffraction tomography is to invert this equation in order to reconstruct the object function from the measured scattered fields. During the forward propagation process, the spatial spectrum of the object under investigation is ''smeared,'' by a convolution in the spectral domain, across the propagating and evanescent regions of the received field. Hence, care must be taken in performing the reconstruction, as the object's spectral information has been moved into regions where it may be considered to be noise rather than useful information. This will reduce the quality and resolution of the reconstruction. We show haw the object's spectrum can be partitioned into resolvable and non-resolvable parts based upon the cutoff between the propagating and evanescent fields. Operating under the Born approximation, we develop a beam-forming on transmit approach to direct the energy into either the propagating or evanescent parts of the spectrum. In this manner, we may individually interrogate the propagating and evanescent regions of the object spectrum.
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Lehman, S K; Chambers, D H & Candy, J V
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anoxic Plume Attenuation in a Fluctuating Water Table System: Impact of 100-D Area In Situ Redox Manipulation on Downgradient Dissolved Oxygen Concentrations (open access)

Anoxic Plume Attenuation in a Fluctuating Water Table System: Impact of 100-D Area In Situ Redox Manipulation on Downgradient Dissolved Oxygen Concentrations

Anoxic Plume Attenuation in a Fluctuating Water Table System: Impact of 100-D Area In Situ Redox Manipulation on Downgradient Dissolved Oxygen Concentrations
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Williams, Mark D.; Vermeul, Vincent R.; Oostrom, Martinus; Evans, John C.; Fruchter, Jonathan S.; Istok, J. D. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resolving Radiological Classification and Release Issues for Many DOE Solid Wastes and Salvageable Materials (open access)

Resolving Radiological Classification and Release Issues for Many DOE Solid Wastes and Salvageable Materials

The cost effective radiological classification and disposal of solid materials with potential volume contamination, in accordance with applicable U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Orders, suffers from an inability to unambiguously distinguish among transuranic waste, low-level waste, and unconditional-release materials. Depending on the classification, disposal costs can vary by a hundred-fold. But in many cases, the issues can be easily resolved by a combination of process information, some simple measurements, and calculational predictions from a computer model for radiation shielding.The proper classification and disposal of many solid wastes requires a measurement regime that is able to show compliance with a variety of institutional and regulatory contamination limits. Although this is not possible for all solid wastes, there are many that do lend themselves to such measures. Several examples are discussed which demonstrate the possibilities, including one which was successfully applied to bulk contamination.The only barriers to such broader uses are the slow-to-change institutional perceptions and procedures. For many issues and materials, the measurement tools are available; they need only be applied.
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Hochel, R. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptable Knowledge Summary Report for Waste Stream: SR-T001-221F-HET/Drums (open access)

Acceptable Knowledge Summary Report for Waste Stream: SR-T001-221F-HET/Drums

This report is fully responsive to the requirements of Section 4.0 Acceptable Knowledge from the WIPP Transuranic Waste Characterization Quality Assurance Plan, CAO-94-1010, and provides a sound, (and auditable) characterization that satisfies the WIPP criteria for Acceptable Knowledge.
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Lunsford, G. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
RIP INPUT TABLES FROM WAPDEG FOR LA DESIGN SELECTION: HIGHER THERMAL LOADING (open access)

RIP INPUT TABLES FROM WAPDEG FOR LA DESIGN SELECTION: HIGHER THERMAL LOADING

The purpose of this calculation is to document (1) the Waste Package Degradation (WAPDEG) version 3.09 (CRWMS M&O 1998b. Software Routine Report for WAPDEG (Version 3.09)) simulations used to analyze waste package degradation and failure under the repository exposure conditions characterized by the higher thermal loading repository design feature and, (2) post-processing of these results into tables of waste package degradation time histories suitable for use as input into the Integrated Probabilistic Simulator for Environmental Systems version 5.19.01 (RIP) computer program (Golder Associates 1998). Specifically, the WAPDEG simulations discussed in this calculation correspond to waste package emplacement conditions (repository environment and design) defined in the Total System Performance Assessment-Viability Assessment (TSPA-VA), with the exception that the higher thermal loading Design Feature (Design Feature 26) of the License Application Design Selection (LADS) analysis was analyzed. Higher thermal loading would keep the drift temperature above the boiling point of water for a longer period of time, thereby minimizing moisture around the waste packages during a longer post-closure period. The higher thermal loading would also affect the surrounding rock, which may have adverse effects. The only failure mechanism of this feature would be if the effects on the surrounding rock were determined to …
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Mon, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Appropriations for FY2000: Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education (open access)

Appropriations for FY2000: Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education

This report is a guide to appropriations of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education for FY2000.
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Irwin, Paul M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Federal Mandatory Minimum Sentencing Statutes: A List of Citations with Captions, Introductory Comments, and Bibliography (open access)

Federal Mandatory Minimum Sentencing Statutes: A List of Citations with Captions, Introductory Comments, and Bibliography

None
Date: August 14, 1999
Creator: Doyle, Charles
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NAFTA: Estimates of Job Effects and Industry Trade Trends After 5½ Years (open access)

NAFTA: Estimates of Job Effects and Industry Trade Trends After 5½ Years

None
Date: December 14, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coast Guard: Analysis of the FY2000 Budget (open access)

Coast Guard: Analysis of the FY2000 Budget

None
Date: October 14, 1999
Creator: Lee, Martin R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cuba-U.S. Relations: Chronology of Key Events 1959-1999 (open access)

Cuba-U.S. Relations: Chronology of Key Events 1959-1999

None
Date: December 14, 1999
Creator: Sullivan, Mark P. & York, Suzanne L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Campaign Financing: Highlights and Chronology of Current Federal Law (open access)

Campaign Financing: Highlights and Chronology of Current Federal Law

This report provides a summary of major provisions of federal law and a chronology of key legislative and judicial actions.
Date: June 14, 1999
Creator: Cantor, Joseph E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Research: A Primer on the Department of Defense’s Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) Program (open access)

Defense Research: A Primer on the Department of Defense’s Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) Program

This report describes the basic elements and issues of the Department of Defense's (DOD) Research, Development, Test and Evaluation (RDT&E) Program. It defines basic activities supported by the program, presents budget trends, discusses the management of program, and describes the infrastructure in which the program is implemented.
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Moteff, John D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Social Security Reform: Assessing Changes To Future Retirement Benefits (open access)

Social Security Reform: Assessing Changes To Future Retirement Benefits

None
Date: December 14, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Missile Defense: Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) Flight Testing (open access)

Missile Defense: Theater High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) Flight Testing

None
Date: September 14, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intercountry Adoption Convention Implementation Act of 1999: Summary and Analysis of S. 682 (open access)

Intercountry Adoption Convention Implementation Act of 1999: Summary and Analysis of S. 682

None
Date: September 14, 1999
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capital Gains Taxes, Innovation and Growth (open access)

Capital Gains Taxes, Innovation and Growth

This study addresses the role of capital gains tax reductions in stimulating new firm formation, innovation, and growth through venture capital investments and tax-favored stock options.
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Gravelle, Jane G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
North Korean Drug Trafficking: Allegations and Issues for Congress (open access)

North Korean Drug Trafficking: Allegations and Issues for Congress

None
Date: September 14, 1999
Creator: Perl, Raphael F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The scientific benefits of inertially confined fusion research (open access)

The scientific benefits of inertially confined fusion research

A striking feature of 25 years of research into inertially confined fusion (ICF) and inertial fusion energy (IFE) has been its significant impact in other fields of science. Most ICF facilities worldwide are now being used in part to support a wider portfolio of research than simply ICF. Reasons for this trend include the high intrinsic interest of the new science coupled with the relative ease and low marginal cost of adapting the facilities particularly lasers, to carry out experiments with goals other than ICF. The availability at ICF laboratories of sophisticated theory and modeling capability and advanced diagnostics has given added impetus. The expertise of ICF specialists has also triggered more lateral scientific spin-offs leading for example to new types of lasers and to related developments in basic science. In a generic sense, the facilities developed for ICF have made possible study of new regimes of the properties of matter at extremely high-energy density and the interaction of ultraintense light with matter. This general opportunity has been exploited in numerous and diverse specific lines of research. Examples elaborated below include laboratory simulation of astrophysical phenomena; studies of the equation of state (EOS) of matter under conditions relevant to the …
Date: May 14, 1999
Creator: Key, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mobile Surveillance and Monitoring Robots (open access)

Mobile Surveillance and Monitoring Robots

Long-term nuclear material storage will require in-vault data verification, sensor testing, error and alarm response, inventory, and maintenance operations. System concept development efforts for a comprehensive nuclear material management system have identified the use of a small flexible mobile automation platform to perform these surveillance and maintenance operations. In order to have near-term wide-range application in the Complex, a mobile surveillance system must be small, flexible, and adaptable enough to allow retrofit into existing special nuclear material facilities. The objective of the Mobile Surveillance and Monitoring Robot project is to satisfy these needs by development of a human scale mobile robot to monitor the state of health, physical security and safety of items in storage and process; recognize and respond to alarms, threats, and off-normal operating conditions; and perform material handling and maintenance operations. The system will integrate a tool kit of onboard sensors and monitors, maintenance equipment and capability, and SNL developed non-lethal threat response technology with the intelligence to identify threats and develop and implement first response strategies for abnormal signals and alarm conditions. System versatility will be enhanced by incorporating a robot arm, vision and force sensing, robust obstacle avoidance, and appropriate monitoring and sensing equipment.
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Kimberly, Howard R. & Shipers, Larry R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-Efficiency, Low-Voltage, Compound Semiconductor Devices for Microwave and MM-Wave Power Amplifiers (open access)

High-Efficiency, Low-Voltage, Compound Semiconductor Devices for Microwave and MM-Wave Power Amplifiers

Improvements in the last decade in InP materials growth, device processing techniques, characterization, and circuit design have enabled solid-state power performance through 122 GHz. Although originally targeted for low-noise and power performance at mm-wave frequencies (>30 GHz), InP HEMTs could become the preferred device for frequencies as low as 800 MHz. This investment has benefited the microwave frequency regime with higher efficiency and power densities at lower operating voltages. State-of-the-art microwave performance at lower operating voltage provides a path to smaller, lighter-weight systems in the battery operated arena of commercial and defense electronics. This paper describes an InP HEMT technology being investigated for many power and low-noise amplifier applications from UHF to W-band frequencies. Specifically the technology demonstrated 640mW/mm power density, 27 dB gain, and 84% power-added efficiency at L-band with a bias of 3.0 volts. Based on the author's literature search, this is a record efficiency at L-band with an operating voltage of less than 5 volts.
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Chao, P.C.; Hietala, V.M.; Kong, W. & Sloan, Lynn R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laboratory Directed Research and Development 1998 Annual Report (open access)

Laboratory Directed Research and Development 1998 Annual Report

The Laboratory's Directed Research and Development (LDRD) program encourages the advancement of science and the development of major new technical capabilities from which future research and development will grow. Through LDRD funding, Pacific Northwest continually replenishes its inventory of ideas that have the potential to address major national needs. The LDRD program has enabled the Laboratory to bring to bear its scientific and technical capabilities on all of DOE's missions, particularly in the arena of environmental problems. Many of the concepts related to environmental cleanup originally developed with LDRD funds are now receiving programmatic support from DOE, LDRD-funded work in atmospheric sciences is now being applied to DOE's Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program. We also have used concepts initially explored through LDRD to develop several winning proposals in the Environmental Management Science Program. The success of our LDRD program is founded on good management practices that ensure funding is allocated and projects are conducted in compliance with DOE requirements. We thoroughly evaluate the LDRD proposals based on their scientific and technical merit, as well as their relevance to DOE's programmatic needs. After a proposal is funded, we assess progress annually using external peer reviews. This year, as in years past, the …
Date: July 14, 1999
Creator: Hughes, Pam & eds., Sheila Bennett
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library