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Personal extrapolation of CDF test beam use to the SSC (open access)

Personal extrapolation of CDF test beam use to the SSC

The author's personal experience in test beam usage at CDF is used to predict SSC needs at the point of turn-on. It is concluded that the test beam demand will reflect the scale of effort involved in SSC detectors rather than the total number of them. Provision for later expansion is recommended. It is also recommended that the test beam facilities, as well as detector electronics, should reflect the available dynamic range; particularly, a single high energy beam derived from the SSC could be shared by several groups. (LEW)
Date: June 23, 1986
Creator: Nodulman, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress in Diamond Cell Experiments: Pressures Above Three Megabars (open access)

Progress in Diamond Cell Experiments: Pressures Above Three Megabars

Diamond cell experiments at pressures above 2 megabars have many important applications with respect to planetary interiors (e.g., metallization of hydrogen). To make possible acquisition of data at extreme pressures on materials of planetary interest, we have been exploring both numerically and experimentally several aspects of diamond cell design and methodology. We have conducted detailed finite element analyses of the diamond cell to explore how bevelled anvils and material properties of the gasket affect diamond cell performance (1). These calculations include nonlinear equations of state, gasket plasticity, and diamond-gasket interfacial friction. Gasket plasticity has a dramatic effect on the stress field and thus must be included in any physically realistic analysis of the diamond cell; purely elastic calculations, therefore, cannot model adequately the behavior of a diamond cell. Gasket yield strengh is very important in facilitating generation of extreme pressures in a diamond cell. Increasing gasket yield strength allows a higher radial pressure gradient to be supported at a given gasket thickness, which means that failure of an experiment by deformation of the anvils to allow anvil-anvil contact occurs at higher pressures than would occur with a lower yield strength gasket. Furthermore, the finite element analyses indicate that increasing gasket …
Date: January 23, 1986
Creator: Goettel, K. A.; Reichlin, R.; Moss, W. C. & Martin, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Perceived and calculated health risks: do the impacts differ (open access)

Perceived and calculated health risks: do the impacts differ

In many cases of radioactive and hazardous waste management, some members of the general public perceive that human health risks associated with the wastes are higher than the calculated risks. Calculated risks are projections that have been derived from models, and it is these risks that are usually used as the basis for waste management. However, for various reasons, the calculated risks are often considered by the public as too low or inappropriate. The reasons that calculated risks are not perceived as accurate and the factors that affect these perceptions are explored in this paper. Also discussed are the impacts related to the perceived and calculated health risks: what they are, and if and how they differ. The kinds of potential impacts examined are health effects, land value changes, and social, transportation, and economic effects. The paper concludes with a discussion of the implications of incorporating these different risk perspectives in decisions on waste management.
Date: January 23, 1986
Creator: Payne, B.A. & Williams, R.G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of the linear aperture of the SSC (Superconducting Supercollider) clustered lattice used for the conceptual design report (open access)

Determination of the linear aperture of the SSC (Superconducting Supercollider) clustered lattice used for the conceptual design report

A study is made of the linear aperture for the clustered lattice used for the SSC Conceptual Design Report. Random multipole errors are included in all magnetic elements including the insertion dipoles and quadrupoles. Based on the concept of smear, the linear aperture is equal to the dynamic aperture in the range -0.1 less than or equal to ..delta..P/P less than or equal to 0.03%. Strong coupling for ..delta..P/P > 0% produces large smears. A variation of the smear parameter that is insensitive to coupling is proposed. A comparison is made with results reported in the SSC Conceptual Design Report.
Date: June 23, 1986
Creator: Dell, G.F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Symmetry issues in a class of ion beam targets using sufficiently short direct drive pulses (open access)

Symmetry issues in a class of ion beam targets using sufficiently short direct drive pulses

Controlling asymmetries in direct drive ion beam targets depends upon the ability to control the effects of residual target asymmetries after an appropriate illumination scheme has already been utilized. A class of modified ion beam targets where residual asymmetries are ameliorated is considered. The illumination scheme used is an axially symmetric one convenient for reactor designs. Residual asymmetries are controlled by limiting the radial motion of the radius R/sub dep/ of peak ion energy deposition. Limiting the motion of R/sub dep/ is achieved by lengthening the time scale t/sub s/ where changes in R/sub dep/ adversely affect asymmetries. In our example, t/sub s/ becomes longer than the duration ..delta..t/sub D/ of the entire direct drive pulse train (t/sub s/ > ..delta..t/sub D/).
Date: October 23, 1986
Creator: Mark, J.W.K. & Lindl, J.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current technology of particle physics detectors (open access)

Current technology of particle physics detectors

A brief discussion is given of the characteristics required of new accelerator facilities, leading into a discussion of the required detectors, including position sensitive detectors, particle identification, and calorimeters. (LEW)
Date: June 23, 1986
Creator: Ludlam, T. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Eleventh workshop on geothermal reservoir engineering: Proceedings (open access)

Eleventh workshop on geothermal reservoir engineering: Proceedings

The Eleventh Workshop on Geothermal Reservoir Engineering was held at Stanford University on January 21-23, 1986. The attendance was up compared to previous years, with 144 registered participants. Ten foreign countries were represented: Canada, England, France, Iceland, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, New Zealand and Turkey. There were 38 technical presentations at the Workshop which are published as papers in this Proceedings volume. Six technical papers not presented at the Workshop are also published and one presentation is not published. In addition to these 45 technical presentations or papers, the introductory address was given by J. E. Mock from the Department of Energy. The Workshop Banquet speaker was Jim Combs of Geothermal Resources International, Inc. We thank him for his presentation on GEO geothermal developments at The Geysers. The chairmen of the technical sessions made an important contribution to the Workshop. Other than Stanford faculty members they included: M. Gulati, E. Iglesias, A. Moench, S. Prestwich, and K. Pruess. The Workshop was organized by the Stanford Geothermal Program faculty, staff, and students. We would like to thank J.W. Cook, J.R. Hartford, M.C. King, A.E. Osugi, P. Pettit, J. Arroyo, J. Thorne, and T.A. Ramey for their valued help with the meeting …
Date: January 23, 1986
Creator: Ramey, H.J. Jr.; Kruger, P.; Miller, F.G.; Horne, R.N.; Brigham, W.E. & Counsil, J.R. (Stanford Geothermal Program)
System: The UNT Digital Library
ATA beam director experiment (open access)

ATA beam director experiment

This report describes beam director elements for an experiment at the Advanced Test Accelerator. The elements described include a vernier magnet for beam aiming, an achromat magnet, and an isolation system for the beam interface. These components are built at small scale for concept testing. (JDH)
Date: June 23, 1986
Creator: Lee, E.P.; Younger, F.C.; Cruz, G.E. & Nolting, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Method for Analyzing Exponential Decays (open access)

A Method for Analyzing Exponential Decays

This article presents the non-linear least-squares routine KPS1 for the analysis of data from counting experiments which follow single exponential decays.
Date: October 23, 1986
Creator: Marshall, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library