Operational Experience with the Frontier System in CMS (open access)

Operational Experience with the Frontier System in CMS

None
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Blumenfeld, Barry; Dykstra, Dave; Kreuzer, Peter; Du, Ran & Wang, Weizhen
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deciphering the details of RNA aminoglycoside interactions: from atomistic models to biotechnological applications (open access)

Deciphering the details of RNA aminoglycoside interactions: from atomistic models to biotechnological applications

A detailed study was done of the neomycin-B RNA aptamer for determining its selectivity and binding ability to both neomycin– and kanamycin-class aminoglycosides. A novel method to increase drug concentrations in cells for more efficiently killing is described. To test the method, a bacterial model system was adopted and several small RNA molecules interacting with aminoglycosides were cloned downstream of T7 RNA polymerase promoter in an expression vector. Then, the growth analysis of E. coli expressing aptamers was observed for 12-hour period. Our analysis indicated that aptamers helped to increase the intracellular concentration of aminoglycosides thereby increasing their efficacy.
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Ilgu, Muslum
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
The LCLS Timing Event System (open access)

The LCLS Timing Event System

The Linac Coherent Light Source requires precision timing trigger signals for various accelerator diagnostics and controls at SLAC-NAL. A new timing system has been developed that meets these requirements. This system is based on COTS hardware with a mixture of custom-designed units. An added challenge has been the requirement that the LCLS Timing System must co-exist and 'know' about the existing SLC Timing System. This paper describes the architecture, construction and performance of the LCLS timing event system.
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Dusatko, John; Allison, S.; Browne, M. & Krejcik, P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The LCLS Undulator Beam Loss Monitor Readout System (open access)

The LCLS Undulator Beam Loss Monitor Readout System

The LCLS Undulator Beam Loss Monitor System is required to detect any loss radiation seen by the FEL undulators. The undulator segments consist of permanent magnets which are very sensitive to radiation damage. The operational goal is to keep demagnetization below 0.01% over the life of the LCLS. The BLM system is designed to help achieve this goal by detecting any loss radiation and indicating a fault condition if the radiation level exceeds a certain threshold. Upon reception of this fault signal, the LCLS Machine Protection System takes appropriate action by either halting or rate limiting the beam. The BLM detector consists of a PMT coupled to a Cherenkov radiator located near the upstream end of each undulator segment. There are 33 BLMs in the system, one per segment. The detectors are read out by a dedicated system that is integrated directly into the LCLS MPS. The BLM readout system provides monitoring of radiation levels, computation of integrated doses, detection of radiation excursions beyond set thresholds, fault reporting and control of BLM system functions. This paper describes the design, construction and operational performance of the BLM readout system.
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Dusatko, John; Browne, M.; Fisher, A. S.; Kotturi, D.; Norum, S. & Olsen, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Simulation and Computing Fiscal Year 14 Implementation Plan, Rev. 0 (open access)

Advanced Simulation and Computing Fiscal Year 14 Implementation Plan, Rev. 0

None
Date: July 23, 2013
Creator: McCoy, M; Alvin, K & Archer, B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Multi-Level Bitmap Indexes for Flash Memory Storage (open access)

Multi-Level Bitmap Indexes for Flash Memory Storage

Due to their low access latency, high read speed, and power-efficient operation, flash memory storage devices are rapidly emerging as an attractive alternative to traditional magnetic storage devices. However, tests show that the most efficient indexing methods are not able to take advantage of the flash memory storage devices. In this paper, we present a set of multi-level bitmap indexes that can effectively take advantage of flash storage devices. These indexing methods use coarsely binned indexes to answer queries approximately, and then use finely binned indexes to refine the answers. Our new methods read significantly lower volumes of data at the expense of an increased disk access count, thus taking full advantage of the improved read speed and low access latency of flash devices. To demonstrate the advantage of these new indexes, we measure their performance on a number of storage systems using a standard data warehousing benchmark called the Set Query Benchmark. We observe that multi-level strategies on flash drives are up to 3 times faster than traditional indexing strategies on magnetic disk drives.
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Wu, Kesheng; Madduri, Kamesh & Canon, Shane
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search for a light Higgs decaying to two gluons or ssbar in the radiative decays of Upsilon( 1S ) (open access)

Search for a light Higgs decaying to two gluons or ssbar in the radiative decays of Upsilon( 1S )

None
Date: July 23, 2013
Creator: Lees, J. P.; Poireau, V.; Tisserand, V.; /Annecy, LAPP; Grauges, E.; /Barcelona U., ECM et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 MICROBIAL STRESS RESPONSE GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JULY 18-23, 2010 (open access)

2010 MICROBIAL STRESS RESPONSE GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, JULY 18-23, 2010

The 2010 Gordon Research Conference on Microbial Stress Responses provides an open and exciting forum for the exchange of scientific discoveries on the remarkable mechanisms used by microbes to survive in nearly every niche on the planet. Understanding these stress responses is critical for our ability to control microbial survival, whether in the context of biotechnology, ecology, or pathogenesis. From its inception in 1994, this conference has traditionally employed a very broad definition of stress in microbial systems. Sessions will cover the major steps of stress responses from signal sensing to transcriptional regulation to the effectors that mediate responses. A wide range of stresses will be represented. Some examples include (but are not limited to) oxidative stress, protein quality control, antibiotic-induced stress and survival, envelope stress, DNA damage, and nutritional stress. The 2010 meeting will also focus on the role of stress responses in microbial communities, applied and environmental microbiology, and microbial development. This conference brings together researchers from both the biological and physical sciences investigating stress responses in medically- and environmentally relevant microbes, as well as model organisms, using cutting-edge techniques. Computational, systems-level, and biophysical approaches to exploring stress responsive circuits will be integrated throughout the sessions alongside the …
Date: July 23, 2011
Creator: Ades, Sarah
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
APPENDIX C: HYDROLOGIC SOURCE TERM SCREENING AND DISTRIBUTION (open access)

APPENDIX C: HYDROLOGIC SOURCE TERM SCREENING AND DISTRIBUTION

None
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Tompson, A & Zavarin, M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Image Reconstruction of Imatron Electron-Beam Tomography Data (open access)

Image Reconstruction of Imatron Electron-Beam Tomography Data

None
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Champley, K M; Azevedo, S G; Schneberk, D J & Martz, H E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary Analysis on Linac Oscillation Data LI05-19 and Wake Field Energy Loss in FACET Commissioning 2012 (open access)

Preliminary Analysis on Linac Oscillation Data LI05-19 and Wake Field Energy Loss in FACET Commissioning 2012

In this note, preliminary analysis on linac ocsillation data in FACET linac LI05-09 plus LI11-19 is presented. Several quadrupoles are identified to possibly have different strength, compared with their designed strength in the MAD optics model. The beam energy loss due to longitudinal wake fields in the S-band linac is also analytically calculated, also by LITRACK numerical simulations.
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Sun, Yipeng
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transcriptomic response of the mycoparasitic fungus Trichoderma atroviride to the presence of a fungal prey (open access)

Transcriptomic response of the mycoparasitic fungus Trichoderma atroviride to the presence of a fungal prey

BACKGROUND: Combating the action of plant pathogenic microorganisms by mycoparasitic fungi has been announced as an attractive biological alternative to the use of chemical fungicides since two decades. The fungal genus Trichoderma includes a high number of taxa which are able to recognize, combat and finally besiege and kill their prey. Only fragments of the biochemical processes related to this ability have been uncovered so far, however. RESULTS: We analyzed genome-wide gene expression changes during the begin of physical contact between Trichoderma atroviride and two plant pathogens Botrytis cinerea and Rhizoctonia solani, and compared with gene expression patterns of mycelial and conidiating cultures, respectively. About 3000 ESTs, representing about 900 genes, were obtained from each of these three growth conditions. 66 genes, represented by 442 ESTs, were specifically and significantly overexpressed during onset of mycoparasitism, and the expression of a subset thereof was verified by expression analysis. The upregulated genes comprised 18 KOG groups, but were most abundant from the groups representing posttranslational processing, and amino acid metabolism, and included components of the stress response, reaction to nitrogen shortage, signal transduction and lipid catabolism. Metabolic network analysis confirmed the upregulation of the genes for amino acid biosynthesis and of those …
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Seidl, Verena; Song, Lifu; Lindquist, Erika; Gruber, Sabine; Koptchinskiy, Alexeji; Zeilinger, Susanne et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diboson Production at the Tevatron (open access)

Diboson Production at the Tevatron

Here we summarize the recent measurements of the diboson production cross sections and limits on trilinear gauge boson couplings using 1-5 fb{sup -1} of Tevatron data collected by the CDF and D0 detectors. These results are the most precise to date from a hadron collider.
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Sekaric, Jadranka
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structural and magnetic properties and superconductivity in Ba(Fe{sub 1-x}TM{sub x}){sub 2}As{sub 2} (open access)

Structural and magnetic properties and superconductivity in Ba(Fe{sub 1-x}TM{sub x}){sub 2}As{sub 2}

We studied the effects on structural and magnetic phase transitions and the emergence of superconductivity in transition metal substituted BaFe{sub 2}As{sub 2}. We grew four series of Ba(Fe{sub 1-x}TM{sub x}){sub 2}As{sub 2} (TM=Ru, Mn, Co+Cr and Co+Mn) and characterized them by crystallographic, magnetic and transport measurements. We also subjected Ba(Fe{sub 1-x}Cr{sub x}){sub 2}As{sub 2} and Ba(Fe{sub 1-x}Co{sub x}){sub 2}As{sub 2} to heat treatment to explore what changes might be induced.
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Thaler, Alexander
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 Plant Molecular Biology Gordon Research Conference (open access)

2010 Plant Molecular Biology Gordon Research Conference

The Plant Molecular Biology Conference has traditionally covered a breadth of exciting topics and the 2010 conference will continue in that tradition. Emerging concerns about food security have inspired a program with three main themes: (1) genomics, natural variation and breeding to understand adaptation and crop improvement, (2) hormonal cross talk, and (3) plant/microbe interactions. There are also sessions on epigenetics and proteomics/metabolomics. Thus this conference will bring together a range of disciplines, will foster the exchange of ideas and enable participants to learn of the latest developments and ideas in diverse areas of plant biology. The conference provides an excellent opportunity for individuals to discuss their research because additional speakers in each session will be selected from submitted abstracts. There will also be a poster session each day for a two-hour period prior to dinner. In particular, this conference plays a key role in enabling students and postdocs (the next generation of research leaders) to mingle with pioneers in multiple areas of plant science.
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Sussman, Michael
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of a lithium-glass based composite neutron detector for He replacement (open access)

Development of a lithium-glass based composite neutron detector for He replacement

None
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Rich, G C; Kazkaz, K & Karwowski, H J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Life-Cycle Analysis of Alternative Aviation Fuels In GREET (open access)

Life-Cycle Analysis of Alternative Aviation Fuels In GREET

The Greenhouse gases, Regulated Emissions, and Energy use in Transportation (GREET) model, developed at Argonne National Laboratory, has been expanded to include well-to-wake (WTWa) analysis of aviation fuels and aircraft. This report documents the key WTWa stages and assumptions for fuels that represent alternatives to petroleum jet fuel. The aviation module in GREET consists of three spreadsheets that present detailed characterizations of well-to-pump and pump-to-wake parameters and WTWa results. By using the expanded GREET version (GREET1{_}2011), we estimate WTWa results for energy use (total, fossil, and petroleum energy) and greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions (carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide) for (1) each unit of energy (lower heating value) consumed by the aircraft or (2) each unit of distance traveled/ payload carried by the aircraft. The fuel pathways considered in this analysis include petroleum-based jet fuel from conventional and unconventional sources (i.e., oil sands); Fisher-Tropsch (FT) jet fuel from natural gas, coal, and biomass; bio-jet fuel from fast pyrolysis of cellulosic biomass; and bio-jet fuel from vegetable and algal oils, which falls under the American Society for Testing and Materials category of hydroprocessed esters and fatty acids. For aircraft operation, we considered six passenger aircraft classes and four freight aircraft classes …
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: Elgowainy, A.; Han, J.; Wang, M.; Carter, N.; Stratton, R.; Hileman, J. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2010 Atomic & Molecular Interactions Gordon Research Conference (open access)

2010 Atomic & Molecular Interactions Gordon Research Conference

The Atomic and Molecular Interactions Gordon Conferences is justifiably recognized for its broad scope, touching on areas ranging from fundamental gas phase and gas-condensed matter collision dynamics, to laser-molecule interactions, photophysics, and unimolecular decay processes. The meeting has traditionally involved scientists engaged in fundamental research in gas and condensed phases and those who apply these concepts to systems of practical chemical and physical interest. A key tradition in this meeting is the strong mixing of theory and experiment throughout. The program for 2010 conference continues these traditions. At the 2010 AMI GRC, there will be talks in 5 broadly defined and partially overlapping areas of intermolecular interactions and chemical dynamics: (1) Photoionization and Photoelectron Dynamics; (2) Quantum Control and Molecules in Strong Fields; (3) Photochemical Dynamics; (4) Complex Molecules and Condensed Phases; and (5) Clusters and Reaction Dynamics. These areas encompass many of the most productive and exciting areas of chemical physics, including both reactive and nonreactive processes, intermolecular and intramolecular energy transfer, and photodissociation and unimolecular processes. Gas phase dynamics, van der Waals and cluster studies, laser-matter interactions and multiple potential energy surface phenomena will all be discussed.
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Martinez, Todd
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RADIATION CHEMISTRY 2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE JULY 18-23 (open access)

RADIATION CHEMISTRY 2010 GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE JULY 18-23

The 2010 Gordon Conference on Radiation Chemistry will present cutting edge research regarding the study of radiation-induced chemical transformations. Radiation Chemistry or 'high energy' chemistry is primarily initiated by ionizing radiation: i.e. photons or particles with energy sufficient to create conduction band electrons and 'holes', excitons, ionic and neutral free radicals, highly excited states, and solvated electrons. These transients often interact or 'react' to form products vastly different than those produced under thermal equilibrium conditions. The non-equilibrium, non-thermal conditions driving radiation chemistry exist in plasmas, star-forming regions, the outer solar system, nuclear reactors, nuclear waste repositories, radiation-based medical/clinical treatment centers and in radiation/materials processing facilities. The 2010 conference has a strong interdisciplinary flavor with focus areas spanning (1) the fundamental physics and chemistry involved in ultrafast (atto/femtosecond) energy deposition events, (2) radiation-induced processes in biology (particularly spatially resolved studies), (3) radiation-induced modification of materials at the nanoscale and cosmic ray/x-ray mediated processes in planetary science/astrochemistry. While the conference concentrates on fundamental science, topical applied areas covered will also include nuclear power, materials/polymer processing, and clinical/radiation treatment in medicine. The Conference will bring together investigators at the forefront of their field, and will provide opportunities for junior scientists and graduate students …
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Orlando, Thomas
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Metal-Molecule Schottky Junction Effects in Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering (open access)

Metal-Molecule Schottky Junction Effects in Surface Enhanced Raman Scattering

None
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Gartia, M; Bond, T C & Liu, G L
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Rigorous Surface Enhanced Raman Spectral Characterization of Large-Area High-Uniformity Silver-Coated Tapered Silica Nanopillar Arrays (open access)

Rigorous Surface Enhanced Raman Spectral Characterization of Large-Area High-Uniformity Silver-Coated Tapered Silica Nanopillar Arrays

None
Date: July 23, 2010
Creator: Gartia, M. R.; Xu, Z.; Behymer, E.; Nguyen, H.; Britten, J. A.; Larson, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress on the Neutrino Factory Target System Design (open access)

Progress on the Neutrino Factory Target System Design

N/A
Date: July 23, 2012
Creator: K., Sayed H.; Kirk, H.G. & McDonald, K.T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library