Hadron masses in lattice gauge theories: The inclusions of dynamical fermions (open access)

Hadron masses in lattice gauge theories: The inclusions of dynamical fermions

Hadron masses are calculated on an 8/sup 3/ /times/ 16 lattice using four flavors of staggered fermion to generate the gauge configurations, but using Wilson fermions to calculate the hadron propagators. The identification of a value of the Wilson hopping parameter with the value of the bare quark mass used in the simulations is discussed.
Date: November 24, 1987
Creator: Richards, D.G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potential impacts of artificial intelligence expert systems on geothermal well drilling costs: (open access)

Potential impacts of artificial intelligence expert systems on geothermal well drilling costs:

The Geothermal research Program of the US Department of Energy (DOE) has as one of its goals to reduce the cost of drilling geothermal wells by 25 percent. To attain this goal, DOE continuously evaluates new technologies to determine their potential in contributing to the Program. One such technology is artifical intelligence (AI), a branch of computer science that, in recent years, has begun to impact the marketplace in a number of fields. Expert systems techniques can (and in some cases, already have) been applied to develop computer-based ''advisors'' to assist drilling personnel in areas such as designing mud systems, casing plans, and cement programs, optimizing drill bit selection and bottom hole asssembly (BHA) design, and alleviating lost circulation, stuck pipe, fishing, and cement problems. Intelligent machines with sensor and/or robotic directly linked to AI systems, have potential applications in areas of bit control, rig hydraulics, pipe handling, and pipe inspection. Using a well costing spreadsheet, the potential savings that could be attributed to each of these systems was calculated for three base cases: a dry steam well at The Geysers, a medium-depth Imerial Valley well, and a deep Imperial Valley well. Based on the average potential savings to be …
Date: November 24, 1987
Creator: Satrape, J.V.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tritium permeation through characterized films on Type 304L stainless steel (open access)

Tritium permeation through characterized films on Type 304L stainless steel

Rocky Flats is looking for an optimum method for surface treating 304L stainless steel to increase its resistance to tritium permeation. Selected surface treatments were applied to 304L samples. One set of samples was shipped to the Rockwell Corporate Science Center for alternate characterization analysis. Another set was sent to Los Alamos National Laboratory for tritium exposure and ion beam spectrographic analysis. The Science Center performed the following analyses: ellipsometry, contact potential, photoelectron emission, surface energy, surface activation, cathodic polarization, electrochemical impedance, and open-circuit potential. Excellent correlation was found between type of treatment and surface activation and electrochemical impedance. Results of the Science Center tests correlated well with actual tritium permeation measurements made at Los Alamos. 8 refs., 8 figs., 1 tab.
Date: July 24, 1987
Creator: Kallas, A.J.; Rising, T.L.; Childs, E.L. & Thomas, R.L. (ed.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relation between shock strength and strain-rate plasticity at maximum deviatoric stress (open access)

Relation between shock strength and strain-rate plasticity at maximum deviatoric stress

Using Wallace's analysis for steady weak shocks, this paper establishes for Cu, Ur, and 6061T6Al an approximate relations between the shock strength and the maximum deviatoric stress, tau/sub m/, and plastic strain at tau/sub m/. In addition it is shown that the plastic strain rate is very nearly proportional to the total normal strain rate at tau/sub m/. These results and the universal shock strength/strain rate relation of Swegle and Grady are used to draw conclusions about the general plasticity constitutive relation.
Date: June 24, 1987
Creator: Tonks, D.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Surface studies of UFe2 and evaluation of its catalytic properties with a 2H2:CO mixture (open access)

Surface studies of UFe2 and evaluation of its catalytic properties with a 2H2:CO mixture

The reactivity of UFe2 with O2, CO and CO2 were studied using x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS). Adsorption of O2 on clean UFe2 surfaces (Fe/U approx. = 2.0), produced by argon-ion sputtering, leads to the formation of UO2 and depletion of Fe from the surface layer probed by XPS (Fe/U approx. = 0.8). The oxidation state of Fe in this layer, as determined by XPS (Fe 2p/sub 3/2/ = 710.4 eV), is between Fe S and Fe T of pure Fe oxides. Exposure of sputtered-clean UFe2 to CO and CO2 results in a slight broadening of the U 4f peaks, indicating U oxidation, and some Fe depletion in the analyzed layer (Fe/U approx. = 1.7). The O ls (530.2 and 530.4 eV for CO and CO2, respectively) and C ls (282.7 and 282.6 eV for CO and CO2, respectively) indicate that dissociative chemisorption to O and C atoms occurs. UFe2 ground into a fine powder was tested as a catalyst in a differential high-pressure flow reactor with a 2H2:CO gas mixture. A significant amount of methanol and hydrocarbons are produced at 577K; while hydrocarbons are the main products (>99%) at 739K. XPS analysis of the used catalyst indicates that U is …
Date: March 24, 1987
Creator: Schultz, J.; Naegele, J.; Spirlet, J.C. & Colmenares, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Full length prototype SSC dipole test results (open access)

Full length prototype SSC dipole test results

Results are presented from tests of the first full length prototype SSC dipole magnet. The cryogenic behavior of the magnet during a slow cooldown to 4.5K and a slow warmup to room temperature has been measured. Magnetic field quality was measured at currents up to 2000 A. Averaged over the body field all harmonics with the exception of b/sub 2/ and b/sub 8/ are at or within the tolerances specified by the SSC Central Design Group. (The values of b/sub 2/ and b/sub 8/ result from known design and construction defects which will be be corrected in later magnets.) Using an NMR probe the average body field strength is measured to be 10.283 G/A with point to point variations on the order of one part in 1000. Data are presented on quench behavior of the magnet up to 3500 A (approximately 55% of full field) including longitudinal and transverse velocities for the first 250 msec of the quench.
Date: April 24, 1987
Creator: Strait, J.; Brown, B.C.; Carson, J.; Engler, N.; Fisk, H.E.; Hanft, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Relativistic nuclear fluid dynamics and VUU kinetic theory (open access)

Relativistic nuclear fluid dynamics and VUU kinetic theory

Relativistic kinetic theory may be used to understand hot dense hadronic matter. We address the questions of collective flow and pion production in a 3 D relativistic fluid dynamic model and in the VUU microscopic theory. The GSI/LBL collective flow and pion data point to a stiff equation of state. The effect of the nuclear equation of state on the thermodynamic parameters is discussed. The properties of dense hot hadronic matter are studied in Au + Au collisions from 0.1 to 10 GeV/nucleon. 22 refs., 5 figs.
Date: August 24, 1987
Creator: Molitoris, J.J.; Hahn, D.; Alonso, C.; Collazo, I.; D'Alessandris, P.; McAbee, T. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transmission-corrected x-ray fluorescence analysis of uranium and plutonium solutions using a dual transmission source (open access)

Transmission-corrected x-ray fluorescence analysis of uranium and plutonium solutions using a dual transmission source

The energy-dispersive x-ray fluorescence analysis (XRFA) technique has been implemented at several spent nuclear fuel reprocessing facilities for nondestructive measurements of uranium and/or plutonium concentrations in process streams and product storage tanks. An important factor in these quantitative measurements is the absorption of the fluoresced x-rays by the solution matrix, which must be taken into account to accurately quantify the U or Pu concentrations. We describe a new, accurate method using a dual transmission source of Gd-153 and Co-57 to correct for matrix effects. Results of measurements on uranium and plutonium solution standards show the methodology to be better than 0.5%, which includes statistical precision, over the concentration range from 1 to 250 g/l. 5 refs., 4 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: November 24, 1987
Creator: Ruhter, W. D. & Camp, D. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of a transfected and amplified Drosophila heat shock promoter construction for inducible production of toxic mouse c-myc proteins in CHO cells (open access)

Use of a transfected and amplified Drosophila heat shock promoter construction for inducible production of toxic mouse c-myc proteins in CHO cells

After transfection and selection with methotrexate, CHO cell lines were established which contained up to 2000 copies of an expression vector for c-myc protein. The vector contained the Drosophila heat shock protein 70 (hsp70) promoter fused with the coding region of the mouse c-myc gene. Incubation of cells for up to 3 hours at 43/sup 0/C resulted in at least a 100-fold induction of recombinant c-myc mRNA. When cells were shifted back to 37/sup 0/C, within 1 to 4 hours, this RNA was translated into protein to yield about 250 ..mu..g per 10/sup 9/ cells. Cells died a few hours later, suggesting that high concentrations of intracellular c-myc are cytotoxic. 47 refs., 5 figs.
Date: July 24, 1987
Creator: Wurm, F.M.; Gwinn, K.A.; Papoulas, O.; Pallavicini, M. & Kingston, R.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ignition physics study group support of the engineering test reactor program (open access)

Ignition physics study group support of the engineering test reactor program

This paper consists of a series of vugraphs concerning the Engineering Fast Reactor Program. Design goals for the reactor are discussed and presented graphically. (JDH)
Date: March 24, 1987
Creator: Sheffield, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tests of prototype SSC magnets (open access)

Tests of prototype SSC magnets

Results are presented from tests of the first two full length prototype SSC dipole magnets. Magnetic field measurements have been made at currents up to 2000 A. The two magnets achieved peak currents at 4.5K of 5790 A and 6450 A, respectively, substantially below the short sample limit of 6700 A. These peak values, however, could not be achieved reproducibly. Data are presented from studies performed to try to understand the poor quench performance.
Date: April 24, 1987
Creator: Strait, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrodynamics of a vertical hydraulic fracture (open access)

Hydrodynamics of a vertical hydraulic fracture

We have developed a numerical algorithm, HUBBERT, to simulate the hydrodynamics of a propagating vertical, rectangular fracture in an elastic porous medium. Based on the IFD method, this algorithm assumes fracture geometry to be prescribed. The breakdown and the creation of the incipient fracture is carried out according to the Hubbert-Willis theory. The propagation of the fracture is based on the criterion provided by Griffith, based on energy considerations. The deformation properties of the open fracture are based on simple elasticity solutions. The fracture is assumed to have an elliptical shape to a distance equal to the fracture height, beyond which the shape is assumed to be parallel plate. A consequence of Griffith's criterion is that the fracture must propagate in discrete steps. The parametric studies carried out suggest that for a clear understanding of the hydrodynamics of the hydraulic fracture many hitherto unrecognized parameters must be better understood. Among these parameters one might mention, efficiency, aperture of the newly formed fracture, stiffness of the newly formed fracture, relation between fracture aperture and permeability, and well bore compliance. The results of the studies indicate that the patterns of pressure transients and the magnitudes of fracture length appear to conform to …
Date: March 24, 1987
Creator: Narasimhan, T.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wave equations for pulse propagation (open access)

Wave equations for pulse propagation

Theoretical discussions of the propagation of pulses of laser radiation through atomic or molecular vapor rely on a number of traditional approximations for idealizing the radiation and the molecules, and for quantifying their mutual interaction by various equations of propagation (for the radiation) and excitation (for the molecules). In treating short-pulse phenomena it is essential to consider coherent excitation phenomena of the sort that is manifest in Rabi oscillations of atomic or molecular populations. Such processes are not adequately treated by rate equations for excitation nor by rate equations for radiation. As part of a more comprehensive treatment of the coupled equations that describe propagation of short pulses, this memo presents background discussion of the equations that describe the field. This memo discusses the origin, in Maxwell's equations, of the wave equation used in the description of pulse propagation. It notes the separation into lamellar and solenoidal (or longitudinal and transverse) and positive and negative frequency parts. It mentions the possibility of separating the polarization field into linear and nonlinear parts, in order to define a susceptibility or index of refraction and, from these, a phase and group velocity. The memo discusses various ways of characterizing the polarization characteristics of …
Date: June 24, 1987
Creator: Shore, B. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CC Cryostat Cooldown Test Warmup (open access)

CC Cryostat Cooldown Test Warmup

This report discusses the warming up of the stainless steel inner vessel of the CC Cryostat back to room temperature after it has been cooled down by liquid nitrogen. It considers the sufficiency of a standard magnet warm-up 12KW heater in delivering enough heat to warm the Crypstat in a couple of days. The concept of sufficiency will be answered by the following questions, and by an experimental test that was made of the heater in question.
Date: September 24, 1987
Creator: Peterson, T. & Fitzpatrick, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status report on SWSA 6 geophysical studies (open access)

Status report on SWSA 6 geophysical studies

As part of the Solid Waste Storage Area (SWSA) 6 remedial investigation activities, surface seismic refraction surveys will be conducted to characterize the thickness of the soil/saprolite horizon (Boegly et al. 1985). The primary advantage of the seismic method is the ability to detect sudden changes in bedrock topography in regions with insufficient borehole data. The lateral resolution capability offered by the seismic refraction method is highly desirable to properly characterize the thickness of the soil/saprolite horizon. This progress report presents a project design for this activity and documents investigations that have been accomplished to complete this project. Data acquisition is expected to be completed during FY-87.
Date: June 24, 1987
Creator: Dreier, R. B.; Selfridge, R. J. & Beaudoin, C. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status report on SWSA 6 geophysical studies (open access)

Status report on SWSA 6 geophysical studies

As part of the Solid Waste Storage Area (SWSA) 6 remedial investigation activities, surface seismic refraction surveys will be conducted to characterize the thickness of the soil/saprolite horizon (Boegly et al. 1985). The primary advantage of the seismic method is the ability to detect sudden changes in bedrock topography in regions with insufficient borehole data. The lateral resolution capability offered by the seismic refraction method is highly desirable to properly characterize the thickness of the soil/saprolite horizon. This progress report presents a project design for this activity and documents investigations that have been accomplished to complete this project. Data acquisition is expected to be completed during FY-87.
Date: June 24, 1987
Creator: Dreier, R. B.; Selfridge, R. J. & Beaudoin, C. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resonances in near-threshold x-ray photoabsorption of inner shells (open access)

Resonances in near-threshold x-ray photoabsorption of inner shells

Synchrotron radiation measurements of near-threshold and broad-range (20 eV - 3 keV) absolute photoabsorption cross sections were made at the Brookhaven National Laboratory (NSLS) and at Stanford (SSRL). Transmission data for well-characterized multilayer foils provided absolute cross sections with 10% overall uncertainties and better than 0.2% energy resolution. Several examples of our results are presented.
Date: August 24, 1987
Creator: Del Grande, N. K.; Tirsell, K. G.; Schneider, M. B.; Garrett, R. F.; Kneedler, E. M. & Manson, S. T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ZPPR progress report: April 1987-July 1987 (open access)

ZPPR progress report: April 1987-July 1987

This report describes the progress in the Jupiter-III program during the time period of April through July, 1987.
Date: August 24, 1987
Creator: Collins, P.J. & Brumbach, S.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP): Model AL-M1 nuclear packaging (DOE C of C No. USA/9507/BLF) (open access)

Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP): Model AL-M1 nuclear packaging (DOE C of C No. USA/9507/BLF)

This Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP) satisfies the request of the US Department of Energy for a formal safety analysis of the shipping container identified as USA/9507/BLF, also called AL-M1, configuration 5. This report makes available to all potential users the technical information and the limits pertinent to the construction and use of the shipping containers. It includes discussions of structural integrity, thermal resistance, radiation shielding and radiological safety, nuclear criticality safety, and quality control. A complete physical and technical description of the package is presented. The package consists of an inner container centered within an insulated steel drum. The configuration-5 package contains tritiated water held on sorbent material. There are two other AL-M1 packages, designated configurations 1 and 3. These use the same insulated outer drum, but licensing of these containers will not be addressed in this SARP. Design and development considerations, the tests and evaluations required to prove the ability of the container to withstand normal transportation conditions, and the sequence of four hypothetical accident conditions (free drop, puncture, thermal, and water immersion) are discussed. Tables, graphs, dimensional sketches, photographs, technical references, loading and shipping procedures, Monsanto Research Corporation-Mound experience in using the containers, and a copy …
Date: November 24, 1987
Creator: Coleman, Harold L.; Whitney, Michael A.; Williams, Monte A.; Alexander, Barbara M. & Shapiro, Alvin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
1987 Gordon Research Conference on Physical Metallurgy. (open access)

1987 Gordon Research Conference on Physical Metallurgy.

None
Date: July 24, 1987
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP): Models AL-M3 and AL-M6 nuclear packaging (DOE C of C No. USA/5790/BLF and No. USA/5791/BLF) (open access)

Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP): Models AL-M3 and AL-M6 nuclear packaging (DOE C of C No. USA/5790/BLF and No. USA/5791/BLF)

This revised Safety Analysis Report for Packaging (SARP) satisfies the requirement of the US Department of Energy (DOE) for an updated formal safety analysis of the two insulated drum shipping containers identified as USA/5790/BLF and USA/5791/BLF. The report makes available to all potential users the technical information and limits pertinent to the construction and use of the shipping containers. This SARP includes discussions of structural integrity, thermal resistance, radiation shielding and radiological safety, nuclear criticality safety, and quality control. Complete physical and technical descriptions of the packages are presented. Each package consists of a cylindrical steel inner container centered within an insulating steel drum assembly. The contents may be any radioactive materials that satisfy the requirements established in this SARP. A shipment of plutonium-238 in the form of a solid oxide is evaluated in this SARP as an example. Design and development considerations, the tests and evaluations required to prove the ability of the containers to withstand normal transportation conditions, and the sequence of four hypothetical accident conditions (free drop, puncture, thermal, and water immersion) are discussed. Tables, graphs, dimensional sketches, photographs, technical references, loading and shipping procedures, Mound Facility experience in using the containers, and copies of the DOE …
Date: November 24, 1987
Creator: Coleman, Harold L.; Whitney, Michael A.; Williams, Monte A.; Alexander, Barbara M. & Shapiro, Alvin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library