Recent US target-physics-related research in heavy-ion inertial fusion: simulations for tamped targets and for disk experiments in accelerator test facilities (open access)

Recent US target-physics-related research in heavy-ion inertial fusion: simulations for tamped targets and for disk experiments in accelerator test facilities

Within the last few years, there have also appeared in the Heavy-Ion Fusion literature several studies of targets which have outer tampers. One-dimensional simulations indicate higher target gains with a judicious amount of tamping. But for these targets, a full investigation has not been carried through in regards to conservative criteria for fluid instabilities as well as reasonable imperfections in target fabrication and illumination symmetry which all affect target ignition and burn. Comparisons of these results with the gain survey of Part I would have to be performed with care. These calculations suggest that experiments relating to high temperature disk heating, as well as beam deposition, focusing and transport can be performed within the context of current design proposals for accelerator test-facilities. Since the test-facilities have lower ion kinetic energy and beam pulse power as compared to reactor drivers, we achieve high-beam intensities at the focal spot by using short focal distance and properly designed beam optics.
Date: June 24, 1982
Creator: Mark, J.W.K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method for fabricating a seal between a ceramic and a metal alloy (open access)

Method for fabricating a seal between a ceramic and a metal alloy

A method of fabricating a seal between a ceramic and an alloy comprising the steps of prefiring the alloy in an atmosphere with a very low partial pressure of oxygen, firing the assembled alloy and ceramic in air, and gradually cooling the fired assembly to avoid the formation of thermal stress in the ceramic. The method forms a bond between the alloy and the ceramic capable of withstanding the environment of a pressurized water reactor and suitable for use in an electrical conductivity sensitive liquid level transducer.
Date: July 24, 1981
Creator: Kelsey, P.V. Jr. & Siegel, W.T.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mathematical models and illustrative results for the RINGBEARER II monopole/dipole beam-propagation code (open access)

Mathematical models and illustrative results for the RINGBEARER II monopole/dipole beam-propagation code

RINGBEARER II is a linearized monopole/dipole particle simulation code for studying intense relativistic electron beam propagation in gas. In this report the mathematical models utilized for beam particle dynamics and pinch field computation are delineated. Difficulties encountered in code operations and some remedies are discussed. Sample output is presented detailing the diagnostics and the methods of display and analysis utilized.
Date: May 24, 1982
Creator: Chambers, F.W.; Masamitsu, J.A. & Lee, E.P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron-detection apparatus (open access)

Neutron-detection apparatus

An atomic fission counting apparatus used for neutron detection is provided with spirally curved electrode plates uniformly spaced apart in a circular array and coated with fissile material.
Date: April 24, 1981
Creator: Kopp, M.K. & Valentine, K.H.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Time-Dependent Two-Dimensional Radiation Hydrodynamics of Accreting Matter Onto Highly Magnetized Neutron Stars (open access)

Time-Dependent Two-Dimensional Radiation Hydrodynamics of Accreting Matter Onto Highly Magnetized Neutron Stars

We present for the first time, the self-consistent solution of the two-dimensional, time-dependent equations of radiation-hydrodynamics governing the accretion of matter onto the highly magnetized polar caps of luminous x-ray pulsars. The calculations show a structure in the accretion column very different from previous one-zone uniform models. We have included all the relevant magnetic field corrections to both the hydrodynamics and the radiative transport. We include a new theory for the diffusion and advection of both radiation energy density and photon number density. For initially uniformly accreting models with super-Eddington flows, we have uncovered evidence of strong radiation-driven outflowing optically thin radiation filled regions of the accretion column embedded in optically-thick inflowing plasma. The development of these photon bubbles'' have growth times on the order of a millisecond and show fluctuations on sub-millisecond timescales. The photon bubbles are likely to be a consequence of convective over-stability and may result in observable fluctuations in the emitted luminosity leading to luminosity dependent changes in the pulse profile. This may provide important new diagnostics for conditions in accreting x-ray pulsars. 13 refs., 18 figs.
Date: November 24, 1989
Creator: Klein, R.I. (California Univ., Los Angeles, CA (USA). Dept. of Astronomy Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA) California Univ., Los Angeles, CA (USA). Inst. of Geophysics and Planetary Physics) & Arons, J. (California Univ., Berkeley, CA (USA). Dept. of Astronomy California Univ., Los Angeles, CA (USA). Inst. of Geophysics and Planetary Physics CEA Centre d'Etudes Nucleaires de Saclay, 91 -
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Timing and control monitor system upgrade design document. Version 4 (open access)

Timing and control monitor system upgrade design document. Version 4

This is a design document for the Timing and Control Monitor System Upgrade Project. This project is intended to provide a replacement system for the existing user Encoder Monitor Systems and Varian 72 Control Room computer systems. All of these systems reside at the Nevada Test Site. The function of the T and C Monitor System is to gather real-time statistics and data on user defined key variables from control, communication, data acquistion systems, and from the monitoring system itself. The control, communication, and data acquisition systems each operate separately from the monitor system. The T and C Monitor System gathers this data in order to verify the readiness of an event to begin countdown. This includes setup, verification, calibration, and peripheral services, report any failures that may occur during the countdown, verify detonation and containment, and assist reentry activities after the event.
Date: January 24, 1984
Creator: Brandt, J.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance characteristics of large aperture, ten-cell, atmospheric pressure isobutane Cherenkov counters (open access)

Performance characteristics of large aperture, ten-cell, atmospheric pressure isobutane Cherenkov counters

Two large aperture, 10 cell atmospheric-pressure isobutane Cherenkov counters were designed and constructed for a SLAC streamer chamber experiment. The rejection efficiencies for a 9 GeV/c ..pi../sup -/ were measured to be 99.838 +- .006% and 99.717 +- 008% for the two counters. The design details and performance characteristics are discussed.
Date: May 24, 1980
Creator: Hylen, J.; Ma, Z.M.; Jawahery, A.; Maruyama, T.; Milburn, R. & Thornton, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
/sup 56/Ni and the light curve of Type I supernova (open access)

/sup 56/Ni and the light curve of Type I supernova

The explanation of SN Type I by radioactive decay of /sup 56/Ni requires a relatively small value of the transparency function M/sub ej//v/sub 9//sup 2/ = 0.22 in units of M/sub solar/'s and 10/sup 9/ cm s/sup -1/ to explain the light curve. A minimum mass of /sup 56/Ni is required to explain the peak and near peak luminosity. Subsequent radioactive decay energy must escape in some other form than optical light in order to explain the rapid early and late time decay. Early ultraviolet and infrared radiation are excluded as sinks of energy by observations. PdV work is excluded by theory. The energy loss due to the escape of gamma rays and ..beta../sup +/'s with the above value of M/sub ej//v/sub 9//sup 2/ gives good agreement with the light curve after maximum, provided essentially all the trapped energy is converted to optical light. The peak of SN 1972e is explained with the above transparency value M/sub ej//v/sub 9//sup 2/ = 0.22 and mass of /sup 56/Ni of 0.25 M/sub solar/ or 0.4 M/sub solar/, and a distance of 3.2 Mpc or 4 Mpc, respectively. These values depend critically upon the prediscovery report of Austin (1972), and the assumption again …
Date: July 24, 1980
Creator: Colgate, S.A. & Petschek, A.G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of soil damping techniques used in soil structure interaction analysis of a nuclear power plant (open access)

Evaluation of soil damping techniques used in soil structure interaction analysis of a nuclear power plant

A prediction of dynamic soil properties at the site of a nuclear power plant plays a very important role in the seismic analysis of the facility. Conventional modal analysis procedures can accommodate virtually any range of equivalent elastic soil stiffness which is used to characterize the site. However, high radiation damping associated with energy dissipation in the soil half-space is difficult to accommodate in an elastic modal solution to the dynamic problem. Several methods are available to combine the soil damping with the structural damping in a composite modal damping coefficient. However, even with this convenient representation, the resulting large fractions of critical damping can make modal solutions to the problems suspect. This paper is based on experience gained in this area during studies performed for the Nuclear Regulatory Commission involving seismic analyses of power plants.
Date: February 24, 1982
Creator: Nelson, T.A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Method for producing nuclear fuel (open access)

Method for producing nuclear fuel

Nuclear fuel is made by contacting an aqueous solution containing an actinide salt with an aqueous solution containing ammonium hydroxide, ammonium oxalate, or oxalic acid in an amount that will react with a fraction of the actinide salt to form a precipitate consisting of the hydroxide or oxalate of the actinide. A slurry consisting of the precipitate and solution containing the unreacted actinide salt is formed into drops which are gelled, calcined, and pressed to form pellets.
Date: April 24, 1981
Creator: Haas, P.A.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear interactions of heavy ions (open access)

Nuclear interactions of heavy ions

A possible source of preheat for heavy ion driven inertial fusion targets is the production of fast precursors by nuclear interactions between the incident heavy ions and the outer parts of the target. A model has been developed which roughly describes these interactions for all beam-target combinations for all incident energies. This interaction model has been applied to a specific capsule design. The resultant preheat is an order of magnitude below the level which could impair target performance.
Date: February 24, 1982
Creator: Tabak, M. & Bangerter, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Separator assembly for use in spent-nuclear-fuel shipping cask. [Patent application] (open access)

Separator assembly for use in spent-nuclear-fuel shipping cask. [Patent application]

A separator assembly for use in a spent-nuclear-fuel shipping cask has a honeycomb-type wall structure defining parallel cavities for holding nuclear fuel assemblies. Tubes formed of an effective neutron-absorbing material are embedded in the wall structure around each of the cavities and provide neutron flux traps when filled with water.
Date: April 24, 1981
Creator: Bucholz, J.A.
Object Type: Patent
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geothermal Symposium: Low-Temperature Utilization, Heat-Pump Applications, District Heating (open access)

Geothermal Symposium: Low-Temperature Utilization, Heat-Pump Applications, District Heating

Separate abstracts are prepared for twelve papers presented at the symposium. (MCW)
Date: September 24, 1980
Creator: Bloomquist, R. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wear and corrosion performance of metallurgical coatings in sodium (open access)

Wear and corrosion performance of metallurgical coatings in sodium

The friction, wear, and corrosion performance of several metallurgical coatings in 200 to 650/sup 0/C sodium are reviewed. Emphasis is placed on those coatings which have successfully passed the qualification tests necessary for acceptance in breeder reactor environments. Tests include friction, wear, corrosion, thermal cycling, self-welding, and irradiation exposure under as-prototypic-as-possible service conditions. Materials tested were coatings of various refractory metal carbides in metallic binders, nickel-base and cobalt-base alloys and intermetallic compounds such as the aluminides and borides. Coating processes evaluated included plasma spray, detonation gun, sputtering, spark-deposition, and solid-state diffusion.
Date: April 24, 1980
Creator: Johnson, R. N. & Farwick, D. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Master oscillator stability requirements considerations (open access)

Master oscillator stability requirements considerations

This note attempts to point out some ideas about the required stability of the 476 MHz master oscillator, assuming that the phase noise of the oscillator is the only source of noise in the accelerator system.
Date: June 24, 1986
Creator: Schwarz, H. & Vancraeynest, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory DIII-D cooperation: 1987 annual report (open access)

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory DIII-D cooperation: 1987 annual report

This report summarizes the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) DIII-D cooperation during FY87. The LLNL participation in DIII-D concentrated on three principal areas: ECH and current-drive physics, divertor and edge physics, and tokamak operations. These topics are dicussed in this report. 27 refs., 11 figs.
Date: February 24, 1988
Creator: Allen, S. L.; Calderon, M. O.; Ellis, R. M.; Evans, J. C.; Ferguson, S. W.; Hill, D. N. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Graph-theoretic algorithm for hierarchial decomposition of dynamic systems (open access)

Graph-theoretic algorithm for hierarchial decomposition of dynamic systems

A graph-theoretic scheme is proposed for partitioning of dynamic systems into hierarchially ordered subsystems having independent inputs and outputs. The resulting subsystems are input-output reachable as well as structurally controllable and observable, so that a piece-by-piece design of estimators and controllers can be accomplished for systems with large dimensions without excessive computer requirements.
Date: March 24, 1982
Creator: Pichai, V.; Sezer, M.E. & Siljak, D.D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanical design of the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade vacuum system (open access)

Mechanical design of the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade vacuum system

The Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade (TMX Upgrade) vacuum system uses most of the vacuum system from the original TMX and substantially increases its capabilities. The vacuum system provides the main structure for the experimental apparatus, as well as providing and maintaining the vacuum environment. The vacuum vessel provides the structure supporting all magnets, as they are contained inside the vacuum vessel, all of the neutral-beam injectors, and the various diagnostics. The vessel provides the main vacuum enclosure and the various access ports required by the magnet system, injector system, internal vacuum system, and plasma diagnostics. The vacuum environment is created and maintained by two systems, the external vacuum system and the internal vacuum system. The external system consists of mechanical pumps, turbopumps, and cryopumps, and creates a vacuum inside the vessel down to a minimum pressure of 10/sup -6/ Torr. The internal vacuum system further reduces the pressure into the 10/sup -8/ Torr range and provides the fast pumping required to handle the excess gas from the neutral-beam injector system during a plasma shot. The internal vacuum system consists of titanium sublimators and liquid nitrogen (LN) liners that separate the vacuum vessel into various pumping regions.
Date: September 24, 1981
Creator: Lang, D. D.; Calderon, M. O.; Thomas, S. R. & Garner, D. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Early history of computer simulations in statistical mechanics (open access)

Early history of computer simulations in statistical mechanics

A history of the early use of the Monte Carlo method is presented.
Date: June 24, 1985
Creator: Wood, W.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
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
Tandem mirror fusion-fission hybrid studies (open access)

Tandem mirror fusion-fission hybrid studies

Initial tandem mirror hybrid studies predict the ability to produce large amounts of fissile fuel (2 to 7 tons U233 per year from a 4000 MW plant) at a cost that adds less than 25% to the cost of power from a LWR.
Date: April 24, 1980
Creator: Lee, J. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety assessment document for the dynamic test complex (Building 836) (open access)

Safety assessment document for the dynamic test complex (Building 836)

A safety assessment was performed to determine if potential accidents at the 836 Complex at Site 300 could present undue hazards to the general public, personnel at Site 300, or have an adverse effect on the environment. The credible accidents that might have an effect on these facilities or have off-site consequences were considered. These were earthquake, extreme wind (including missiles), lightning, flood, criticality, high explosive (H) detonation that disperses uranium and beryllium, spontaneous oxidation of plutonium, explosions due to finely divided particles, and a fire.
Date: November 24, 1981
Creator: Odell, B.N. & Pfeifer, H.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pion induced double-charge exchange above the resonance (open access)

Pion induced double-charge exchange above the resonance

The zero degree excitation function for ({pi}{sup +}, {pi}{sup -}) is calculated for pion energies of 300 to 1400 MeV assuming a sequential mechanism. The cross section around 1225 MeV is 10{sup 4} smaller than at 800 MeV. Experiments at this energy should be ideal for searches for effects due to exchange currents, and other non-conventional mechanisms. 15 refs.
Date: October 24, 1989
Creator: Oset, E.; Strottman, D. (Valencia Univ. (Spain). Dept. de Fisica Teorica & Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA))
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical coatings for laser fusion applications (open access)

Optical coatings for laser fusion applications

Lasers for fusion experiments use thin-film dielectric coatings for reflecting, antireflecting and polarizing surface elements. Coatings are most important to the Nd:glass laser application. The most important requirements of these coatings are accuracy of the average value of reflectance and transmission, uniformity of amplitude and phase front of the reflected or transmitted light, and laser damage threshold. Damage resistance strongly affects the laser's design and performance. The success of advanced lasers for future experiments and for reactor applications requires significant developments in damage resistant coatings for ultraviolet laser radiation.
Date: April 24, 1980
Creator: Lowdermilk, W.H.; Milam, D. & Rainer, F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library