The Effects of 250-kv X-Ray on the Dog's Pancreas: Morphological and Functional Changes (open access)

The Effects of 250-kv X-Ray on the Dog's Pancreas: Morphological and Functional Changes

Previous investigations that the pancreas is a radioresistant organ. Ivy in 1924 noted the presence of a fibrotic atrophic pancreas in a dog which had received one erythema dose to the epigastrium. Fisher in 1923 reported that four to five erythema doses delivered in a single application caused complete disappearance of the irradiated pancreatic remnant in about two months. These dogs died because of uncontrolled diabetes. One dog that received four erythema doses (possibly 200 r) was sacrificed after five months. At autopsy the irradiated pancreas had disappeared, but 275 mgm of regenerated pancreas were found at the base of the main duct and 100 mgm at the base of the accessory duct. Leven in 1933 implanted radon seeds into the pancreas. Dosages varied from 528 to 1584 millicurie hours. At postmorten the pancreas surrounding the seeds demonstrated fibrous atropy and foci of necrosis. The islets appeared normal but were relatively larger in size. Rauch in 1952 reported that dogs given 200 r in air over the pancreas on alternate days until a total of 1600 r was received failed to show any histological changes after two months. Lushbaugh and Spalding and Lushbaugh reported that over 1500 r of whole-body …
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Archamefau, John; Griem, Melvin & Harper, Paul
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Isochronal Differential Microcalorimeter (open access)

An Isochronal Differential Microcalorimeter

An isochronal differential-type microcalorimeter has been designed and constructed. As a result of its simple design it is very easy to handle the samples and assemble the calorimeter. Important to the operation of the calorimeter is a program, also working on the differential principle, that provides linear temperature rise of the samples. This calorimeter is used to measure very small energy releases such as those found in precipitation, stored energy, etc. It is demonstrated that the calorimeter is easily capable of measuring 0.0005 cal with a probable error of the order of 1% to 2%.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Arndt, R. A. & Fujita, F. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bromine Exchange in Graphite-Bromine Lamellar Compounds (open access)

Bromine Exchange in Graphite-Bromine Lamellar Compounds

A kinetic study of the exchange of normal and radioactive bromine in graphite-bromine lamellar compounds has been made at temperatures of 30° to 50°C. Natural and synthetic graphite powders were investigated. Two alternative mechanisms for the exchange, volume diffusion and surface exchange, were considered. The data were in better agreement with the diffusion mechanism. Diffusion coefficients of 10 -9 to 10 -8 cm2/sec and an activation energy of 11 to 14 kcal/mole were calculated for the natural graphite powders. The diffusion coefficients increased with increasing bromine content. Reversibly absorbed bromine exchanged more rapidly than irreversibly absorbed bromine.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Aronson, Seymour
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Rapid Beam Ejector at the Cosmotron (open access)

Studies of the Rapid Beam Ejector at the Cosmotron

For an experiment to measure the magnetic moment of the Λ hyperon, it was necessary to extract the external beam of the Cosmotron with maximum efficiency and with minimum time duration. To accomplish this end, the standard external beam of the machine was supplemented with the Rapid Beam Ejector. It was found that, unfortunately, the ejection efficiency of the beam was less than normal when the RBE was used. Measurements of the ejection efficiency were made by irradiating polyethylene foils at the second focus of Beam 1 with 3 BeV protons. The external beam was tuned up and optimized in a standard manner. It was found that the ratio of the number of protons ejected with the RBE to the number ejected without the RBE was 0.3 in one run and 0.22 in another try. It was also observed that the RBE did not shift the position of the external proton beam focus to within ± 1/8 in.
Date: February 7, 1963
Creator: Barton, M. Q.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Radiations of Different let on Early Responses in the Mammal (open access)

The Effects of Radiations of Different let on Early Responses in the Mammal

This paper will first note briefly the place and status of radiobiotopical investigations with fast neutrons. The monoenergetic (fast) neutron technique employed at this laboratory will be then described and results of studies with various criteria-of-effect in the mouse will be reviewed. Finally, certain general patterns of response for these systems will be pointed out as functions of neutron energy.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Bateman, J. L. & Bond, V. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fluorimetric Assay of α-Chymotrypsin (open access)

Fluorimetric Assay of α-Chymotrypsin

The enzymolysis by α-chymotrypsin of the substrates, N-acetyl-L-tryptophane ethyl ester and N-acetyl-L-tyrosine ethyl ester, was followed by means of fluorescence whose intensity increased fourfold and threefold per mole respectively as substrate was transformed into amino acid. The assay by fluorescence was several orders of magnitude more sensitive than the assay by differential absorption spectra of these substances and was in agreement with it in those concentration regions where both methods overlap. To maintain linearity between concentration and fluorescence intensity, the concentration of substrate should be no greater than 10-4 M/1. In such solutions the rate of esterolysis could be followed with the enzyme at 10-11 M/1.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Bielski, Benon H. J. & Freed, Simon
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental Radiation Measurements in Conventional Structures: Part 2. Comparison of Measurements in Above-Ground and Below-Ground Structures From Simulated and Actual Fallout Radiation (open access)

Experimental Radiation Measurements in Conventional Structures: Part 2. Comparison of Measurements in Above-Ground and Below-Ground Structures From Simulated and Actual Fallout Radiation

Report concerning the protection offered against radioactive fallout offered by two types of structures at the Nevada Test Site. Differences between above ground and underground structures are measured and compared to data taken from actual fallout conditions.
Date: February 1963
Creator: Burson, Z. G. (Zolin G.)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Indirect Effect of X-Radiation on Bone Growth in Rats (open access)

Indirect Effect of X-Radiation on Bone Growth in Rats

It has been known for many years that bone growth may be retarded by relatively large doses of therapeutic radiation. Similar doses of radiation have also shown retarded growth in animals. More recently, reports of studies of Japanese children exposed to the Atomic Bomb Detentions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and Marshallese children exposed to radiation in the fallout accident of 1954 have indicated some impairment in their growth and development, possibly related to radiation exposure. Since the doses of radiation received by these children were lower than would be expected to produce retardation of bone growth by direct irradiation, it was considered that indirect mechanisms might play a part. This preliminary report summarizes investigations of possible indirect effects of X-irradiation in bone growth in rats.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Conard, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Possibilities and Limitations in the use of Tritiated Thymidine for in Vivo Cytokinetic Studies on Lymphoreticular Tissue (open access)

Possibilities and Limitations in the use of Tritiated Thymidine for in Vivo Cytokinetic Studies on Lymphoreticular Tissue

Tritiated thymidine (H3TDR), a specific precursor of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), has proved to be a valuable tool in the study of in vivo cellular kinetics. Various methods of analysis have been used in autoradiographic investigations of proliferative patterns and time parameters in different cell lines.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Cottier, H.; Odartchenko, N.; Feinendegen, L. E. & Bond, V. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Microbeam as a Tool in Radiobiology (open access)

The Microbeam as a Tool in Radiobiology

In the analysis of the effect of ionizing radiation on living systems, the problem is complicated by the interaction of one part of the system with other parts. If an entire mouse is subjected to radiation, only a few of the most radiosensitive organs, the "weak links," react to the insult and essentially limit the size of the dose delivered since there is little to be learned from irradiating a dead mouse. Thus an insensitive organ like muscle will not respond at all to a total body dose. Likewise, every organ is composed of several different kinds of cells, and the most radiosensitive cells in the organ will determine the reaction observed.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Curtis, Howard J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chronic Excess Salt Consumption as an Etiologic Factor in Human Hypertension (open access)

Chronic Excess Salt Consumption as an Etiologic Factor in Human Hypertension

Since 1940 it has been known that extra salt (i.e. sodium chloride) facilitated the development of experimental hypertension induced by various sterols; subsequently hypertension was induced by desoxycorticosterone acetate plus sodium chloride; then hypertension was produced by using hypertonic saline as the sole source of liquid; and finally, in 1953, Menesly and his associates reported that chronic ingestion of excess dietary salt alone would produce hypertension in rats. Furthermore, in conformity with general pharmacologic experience relating dose response to successive increments of a drug, as the average daily salt intake increased, the average systolic, blood pressure increased.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Dahl, Lewis K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermodynamics of Fused Salt Mixtures From EMF Measurements. The Systems NaCl-KCl, NaCl-MgCl2, and NaCl-CeCl3. (open access)

Thermodynamics of Fused Salt Mixtures From EMF Measurements. The Systems NaCl-KCl, NaCl-MgCl2, and NaCl-CeCl3.

The following cells were operated at 820°C: [equations not transcribed] where the over-all reaction in each cell is simply the transfer of NaCl from pure NaCl to the mixtures of the right hand compartment. The porcelain acts as a pure sodium ion conductor in these cells. The relative partial molar free energy of mixing for sodium chloride, FMNaCl, is given by [equation not transcribed] where E is the EMF of the cell. Results are given over the entire composition range in each system and compared with previous measurements from other sources. Other thermodynamic quantities are calculated from the results. Experiments using a H2, HCl mixture in place of Cl2 are discussed, as well as the extension of the measurements to other systems.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Egan, James J. & Bracker, John
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Outline of the Geology of the U12b.10 Tunnel, Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada (open access)

Outline of the Geology of the U12b.10 Tunnel, Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada

This report briefly describes the geological data of the U12b.10 tunnel at the Nevada Test Site.
Date: February 27, 1963
Creator: Emerick, W. L.; Snyder, R. P. & Bowers, William E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inelastic Interactions of 11.4 Bec/c π" Mesons in Hydrogen (open access)

Inelastic Interactions of 11.4 Bec/c π" Mesons in Hydrogen

Production cross sections and angular distributions of Λ and K° particles produced by 11.4 Bev/c π" mesons in hydrogen have been measured. A systematic investigation was made of all two-body decays of unstable neutral particles. No events inconsistent with γ, Λ, or K° were found. Production cross sections, angular distributions and effective mass distributions of π mesons produced in 4-prong events were also measured. No evidence for dominance of any high mass multi-pion resonance was found. Both the pion production and strange particle production reactions demonstrated peripheral characteristics in that the baryon was strongly peaked backward in the center of mass. The average transverse momentum was observed to be a monotonically increasing function of mass. The experimental total interaction cross section was 25.3 ± 1.5 mb. The effect of the pion-nucleon T ' 3/2 isobar was clearly observed.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Ferbel, T. & Taft, H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Fate of Transfused H3 Thymidine Labeled Bone Marrow Cells in Irradiated Recipients (open access)

The Fate of Transfused H3 Thymidine Labeled Bone Marrow Cells in Irradiated Recipients

It has been established by chromosome marker studies, histochemical, immunological, and cytological methods that the hemopoietic tissues of animals exposed to lethal doses of whole-body irradiation can be repopulated by transfused autologous, homologous or heterologous bone marrow cells. However, the morphology of the cell responsible for the regeneration of hematopoietic activity in the various hemopoietic organs has not been identified. It has been shown that the bone marrow contains the cell or cells capable of regenerating all types of hemopoietic tissues. In order to identify transfused cells, one must have a label which persists through successive divisions. Odell and Smith labeled the donors with S35 methionin and were thus able to follow the accumulation of the donor marrow cells in the recipients lungs and subsequently their releases to the bone marrow and spleen. However, this compound has a relatively rapid turnover in the labeled cells and thus a relatively limited capability of serial studies to observe mitosis and differentiation. Tritiated thymidine is ideal for this purpose since it is incorporated solely into DNA and is diluted only by mitosis. In addition the high resolution with tritium makes it certain that one is observing nuclear labeling. Bond et al. have studied …
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Fliedner, T. M.; Thomas, E. D.; Meyer, L. M. & Cronkite, E. P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport of FissionProducts Through the Soil Following Injection From a Well and Methods Used for Removal (open access)

Transport of FissionProducts Through the Soil Following Injection From a Well and Methods Used for Removal

In the summer of 1960 one of the little used wells on the Brookhaven National Laboratory site became accidentally contaminated with radioactive material. The contamination was discovered during a routine sampling of all wells in the waste disposal area, so there was a period of several weeks between the time of discharge.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Gemmell, L. & Pearsall, S. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mode Identification in the Iris-Loaded Waveguide of a RF Particle Separator (open access)

Mode Identification in the Iris-Loaded Waveguide of a RF Particle Separator

The theoretical and practical aspects of the accelerating mode (TM01) in iris-loaded waveguides have been covered extensively in many reports and publications. The pulse shortening observed in linacs and the possible application of an iris-loaded waveguides as the deflecting structure for rf particle separators stimulated the interest in the nature of higher order modes. Some experimental results on higher order modes in iris-loaded waveguides are available in references. Results of studies done at CERN are not yet published; they were however communicated to the authors and represented the basis of work done at Brookhaven. A preliminary account of BNL results was given in reference. The purpose of this report is to describe the model measurements which were necessary to determine the geometry of a brazed or electroformed prototype for a deflecting waveguide. At the same time, a systematic investigation of other than the deflecting mode was done to ensure a nondegenerate field solution at the operating frequency. The measurements are compared with computational results obtained on the IBM 7090 at BNL.
Date: February 18, 1963
Creator: Hahn, H. & Halama, H. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Trichinella Spiralis Infection on Incorporation of Amino Acids into Serum and Hemoglobin (open access)

Effects of Trichinella Spiralis Infection on Incorporation of Amino Acids into Serum and Hemoglobin

Encysted Trichinella spiralis larvae incorporated carbon-14 from mice fed diets containing C14 -labeled glycerine and DL-alanine. In general, a higher level of C14 activity (C14 per gram of dry tissue) was found in muscle larvae than in muscle tissue. The presence of encysted Trichinella larvae in the muscles of 56-day and 180-day infected mice did not alter incorporation of C14 from these amino acids into infected muscle protein when compared with noninfected muscle. These experiments were extended to include the aromatic amino acids, DL-tyrosine and DL-tryptophan.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Hankes, Lawrence V. & Stone, Richard D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Conductance of Metallic Surfaces in Contact (open access)

Thermal Conductance of Metallic Surfaces in Contact

"Research in thermal contact resistance at MIT and advances made during the past year are summarized. The problem of predicting cortact resistance is examined in an analysis of a model for the contact which relates the geometry of actual surfaces in contact to the contact model, and a deformation analysis which relates the contact geometry to the load carried by the surfaces. Experimental procedures are described and are applied to two stainless steel surfaces in contact and to W and graphite surfaces in contact. A significant result is that a surface may be described by two measurable parameters which may be combined with two such parameters of any other surface to completely determine the geometry of the interface if they are placed in contact. It thus remains to construct a device which will readily measure these two parameters."
Date: February 1963
Creator: Henry, John Jewett
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cross Section, Volume 9, Number 9, February 1963 (open access)

The Cross Section, Volume 9, Number 9, February 1963

Monthly newsletter of the High Plains Underground Water Conservation District No. 1, discussing the field of underground water. Topics include profiles of water conservation research, annual pre-plant soil moisture survey data, annual Winter Water Level measurement data, and information about the latest water conservation tips.
Date: February 1963
Creator: High Plains Underground Water Conservation District No. 1 (Tex.)
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
The Function of Bridging Groups in Electron-Transfer Reactions (open access)

The Function of Bridging Groups in Electron-Transfer Reactions

Electron-transfer reactions involving bridged transition states are examined from the point of view of adiabatic electron transfer theory. One important function of the bridging group is to decrease the effective dipole moment of the charge system of the reaction ions. The effect on the activation energy is different for outer-sphere and inner-sphere reactions. Trends in the halide and hydroxide catalysis of isotopic exchange reactions of transition metal ions are discussed.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Hush, N. S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crystal Structure of a Sodium Cobalt Molybdate (open access)

Crystal Structure of a Sodium Cobalt Molybdate

The cobalt and molybdenum positions had been derived from a three-dimensional Patterson function based on complete data out to λ-1 sin θMo≈ 1. From the separation of the separation of the Mo atoms it was thought that the structure contained free, unlinked MoO4 -2 ions, and this, together with the observed density and analyses for Co and Mo, suggested that the composition was probably Co2(MoO4)3. The paucity of structural information on complex oxide systems and the interesting properties, both structural and physical, of such systems prompted the present, detailed refinement of the structure. The result is more complicated and more interesting than had been anticipated: from the analysis of the X-ray data the compound is found to be NaCo2.31(MoO4)3, and this composition is consistent with chemical analyses. The structure shows several interesting features, including the partial occupancy of cobalt atoms in two independent CoO6 octahedral sites. In one arrangement of CoO6 octahedra there is the not too common face sharing to form infinite columns; in the other arrangement a zig-zag sheet, as far as we know differing from anything thus far reported, is formed by the sharing of edges and corners.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Ibers, James A. & Smith, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The History of the Brookhaven Biology Department Mouse Colony No. 1 (Swiss-Bridge-Bagg-O'Grady-Walter Reed Strain) With Endemic Occult Cerebral Encephalitozoönosis and Colony No. 2 (open access)

The History of the Brookhaven Biology Department Mouse Colony No. 1 (Swiss-Bridge-Bagg-O'Grady-Walter Reed Strain) With Endemic Occult Cerebral Encephalitozoönosis and Colony No. 2

Innes, Zemen, Frenkel, Borner and Wright (1962) described an outbreak of encephalitozoönosis of the central nervous system in mice, a summary of which is given below for an understanding of why this appendix may be of interest. When the paper was presented for publication, the editors of the journal decided to omit the history of our mouse colony. In our opinion, to understand (a) how this infection may have arisen and (b) may have spread, and still exist in some colonies, it is of prime importance to know the history of this strain of mice used by us (and others). It also has lessons on the establishment and maintenance of so-called "disease-free" or "specific pathogen-free"* colonies of laboratory animals in general. Information on the history of the mice has been culled from Col. H. Yager, VC, Director of the Division of Veterinary Medicine, Walter Reed Army Institute of Medical Research, Washington, D. C., and from Drs, Clara Lynch and John B. Nelson, Rockefeller Institute, New York.
Date: February 25, 1963
Creator: Innes, J. R. M. & Borner, G
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Abscopal Effects of Localized Irradiation by Accelerator Beams (open access)

Abscopal Effects of Localized Irradiation by Accelerator Beams

The aim of this series of experiments was to evaluate the existence of abscopal effects of irradiation. No attempt was made towards the elucidation of mechanisms. Very early in the history of radiological research it was noticed radiation produces both local and general effects involving the entire body. Gauss and Lembcke introduced the term "Roentgenkater" (radiation sickness). They ascribed these "General Effects" to the circulation of toxic substances released from cells that disintegrated following irradiation.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Jansen, C. R.; Bond, V. P.; Rai, K. R. & Lippincott, S. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library