Preliminary petrographic study of rock from Nevada Test Site - Basalt Mesa (open access)

Preliminary petrographic study of rock from Nevada Test Site - Basalt Mesa

Discussing photographs of rocks from Basalt Mesa
Date: May 6, 1960
Creator: Anderson, E. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation - Induced Mammary Gland Neoplasia in the Rat (open access)

Radiation - Induced Mammary Gland Neoplasia in the Rat

In discussing this subject, data on radiation induced mammary gland neoplasia in the rat indicating that direct interaction between the radiation and target tissue is necessary for maximum neoplasia induction will be presented mainly. Other types of radiation induced neoplasia, in which little or no information on the mechanisms involved is available, will be discussed briefly. In particular, investigations on radiation induced mouse lymphoma will be reviewed, in which neoplasia appears to be an abscopal effect. Implications of these data will be discussed, particularly with regard to possible mechanisms involved, and extrapolation to man.
Date: March 6, 1963
Creator: Bond, V. P.; Cronkite, E. P.; Shellabarger, C. A. & Aponte, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aluminum Alloy Work at Hanford (open access)

Aluminum Alloy Work at Hanford

Investigation of aqueous and steam corrosion at elevated temperature has been carried on at Hanford for several tears. A number of reports have been published on various phases of the corrosion program but, except for monthly reports, little has been written on the progress of the Corrosion and Coatings Operation alloy development program. This interim report will outline the more important current phases of the aluminum alloy program.
Date: May 6, 1960
Creator: Bowen, H. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Non-military Uses of Nuclear Explosions (open access)

Non-military Uses of Nuclear Explosions

Introduction. With the development of fission and subsequently of thermonuclear explosives, a very large source of cheap energy has become available. The problem of using this energy for peaceful purposes safely and economically presents itself as one of the most interesting and important of our time. In explosions the energy is released very suddenly. Conversion of this sudden release of energy at extremely high temperature and pressure into the form of useful work, either mechanical or chemical or thermal, must be accomplished in order for such explosions to have nonmilitary uses. The technical feasibility of such conversions in a number of different instances will be described in this article. At the same time one must be able to control nuisance effects. Examples of these are seismic effects, the blast and heat which at least in the atmosphere always accompany such explosions, and the problem of radioactivity. Even given the technical feasibility of these accomplishments, which in some cases seems quite clear from what is known already, one must prove economic feasibility. That is to say, one must show that the cost of certain nonmilitary undertakings will be considerably less by the use of nuclear explosions than by conventional methods.
Date: January 6, 1960
Creator: Brown, Harold
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Classification of PuO2 Particles (open access)

Classification of PuO2 Particles

The Biology Operation, Hanford Laboratories, required plutonium dioxide particles in five different micron and sub-micron size ranges. These were to be supplied as a water suspension in small containers. It was necessary to design equipment, suitable for hood operation, which would give a satisfactory separation of these particles.
Date: January 6, 1960
Creator: Burnham, J. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geology and Geophysical Field Measurements for the Midi Mist Tunnel, Nevada Test Site, Nevada (open access)

Geology and Geophysical Field Measurements for the Midi Mist Tunnel, Nevada Test Site, Nevada

The following report summarizes the geological and geophysical studies made on the rocks of the Midi Mist site in the Area-12 tunnel complex of the Nevada Test Site. The data was needed to determine whether the rock met the technical criteria of the nuclear experiment.
Date: February 6, 1967
Creator: Carroll, Roger D.; Ege, John R.; Scott, J. H. & Cunningham, D. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Possible Manifestations Of A Pion-Pion Interaction (open access)

Possible Manifestations Of A Pion-Pion Interaction

The pion-pion interaction is of great theoretical importance and must be understood before the other and more familiar interactions can be systematically analyzed. Therefore, various experiments to verify the existence of a P resonance in the w w system are proposed.
Date: January 6, 1960
Creator: Chew, Geoffrey F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Twin Argon Welding of Alsi-Bonded Aluminum Clad Uranium Metal Fuel Elements (open access)

Twin Argon Welding of Alsi-Bonded Aluminum Clad Uranium Metal Fuel Elements

In the continuing search for better methods of effecting the secondary fusion welded closure in Alsi bonded aluminum clad uranium metal fuel element, an article on "The Twin-Argon Welding Process" by J. A. Donellon was recently found in the September 1954 issue if the British Welding Journal. From a review of the article, the process appeared to have enough possibilities to warrant exploring it. Communication were established with the General Electric Company, Ltd..
Date: May 6, 1960
Creator: Correy, Thomas B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Applications of the Chase Two-Dimensional Analyzer at Brookhaven National Laboratory (open access)

Some Applications of the Chase Two-Dimensional Analyzer at Brookhaven National Laboratory

The Chase two-dimensional analyzer is a 64 channel by 64 channel analyzer with a magnetic drum memory and a buffered storage system. The memory capacity is 2 counts per channel. The maximum storage rate is limited by the drum speed and is about 800 counts per second for a featureless spectrum.
Date: November 6, 1962
Creator: Donovan, Paul F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diffusion of Iron, Cobalt, and Nickel in Gold, Report No. 5 (open access)

Diffusion of Iron, Cobalt, and Nickel in Gold, Report No. 5

"The diffusivities of Fe, Co, and Al in otherwise pure Au were determined by a residual activity technique. It was found that the frequency factors and activation energies of the transition elements into Au are normal relative to the values for Au self-diffusion, and suggest that lattice diffusion is operative, in contrast to the corresponding situation for the diffusion of these elements in Al. This difference in behavior is explained in terms of the marked difference in solid solubilities in the two series."
Date: June 6, 1962
Creator: Duhl, David N.; Hirano, Ken-ichi & Cohen, Morris
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Plates 1-3: Aeroradioactivity Map (ARMS-II), Norfolk-Peninsula Area

Maps of four quadrants in the Norfolk-Peninsula area surveyed as part of a radiological survey, outlining "Radioactivity levels in hundreds of counts per second normalized to 500 ft above ground." Scale 1:250,000.
Date: December 6, 1961
Creator: Edgerton, Germeshausen & Grier
Object Type: Map
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Boron-Carbon System: Quarterly Report Number 3, November 1960 - January 1961 (open access)

The Boron-Carbon System: Quarterly Report Number 3, November 1960 - January 1961

Abstract: A definitive investigation of the boron-carbon equilibrium system is being made by X-ray diffraction, metallographic, and thermal analytical techniques. On the basis of metallographic and X-ray diffraction studies it is concluded that boron carbide has a range of solubility from approximately 10 to 20 atomic per cent carbon at 1500 degrees to 2000 degrees Celsius. The melting point of the carbide-graphite eutectic has been established as 2325-2350 degrees Celsius. No reversible allotropy of the beta-rhombohedral structure has been observed. The solubility of carbon in boron is very small. The melting point of dilute carbon alloys is found to be essentially the same as that of pure boron (2040 degrees to 2050 degrees). No metallographic evidence of a three-phase reaction of dilute alloys is observed.
Date: February 6, 1961
Creator: Elliott, Rodney P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Influence of Radiation-Produced Defects on the Precipitation of Carbon in Iron (open access)

The Influence of Radiation-Produced Defects on the Precipitation of Carbon in Iron

Iron containing approximately 0.01 wt. % carbon was quenched from 700°C and irradiated in the BNL reactor at 57°C for various lengths of time. The rate of decay of the Snoek internal friction peak was observed at 57°C after irradiation. After a 4-hour irradiation the rate of decay of the peak was one order of magnitude faster than the rate of decay in an unirradiated specimen. Longer irradiation times up to 48 hours caused no further acceleration of the decay rate. This observation implies that in the irradiated specimens there are ten times more precipitation nuclei than in the unirradiated specimens. This is confirmed by electron microscope studies which also show a factor of ten greater concentration of precipitate particles in specimens irradiated for 5 hours at 57°C as compared to an equivalent unirradiated specimen. Electron microscope studies also show that longer irradiation times do not increase further this number of precipitates. Although these experiments clearly demonstrate the enhancement of nucleation by neutron irradiation, it is not known why the incipient nuclei created by irradiation times of longer than 5 hours do not form observable precipitate particles.
Date: September 6, 1962
Creator: Fujita, F. E. & Damask, A. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Plasma Cyclotron (open access)

A Plasma Cyclotron

In a previous report the adaptation of Stix's ion-cyclotron-wave-heating scheme to the mirror geometry was suggested. An experiment along these lines has been conducted for the past year by E. Chambers, using a tubular P.I.G discharge to provide the basic plasma. The Chambers experiment has been eminently successful in demonstrating the transfer of rf power along the P.I.G. (as along a co-axial conductor), and the resultant acceleration of ions. The power transfer is evident from the predominantly resistive rf impedance of the P.I.G. (1 - 10 ohms), the production of intense luminosity outside the dc P.I.G channel when the rf is turned on, and by the observation large signals with magnetic pick-up loops. The ion heating is demonstrated by direct measurement of ion current on a probe some centimeters outside the P.I.G., and by the observation of energetic charge-exchange neutrals. At the same time, the characteristic features of heating by ion-cyclotron-waves, as described by Stix, are only partly in evidence. The visible broadening of the P.I.G. channel and such fast-ion phenomena as neutral emission do seem to be maximal near the expected cyclotron resonance point. However, the rf impedance is anomalous both in magnitude and parameter dependence, and there are …
Date: April 6, 1960
Creator: Furth, Harold P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of Runs 1, 2, and 3 in High-Temperature, High-Pressure Titanium Loop (open access)

Summary of Runs 1, 2, and 3 in High-Temperature, High-Pressure Titanium Loop

Simulated reactor fuel solutions were circulated at temperatures as high as 365°C in a small titanium pump loop. A hydroclone separator separated heavy phases formed at high temperatures. As the temperature of the solution was increased beyond the two-liquid-phase temperature (327°C), the salt concentration of the light phase decreased and the acid concentration increased. The mole ratios of uranium to sulfate, uranium to copper, and uranium to nickel in the light phase decreased in the same proportion in the temperature range of 330 to 365°C. Corrosion of titanium and Zircaloy-2 specimens was insignificant during the relatively short exposure periods.
Date: January 6, 1961
Creator: Griess, J. C.; Baker, J. M. & Savage, H. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Norfolk-Peninsula Area (ARMS-II) (open access)

Norfolk-Peninsula Area (ARMS-II)

From Introduction: "The ARMS-II Norfolk - Peninsula area survey was one many that have been flown for the CETO since the nationwide ARMS program was started (1958). Figure 2 shows the location of the areas that have been completed to date. The purpose of the program is to measure the present environmental levels of gamma radiation in areas around nuclear facilities and planned nuclear activities."
Date: December 6, 1961
Creator: Guillou, R. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Secondary Tetanus Antitoxin Responses in Mice Elicited Prior to Irradiation (open access)

Secondary Tetanus Antitoxin Responses in Mice Elicited Prior to Irradiation

The pioneer study by Benjamin and Sluka in 1908 on inhibition of antibody formation by X-rays revealed the importance of the temporal relationship between exposure to radiation and injection of antigen. X-radiation delivered three days before injection of beef serum inhibited precipitin formation in rabbits. A similar exposure to X-rays delivered three days after injection of the antigen failed to repress production of specific antibody. These observations were partially confirmed in 1915 when Hektoen reported inhibition of hemolysin production in the rat when X-radiation was delivered either before or after injection of sheep red cells. Although an absolute difference in radiosensitivity was not evident, the depressant effect of radiation on antibody production appeared to be less effective when radiation was given after injection of the antigen.
Date: March 6, 1963
Creator: Hale, William M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Model of the PRTR Mark I Fuel Element for Heat Transfer Experiments (open access)

A Model of the PRTR Mark I Fuel Element for Heat Transfer Experiments

The purpose of this document is to describe the design and construction of a full-scale, electrically-heated model of a 19-rod PRTR fuel element for use in heat transfer experiments.
Date: July 6, 1960
Creator: Hammond, J. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Borehole Gravity Meter Observations in Drill Hole Test Well-B, Yucca Flat, Nevada Test Site (open access)

Borehole Gravity Meter Observations in Drill Hole Test Well-B, Yucca Flat, Nevada Test Site

Abstract: "Fifteen in situ interval densities were calculated from the borehole gravity meter observations made in Test Well-B. The weighted average density for all the rocks sampled by the gravity meter is 1.83 gm/cc. The alluvium density ranges from 1.71 to 1.82 gm/cc and averages 1.76 gm/cc. The lake beds range from 1.91 to 1.93 gm/cc and average 1.92 gm/cc. The Rainier Mesa Member averages 1.83 gm/cc. The Tiva Canyon Member averages 1.74 gm/cc and the upper 110 feet of Topopah Spring Member has a density of 2.30 gm/cc."
Date: October 6, 1967
Creator: Healey, D. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deposition Of Thermal Energy By Nuclear Explosives (open access)

Deposition Of Thermal Energy By Nuclear Explosives

A fraction of the energy released by the underground detonation of nuclear explosives is locally deposited as residual thermal energy. An accurate prediction of this usable fraction of the energy released is necessary to evaluate the feasibility of several of the proposed projects in the Plowshare Program. This paper will present a summary of the available data on residual thermal energy from nuclear detonations in three different geological media: tuff, halite, and granodiorite.
Date: April 6, 1964
Creator: Heckman, Richard A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Genetic Influences On Mating Behavior In Drosophila Melanogaster (open access)

Genetic Influences On Mating Behavior In Drosophila Melanogaster

Certain aspects of mating behavior in two different types of Drosophila melanogaster females (Basc and Bv) and wildtype males (Samarkand) have been investigated and compared.
Date: December 6, 1960
Creator: Hildreth, Philip E. & Becker, Gweneth Carson
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diffusion in Cobalt-Nickel Alloys, Report No. 4 (open access)

Diffusion in Cobalt-Nickel Alloys, Report No. 4

The self-diffusivities of Co60 and Ni63 in cobalt--nickel solid solutions exhibit a greater activation energy below the Curie temperature (T/sub c/) than above. Values of DELTA Q = Q (ferromagnetic) -- Q (paramagnetic) are approximately equal to RT/sub c/. This observation is interpreted to indicate that the increment in activation energy arises from an increase in the formation energy of a vacancy in the ferromagnetic lattice, with the additional binding energy arising from the interaction of a spin with the Weiss field."
Date: June 6, 1962
Creator: Hirano, Ken-ichi; Agarwala, R. P.; Averbach, B. L. & Cohen, Morris
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exponential Signal Rate-Of-Rise Measurement Instrument (open access)

Exponential Signal Rate-Of-Rise Measurement Instrument

The increasing exponential function e-at [a > 0] characterizes such natural events as gas discharges, neutron multiplication, and the transistor avalanche phenomenon. This report describes an instrument for measuring the rate of rise, a, of an increasing electrical exponential signal.
Date: April 6, 1964
Creator: Holladay, Gale; Behrin, Ervin & Campbell, Donald
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solution of the Monoenergetic Boltzmann Equation in an Infinite Homogeneous Nonmultiplying Medium with Linearly Anisotropic Scattering and Isotropic Plane Source (open access)

Solution of the Monoenergetic Boltzmann Equation in an Infinite Homogeneous Nonmultiplying Medium with Linearly Anisotropic Scattering and Isotropic Plane Source

The solution of the monoenergetic Boltzmann equation in an infinite homogeneous, nonmultiplying medium with linearly anisotropic scattering and an isotropic plane source is given and compared with the corresponding solution for isotropic scattering. The effective source strength for the asymptotic flux turns out to be the same as that for isotropic scattering to first order in Σa/Σ.
Date: September 6, 1960
Creator: Inonu, Erdal
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library