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Recovery of deformed and hydrogen-charge palladium (open access)

Recovery of deformed and hydrogen-charge palladium

Positron lifetime and Doppler-broadening studies made at 300 K have been used to investigate the interaction between interstitial hydrogen and lattice defects in deformed Pd. Specimens were charged with hydrogen at 300 K to levels up to 0.1%. The presence of hydrogen was found to have no effect on the recovery curves of Pd upon annealing to 400/sup 0/C. By 400/sup 0/C the values for both lifetime and Doppler-broadening for both cold worked and cold worked plus hydrogen were below the values obtained for annealed pure Pd. This can be interpreted as gaseous-impurity-trapped vacancies being present after the 1200/sup 0/C anneal, but being swept away by the dislocation microstructure recovery between 200 to 400/sup 0/C.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Snead, C. L. Jr.; Lynn, K. G. & Lynch, J. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Excitation of giant resonances via direct reactions (open access)

Excitation of giant resonances via direct reactions

Experimental measurements of electric giant multipole resonances are discussed. The parameters of the giant quadrupole resonance are now firmly established by an extensive set of measurements. The GQR is providing a significant influence in other areas of nuclear physics. The monopole resonance has now been established and its observation has provided the first direct measure of the nuclear compressibility. A strong case for the existence of a giant octupole resonance is now being made through a variety of hadron reactions. However, the supply of giant multipole resonances has not been exhausted. The newer techniques such as higher energy proton scattering, charge exchange reactions, heavy-ion scattering and pion reactions offer considerable hope for identifying new resonances during the next few years.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Bertrand, F.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Picotron 100 streak tubes as a 150-channel photometer (open access)

Picotron 100 streak tubes as a 150-channel photometer

The characterization of a streak camera based upon Picotron 100 tube types is given. Both a large (30 cm 1 x 10 cm dia.) and a small (18 cm 1 x 5 cm dia.) version of this design has been tested. Over 150 channels of information are simultaneously time resolved with system S.N.R. of 3 at 100 picosecond time resolution without post intensification. Absolute photometric evaluation is given in the dynamic mode, i.e. while operating in the picosecond time domain. Such quantitative data has been lacking in the past, particularly for multiple channel applications.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Majumdar, S.; Weiss, P.B. & Black, J.P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser-plasma interaction experiments at laser wavelengths of 1. 064. mu. m, 0. 532. mu. m, and 0. 355. mu. m (open access)

Laser-plasma interaction experiments at laser wavelengths of 1. 064. mu. m, 0. 532. mu. m, and 0. 355. mu. m

The effect of laser wavelength on laser-plasma coupling is one of the critical issues facing the laser driven inertial confinement community. The advantages of using lasers with output wavelength less than 1 ..mu..m, such as enhanced absorption and hydrodynamic efficiency, reduction in parametric instabilities and corresponding suprathermal electron generation, have long been predicted theoretically.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Campbell, E. M.; Mead, W. C. & Turner, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Growth regulation by macrophages (open access)

Growth regulation by macrophages

The evidence reviewed here indicates that macrophages, either acting alone or in concert with other cells, influence the proliferation of multiple types of cells. Most of the data indicate that these effects are mediated by soluble macrophage-elaborated products (probably proteins) although the role of direct cell-to-cell contacts cannot be ruled out in all cases. A degree of success has been achieved on the biochemical characterization of these factors, due mainly to their low specific activity in conditioned medium and the lack of rapid, specific assays. Understanding the growth-regulating potential of macrophages is an important and needed area of research.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Wharton, W.; Walker, E. & Stewart, C.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diskless LSI-11 systems (open access)

Diskless LSI-11 systems

Programs for dedicated LSI-11 based systems can easily be stored in ROM instead of floppy disks, yet execute the same as disk-stored programs. Two sample systems are described.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Ford, W. & Shirk, D. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Statistical magnetohydrodynamics and reversed-field-pinch quiescence (open access)

Statistical magnetohydrodynamics and reversed-field-pinch quiescence

A statistical model of a bounded, incompressible, cylindrical magnetofluid is presented. This model predicts the presence of magnetic fluctuations about a cylindrically-symmetric, Bessel-function-model, mean magnetic field, which satisfies del x <B> = ..mu.. <B>. As theta ..-->.. 1.56, the model predicts that the significant region of the fluctuation spectrum narrows down to a single (coherent) m = 1 mode. An analogy between the Debye length of an electrostatic plasma and ..mu../sup -1/ suggests the physical validity o the model's prediction of <deltaB(r)deltaB(r')> when /r - r'/ greater than or equal to ..mu../sup -1/.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Turner, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of principal components analysis and three-dimensional atmospheric-transport models for reactor-consequence evaluation (open access)

Use of principal components analysis and three-dimensional atmospheric-transport models for reactor-consequence evaluation

This work explores the use of principal components analysis coupled to three-dimensional atmospheric transport and dispersion models for evaluating the environmental consequences of reactor accidents. This permits the inclusion of meteorological data from multiple sites and the effects of topography in the consequence evaluation; features not normally included in such analyses. The technique identifies prevailing regional wind patterns and their frequencies for use in the transport and dispersion calculations. Analysis of a hypothetical accident scenario involving a release of radioactivity from a reactor situated in a river valley indicated the technique is quite useful whenever recurring wind patterns exist, as is often the case in complex terrain situations. Considerable differences were revealed in a comparison with results obtained from a more conventional Gaussian plume model using only the reactor site meteorology and no topographic effects.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Gudiksen, P. H.; Walton, J. J.; Alpert, D. J. & Johnson, J. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Selective population of high-j states via heavy-ion-induced transfer reactions (open access)

Selective population of high-j states via heavy-ion-induced transfer reactions

One of the early hopes of heavy-ion-induced transfer reactions was to populate states not seen easily or at all by other means. To date, however, I believe it is fair to say that spectroscopic studies of previously unknown states have had, at best, limited success. Despite the early demonstration of selectivity with cluster transfer to high-lying states in light nuclei, the study of heavy-ion-induced transfer reactions has emphasized the reaction mechanism. The value of using two of these reactions for spectroscopy of high spin states is demonstrated: /sup 143/Nd(/sup 16/O,/sup 15/O) /sup 144/Nd and /sup 170/Er(/sup 16/O,/sup 15/O..gamma..) /sup 171/Er. (WHK)
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Bond, P.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SIMMER as a safety analysis tool (open access)

SIMMER as a safety analysis tool

SIMMER has been used for numerous applications in fast reactor safety, encompassing both accident and experiment analysis. Recent analyses of transition-phase behavior in potential core disruptive accidents have integrated SIMMER testing with the accident analysis. Results of both the accident analysis and the verification effort are presented as a comprehensive safety analysis program.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Smith, L. L.; Bell, C. R.; Bohl, W. R.; Bott, T. F.; Dearing, J. F. & Luck, L. B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence of former higher temperatures from alteration minerals, Bostic 1-A well, Mountain Home, Idaho (open access)

Evidence of former higher temperatures from alteration minerals, Bostic 1-A well, Mountain Home, Idaho

Cuttings from the silicic volcanics in the Bostic 1-A well near Mountain Home, Idaho have been examined petrographically with the assistance of x-ray diffraction and electron microprobe analyses. Results indicate that these rocks have been subjected to much higher temperatures than were observed in the well in 1974, when a static temperature log was run. It is not known to what extent the alternation may be due to greater depth of burial in the past, or whether it resulted from an early hydrothermal system of higher temperature than the one now observed.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Arney, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculations of thermal-reactor spent-fuel nuclide inventories and comparisons with measurements (open access)

Calculations of thermal-reactor spent-fuel nuclide inventories and comparisons with measurements

Comparisons with integral measurements have demonstrated the accuracy of CINDER codes and libraries in calculating aggregate fission-product properties, including neutron absorption, decay power, and decay spectra. CINDER calculations have, alternatively, been used to supplement measured integral data describing fission-product decay power and decay spectra. Because of the incorporation of the extensive actinide library and the use of ENDF/B-V data, it is desirable to compare the inventory of individual nuclides obtained from tandem EPRI-CELL/CINDER-2 calculations with those determined in documented benchmark inventory measurements of spent reactor fuel. The development of the popular /sup 148/Nd burnup measurement procedure is outlined, and areas of uncertainty in it and lack of clarity in its interpretation are indicated. Six inventory samples of varying quality and completeness are examined. The power histories used in the calculations have been listed for other users.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Wilson, W. B.; LaBauve, R. J. & England, T. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aspects of model selection in multivariate analyses (open access)

Aspects of model selection in multivariate analyses

Analysis of data sets that involve large numbers of variables usually entails some type of model fitting and data reduction. In regression problems, a fitted model that is obtained by a selection process can be difficult to evaluate because of optimism induced by the choice mechanism. Problems in areas such as discriminant analysis, calibration, and the like often lead to similar difficulties. The preceeding sections reviewed some of the general ideas behind assessment of regression-type predictors and illustrated how they can be easily incorporated into a standard data analysis.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Picard, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interaction of noble-metal fission products with pyrolytic silicon carbide (open access)

Interaction of noble-metal fission products with pyrolytic silicon carbide

Fuel particles for the High-Temperature Gas-Cooled Reactor (HTGR) contain layers of pyrolytic carbon and silicon carbide, which act as a miniature pressure vessel and form the primary fission product barrier. Of the many fission products formed during irradiation, the noble metals are of particular interest because they interact significantly with the SiC layer and their concentrations are somewhat higher in the low-enriched uranium fuels currently under consideration. To study fission product-SiC interactions, particles of UO/sub 2/ or UC/sub 2/ are doped with fission product elements before coating and are then held in a thermal gradient up to several thousand hours. Examination of the SiC coatings by TEM-AEM after annealing shows that silver behaves differently from the palladium group.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Lauf, R. J. & Braski, D. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Internal magnetic fields in hcp-iron (open access)

Internal magnetic fields in hcp-iron

The magnetic behavior of hcp-Fe (epsilon iron) has been investigated by the Moessbauer Effect over a wide range of temperature T, pressure P, and applied magnetic field H/sub 0/. The internal field H/sub i/ of the induced moment is given by H/sub i/ = 0.20 +- .01 H/sub 0/ and is independent of T and P. Enhanced paramagnetism is suggested as the most likely origin for a contribution of this magnitude to H/sub i/.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Taylor, R. D.; Cort, G. & Willis, J. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Integrity of PWR pressure vessels during overcooling accidents (open access)

Integrity of PWR pressure vessels during overcooling accidents

The reactor pressure vessel in a pressurized water reactor is normally subjected to temperatures and pressures that preclude propagation of sharp, crack-like defects that might exist in the wall of the vessel. However, there is a class of postulated accidents, referred to as overcooling accidents, that can subject the pressure vessel to severe thermal shock while the pressure is substantial. As a result of such accidents vessels containing high concentrations of copper and nickel, which enhance radiation embrittlement, may possess a potential for extensive propagation of preexistent inner surface flaws prior to the vessel's normal end of life. For the purpose of evaluating this problem a state-of-the-art fracture mechanics model was developed and has been used for conducting parametric analyses and for calculating several recorded PWR transients. Results of the latter analysis indicate that there may be some vessels that have a potential for failure today if subjected to a Rancho Seco (1978) or TMI-2 (1979) type transient. However, the calculational model may be excessively conservative, and this possibility is under investigation.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Cheverton, R.D.; Iskander, S.K. & Whitman, G.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Light composite fermions: an overview (open access)

Light composite fermions: an overview

Some rules which have been proposed, including 't Hooft's anomaly conditions, decoupling conditions and tumbling versus no tumbling are discussed. Then mass generation mechanisms for composite fermions are covered, including weak gauging, strong gauging, and unification. The origin of the different generations of quarks and leptons is then considered. In the context of composite models, the three generations of quarks and leptons must appear in the first approximation as three sets of massless composite fermions in identical representations of continuous flavor symmetry with a conserved generation number distinguishing them. The generation symmetry is preferably a discrete one in order to avoid massless Goldstone bosons that would occur if one could spontaneously break a continuous symmetry. Harari and Seiberg have shown that in a class of rishon models there exist U(1) generation symmetries that are automatically broken to a discrete generation symmetry due to strong interaction instantons. An example of a solution to the anomaly conditions with this property is given. (GHT)
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Raby, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Clonal theory of radiation carcinogenesis (open access)

Clonal theory of radiation carcinogenesis

In some cases, usually involving high-LET radiations, the dose response at low doses follows a power function of dose with exponent less than one over a wide dose range. This type of response is of great interest since (a) it implies greater effect per unit dose at progressively smaller doses, and (b) it is not predicted by most models and theories of radiobiology. A theoretical framework is presented for responses having the above characteristics over a dose range extending over a factor of 1000. The model postulates precursor cells which occur in clones. Different numbers of precursor cells per clone are assumed. Suitable transformation of a single cell in a clone completes initiation of that clone and raises the probability of tumor formation. At low doses, clones with large numbers of cells at risk have relatively high probability of response. However, depletion of the number of untransformed large clones with increasing dose leaves primarily untransformed smaller clones with smaller probability of response per unit dose. The analytical results demonstrate that power functions with exponent less than one can result even for doses so small that the mean number of charged particle traversals per cell is much less than one. The …
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Baum, J.W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Shielding considerations for advanced space nuclear reactor systems (open access)

Shielding considerations for advanced space nuclear reactor systems

To meet the anticipated future space power needs, the Los Alamos National Laboratory is developing components for a compact, 100 kW/sub e/-class heat pipe nuclear reactor. The reactor uses uranium dioxide (UO/sub 2/) as its fuel, and is designed to operate around 1500 k. Heat pipes are used to remove thermal energy from the core without the use of pumps or compressors. The reactor heat pipes transfer mal energy to thermoelectric conversion elements that are advanced versions of the converters used on the enormously successful Voyager missions to the outer planets. Advanced versions of this heat pipe reactor could also be used to provide megawatt-level power plants. The paper reviews the status of this advanced heat pipe reactor and explores the radiation environments and shielding requirements for representative manned and unmanned applications.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Angelo, J.P. Jr. & Buden, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stochastic modelling of physiologic processes with radiotracers and positron emission tomography (open access)

Stochastic modelling of physiologic processes with radiotracers and positron emission tomography

The compartment model, so often used in nuclear medicine and in pharmacokinetics, is formed by a set of linear differential equations of order one with constant coefficients; its validity depends upon the hypothesis that the system described contains a finite number of components, and that each component is homogeneous. These hypotheses exclude the presence of diffusion and of age-dependent processes, or in general of transport of a non-Markovian nature. The fact that frequently the experimental data agree with this model does not necessarily prove the model is appropriate, but only that it is flexible. In addition to the consistency with the experimental data, an obvious conceptual requirement of the model is that its parameters could be interpreted in terms of perceivable physical properties. All this considered, it will be demonstrated that the experimental data can be examined in terms of a model making a minimum number of assumptions and giving the best physical interpretations to the parameters involved. By way of example, a high resolution positron emission tomograph will be used to determine the successive moments describing the blood circulation through different sections of the brain. Whereever the relative moments form a geometric progression, the circulation in that section follows …
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Rescigno, A.; Lambrecht, R. M. & Duncan, C. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of valence-electron structures of Y/sub 3/Al/sub 5/O/sub 12/(YAG) and Al/sub 2/O/sub 3/, Cr/sub 2/O/sub 2/ (Ruby), a study of certain properties of these laser materials related to their valence-electron structures (open access)

Analysis of valence-electron structures of Y/sub 3/Al/sub 5/O/sub 12/(YAG) and Al/sub 2/O/sub 3/, Cr/sub 2/O/sub 2/ (Ruby), a study of certain properties of these laser materials related to their valence-electron structures

A direct method of determination of the valence-electron structure from its crystal structure has been presented by the writer at XIIth International Congress of Crystallography, at Ottawa, 1981. Here the method is applied to determine the valence-electron structures of Y/sub 3/Al/sub 5/O/sub 12/ (YAG) and Al/sub 2/O/sub 3/, Cr/sub 2/O/sub 3/ (ruby) to see how certain properties of these laser materials are related to their valence-electron structures. The first point observed is the very strong, continuous, but zig-zag three-dimensional fractional covalent M-O bond nets (M = Al or Cr) being connected with the high melting points, the great resistance against the puncture by the strong laser beam. In the case of Nd-YAG, the distortion caused by the replacement of the Y atoms by almost the same size Nd atoms is small. On the other hand, because of the similarity of the valence-electron structures of ..cap alpha..-Al/sub 2/O/sub 3/ and Cr/sub 2/O/sub 3/, the replacement of Al atoms by the little larger size Cr atoms in small amount is easily understood. The large atomic spins of magnetic moment m/sub B/ = 2.76 ..mu../sub B/ (= experiment value, the theoretical m/sub B/ = 2.70/sub 2/ ..mu../sub B/) of Cr atoms pointing parallel …
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Yu, S. H. & Yu, L. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Devil's staircase and order without periodicity in classical condensed matter (open access)

Devil's staircase and order without periodicity in classical condensed matter

The existence of incommensurate structures proves that crystal ordering is not always the most stable one for nonquantum matter. Some properties of structures which are obtained by minimizing a free energy are investigated in the Frenkel Kontorova and related models. It is shown that an incommensurate structure can be either quasi-sinusoidal with a phason mode or built out of a sequence of equidistant defects (discommensurations) which are locked to the lattice by the Peierls force. In that situation the variation of the commensurability ratio with physical parameters forms a complete devil's staircase with interesting physical consequences. Some general results for all structures which minimize a free energy are given. In addition to the known crystal and incommensurate structures, the existence of a new class of structures which have local order at all scale is predicted. Properties of the new class are described in physical terms and possible applications to certain amorphous or nonstoichiometric compounds are discussed.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Aubry, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Role of diagnostic testing in identifying and resolving dimensional-stability problems in electroplated laser mirrors (open access)

Role of diagnostic testing in identifying and resolving dimensional-stability problems in electroplated laser mirrors

The metal mirrors which are the subject of this discussion are to be used in the Antares inertial fusion laser system. Antares is a high-power (40 TW), high-energy (35 to 40 kJ), pulsed CO/sub 2/ laser system for the investigation of inertial confinement fusion. The system contains more than four hundred small and large diamond-turned and conventionally polished mirrors. The largest mirrors are trapezoidal in shape with the longest dimension being 16 to 18 inches. The substrates are type 2124 aluminum for most large mirrors, and aluminum bronze, oxygen-free copper or a copper-zirconium alloy for most of the smaller mirrors. The optical surface is electro-deposited copper 20 to 40 mils thick. After nondestructive testing and rough machining, the electroplated surface is single-point diamond machined or conventionally polished.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Cutler, R.L. & Hogan, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of a diesel exhaust-gas purification system for inert-gas drilling (open access)

Design of a diesel exhaust-gas purification system for inert-gas drilling

To combat the serious oxygen corrosion of drill pipe when a low density drilling fluid (air or mist) is used in geothermal drilling, a system has been designed that produces an inert gas (essentially nitrogen) to be substituted for air. The system fits on three flatbed trailers, is roadable and produces 2000 scfm of gas. The projected cost for gas is slightly less than $2.00 per thousand standard cubic feet.
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Caskey, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library