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Measurements of the dependence of damage thresholds on laser wavelength, pulse duration and film thickness (open access)

Measurements of the dependence of damage thresholds on laser wavelength, pulse duration and film thickness

Results of three experiments will be described. We used 351-nm and 355-nm pulses with durations of 0.6, 1, 5 and 9 ns measure thresholds for a variety of anti-reflectance and high reflectance coatings. The functional form t/sup m/, with t the pulse duration, was used to scale fluence thresholds measured at 0.6 ns to those measured at 9.0 ns. Values of the coefficient m ranged from 0.10 to 0.51. The average value was 0.30. In the second experiment, we measured thresholds at 1064 nm, 527 nm and 355 nm for single-frequency high reflectance ZrO/sub 2//SiO/sub 2/ coatings. Coatings for all three frequencies were deposited simultaneously by use of masks in the coating chamber. Thresholds varied from 2 to 4 J/cm/sup 2/ at 355 nm to 7 to 10 J/cm/sup 2/ at 1064 nm. The third experiment measured thresholds at 355 nm for antireflection coatings made with layer thicknesses varying from greater than one wavelength to less than a quarterwavelength. A significant variation of threshold with coating thickness was not observed, but the median thresholds increased slightly as coating thickness increased.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Rainer, F.; Vercimak, C.L.; Milam, D.; Carniglia, C.K. & Tuttle Hart, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear mass formula with a neutron skin degree of freedom and finite-range model for the surface energy (open access)

Nuclear mass formula with a neutron skin degree of freedom and finite-range model for the surface energy

We study the possibility of extending the model used by Moeller and Nix in 1980 to calculate nuclear masses and fission barriers for nuclei throughout the periodic system, to describe compressibility effects and the existence of a neutron skin. 9 references. (WHK)
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Moeller, P. & Myers, W.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent results of studies of acceleration of compact toroids (open access)

Recent results of studies of acceleration of compact toroids

The observed gross stability and self-contained structure of compact toroids (CT's) give rise to the possibility, unique among magnetically confined plasmas, of translating CT's from their point of origin over distances many times their own length. This feature has led us to consider magnetic acceleration of CT's to directed kinetic energies much greater than their stored magnetic and thermal energies. A CT accelerator falls in the very broad gap between traditional particle accelerators at one extreme, which are limited in the number of particles per bunch by electrostatic repulsive forces, and mass accelerators such as rail guns at the other extreme, which accelerate many particles but are forced by the stress limitations of solids to far smaller accelerations. A typical CT has about a Coulomb of particles, weighs 10 micrograms and can be accelerated by magnetic forces of several tons, leading to an acceleration on the order of 10/sup 11/ gravities.
Date: March 2, 1984
Creator: Hammer, J. H.; Hartman, C. W. & Eddleman, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel, convenient, and nonpersistent radiotracer for environmental and energy applications (open access)

Novel, convenient, and nonpersistent radiotracer for environmental and energy applications

A newly-available radioisotopic system, /sup 172/Hf-/sup 172/Lu, has excellent potential for tracer applications in which nuclear data acquisition must be accomplished in real time. The 6.7-day half-life of /sup 172/Lu is sufficient for a large fraction of tracer experiments, and should allow the direct incorporation of /sup 172/Lu into tests that have traditionally utilized much longer-lived radionuclides. Since /sup 172/Lu is the daughter component of a radioisotope generator, however, its effective shelf-life is determined by the half-life of its 1.9-year /sup 172/Hf parent. Consequently, the frequency of isotope procurement need not be any more extensive than investigators would normally be accustomed to. Discussion relevant to isotope production, generator operation, and nuclide acquisition is presented in this paper.
Date: March 12, 1984
Creator: Grant, P.M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Large area spark counter with fine time and position resolution (open access)

Large area spark counter with fine time and position resolution

The key properties of spark counters include their capability of precision timing (at the sub 100 ps level) and of measuring the position of the charged particle to high accuracy. At SLAC we have undertaken a program to develop these devices for use in high energy physics experiments involving large detectors. A spark counter of size 1.2 m x 0.1 m has been constructed and has been operating continuously in our test setup for several months. Some details of its construction and its properties as a particle detector are reported. 14 references. (WHK)
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Ogawa, A.; Fujiwara, N.; Pestov, Yu.N. & Sugahara, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ECRH and ICRH in the TMX-U Tandem Mirror (open access)

ECRH and ICRH in the TMX-U Tandem Mirror

In the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade (TMX-U), the formation of a thermal barrier and the potential plugging of ion end loss were achieved at central-cell densities up to 2 x 10/sup 12/ cm/sup -3/. The presence of a thermal barrier was confirmed by direct measurement, and ion axial-confinement times in the range 50 to 100 ms were measured. The ECRH in the end cells (a) initiates plasma startup, (b) generates hot, mirror-confined electrons to form thermal barriers, and (c) creates the plugging potential for central-cell ions. The ECRH system consists of four 200 kW, 28 GHz gyrotrons each feeding power to a separate heating location (two in each end plug). Fundamental heating is used at the potential plug, and second harmonic is used in the thermal barrier. Hot-electron plasmas are produced at total end-cell antenna power levels up to 300 kW. Strong single-pass absorption and net hot-electron heating efficiencies exceeding 40% are observed. Hot-electron parameters achieved are: n/sub eh//n/sub et/ up to 0.8, volume-average beta <..beta..> approx. = 0.15, and T/sub x/ (x-ray tail above 40 keV) in the range 75 to 200 keV.
Date: March 15, 1984
Creator: Stallard, B. W.; Cummins, W. F.; Molvik, A. W.; Poulsen, P.; Simonen, T. C.; Falabella, S. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration of a neutron log in partially saturated media IV: effects of sonde-wall gap (open access)

Calibration of a neutron log in partially saturated media IV: effects of sonde-wall gap

A gap between a neutron sonde and the wall of a borehole can have a significant effect on the observed count rate. This effect was determined experimentally to be linear with gaps as large as 2.5 cm. The count rate is given by N/sub N/ = K/sub 0/ + K/sub 1/g where K/sub 0/ is the count rate that would be observed at zero gap, and g is the gap. The parameters K/sub 0/ and K/sub 1/ are dependent on both water (ie. hydrogen) content and bulk density. In many situations failure to correct the count rate for this gap effect can result in a significant degradation in the accuracy of the water content calculated from the count rate. In a dry borehole, K/sub 1/ is small at zero formation water content, and increases with formation water content. In a water-filled borehole, K/sub 1/ is large at zero formation water content, and tends to decrease with increasing formation water content, becoming zero, as of course it must, if the formation is pure water. The absolute value of K/sub 1/ increases with increasing density. A representation was determined for K/sub 0/ and K/sub 1/ from experimental data. This representation can be …
Date: March 8, 1984
Creator: Axelrod, M. C. & Hearst, J. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physical protection system using activated barriers (open access)

Physical protection system using activated barriers

The Argonne National Laboratory has recently installed an activated barrier, the Access Denial System, to upgrade its security. The technology of this system was developed in the late 70's by Sandia National Laboratory-Albuquerque. The Argonne National Laboratory is the first Department of Energy facility to use this device. Recent advancements in electronic components provide the total system support that makes the use of an activated barrier viable and desirable. The premise of an activated barrier is that it is deployed after a positive detection of an adversary is made and before the adversary can penetrate vital area. To accomplish this detection, sophisticated alarms, assessment, and communications must be integrated into a system that permits a security inspector to make a positive evaluation and to activate the barrier. The alarm sensor locations are selected to provide protection in depth. Closed circuit television is used with components that permit multiple video frames to be stored for automated, priority-based playback to the security inspector. Further, algorithms permit look-ahead surveillance of vital areas so that the security inspector can activate the access denial system in a timely manner and not be restricted to following the adversaries' penetration path(s).
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Timm, R. E.; Zinneman, T. E.; Haumann, J. R.; Flaugher, H. A. & Reigle, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of a large-scale melter off-gas system utilizing simulated SRP DWPF waste (open access)

Performance of a large-scale melter off-gas system utilizing simulated SRP DWPF waste

The Department of Energy and the DuPont Company have begun construction of a Defense Waste Processing Facility to immobilize radioactive waste now stored as liquids at the Department of Energy&#x27;s Savannah River Plant. The immobilization process solidifies waste sludge by vitrification into a leach-resistant borosilicate glass. Development of the process has been the responsibility of the Savannah River Laboratory. As part of the development, two large-scale glass melter systems have been designed and operated with simulated waste. Experimental data from these operations show that process requirements will be met. 6 references, 8 figures, 4 tables.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Kessler, J L & Randall, C T
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sensitive dependence to parameters, fat fractals, and universal strange attractors (open access)

Sensitive dependence to parameters, fat fractals, and universal strange attractors

There are many nonlinear differential equations for which two different types of behavior, such as chaos and periodicity, are interwoven in a complex and intricate manner, so that the bifurcation parameters form a ''fat fractal''. The result is that statistical averages vary wildly with parameters and, strictly speaking, prediction becomes impossible even in the statistical sense. (For example, climate, as well as weather, is unpredictable.) There is, however, order in this unpredictable behavior, which can be described by a universal strange attractor of the renormalization transformation.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Farmer, J.D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Workshop on borehole measurements and interpretation in scientific drilling - identification of problems and proposals for their solution: proceedings (open access)

Workshop on borehole measurements and interpretation in scientific drilling - identification of problems and proposals for their solution: proceedings

Critical instrumentation needs for borehole-oriented, geoscience research were identified in a program consisting of formal presentations, psoter sessions and a workshop. The proceedings include results of the workshops, abstracts of the papers and poster sessions, and the attendance list. Details of any of the presentations should be obtained from the individual authors. Separate entries were prepared for individual presentations.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Cooper, D. L. & Traeger, R. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-spin gamma-ray spectroscopy (open access)

High-spin gamma-ray spectroscopy

Nuclei can carry angular momentum by single-particle alignments and by collective motion, as has been well illustrated in discrete-line spectroscopy. From continuum ..gamma..-ray studies in still higher spin regions, it appears that these modes both continue. In favorable cases in rare-earth nuclei, particle alignments from the valence shell separate from proton alignments from the next higher shell. A new generation of Compton-suppressed Ge detector arrays will greatly enhance high-spin studies, both continuum and discrete-line. 17 references.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Diamond, R. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Low level signal data acquisition for the MFTF-B superconducting magnet system (open access)

Low level signal data acquisition for the MFTF-B superconducting magnet system

Acquisition of low level signals from sensors mounted on the superconducting magnets in the Tandem Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF-B) impose very strict requirements on the magnet signal conditioning and data acquisition system. Of the various types of sensors required, thermocouples and strain gages produce very low level outputs. These low level outputs must be accurately measured in the harsh environment of slowly varying magnetic fields, cryogenic temperatures, high vacuum, 80 kV pulse power, 60 Hz, 17 MHz and 28, 35, and 56 GHz electrical noise and possible neutron radiation. Successful measurements require careful attention to grounding, shielding, signal handling and processing in the data acquisition system. The magnet instrumentation system provides a means of effectively measuring both low level signals and high level signals from all types of sensors. Various methods involved in the design and implementation of the system for signal conditioning and data gathering will be presented.
Date: March 28, 1984
Creator: Montoya, C.R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the radiation resistance of high-density polyethylene. [Gamma Rays] (open access)

Evaluation of the radiation resistance of high-density polyethylene. [Gamma Rays]

Mechanical tests following gamma irradiation and creep tests during irradiation have been conducted on high-density polyethylene (HDPE) to provide data to help assess the adequacy of this material for use in high integrity containers (HICs). Two types of HDPE, a highly cross-linked rotationally molded material and a non-cross-linked blow molded material, were used in these tests. Gamma-ray irradiations were performed at several dose rates in environments of air, Barnwell and Hanford backfill soils, and ion-exchange resins. The results of tensile and bend tests on these materials following irradiation are presented along with results on creep during irradiation. 8 references, 9 figures, 2 tables.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Dougherty, D. R.; Adams, J. W. & Barletta, R. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coherent vuv and soft x-ray radiation from undulators in modern storage rings (open access)

Coherent vuv and soft x-ray radiation from undulators in modern storage rings

Magnetic structures in modern storage rings provide an assured route to fundamentally new opportunities for extending coherent radiation experiments to the vacuum ultraviolet and soft x-ray spectral regions. Coherent power levels of order 10 milliwatts are anticipated, in a fully spatially coherent beam, with a longitudinal coherence length of order 1 ..mu..m. In addition to broad tuneability and polarization control, the radiation would occur in 20 psec pulses, at 500 MHz repetition rate.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Kim, K. J.; Halbach, K. & Attwood, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ICRF Heating in the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) (open access)

ICRF Heating in the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U)

Central cell plasma in Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) are heated with 100 kW of ICRF transmitter power to ion temperatures of 1.5 keV at densities of 2 x 10/sup 12/ cm/sup -3/. We have used two Faraday-shielded antennas: the first had one 90/sup 0/ loop; and the second, in current use, has two 170/sup 0/ loops connected in an m = 1 configuration. We are also installing a slot antenna. Optimum heating for wave launching occus below the cyclotron frequency, consistent with slow wave heating. In TMX-U, we observed a power threshold, which is consistent with computed end-loss power balance. The measured loading resistance varies with density and frequency in agreement with McVey's antenna-plasma coupling code.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Molvik, A. W.; Cummins, W. F.; Falabella, S.; Poulsen, P.; Barter, J.; Dimonte, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of complex vessel experiments using the Hybrid Lagrangian-Eulerian containment code ALICE-II (open access)

Analysis of complex vessel experiments using the Hybrid Lagrangian-Eulerian containment code ALICE-II

This paper describes the ALICE-II analysis of and comparison with complex vessel experiments. Tests SM-2 through SM-5 were performed by SRI International in 1978 in studying the structural response of 1/20 scale models of the Clinch River Breeder Reactor to a simulated hypothetical core-disruptive accident. These experiments provided quality data for validating treatments of the nonlinear fluid-structure interactions and many complex excursion phenomena, such as flow through perforated structures, large material distortions, multi-dimensional sliding interfaces, flow around sharp corners, and highly contorted fluid boundaries. Correlations of the predicted pressures with the test results of all gauges are made. Wave characteristics and arrival times are also compared. Results show that the ALICE-II code predicts the pressure profile well. Despite the complexity, the code gave good results for the SM-5 test.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Wang, C. Y.; Ku, J. L. & Zeuch, W. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Perspective on demonstrations of compliance for high-level waste disposal (open access)

Perspective on demonstrations of compliance for high-level waste disposal

This paper discusses a perspective which we have developed on the problem of demonstrating compliance of high-level waste repositories with system performance standards. Our viewpoint arises from two primary concerns - first, that the US Environmental Protection Agency's proposed environmental standard for high-level waste disposal appears to require demonstrations of compliance which are incompatible with scientific knowledge, and, second, that the federal agencies involved in the licensing process may not appreciate fully the extent of unquantifiable and uresolvable uncertainty in repository performance-assessment models. We propose a general approach to demonstrations of compliance which we feel is compatible with the kinds of technical information that will be available for judging repository performance. Our approach emphasizes the importance of investigation alternative conceptual models and lines of reasoning in evaluating repository performance and the importance of subjective scientific judgment in the desision-making process. 24 references, 1 figure.
Date: March 15, 1984
Creator: Kocher, D. C.; Smith, E. D.; O'Kelly, G. D. & Sjoreen, A. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Search for neutral, penetrating, metastable particles produced in the SLAC beam dump (open access)

Search for neutral, penetrating, metastable particles produced in the SLAC beam dump

A search was made for neutral objects which might be produced by 20 GeV electrons incident on the SLAC beam dump, penetrate the downstream natural shielding, and decay upstream of an electromagnetic shower calorimeter. With about 30 coulombs of electrons dumped, no candidate events were found above an energy of approx. 2 GeV. Preliminary analysis implies the 95% confidence level limit on the product of mass and lifetime of light axion-like bosons decaying primarily into two photons to be greater than 0.8 keV-sec. Preliminary limits on photino parameters are also given.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Bjorken, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nova laser alignment control system (open access)

Nova laser alignment control system

Alignment of the Nova laser requires control of hundreds of optical components in the ten beam paths. Extensive application of computer technology makes daily alignment practical. The control system is designed in a manner which provides both centralized and local manual operator controls integrated with automatic closed loop alignment. Menudriven operator consoles using high resolution color graphics displays overlaid with transport touch panels allow laser personnel to interact efficiently with the computer system. Automatic alignment is accomplished by using image analysis techniques to determine beam references points from video images acquired along the laser chain. A major goal of the design is to contribute substantially to rapid experimental turnaround and consistent alignment results. This paper describes the computer-based control structure and the software methods developed for aligning this large laser system.
Date: March 29, 1984
Creator: Van Arsdall, P.J.; Holloway, F.W.; McGuigan, D.L. & Shelton, R.T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam experiment programs in the USA (open access)

Beam experiment programs in the USA

It has been demonstrated that an intense beam with the space charge defocussing force as large as the average focussing forces of the channel can be transported over many lattice periods without losing either the current or the optical quality. This conclusion, which is consistent with the PIC code results, has an important implication in designing a linear induction accelerator driver for inertial confinement fusion.
Date: March 1, 1984
Creator: Kim, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Soft x-ray laser experiments at Novette Laser Facility (open access)

Soft x-ray laser experiments at Novette Laser Facility

We discuss the results of and future plans for experiments to study the possibility of producing an x-ray laser. The schemes we have investigated are all pumped by the Novette Laser, operated at short pulse (tau/sub L/ approx. 100 psec) and an incident wavelength of lambda /sub L/ approx. 0.53 ..mu..m. We have studied the possibility of lasing at 53.6, 68.0 to 72.0, 119.0, and 153.0 eV, using the inversion methods of resonant photo-excitation, collisional excitation, and three-body recombination.
Date: March 5, 1984
Creator: Matthews, D.; Hagelstein, P.; Rosen, M.; Kauffman, R.; Lee, R.; Wang, C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite element method for solving neutron transport problems (open access)

Finite element method for solving neutron transport problems

A finite element method is introduced for solving the neutron transport equations. Our method falls into the category of Petrov-Galerkin solution, since the trial space differs from the test space. The close relationship between this method and the discrete ordinate method is discussed, and the methods are compared for simple test problems.
Date: March 21, 1984
Creator: Ferguson, J.M. & Greenbaum, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-ray microprobe characterization of materials: the case for undulators on advanced storage rings (open access)

X-ray microprobe characterization of materials: the case for undulators on advanced storage rings

The unique properties of X rays offer many advantages over electrons and other charged particles for the microcharacterization of materials. X rays are more efficient in exciting characteristic X-ray fluorescence and produce higher fluorescent signals to backgrounds than obtained with electrons. Detectable limits for X rays are a few parts per billion and are 10/sup -3/ to 10/sup -5/ less than for electrons. Energy deposition in the sample by X rays is 10/sup -3/ to 10/sup -4/ less than for electrons for the same detectable concentration. High-brightness storage rings, especially in the 6 GeV class with undulators, will be approximately 10/sup 3/ brighter in the X-ray energy range from 5 keV to 35 keV than existing storage rings and provide for X-ray microprobes that are as bright as the most advanced electron probes. Such X-ray microprobes will produce unprecedented low levels of detection in diffraction, EXAFS, Auger, and photoelectron spectroscopies for both chemical characterization and elemental identification. These major improvements in microcharacterization capabilities will have wide-ranging ramifications not only in materials science but also in physics, chemistry, geochemistry, biology, and medicine.
Date: March 17, 1984
Creator: Sparks, C.J. Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library