Border Searches of Laptops and Other Electronic Storage Devices (open access)

Border Searches of Laptops and Other Electronic Storage Devices

None
Date: March 5, 2008
Creator: Kim, Yule
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Broadband Internet Access and the Digital Divide: Federal Assistance Programs (open access)

Broadband Internet Access and the Digital Divide: Federal Assistance Programs

This report is on Broadband Internet Access and the Digital Divide: Federal Assistance Programs.
Date: March 25, 2008
Creator: Kruger, Lennard G. & Gilroy, Angele A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Budget for Fiscal Year 2009 (open access)

The Budget for Fiscal Year 2009

This report consists of the budget for fiscal year 2009.
Date: March 19, 2008
Creator: Austin, D. Andrew
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Budget Reconciliation Process: The Senate’s “Byrd Rule” (open access)

The Budget Reconciliation Process: The Senate’s “Byrd Rule”

This report discusses the reconciliation under the congressional budget act of 1974 by which congress implements budget resolution policies affecting mainly permanent spending and revenue programs.
Date: March 20, 2008
Creator: Keith, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bulgaria: Current Issues and U.S. Policy (open access)

Bulgaria: Current Issues and U.S. Policy

This short report provides information on Bulgaria's current political and economic situation, and foreign policy. It also discusses U.S. policy towards Bulgaria.
Date: March 13, 2008
Creator: Woehrel, Steven
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Business Systems Modernization: Internal Revenue Service's Fiscal Year 2008 Expenditure Plan (open access)

Business Systems Modernization: Internal Revenue Service's Fiscal Year 2008 Expenditure Plan

A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The Internal Revenue Service's (IRS) Business Systems Modernization (BSM) program is a multibillion-dollar, high-risk, highly complex effort that involves the development and delivery of a number of modernized systems that are intended to replace the agency's aging business and tax processing systems. As required by law, IRS submitted its fiscal year 2008 expenditure plan in August 2007 to congressional appropriations committees, requesting $235.8 million from the BSM account. GAO's objectives in reviewing the plan were to (1) determine whether it satisfied the conditions specified in the law, (2) determine IRS's progress in implementing prior expenditure plan review recommendations, and (3) provide additional observations about the plan and the BSM program. To accomplish the objectives, GAO analyzed the plan, reviewed related documentation, and interviewed IRS officials."
Date: March 7, 2008
Creator: United States. Government Accountability Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cable Damage Detection Using Time Domain Reflectometry and Model-Based Algorithms (open access)

Cable Damage Detection Using Time Domain Reflectometry and Model-Based Algorithms

None
Date: March 20, 2008
Creator: Clark, G A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of asymptotic and RMS kicks due to higher order modes in the 3.9-GHz cavity (open access)

Calculation of asymptotic and RMS kicks due to higher order modes in the 3.9-GHz cavity

FLASH plans to use a 'third harmonic' (3.9 GHz) superconducting cavity to compensate nonlinear distortions of the longitudinal phase space due to the sinusoidal curvature of the cavity voltage of the TESLA 1.3 GHz cavities. Higher order modes (HOMs) in the 3.9 GHz have a significant impact on the dynamics of the electron bunches in a long bunch train. Kicks due to dipole modes can be enhanced along the bunch train depending on the frequency and Q-value of the modes. The enhancement factor for a constant beam offset with respect to the cavity has been calculated. A simple Monte Carlo model of these effects, allowing for scatter in HOM frequencies due to manufacturing variances, has also been implemented and results for both FLASH and for an XFEL-like configuration are presented.
Date: March 1, 2008
Creator: Bellantoni, L.; Edwards, H. & Wanzenberg, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calibration of the HB line active well neutron coincidence counter for measurement of LANL 3013 highly enriched uranium product splits (open access)

Calibration of the HB line active well neutron coincidence counter for measurement of LANL 3013 highly enriched uranium product splits

None
Date: March 26, 2008
Creator: Dewberry, R.; Williams, D. R.; Lee, R. S.; Roberts, D. W.; Arrigo, L. M. & Salaymeh, S. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
California's Waiver Request to Control Greenhouse Gases Under the Clean Air Act (open access)

California's Waiver Request to Control Greenhouse Gases Under the Clean Air Act

This report reviews the nature of Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) authority, as well as that of California and other states, to regulate emissions from mobile sources. It includes a discussion fo the applicability of that authority to greenhouse gases (GHGs) and issues related to the California waiver request.
Date: March 4, 2008
Creator: McCarthy, James E. & Meltz, Robert
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Campaign Finance: Legislative Developments and Policy Issues in the 110th Congress (open access)

Campaign Finance: Legislative Developments and Policy Issues in the 110th Congress

This report provides an overview of major legislative and policy developments related to campaign finance during the 110th Congress.
Date: March 6, 2008
Creator: Garrett, R. Sam
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capital Punishment: Constitutionality for Non-Homicide Crimes Such as Child Rape (open access)

Capital Punishment: Constitutionality for Non-Homicide Crimes Such as Child Rape

This report provides background on the 8th Amendment and court decision on states imposing the death penalty for any crime other than murder.
Date: March 21, 2008
Creator: Smith, Alison M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Capitol Visitor Center: Update on Status of Project's Schedule and Cost as of March 12, 2008 (open access)

Capitol Visitor Center: Update on Status of Project's Schedule and Cost as of March 12, 2008

Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Today's remarks are based on our review of schedules and financial reports for the Capitol Visitor Center (CVC) project and related records maintained by Architect of the Capitol (AOC) and its construction management contractor, Gilbane Building Company; our observations on the progress of work at the CVC construction site; and our discussions with the CVC team (AOC and its major CVC contractors), AOC's Chief Fire Marshal, and representatives from the U.S. Capitol Police. We also reviewed AOC's construction management contractor's periodic schedule assessments, proposed change order log, and weekly reports on construction progress. In addition, we reviewed the contract modifications made to date."
Date: March 12, 2008
Creator: United States. Government Accountability Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Carbon Cycle: Implications for Climate Change and Congress (open access)

The Carbon Cycle: Implications for Climate Change and Congress

This report puts the human contribution of carbon to the atmosphere into the larger context of the global carbon cycle. The report focuses almost entirely on carbon dioxide (CO2), which alone is responsible for over half of the change in Earth's radiation balance. Moreover, according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), CO2 is the most important greenhouse gas released to the atmosphere from human activities.
Date: March 13, 2008
Creator: Folger, Peter
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalyzed Water Oxidation by Solar Irradiation of Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductors (Part 1. Overview). (open access)

Catalyzed Water Oxidation by Solar Irradiation of Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductors (Part 1. Overview).

The objectives of this report are: (1) Investigate the catalysis of water oxidation by cobalt and manganese hydrous oxides immobilized on titania or silica nanoparticles, and dinuclear metal complexes with quinonoid ligands in order to develop a better understanding of the critical water oxidation chemistry, and rationally search for improved catalysts. (2) Optimize the light-harvesting and charge-separation abilities of stable semiconductors including both a focused effort to improve the best existing materials by investigating their structural and electronic properties using a full suite of characterization tools, and a parallel effort to discover and characterize new materials. (3) Combine these elements to examine the function of oxidation catalysts on Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductor (BGNSC) surfaces and elucidate the core scientific challenges to the efficient coupling of the materials functions.
Date: March 18, 2008
Creator: Fujita, E.; Khalifah, P.; Lymar, S.; Muckerman, J. T. & Rodgriguez, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Catalyzed Water Oxidation by Solar Irradiation of Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductors (Part 2. Overview). (open access)

Catalyzed Water Oxidation by Solar Irradiation of Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductors (Part 2. Overview).

The objectives of this report are: (1) Investigate the catalysis of water oxidation by cobalt and manganese hydrous oxides immobilized on titania or silica nanoparticles, and dinuclear metal complexes with quinonoid ligands in order to develop a better understanding of the critical water oxidation chemistry, and rationally search for improved catalysts. (2) Optimize the light-harvesting and charge-separation abilities of stable semiconductors including both a focused effort to improve the best existing materials by investigating their structural and electronic properties using a full suite of characterization tools, and a parallel effort to discover and characterize new materials. (3) Combine these elements to examine the function of oxidation catalysts on Band-Gap-Narrowed Semiconductor (BGNSC) surfaces and elucidate the core scientific challenges to the efficient coupling of the materials functions.
Date: March 18, 2008
Creator: Fujita, E.; Khalifah, P.; Lymar, S.; Muckerman, J. T. & Rodriguez, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A CCD Camera with Electron Decelerator for Intermediate Voltage Electron Microscopy (open access)

A CCD Camera with Electron Decelerator for Intermediate Voltage Electron Microscopy

Electron microscopists are increasingly turning to Intermediate Voltage Electron Microscopes (IVEMs) operating at 300 - 400 kV for a wide range of studies. They are also increasingly taking advantage of slow-scan charge coupled device (CCD) cameras, which have become widely used on electron microscopes. Under some conditions CCDs provide an improvement in data quality over photographic film, as well as the many advantages of direct digital readout. However, CCD performance is seriously degraded on IVEMs compared to the more conventional 100 kV microscopes. In order to increase the efficiency and quality of data recording on IVEMs, we have developed a CCD camera system in which the electrons are decelerated to below 100 kV before impacting the camera, resulting in greatly improved performance in both signal quality and resolution compared to other CCDs used in electron microscopy. These improvements will allow high-quality image and diffraction data to be collected directly with the CCD, enabling improvements in data collection for applications including high-resolution electron crystallography, single-particle reconstruction of protein structures, tomographic studies of cell ultrastructure and remote microscope operation. This approach will enable us to use even larger format CCD chips that are being developed with smaller pixels.
Date: March 17, 2008
Creator: Downing, Kenneth H; Downing, Kenneth H. & Mooney, Paul E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Center-stabilized Yang-Mills Theory:Confinement and Large N Volume Independence (open access)

Center-stabilized Yang-Mills Theory:Confinement and Large N Volume Independence

We examine a double trace deformation of SU(N) Yang-Mills theory which, for large N and large volume, is equivalent to unmodified Yang-Mills theory up to O(1/N{sup 2}) corrections. In contrast to the unmodified theory, large N volume independence is valid in the deformed theory down to arbitrarily small volumes. The double trace deformation prevents the spontaneous breaking of center symmetry which would otherwise disrupt large N volume independence in small volumes. For small values of N, if the theory is formulated on R{sup 3} x S{sup 1} with a sufficiently small compactification size L, then an analytic treatment of the non-perturbative dynamics of the deformed theory is possible. In this regime, we show that the deformed Yang-Mills theory has a mass gap and exhibits linear confinement. Increasing the circumference L or number of colors N decreases the separation of scales on which the analytic treatment relies. However, there are no order parameters which distinguish the small and large radius regimes. Consequently, for small N the deformed theory provides a novel example of a locally four-dimensional pure gauge theory in which one has analytic control over confinement, while for large N it provides a simple fully reduced model for Yang-Mills theory. …
Date: March 21, 2008
Creator: Unsal, Mithat; /SLAC /Stanford U., Phys. Dept.; Yaffe, Laurence G. & /Washington U., Seattle
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests (open access)

Central Asia: Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests

This report provides Regional Developments and Implications for U.S. Interests related to Central Asia.
Date: March 19, 2008
Creator: Nichol, Jim
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cfd Modeling Analysis of Mechanical Draft Cooling Tower (open access)

Cfd Modeling Analysis of Mechanical Draft Cooling Tower

Industrial processes use mechanical draft cooling towers (MDCT's) to dissipate waste heat by transferring heat from water to air via evaporative cooling, which causes air humidification. The Savannah River Site (SRS) has a MDCT consisting of four independent compartments called cells. Each cell has its own fan to help maximize heat transfer between ambient air and circulated water. The primary objective of the work is to conduct a parametric study for cooling tower performance under different fan speeds and ambient air conditions. The Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) developed a computational fluid dynamics (CFD) model to achieve the objective. The model uses three-dimensional steady-state momentum, continuity equations, air-vapor species balance equation, and two-equation turbulence as the basic governing equations. It was assumed that vapor phase is always transported by the continuous air phase with no slip velocity. In this case, water droplet component was considered as discrete phase for the interfacial heat and mass transfer via Lagrangian approach. Thus, the air-vapor mixture model with discrete water droplet phase is used for the analysis. A series of the modeling calculations was performed to investigate the impact of ambient and operating conditions on the thermal performance of the cooling tower when fans …
Date: March 3, 2008
Creator: Lee, S.; Alfred Garrett, A.; James02 Bollinger, J. & Larry Koffman, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
CHALLENGES IN GENERATING HYDROGEN BY HIGH TEMPERATURE ELECTROLYSIS USING SOLID OXIDE CELLS (open access)

CHALLENGES IN GENERATING HYDROGEN BY HIGH TEMPERATURE ELECTROLYSIS USING SOLID OXIDE CELLS

Idaho National Laboratory’s (INL) high temperature electrolysis research to generate hydrogen using solid oxide electrolysis cells is presented in this paper. The research results reported here have been obtained in a laboratory-scale apparatus. These results and common scale-up issues also indicate that for the technology to be successful in a large industrial setting, several technical, economical, and manufacturing issues have to be resolved. Some of the issues related to solid oxide cells are stack design and performance optimization, identification and evaluation of cell performance degradation parameters and processes, integrity and reliability of the solid oxide electrolysis (SOEC) stacks, life-time prediction and extension of the SOEC stack, and cost reduction and economic manufacturing of the SOEC stacks. Besides the solid oxide cells, balance of the hydrogen generating plant also needs significant development. These issues are process and ohmic heat source needed for maintaining the reaction temperature (~830°C), high temperature heat exchangers and recuperators, equal distribution of the reactants into each cell, system analysis of hydrogen and associated energy generating plant, and cost optimization. An economic analysis of this plant was performed using the standardized H2A Analysis Methodology developed by the Department of Energy (DOE) Hydrogen Program, and using realistic financial and …
Date: March 1, 2008
Creator: Sohal, M. S.; O'Brien, J. E.; Stoots, C. M.; McKellar, M. G.; Herring, J. S. & Harvego, E. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Challenging Nuclear Structure Models Through a Microscopic Description of Proton Inelastic Scattering off 208Pb (open access)

Challenging Nuclear Structure Models Through a Microscopic Description of Proton Inelastic Scattering off 208Pb

A fully microscopic calculation of inelastic proton scattering off {sup 208}Pb is presented, and compared to experimental scattering data for incident proton energies between 65 and 201 MeV. By constructing the nucleon-nucleus interaction through the folding of nuclear structure information with a reliable nucleon-nucleon effective interaction that has no adjusted parameter, a consistent framework is built, for probing the influence of different descriptions of nuclear structure on nucleon inelastic scattering predictions. The absence of phenomenological normalization in this framework guarantees a unique and unambiguous interpretation of our calculations in terms of quality of the underlying nuclear structure description: a feature that had been reserved, until recently, to the electron probe. This tool is used to investigate the effect of long range correlations embedded in excited states, on calculated inelastic observables, demonstrating the sensitivity of nucleon scattering predictions to details of the nuclear structure.
Date: March 20, 2008
Creator: Dupuis, M.; Karataglidis, S.; Bauge, E.; Delaroche, J.-P. & Gogny, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Changes in Geant4 Electromagnetics from Release 4.6.1 to 4.9.1 (open access)

Changes in Geant4 Electromagnetics from Release 4.6.1 to 4.9.1

None
Date: March 25, 2008
Creator: Perl, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of EGS Fracture Network Lifecycles (open access)

Characterization of EGS Fracture Network Lifecycles

Geothermal energy is relatively clean, and is an important non-hydrocarbon source of energy. It can potentially reduce our dependence on fossil fuels and contribute to reduction in carbon emissions. High-temperature geothermal areas can be used for electricity generation if they contain permeable reservoirs of hot water or steam that can be extracted. The biggest challenge to achieving the full potential of the nation’s resources of this kind is maintaining and creating the fracture networks required for the circulation, heating, and extraction of hot fluids. The fundamental objective of the present research was to understand how fracture networks are created in hydraulic borehole injection experiments, and how they subsequently evolve. When high-pressure fluids are injected into boreholes in geothermal areas, they flow into hot rock at depth inducing thermal cracking and activating critically stressed pre-existing faults. This causes earthquake activity which, if monitored, can provide information on the locations of the cracks formed, their time-development and the type of cracking underway, e.g., whether shear movement on faults occurred or whether cracks opened up. Ultimately it may be possible to monitor the critical earthquake parameters in near-real-time so the information can be used to guide the hydraulic injection while it is in …
Date: March 31, 2008
Creator: Foulger, Gillian R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library