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The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 156, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009 (open access)

The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 156, No. 70, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009

Semi-weekly newspaper from Bastrop, Texas that includes local, state and national news along with advertising.
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Wright, Cyndi
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 288, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009 (open access)

The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 288, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009

Daily newspaper from Baytown, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Clements, Clifford E.
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
Crosscutting Technology Development at the Center for Advanced Separation Technologies (open access)

Crosscutting Technology Development at the Center for Advanced Separation Technologies

The U.S. is the largest producer of mining products in the world. In 2003, U.S. mining operations produced $57 billion worth of raw materials that contributed a total of $564 billion to the nation's wealth. Despite these contributions, the mining industry has not been well supported with research and development funds as compared to mining industries in other countries. To overcome this problem, the Center for Advanced Separation Technologies (CAST) was established to develop technologies that can be used by the U.S. mining industry to create new products, reduce production costs, and meet environmental regulations. Originally set up by Virginia Tech and West Virginia University, this endeavor has been expanded into a seven-university consortium -- Virginia Tech, West Virginia University, University of Kentucky, University of Utah, Montana Tech, New Mexico Tech and University of Nevada, Reno - that is supported through U.S. DOE Cooperative Agreement No. DE-FC26-02NT41607: Crosscutting Technology Development at the Center for Advanced Separation Technologies. Much of the research to be conducted with Cooperative Agreement funds will be longer-term, high-risk, basic research and will be carried out in five broad areas: (1) Solid-solid separation; (2) Solid-liquid separation; (3) Chemical/biological extraction; (4) Modeling and control; and (5) Environmental control. …
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Hull, Christopher
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impacts of Biofilm Formation on Cellulose Fermentation (open access)

Impacts of Biofilm Formation on Cellulose Fermentation

This project addressed four major areas of investigation: i) characterization of formation of Cellulomonas uda biofilms on cellulose; ii) characterization of Clostridium phytofermentans biofilm development; colonization of cellulose and its regulation; iii) characterization of Thermobifida fusca biofilm development; colonization of cellulose and its regulation; and iii) description of the architecture of mature C. uda, C. phytofermentans, and T. fusca biofilms. This research is aimed at advancing understanding of biofilm formation and other complex processes involved in the degradation of the abundant cellulosic biomass, and the biology of the microbes involved. Information obtained from these studies is invaluable in the development of practical applications, such as the single-step bioconversion of cellulose-containing residues to fuels and other bioproducts. Our results have clearly shown that cellulose-decomposing microbes rapidly colonize cellulose and form complex structures typical of biofilms. Furthermore, our observations suggest that, as cells multiply on nutritive surfaces during biofilms formation, dramatic cell morphological changes occur. We speculated that morphological changes, which involve a transition from rod-shaped cells to more rounded forms, might be more apparent in a filamentous microbe. In order to test this hypothesis, we included in our research a study of biofilm formation by T. fusca, a thermophilic cellulolytic actinomycete …
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Leschine, Susan
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microbial Fermentation of Abundant Biopolymers: Cellulose and Chitin (open access)

Microbial Fermentation of Abundant Biopolymers: Cellulose and Chitin

Our research has dealt with seven major areas of investigation: i) characterization of cellulolytic members of microbial consortia, with special attention recently given to Clostridium phytofermentans, a bacterium that decomposes cellulose and produces uncommonly large amounts of ethanol, ii) investigations of the chitinase system of Cellulomonas uda; including the purification and characterization of ChiA, the major component of this enzyme system, iii) molecular cloning, sequence and structural analysis of the gene that encodes ChiA in C. uda, iv) biofilm formation by C. uda on nutritive surfaces, v) investigations of the effects of humic substances on cellulose degradation by anaerobic cellulolytic microbes, vi) studies of nitrogen metabolism in cellulolytic anaerobes, and vii) understanding the molecular architecture of the multicomplex cellulase-xylanase system of Clostridium papyrosolvens. Also, progress toward completing the research of more recent projects is briefly summarized. Major accomplishments include: 1. Characterization of Clostridium phytofermentans, a cellulose-fermenting, ethanol-producing bacterium from forest soil. The characterization of a new cellulolytic species isolated from a cellulose-decomposing microbial consortium from forest soil was completed. This bacterium is remarkable for the high concentrations of ethanol produced during cellulose fermentation, typically more than twice the concentration produced by other species of cellulolytic clostridia. 2. Examination of the …
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Leschine, Susan
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Minutes of the TXSSAR Board of Managers Meeting: October 31-November 1, 2009] (open access)

[Minutes of the TXSSAR Board of Managers Meeting: October 31-November 1, 2009]

Minutes of the Texas Society of the Sons of the American Revolution (TXSSAR) Board of Managers meeting covering the general sessions, held October 31-November 1, 2009 at the Holiday Inn Select, in Richardson, Texas. It includes information about the committees and business covered by the attending members.
Date: 2009-10-31/2009-11-01
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 117, No. 214, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009 (open access)

Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 117, No. 214, Ed. 1 Saturday, October 31, 2009

Daily newspaper from Perry, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Brown, Gloria
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Phase I (CATTS Theory), Phase II (Milne Point), Phase III (Hydrate Ridge) (open access)

Phase I (CATTS Theory), Phase II (Milne Point), Phase III (Hydrate Ridge)

This study introduces a new type of “cumulative seismic attribute” (CATT) which quantifies gas hydrates resources in Hydrate Ridge offshore Oregon. CATT is base on case-specific transforms that portray hydrated reservoir properties. In this study we used a theoretical rock physics model to correct measured velocity log data.
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of Seamless Superconducting Radio Frequency Cavities from Ultra-fine Grained Niobium, Phase II Final Report (open access)

Production of Seamless Superconducting Radio Frequency Cavities from Ultra-fine Grained Niobium, Phase II Final Report

The positron and electron linacs of the International Linear Collider (ILC) will require over 14,000, nine-cell, one meter length, superconducting radio frequency (SRF) cavities [ILC Reference Design Report, 2007]. Manufacturing on this scale will benefit from more efficient fabrication methods. The current methods of fabricating SRF cavities involve deep drawing of the halves of each of the elliptical cells and joining them by high-vacuum, electron beam welding, with at least 19 circumferential welds per cavity. The welding is costly and has undesirable effects on the cavity surfaces, including grain-scale surface roughening at the weld seams. Hydroforming of seamless tubes avoids welding, but hydroforming of coarse-grained seamless tubes results in strain-induced surface roughening. Surface roughness limits accelerating fields, because asperities prematurely exceed the critical magnetic field and become normal conducting. This project explored the technical and economic feasibility of an improved processing method for seamless tubes for hydroforming. Severe deformation of bulk material was first used to produce a fine structure, followed by extrusion and flow-forming methods of tube making. Extrusion of the randomly oriented, fine-grained bulk material proceeded under largely steady-state conditions, and resulted in a uniform structure, which was found to be finer and more crystallographically random than standard …
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: Roy Crooks, Ph.D., P.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SPARTICUS: Small Particles in Cirrus Science and Operations Plan (open access)

SPARTICUS: Small Particles in Cirrus Science and Operations Plan

From a mass-weighted perspective, cirrus clouds exert an enormous influence on the radiative energy budget of the earth’s climate system. Owing to their location in the cold upper troposphere, cirrus can significantly reduce the outgoing longwave radiation while, at the same time, remaining relatively transmissive to solar energy. Thus, cirrus clouds are the only cloud genre that can exert a direct radiative warming influence on the climate system (Ackerman et al. 1988). It is not surprising, therefore, that general circulation models (GCMs) are especially sensitive to the presence of cirrus in the model atmosphere. Lohmann and Roeckner (1995), for instance, show that the climate sensitivity can vary by as much as 40% due to the properties of cirrus varying between transparent and opaque limits. Lohmann and Roeckner (1995) also identify a key feedback by cirrus that is often overlooked; on longer time scales cloud heating in the upper troposphere can act to maintain and modulate the general circulation of the atmosphere through accelerating the subtropical and polar jet streams. Understanding these mechanisms and representing them in models is complicated by the fact that cirrus properties vary over an enormous dynamic range compared to most other clouds.
Date: October 31, 2009
Creator: J Mace, E Jensen, G McFarquhar, J Comstock, T Ackerman, D Mitchell, X Liu, T Garrett
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library