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The complexities of proanthocyanidin biosynthesis and its regulation in plants (open access)

The complexities of proanthocyanidin biosynthesis and its regulation in plants

Article describes how proanthocyanidins (PAs) are natural flavan-3-ol polymers that contribute protection to plants under biotic and abiotic stress, benefits to human health, and bitterness and astringency to food products. This review extends the conventional understanding with recent findings that provide new insights to address lingering questions and focus strategies for manipulating PA traits in plants.
Date: November 26, 2022
Creator: Yu, Keji; Song, Yushuang; Lin, Jinxing & Dixon, R. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
When the guest of honor is a party pro, it better be good: Austin fête celebrates author (open access)

When the guest of honor is a party pro, it better be good: Austin fête celebrates author

Article about Lara Shriftman and Elizabeth Harrison, co-owners of marketing, public relations, and planning firm Harrison & Shriftman and co-authors of the book "Party Confidential."
Date: November 26, 2006
Creator: Scheidnes, Jean
System: The UNT Digital Library
Edge-plasmon assisted electro-optical modulator (open access)

Edge-plasmon assisted electro-optical modulator

Article demonstrates an efficient electro-optical modulation by using an edge-plasmon mode specific for the hybrid plasmonic waveguide.
Date: November 26, 2019
Creator: Drachev, Vladimir P.; Pshenichnyuk, Ivan A.; Nazarikov, Gleb I.; Kosolobov, Sergey S. & Maimistov, Andrei I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Using a Novel Approach to Estimate Packing Density and Related Electrical Resistance in Multiwall Carbon Nanotube Networks (open access)

Using a Novel Approach to Estimate Packing Density and Related Electrical Resistance in Multiwall Carbon Nanotube Networks

Article using contrast image processing to estimate the concentration of multi-wall carbon nanotubes (MWCNT) in a given network.
Date: September 25, 2020
Creator: Philipose, Usha; Jiang, Yan; Farmer, Gavin; Howard, Chris; Harcrow, Michael; Littler, Chris et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Dense Stereovision System for 3D Body Imaging (open access)

A Dense Stereovision System for 3D Body Imaging

Article presents a 3D body imaging system built upon stereovision technology which utilizes paired, high-resolution single-lens reflex (SLR) cameras to image the front and back body surfaces of a person, and robust and efficient stereo matching algorithms to reconstruct the 3D surface of the body with high-density data clouds.
Date: November 26, 2019
Creator: Yao, Ming & Xu, Bugao
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Exploratory Evaluation of Tyrosine Hydroxylase Inhibition in Planaria as a Model for Parkinsonism (open access)

An Exploratory Evaluation of Tyrosine Hydroxylase Inhibition in Planaria as a Model for Parkinsonism

Study examines planaria as potential models of parkinsonism for the purpose of screening potential therapeutic agents.
Date: November 26, 2013
Creator: Prokai, David; Nguyen, Thinh; Kamrowski, Kurt; Chandra, Ashwin; Talamantes, Tatjana; Baxter, Lewis R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transverse energy distribution, charged particle multiplicities and spectra in /sup 16/O--nucleus collisions (open access)

Transverse energy distribution, charged particle multiplicities and spectra in /sup 16/O--nucleus collisions

The HELIOS (High Energy Lepton and Ion Spectrometer) experiment, installed at the CERN Super Proton Synchrotron, proposes to examine in detail the physical properties of a state of high energy created in nuclei by ultra-relativistic nucleus-nucleus collisions. It is generally believed that, at high densities or temperatures, a phase transition to a plasma of quark and gluons will occur. The dynamic of the expansion of such a plasma and its subsequent condensation into a hadron gas should markedly affect the composition and momentum distribution of the emerging particles and photons. The HELIOS experimental setup therefore combines 4..pi.. calorimetric coverage with measurements of inclusive particle spectra, two particle correlations, low and high mass lepton pairs and photons. The emphasis is placed on transverse energy flow (E/sub /tau//) measurements with good energy resolution, and the ability to trigger the acquisition of data in a variety of E/sub /tau// ranges, thereby selecting the impact parameter or the violence of the collisions. This short note presents HELIOS results, for the most part still preliminary, on /sup 16/O--nucleus collisions at the incident energies of 60 and 200 GeV per nucleon. The E /sub /tau// distributions from Al, Ag and W targets are discussed and compared …
Date: November 26, 1987
Creator: Sunier, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analytic technique for router comparison (open access)

Analytic technique for router comparison

A model for printed circuit boards which can be used to predict the probability that a router will successfully make a connection is presented. The model reflects certain characteristics of the circuit board that is being routed and the model incrementally changes as the board is routed. Routing procedures typically have certain parameters which influence selection of the set of paths that are explored, and determine the order of exploration. These parameters obviously influence the probability that a particular connection can be made. These parameters may also be used to formulate a model of the behavior of a particular routing procedure.
Date: November 26, 1975
Creator: Wilson, D. C. & Smith, R. J., II
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental Considerations in the Studies of Corrosion Resistant Alloys for High-Level Radioactive Waste Containment (open access)

Environmental Considerations in the Studies of Corrosion Resistant Alloys for High-Level Radioactive Waste Containment

The corrosion resistance of Alloy 22 (UNS No.: N06022) was studied in simulated ground water of different pH values and ionic contents at various temperatures. Potentiodynamic polarization techniques were used to study the electrochemical behavior and measure the critical potentials in the various systems. Alloy 22 was found to be resistant to localized corrosion in the simulated ground waters tested.
Date: November 26, 2001
Creator: Ilevbare, G O; Lian, T & Farmer, J C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Two-Phase Emission Detector for Measuring Coherent Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering (open access)

Two-Phase Emission Detector for Measuring Coherent Neutrino-Nucleus Scattering

Coherent scattering is a flavor-blind, high-rate, as yet undetected neutrino interaction predicted by the Standard Model. We propose to use a compact (kg-scale), two-phase (liquid-gas) argon ionization detector to measure coherent neutrino scattering off nuclei. In our approach, neutrino-induced nuclear recoils in the liquid produce a weak ionization signal, which is transported into a gas under the influence of an electric field, amplified via electroluminescence, and detected by phototubes or avalanche diodes. This paper describes the features of the detector, and estimates signal and background rates for a reactor neutrino source. Relatively compact detectors of this type, capable of detecting coherent scattering, offer a new approach to flavor-blind detection of man-made and astronomical neutrinos, and may allow development of compact neutrino detectors capable of nonintrusive real-time monitoring of fissile material in reactors.
Date: November 26, 2003
Creator: Bernstein, A & Hagmann, C A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of BK7 Substrate Solarization on the Performance of Hafnia and Silica Multilayer Mirrors (open access)

Influence of BK7 Substrate Solarization on the Performance of Hafnia and Silica Multilayer Mirrors

Transport mirrors within the National Ignition Facility, a 192-beam 4-MJ fusion laser at 1053 nm, will be exposed to backscattered light from plasmas created from fusion targets and backlighters. This backscattered light covers the UV and visible spectrum from 351-600 nm. The transport mirror BK7 substrates will be intentionally solarized to absorb >95% of the backscattered light to prevent damage to the metallic mechanical support hardware. Solarization has minimal impact on the 351- and 1053-nm laser-induced damage threshold or the reflected wavefront of the multilayer hafnia silica coating. Radiation sources of various energies were examined for BK7 darkening efficiency within the UV and visible region with 1.1 MeV gamma rays from a Cobalt 60 source ultimately being selected. Finally, bleaching rates were measured at elevated temperatures to generate a model for predicting the lifetime at ambient conditions (20 C), before solarized BK7 substrates exceed 5% transmission in the UV and visible region. Over a 30-mm thickness, BK7 glass will bleach in 10 years to 5% transmission at 600 nm, the most transmissive wavelengths over the 351-600 nm regions.
Date: November 26, 2002
Creator: Stolz, C J; Menapace, J A; Genin, F; Ehrmann, P; Miller, P & Rogowski, G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interfacial Control of Creep Deformation in Ultrafine Lamellar TiAl (open access)

Interfacial Control of Creep Deformation in Ultrafine Lamellar TiAl

Solute effect on the creep resistance of two-phase lamellar TiAl with an ultrafine microstructure creep-deformed in a low-stress (LS) creep regime [where a linear creep behavior was observed] has been investigated. The resulted deformation substructure and in-situ TEM experiment revealed that interface sliding by the motion of pre-existing interfacial dislocations is the predominant deformation mechanism in LS creep regime. Solute segregation at lamellar interfaces and interfacial precipitation caused by the solute segregation result in a beneficial effect on the creep resistance of ultrafine lamellar TiAl in LS creep regime.
Date: November 26, 2002
Creator: Hsiung, L M
System: The UNT Digital Library
Controlling Topological States in Topological/Normal Insulator Heterostructures (open access)

Controlling Topological States in Topological/Normal Insulator Heterostructures

This article contains a systematic investigation of the nature of the nontrivial interface states in topological/normal insulator (TI/NI) heterostructures.
Date: November 26, 2018
Creator: Costa, Marcio; Costa, Antônio T.; Freitas, Walter A.; Schmidt, Tome M.; Buongiorno Nardelli, Marco & Fazzio, Adalberto
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Progress in the Development of Capsule Targets for the Nation Ignition Facility (open access)

Recent Progress in the Development of Capsule Targets for the Nation Ignition Facility

The capsule targets for ignition experiments at the National Ignition Facility must meet very exacting requirements. Primary among them is an extremely high degree of symmetry at all length scales for the 2-mm-diameter 150-{micro}m-walled capsule. At LLNL work is in progress to produce both polyimide and sputtered beryllium targets that meet these specifications. Both of these targets require a thin-walled spherical-shell plastic mandrel upon which the beryllium or polyimide ablator is deposited. In this paper we report on recent progress in developing NIF capsules that meet the demanding design requirements.
Date: November 26, 2002
Creator: Cook, R; Anthamatten, M; Armstrong, J P; Letts, S A; McEachern, R L; McQuillan, B W et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaporative Evolution of Brines from Synthetic Topoah Spring Tuff Pore Water, Yucca Mountain, NV (open access)

Evaporative Evolution of Brines from Synthetic Topoah Spring Tuff Pore Water, Yucca Mountain, NV

We are investigating the evaporation of pore water representative of the designated high-level-nuclear-waste repository at Yucca Mountain, NV to predict the range of brine compositions that may contact waste containers. These brines could form potentially corrosive thin films on the containers and impact their long-term integrity. Here we report the geochemistry of a relatively complex synthetic Topopah Spring Tuff pore water that was progressively evaporated in a series of experiments. The experiments were conducted in a closed vessel, heated to 95 C, and purged with atmospheric CO{sub 2}. Aqueous samples of the evaporating solution were taken and analyzed to determine the evolving water chemistry, and the final solid precipitate was analyzed by X-ray diffraction. The synthetic Topopah Spring Tuff water evolved towards a complex brine that contains about 3 mol% SO{sub 4}, and 2 mol% Ca, 3 mol% K, 5 mol% NO{sub 3}, 40 mol% Cl, and 47 mol% Na. Trends in the solution data and identification of CaSO{sub 4} solids (anhydrite and bassanite) suggest that fluorite, carbonate, sulfate, and Mg-silicate precipitation minimize the corrosion potential of ''sulfate type pore water'' by removing F, Ca, and Mg during the early stages of evaporation.
Date: November 26, 2002
Creator: Alai, M & Carroll, S
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron star accretion and the neutrino fireball (open access)

Neutron star accretion and the neutrino fireball

The mixing necessary to explain the ``Fe`` line widths and possibly the observed red shifts of 1987A is explained in terms of large scale, entropy conserving, up and down flows (calculated with a smooth particle 2-D code) taking place between the neutron star and the explosion shock wave due to the gravity and neutrino deposition. Depending upon conditions of entropy and mass flux further accretion takes place in single events, similar to relaxation oscillator, fed by the downward flows of low entropy matter. The shock, in turn, is driven by the upflow of the buoyant high entropy bubbles. Some accretion events will reach a temperature high enough to create a neutrino ``fireball,`` a region hot enough, 11 Mev, so as to be partially opaque to its own (neutrino) radiation. The continuing neutrino deposition drives the explosion shock until the entropy of matter flowing downwards onto the neutron star is high enough to prevent further accretion. This process should result in a robust supernova explosion.
Date: November 26, 1991
Creator: Colgate, S. A.; Herant, M. E. & Benz, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Leachability of decontamination reagents from cement waste forms (open access)

Leachability of decontamination reagents from cement waste forms

Brookhaven National Laboratory, in order to provide technical information needed by the US Nuclear Regulatory Commission to evaluate the adequacy of near-surface disposal of decontamination wstes, has begun to study the leachability of organic reagents from solidified simulated decontamination wastes. Laboratory-scale cement waste forms containing EDTA, picolinic acid or simulated LOMI decontamination reagent were leach tested. Samples containing an organic reagent on either mixed bed ion-exchange resins or anion exchange resins were tested. A fixed interval leach procedure was used, as well as the standard procedure ANS 16.1. The leachability indices measured for the release of the acid from resin/cement composites are: 10.1 for EDTA on mixed bed resins; 9.1 for picolinic acid on mixed bed resins; 9.2 for picolinic acid on anion exchange resins; 8.8 for picolinic acid in forms containing simulated low oxidation metallic ion (LOMI) reagent on mixed bed resins and 8.7 for picolinic acid in forms containing simulated LOMI reagent on anion exchange resins. The leachability indices measured varied with leach time and the data indicate that the release mechanism may not be simply diffusion controlled. 5 references, 2 tables.
Date: November 26, 1984
Creator: Piciulo, P. L.; Davis, M. S. & Adams, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
New particle searches at p p experiments (open access)

New particle searches at p p experiments

The search for new particles, such as the top quark, charged Higgs boson, heavy gauge bosons and supersymmetric particles, at the CERN and Fermilab proton-antiproton colliders is reviewed. A preliminary result by the CDF experiment of a reconstructed B meson mass peak from the decays B{sup {plus minus}} {yields} J/{psi}K{sup {plus minus}} and B{sup 0} {yields} J/{psi}K*{sup 0} is also presented. 22 refs., 13 figs.
Date: November 26, 1990
Creator: Sharha, J. (Johns Hopkins Univ., Baltimore, MD (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nondestructive, energy-dispersive, x-ray fluorescence analysis of product stream concentrations from reprocessed nuclear fuels (open access)

Nondestructive, energy-dispersive, x-ray fluorescence analysis of product stream concentrations from reprocessed nuclear fuels

Energy-dispersive x-ray fluorescence analysis (XRFA) can be used to measure nondestructively pure and mixed U/Pu concentrations in process streams and hold tank solutions. The 122-keV gamma ray from /sup 57/Co excites the actinide K x rays which are detected by a HPGe detector. A computer- and disk-based analyzer system provides capability for making on-stream analyses, and the noninvasive measurement is easily adapted directly to appropriate sized pipes used in a chemical reprocessing plant. Measurement times depend on concentration and purpose but vary from 100 to 500s for process control of strong to weak solutions. Accountability measurements require better accuracy thus more time; and for solutions containing plutonium, require a measurement of the solution radioactivity made with an automatic shutter that eclipses the two exciting sources. Plutonium isotopic abundances can also be obtained. Concentrations in single or dual element solutions from less than 1 g/l to over 200 g/l are determined to an accuracy of 0.2% after calibration of the system. For mixed solutions the unknown ratio of U to Pu is linearly related to the net U/Pu K x-ray intensities. Concentration values for ratios different than the calibration ratio require only small corrections to the values derived from a calibration …
Date: November 26, 1979
Creator: Camp, D. C. & Ruhter, W. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron star accretion and the neutrino fireball (open access)

Neutron star accretion and the neutrino fireball

The mixing necessary to explain the Fe'' line widths and possibly the observed red shifts of 1987A is explained in terms of large scale, entropy conserving, up and down flows (calculated with a smooth particle 2-D code) taking place between the neutron star and the explosion shock wave due to the gravity and neutrino deposition. Depending upon conditions of entropy and mass flux further accretion takes place in single events, similar to relaxation oscillator, fed by the downward flows of low entropy matter. The shock, in turn, is driven by the upflow of the buoyant high entropy bubbles. Some accretion events will reach a temperature high enough to create a neutrino fireball,'' a region hot enough, 11 Mev, so as to be partially opaque to its own (neutrino) radiation. The continuing neutrino deposition drives the explosion shock until the entropy of matter flowing downwards onto the neutron star is high enough to prevent further accretion. This process should result in a robust supernova explosion.
Date: November 26, 1991
Creator: Colgate, S.A. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (United States)); Herant, M.E. (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, MA (United States)) & Benz, W. (Steward Observatory, Tucson, AZ (United States))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) diagnostic system (open access)

Status of the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) diagnostic system

This paper presents the current status of the Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) diagnostics system. For the initial instruments active on TMX-U, the expansions or upgrades that have been implemented are outlined. For the newly added systems, more implementation details are presented.
Date: November 26, 1983
Creator: Coutts, G. W.; Coffield, F. E. & Hornady, R. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of the in situ measurement of terrestrial americium with a Ge(Li) spectrometer and a FIDLER (open access)

Comparison of the in situ measurement of terrestrial americium with a Ge(Li) spectrometer and a FIDLER

None
Date: November 26, 1973
Creator: Roth, S.J. & Huckabay, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear detection instrumentation for RSP measurements with the FFTF engineering mockup core (open access)

Nuclear detection instrumentation for RSP measurements with the FFTF engineering mockup core

None
Date: November 26, 1974
Creator: Mathis, M. V.; De Lorenzo, J. T.; Chiles, M. M. & Mihalczo, J. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computer-controlled sampling system for airborne radionuclides (open access)

Computer-controlled sampling system for airborne radionuclides

From nuclear science symposium; San Francisco, California, USA (14 Nov 1973). A computer-controlled air sampling system has been designed and is presently being constnacted. The self-contained, mobile system will collect and record data from eight meteorological sensors. This information will be used in the study of resuspen airborne activity. Air sampler operation will be based on comparisons between the meteorological data and the sampling criteria selected by the operator at the beginning of the run. Correlation between meteorological parameters and resuspension will be used to develop a predictive model. A description of system hardware and a discussion of the software concept are included. (auth)
Date: November 26, 1973
Creator: Koval, J. S.; Reichman, J. M. & Fry, C. O.
System: The UNT Digital Library