Zircex Kinetics And Uranium Loss Study (open access)

Zircex Kinetics And Uranium Loss Study

"A study was made of the effects of temperature, impurities in the hydrogen chloride, flow rates, and niobium content on both the reaction rates and insoluble uranium losses in the Zircex Process is presented."
Date: November 13, 1957
Creator: Carter, Jr, T. J. & Stone, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Parks & Wildlife News, November 13, 1980 (open access)

Texas Parks & Wildlife News, November 13, 1980

Weekly newsletter discussing natural resources, parks, hunting and fishing, and other information related to the outdoors in Texas.
Date: November 13, 1980
Creator: Texas. Parks and Wildlife Department.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
RBE of Monoenergetic Fast Neutrons: Cytogenetic Effects in Maize (open access)

RBE of Monoenergetic Fast Neutrons: Cytogenetic Effects in Maize

Investigations on the relative biological effectiveness (RBE) of densely ionizing radiations (with high LET, rate of linear energy transfer) are of importance in both fundamental and applied radiobiology. In the latter, they serve as a basis in setting permissible exposure levels for types of radiation about which little long range experience is available. Some of the best RBE studies have been done on chromosomal aberrations. The difficulty is determining RBE on the basis of chromosomal exchanges or 2-break aberrations is that the dose-response curves differ for radiations of different LET and dose rate. The dose-squared term tends to predominate with radiations of low LET (such as γ rays and most X rays) and high doses or dose rates; the linear term dominates with high LET tracks in general and at low doses or dose rates. The shape of the curves is thought to reflect the existence of two classes of mechanisms by which chromosome exchanges are produced; exchanges caused by the passage of a single ionizing particle account for the linear component of the dose-response curve, exchanges due to the interaction of effects of two independent ionizing particles are responsible for the dose-squared component. This model has been amply confirmed …
Date: November 13, 1963
Creator: Smith, H. H.; Bateman, J. L.; Quastler, H. & Rossi, H. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reutilization of DNA-Thymine, and Conversion of RNA-Pyrimidines for DNA-Thymine, in Normal Rat Bone Marrow Studies with Tritiated Nucleosides (open access)

Reutilization of DNA-Thymine, and Conversion of RNA-Pyrimidines for DNA-Thymine, in Normal Rat Bone Marrow Studies with Tritiated Nucleosides

If one injects into an animal H3-thymidine, 50% of it is incorporated into deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), within approximately 30 to 45 minutes, while the rest is catabolized. A storage of H3-thymidine for later incorporation into DNA does not occur, on the basis of available evidence. Once incorporated, the label remains bound to DNA until cell death and no unequivocal evidence has as yet been presented to indicate metabolic renewal or intracellular turnover of the DNA molecule. The loss of labeled DNA from the bone marrow is therefore directly influenced by the rate of proliferation of the various cell types with release of mature cells into the peripheral blood.
Date: November 13, 1963
Creator: Feinendegen, L. E.; Bond, V. P.; Cronkite, E. P. & Hughes, W. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Use of Neutron Irradiations in the Brookhaven Mutations Program (open access)

Use of Neutron Irradiations in the Brookhaven Mutations Program

In brief, these facilities consist of a 250 KvP X-ray generator; two areas of a research reactor, one a well thermalized unit of moderate capacity and a larger area with a mixed thermal and fast neutron distribution, all of which are used for brief, acute exposure. A 10 acre field, currently with almost 4000 curies of cobalt 60, serves to irradiate entire plants for either short or long periods of time. Recently, the flux density of the thermal column was increased by a factor of 5 over the original density. This was accomplished by lowering the thermal column 12 inches deeper into the reactor shield. Fast neutrons at this higher flux density are also available to the cooperator. An additional facility available to the program is the array of kilocurie gamma sources in the Nuclear Engineering Department of Brookhaven National Laboratory.
Date: November 13, 1963
Creator: Miksche, J. P. & Shapiro, S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Choice of Electrical Conductor on Power Requirements of Low Temperature Magnets (open access)

Effect of Choice of Electrical Conductor on Power Requirements of Low Temperature Magnets

Introduction. As has been shown by Post, the total power required to produce a strong, steady-state magnetic field is strongly dependent upon the temperature at which the electrical conductor of the magnet operates. The power required for operation at very low temperature can, in some cases, be much less than that required for ambient temperature operation. The power required for low temperature operation depends on many system characteristics which include the metal chosen for the electrical conductor, the purity of this metal, and efficiency of the refrigeration equipment. This paper shows the relative power requirement, as a function of temperature, of a magnet with a particular shape and with a field strength of 100,000 gauss. Data is shown for three electrical conductors: copper, aluminum, and sodium.
Date: November 13, 1959
Creator: Mallon, Richard G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 45, Number 46, Pages 8067-8208, November 13, 2020 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 45, Number 46, Pages 8067-8208, November 13, 2020

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: November 13, 2020
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Annual Financial Report: 2018 (open access)

Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Annual Financial Report: 2018

Annual financial report of the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement documenting income, expenditures, and other relevant financial information for fiscal year 2018
Date: November 13, 2018
Creator: Texas Commission on Law Enforcement
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
General Reactor-Engineering Research Quarterly Progress Report [for] Period Ending August 31, 1950 (open access)

General Reactor-Engineering Research Quarterly Progress Report [for] Period Ending August 31, 1950

Technical report describing results on work which cannot be ascribed to one reactor program. Outlines the results of miscellaneous corrosion testing, the development of new shielding materials, the testing of irradiated plastics, and general heat transfer investigation. [From Preface]
Date: November 13, 1950
Creator: Lyon, R. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Primer: Congress's Constitutional Authority with Regard to the Armed Forces (open access)

Defense Primer: Congress's Constitutional Authority with Regard to the Armed Forces

This report provides an overview of Congress's war powers under the U.S. Constitution.
Date: November 13, 2018
Creator: Elsea, Jennifer K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Defense Primer: Legal Authorities for the Use of Military Forces (open access)

Defense Primer: Legal Authorities for the Use of Military Forces

This report provides an overview of United States war powers.
Date: November 13, 2018
Creator: Elsea, Jennifer K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Turkey Poults: For Week Ending November 8, 1980 (open access)

Texas Turkey Poults: For Week Ending November 8, 1980

Weekly report of the Texas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service on turkey poult numbers in Texas and compared with other states. It includes compiled statistics across six consecutive weeks during two years for turkey eggs set and poults hatched.
Date: November 13, 1980
Creator: Texas Crop and Livestock Reporting Service
Object Type: Report
System: The Portal to Texas History
J/(ps) Production via Initial State Radiation in e+e- ----> (m)+(m)-y at an e+e- Center-of-Mass Energy near 10.6 GeV (open access)

J/(ps) Production via Initial State Radiation in e+e- ----> (m)+(m)-y at an e+e- Center-of-Mass Energy near 10.6 GeV

The authors have used a study of the process e{sup +}e{sup -} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup -} {gamma} at a center-of-mass energy near the {Upsilon}(4S) resonance for a {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup -} invariant mass range near the J/{psi} mass to extract the cross section {sigma}(e{sup +}e{sup -} {yields} J/{psi}{gamma} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup -}{gamma}). The data set, corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 88.4 fb{sup -1}, was collected using the BABAR detector at the PEP-II collider. They measure the product {Lambda}(J/{psi} {yields} e{sup +}e{sup -}) B(J/{psi} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup -}) to be 0.330 {+-} 0.008 {+-} 0.007 keV. Using the world averages for B(J/{psi} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{mu}{sup -}) and B(J/{psi} {yields} e{sup +}e{sup -}), they derive the J/{psi} electronic and total widths: {Lambda}(J/{psi} {yields} e{sup +}e{sup -}) = 5.61 {+-} 0.20 keV and {Lambda} = 94.7 {+-} 4.4 keV.
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Wright, D & Collaboration, T B
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contribution of Neutron Beta Decay to Radiation Belt Pumping from High Altitude Nuclear Explosion (open access)

Contribution of Neutron Beta Decay to Radiation Belt Pumping from High Altitude Nuclear Explosion

In 1962, several satellites were lost following high altitude nuclear tests by the United States and the Soviet Union. These satellite failures were caused by energetic electrons injected into the earth's radiation belts from the beta decay of bomb produced fission fragments and neutrons. It has been 40 years since the last high altitude nuclear test; there are now many more satellites in orbit, and it is important to understand their vulnerability to radiation belt pumping from nuclear explosions at high altitude or in space. This report presents the results of a calculation of the contribution of neutron beta decay to artificial belt pumping. For most high altitude nuclear explosions, neutrons are expected to make a smaller contribution than fission products to the total trapped electron inventory, and their contribution is usually neglected. However, the neutron contribution may dominate in cases where the fission product contribution is suppressed due to the altitude or geomagnetic latitude of the nuclear explosion, and for regions of the radiation belts with field lines far from the detonation point. In any case, an accurate model of belt pumping from high altitude nuclear explosions, and a self-consistent explanation of the 1962 data, require inclusion of the …
Date: November 13, 2002
Creator: Marrs, R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Branching Fraction and Polarization for the Decay B- ---> D*0K*- (open access)

Measurement of the Branching Fraction and Polarization for the Decay B- ---> D*0K*-

None
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Aubert, B; Wright, D & Collaboration, T B
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Implications of Convective Scrape-Off Layer Transport for Fusion Reactors with Solid and Liquid Walls (open access)

Implications of Convective Scrape-Off Layer Transport for Fusion Reactors with Solid and Liquid Walls

Recent experimental observations in tokamaks indicate enhanced convection of plasma blobs toward the main chamber wall. Potential implications of these observations for reactors are examined here. Two dimensional plasma edge calculations are performed with UEDGE, including convective transport consistent with present experiments. This is coupled to a kinetic neutral calculation using the code NUT, to compute the hot neutral flux to the wall. The inclusion of convection increases sputtering of the wall by roughly an order of magnitude. For tungsten walls, erosion (neglecting re-deposition) is estimated to be {approx}0.6 mm per year. Plasma contamination could be serious for high Z walls of W or Sn, and might preclude ignition (based on empirical screening estimates). Low Z liquid materials offer much better prospects for acceptable plasma contamination. Rough estimates of dust generation from such erosion rates imply significant safety issues. Plasma transport via blobs can also significantly modify models of impurity redeposition.
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Kotschenreuther, M; Rognlien, T D & Valanju, P
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diagnosing Plasma Gradients Using Spectral Line Shapes (open access)

Diagnosing Plasma Gradients Using Spectral Line Shapes

The development of a set of stable implosions using indirectly driven plastic microspheres with argon (0.1 atm) doped deuterium (50 atm) has provided a unique source for testing the plasma spectroscopy of the high energy density imploded core. The core reaches electron densities of > 10{sup 24} cm{sup -3} with temperatures of {approx} 1 keV and has been shown to be reproducible on a shot to shot basis. Moreover, it has been shown that not only the peak temperature and density are consistent, but that the temporal evolution of the mean temperature and density of the final phase of the implosion is also reproducible. These imploding cores provide a unique opportunity to test aspects of plasma spectroscopy that are difficult to study in other plasmas and to develop methods to test stable hydrodynamics. We present experimental results and discuss spectroscopic analysis algorithms to determine consistent temperature and density fits to determine gradients in the plasma.
Date: November 13, 2000
Creator: Back, C. A.; Golovkin, I.; Mancini, R.; Missalla, T.; Landen, O. L.; Lee, R. W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Smoothing of Diamond-Turned Substrates for Extreme Ultraviolet Illuminators (open access)

Smoothing of Diamond-Turned Substrates for Extreme Ultraviolet Illuminators

Condenser optics in extreme ultraviolet lithography (EUVL) systems are subjected to frequent replacement as they are positioned close to the illumination source, where increased heating and contamination occur. In the case of aspherical condenser elements made by optical figuring/finishing, their replacement can be very expensive (several hundred thousand dollars). One approach to this problem would be to manufacture inexpensive illuminator optics that meet all required specifications and could be replaced at no substantial cost. Diamond-turned metal substrates are a factor of 100 less expensive than conventional aspherical substrates but have insufficient finish, leading to unacceptably low EUV reflectance after multilayer coating. In this work it is shown that, by applying a smoothing film prior to multilayer coating, the high spatial frequency roughness of a diamond-turned metal substrate is reduced from 1.76 to 0.27 nm rms while the figure slope error is maintained at acceptable levels. Metrology tests performed at various stages of the fabrication of the element demonstrated that it satisfied all critical figure and finish specifications as illuminator. Initial experimental results on the stability and performance of the optic under a real EUVL plasma source environment show no accelerated degradation when compared to conventional substrates.
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Soufli, R; Spiller, E; Schmidt, M A; Robinson, J C; Baker, S L; Ratti, S et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design Integration of Liquid Surface Divertors (open access)

Design Integration of Liquid Surface Divertors

The US Enabling Technology Program in fusion is investigating the use of free flowing liquid surfaces facing the plasma. We have been studying the issues in integrating a liquid surface divertor into a configuration based upon an advanced tokamak, specifically the ARIES-RS configuration. The simplest form of such a divertor is to extend the flow of the liquid first wall into the divertor and thereby avoid introducing additional fluid streams. In this case, one can modify the flow above the divertor to enhance thermal mixing. For divertors with flowing liquid metals (or other electrically conductive fluids) MHD (magneto-hydrodynamics) effects are a major concern and can produce forces that redirect flow and suppress turbulence. An evaluation of Flibe (a molten salt) as a working fluid was done to assess a case in which the MHD forces could be largely neglected. Initial studies indicate that, for a tokamak with high power density, an integrated Flibe first wall and divertor does not seem workable. We have continued work with molten salts and replaced Flibe with Flinabe, a mixture of lithium and sodium fluorides, that has some potential because of its lower melting temperature. Sn and Sn-Li have also been considered, and the initial …
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Nygren, R E; Cowgill, D F; Ulrickson, M A; Nelson, B E; Fogarty, P J; Rognlien, T D et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Prompt GRB optical follow-up experiments (open access)

Prompt GRB optical follow-up experiments

Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are brief, randomly located, releases of gamma-ray energy from unknown celestial sources that occur almost daily. The study of GRBs has undergone a revolution in the past three years due to an international effort of follow-up observations of coordinates provided by Beppo/SAX and IPN GRB. These follow-up observations have shown that GRBs are at cosmological distances and interact with surrounding material as described by the fireball model. However, prompt optical counterparts have only been seen in one case and are therefore very rare or much dimmer than the sensitivity of the current instruments. Unlike later time afterglows, prompt optical measurements would provide information on the GRB progenitor. LOTIS is the very first automated and dedicated telescope system that actively utilizes the GRB Coordinates Network (GCN) and it attempts to measure simultaneous optical light curve associated with GRBs. After 3 years of running, LOTIS has responded to 75 GRB triggers. The lack of any optical signal in any of the LOTIS images places numerical limits on the surrounding matter density, and other physical parameters in the environment of the GRB progenitor. This paper presents LOTIS results and describes other prompt GRB follow-up experiments including the Super-LOTIS at …
Date: November 13, 2000
Creator: Park, H. S.; Williams, G.; Ables, E.; Band, D.; Barthelmy, S.; Bionta, R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Toward Robust Climate Baselining: Objective Assessment of Climate Change Using Widely Distributed Miniaturized Sensors for Accurate World-Wide Geophysical Measurements (open access)

Toward Robust Climate Baselining: Objective Assessment of Climate Change Using Widely Distributed Miniaturized Sensors for Accurate World-Wide Geophysical Measurements

A gap-free, world-wide, ocean-, atmosphere-, and land surface-spanning geophysical data-set of three decades time-duration containing the full set of geophysical parameters characterizing global weather is the scientific perquisite for defining the climate; the generally-accepted definition in the meteorological community is that climate is the 30-year running-average of weather. Until such a tridecadal climate base line exists, climate change discussions inevitably will have a semi-speculative, vs. a purely scientific, character, as the baseline against which changes are referenced will be at least somewhat uncertain. The contemporary technology base provides ways-and-means for commencing the development of such a meteorological measurement-intensive climate baseline, moreover with a program budget far less than the {approx}$2.5 B/year which the US. currently spends on ''global change'' studies. In particular, the recent advent of satellite-based global telephony enables real-time control of, and data-return from, instrument packages of very modest scale, and Silicon Revolution-based sensor, data-processing and -storage advances permit 'intelligent' data-gathering payloads to be created with 10 gram-scale mass budgets. A geophysical measurement system implemented in such modern technology is a populous constellation 03 long-lived, highly-miniaturized robotic weather stations deployed throughout the weather-generating portions of the Earths atmosphere, throughout its oceans and across its land surfaces. Leveraging the …
Date: November 13, 2001
Creator: Teller, E.; Leith, C.; Canavan, G.; Marion, J. & Wood, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of phosphor scintillator-based detectors for soft x-rayand vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopy of magnetically confined fusion plasmas (open access)

Development of phosphor scintillator-based detectors for soft x-rayand vacuum ultraviolet spectroscopy of magnetically confined fusion plasmas

None
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Soukhanovskii, V. A.; Regan, S. P.; May, M. J.; Finkenthal, M. & Moos, H. W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of the Branching Fraction for B(plus or minus) ----> Xc0K(plus or minus) (open access)

Measurement of the Branching Fraction for B(plus or minus) ----> Xc0K(plus or minus)

None
Date: November 13, 2003
Creator: Wright, D & Collaboration, T B
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Statistical error in particle simulations of low mach number flows (open access)

Statistical error in particle simulations of low mach number flows

We present predictions for the statistical error due to finite sampling in the presence of thermal fluctuations in molecular simulation algorithms. The expressions are derived using equilibrium statistical mechanics. The results show that the number of samples needed to adequately resolve the flowfield scales as the inverse square of the Mach number. Agreement of the theory with direct Monte Carlo simulations shows that the use of equilibrium theory is justified.
Date: November 13, 2000
Creator: Hadjiconstantinou, N G & Garcia, A L
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library