Project Hobo : Densities and Velocities Measured on Specimens from Instrument and Shot Holes (open access)

Project Hobo : Densities and Velocities Measured on Specimens from Instrument and Shot Holes

Abstracts. Results are given for bulk-density and pulse-velocity measurements performed on specimens of the Project Hobo medium. Test techniques, sample handling, and specimen preparation are described. Values are tabulated in terms of sample origin and geological identity.
Date: May 2, 1960
Creator: Guido, Raymond S. & Warner, Stanley E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Hobo : Shear and Compressional Velocity Measurements (open access)

Project Hobo : Shear and Compressional Velocity Measurements

Abstract. Three groups of 100 foot holes were drilled vertically downward from the floor of U 12e main tunnel and U 123.03 drift at the Nevada Test Site. Distances between holes in each group varied from 13 to 375 feet. One hole in each group was used a a 'shot hole'; the others for seismometers to records the energy generated in the 'shot hole'. Two types of recordings were made. One for dilatational or longitudinal "P" waves and one for transverse or shear "S" waves. Simultaneous recordings were made on photographic paper and on magnetic belts with a minimum of three "specimen" records at each hole, for each type of recording. The magnetic belts were transcribed to 1/2 inch IRIG tape for computer use. Rock density measurements were also made in the holes. From these data Poisson's Ratio, Bulk Modulus, Rigidity Modulus, and Young's Modulus were computed. Elastic constant values obtained 'in sltu' are much higher than those determined by soils laboratory tests on small rock samples. The data obtained are considered to be of exceptionally high accuracy.
Date: May 1960
Creator: Swain, R. J.; Heald, C. L. & Snodgrass, D. T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Six-Bar Linkage Using Digital Computer (open access)

Analysis of Six-Bar Linkage Using Digital Computer

Summary. The analysis of the motion of a six-bar linkage is difficult because of the large number of variables involved and the large number of calculations that have to be made for each position of the linkage. If a digital computer is used to make the calculations required for a multi-position analysis of a mechanism, it is feasible to design by analyzing a large numbers of similar linkages and selecting the optimum configuration. In this paper expressions have been derived for the output angle as a function of the input angle and the transmission angle as a function of the input angle for any single-degree-of-freedom six-bar linkage for which the parameters are known An example showing the usefulness of a six-bar computer program as a mechanism design tool is discussed.
Date: May 20, 1960
Creator: Dunk, A. C. & Hanson, C. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Potential Uses of Nuclear Explosives in the Conservation and Development of Water Resources (open access)

Some Potential Uses of Nuclear Explosives in the Conservation and Development of Water Resources

Abstract. The peacetime application of nuclear explosives to the conservation and development of our national water resources is, at this time, of sufficient promise to present some of the possibilities publicly. In nuclear explosives man has at his disposal and service, a powerful source of energy - a new tool - that we believe can be utilized safely to excavate channels and lake basins, or to create conduits of broken permeable material and underground reservoirs. In surveying the possible applications of nuclear explosives, the following ideas are among those worthy of serious consideration: (a) the use of nuclear explosives for the economic movement of large volumes of earth in the construction of earth fill dames, (b) the use of nuclear explosives for the diversion of a stream from a river system, whose flow is largely lost to the sea, into another stream channel leading to an arid section or a closed basin, (c) the use of nuclear explosives to create a recharge basin or a conduit to a subsurface aquifer for fresh water recharge, and (d) the use of nuclear explosives to create off-channel reservoirs for the elimination of saline waters through recharge to a mineralized aquifer and by evaporation.
Date: May 24, 1960
Creator: {{{name}}}
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization of Molecular Flow Conductance (open access)

Optimization of Molecular Flow Conductance

Abstract. A method is described for measuring the molecular flow conductance of scale models of complete diffusion pump systems. Results are given in terms of Clausing's factor P, defined by P= F/F(0), where F is the net volume flow rate through a geometry and F(0) is the volume flow rate of gas striking the orifice of the geometry. Use of the factor P allows prediction of the conductance of the full-scale system represented by the model. Experimental and theoretical data are presented for straight cylinders, cylindrical elbows, and several geometries having no-line-of-sight through them. It is shown that for an optimized diffusion pump system, comprising baffle, trap and valve, 0.3 [less than] P [less than] 0.5 can be obtained.
Date: August 1960
Creator: Levenson, L. L. (Leonard Lionel); Milleron, Norman. & Davis, Donald H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Accelerators Requiring High Peak Power Pulse Modulators (open access)

Electron Accelerators Requiring High Peak Power Pulse Modulators

The Astron, a thermo-nuclear fusion research machine, requires the injection of high-energy electron at 5 MEV emery level +- 1/2 %, 200 amperes, 60 pulses per second, 0.3 usec pulse width. The accelerator will work by the induction principle with approximately 500 magnetic cores, each 1/2 inch thick lined up on centers. Each core will be pulsed by a single primary turn and the electrons forming the secondary will experience a voltage acceleration equivalent to the primary voltage upon passing by each core. The coupling in this arrangement has been tested and it is very nearly unity.
Date: June 7, 1960
Creator: Smith, Vernon L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Control Concepts for Nuclear Ramjet Reactors (open access)

Control Concepts for Nuclear Ramjet Reactors

Tory 11-A, the first experimental reactor in the Pluto nuclear ramjet program, will be tested in late 1960 at the Nevada Test Site of the Atomic Energy Commission. The fundamental objective of Tory II-A is to demonstrate that a high power density, high-temperature, air-cooled reactor can be successfully designed, constructed, and operated. This application places requirements on the reactor control system which are considerably more stringent than those found in previous reactor systems, both from the standpoint of radiation environment and system performance. To fulfill the system requirements a high-performance reactor control system has been designed and built; control actuation hardware has been developed which can withstand the high-radiation environment of Tory LI-A. This actuation system features radiation-tolerant electrohydraulic components: actuators, servo-valves, solenoid valves, feedback transducers, accumulators and associated hydraulic components. To provide high reliability against undesired shutdowns while carrying out high power level transients, the Tory 11-A control philosophy includes a new concept in reactor safety: reliance on a nonlocking, fast-reset safety system during accident situations. The fast-reset system acts so as to hold the programmed power level rather than initiating an irreversible "scram" action. A reactor "scram", if tolerated, could produce thermal shocks which would seriously damage the …
Date: June 11, 1960
Creator: Finnigan, Robert E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stability for inhomogeneous difference schemes (open access)

Stability for inhomogeneous difference schemes

Abstract. The Equivalence Theorem of P. Lax is extended to difference schemes for initial-value problems for linear inhomogeneous PDE with linear inhomogeneous boundary values and for boundary-value problems.
Date: July 13, 1960
Creator: Seidman, Thomas I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Layering Above a Refractor on the Character of the Refraction Arrival (open access)

Effect of Layering Above a Refractor on the Character of the Refraction Arrival

Abstract. The waveform or character of a refraction arrival has become internationally important because of its use in determining source parameters. An approximate theoretical machine calculation has been made to show the effect of layering above a refractor on the character of the refraction arrival. The method is illustrated with a geologic model taken from the Edwards Plateau area of West Texas. The effect of the Edwards limestone, Comanche, and Trinity formations on the refraction from the Pennsylvanian limestone is computed. The conversion of energy in theses upper layers from compressional to shear plays a significant role in forming the refraction character. An anticlinal structure is introduced into the Pennsylvanian limestone and it is argued that, in a first approximation, the wave in the Pennsylvanian limestone follow the structure, refracting off at the critical angle as before. Now, however, the angle of incidence on the base of the Trinity is a function of the angle of the structure. Since the amplitudes of converted waves depends n this angle, The character of the refraction arrival depends in a predictable way on the angle in the structure where the critical refraction has taken lace. These results are theoretical and only approximate, but …
Date: September 20, 1960
Creator: Werth, Glenn C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Cowboy : Physical Properties of Salt Samples (open access)

Project Cowboy : Physical Properties of Salt Samples

The purpose of Project Cowboy was to investigate the seismic signals generated by chemical explosions in underground cavities, with particular emphasis on the possibility of decoupling of these signals from the surrounding media. The project site was the Carey Salt Company salt mine, located approximately five miles west of Winnfield, Louisiana. The tests were run during fiscal year 1960. This report presents the results of tests performed on specimens from the samples of salt taken in the area.
Date: July 15, 1960
Creator: Guido, Raymond S. & Warner, Stanley E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Study of Heat and Mass Transfer to Uninsulated Liquid Oxygen Containers (open access)

A Study of Heat and Mass Transfer to Uninsulated Liquid Oxygen Containers

The wide use of liquid oxygen as an oxidant in rocket engines has resulted in an increased interest in low-temperature heat transfer. Storage tanks for this type of application, being uninsulated, contain a boiling-liquid low-temperature sink, which is susceptible to environmental heat inputs and subsequent liquid loss by vaporization. Such losses are difficult to predict due to the complex combination of ambient conditions which exist, and the lack of knowledge concerning their combined effects. Heat transfer in this field is difficult to analyze primarily because of its transient nature. This is a result of such factors as: (1) the growth of an insulating frost layer on the outer surface of the container, with its accompanying energy transfer to the system; (2) the temperature dependent convective air pattern that surrounds the container, (3) the transfer of radiant energy to the system, and (4) the mechanical failure of the frost itself with subsequent sloughing from the container wall. A lack of knowledge regarding the coefficient of diffusion of water vapor through air and the thermal conductivity of frost in this depressed temperature range further complicates the predictions of heat transfer.
Date: July 20, 1960
Creator: Holten, David Charles
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Cowboy : Final Report : Seismic Decoupling for Explosions in Spherical Cavities (open access)

Project Cowboy : Final Report : Seismic Decoupling for Explosions in Spherical Cavities

A series paired explosions in a salt mine near Winnfield, Louisiana, has been conducted to test a theory by A.L. Latter concerning seismic decoupling by underground cavities. The theory predicted a decoupling of 132 Free-field and surface measurements from an explosion in either a 6-ft- or a 15-ft-radius spherical cavity were compared with similar measurements from a completely tamped explosion of equal size. Shot sizes were from 20 pounds up to a ton. Surface measurements were made out to 100 km and covered the frequency range from 0.05 to 100 cps. The experiments confirmed that decoupling does occur. For explosions that produce an average cavity pressure up to one-fifth and possible more of the lithostatic overburden pressure, seismic waves were decoupled by the 100, i.e., two order of magnitude. Even for explosions producing an average cavity pressure of six times the lithostatic overburden pressure, the seismic waves were decoupled by 20 -- more than a full order of magnitude. Minimum decoupling factors as a function of frequency are presented.
Date: August 1960
Creator: Adams, William M. & Allen, DeWitt C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Propellants for Electrical Propulsion Systems : Panel Discussion of Rocket Propellants, American Chemical Society Meeting, Berkeley, August 8 (open access)

Propellants for Electrical Propulsion Systems : Panel Discussion of Rocket Propellants, American Chemical Society Meeting, Berkeley, August 8

As we might suspect, the propellant problems for electrical propulsion systems are quite different than those of chemical or nuclear propulsion schemes. In those cases, two of the most important parameters were the propellant temperature and mean molecular weight. Here we are sidestepping the temperature requirement entirely by using electrical energy for the energy source rather than chemical or thermal energy. Of course, mission analysis have demonstrated that the energy per unit weight requirements are so large as to rule out all except nuclear or solar sources for this energy. As a result, nearly all the weight of the propulsion system is in the electrical power supply. Consequently, the efficiency of the thrust system in converting this electrical energy into directed mechanical energy of the propellant is one of its most important parameters. In addition, it must have exceedingly long operating life, say a year or so, and its electrical characteristics must match those of the power source.
Date: 1960
Creator: Fox, Robert H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
On Neutral Spin-0 Particles with Imaginary Parity (open access)

On Neutral Spin-0 Particles with Imaginary Parity

Some consequences of the existence of a neutral spin-0 particle with imaginary parity are examined. The particle is subsequently identified with K0 and it is shown that associated production is a consequence of a super-selection law for parity. The parity of the K0 is fixed by its electromagnetic interaction, which leads to certain results that differ from those predicted by strangeness. The theory accounts directly for the non-conservation of parity in non-neutrino decays of Λ, Σ's and K's.
Date: September 1960
Creator: Spitzer, Richard
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molybdenum, Niobium, Tantalum, Tungsten and Uranium Oxide in the Journal Literatures of the USSR :1955 - June 1960 (open access)

Molybdenum, Niobium, Tantalum, Tungsten and Uranium Oxide in the Journal Literatures of the USSR :1955 - June 1960

This bibliography lists selected articles on molybdenum, niobium, tantalum, tungsten and uranium oxide in the journal literature of the U.S.S.R. The following sources were used and also are noted after each citation, Special Library Association Translation monthly 1959-June 1960, U.S. Library of Congress Monthly index of Russian accessions 1955-June 1960, U.S. Office of Technical Services Technical translations 1955-1958.
Date: September 1, 1960
Creator: Wenrich, Carl J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Data Processing For Bubble Chambers (open access)

Data Processing For Bubble Chambers

The computer program which performs spatial reconstruction of events photographed in a bubble chamber is required to eliminate human and digitizer errors. It recognizes and corrects for single nuclear scatterings in the presence of multiple Coulomb scatterings. Momentum components are determined and kinematic constraints are applied. Measured parameters are performed into special reference frames and quantities of physical interest are calculated. Results are stored in a tape file containing all events of one reaction type.
Date: November 10, 1960
Creator: White, Howard S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Genetic Influences On Mating Behavior In Drosophila Melanogaster (open access)

Genetic Influences On Mating Behavior In Drosophila Melanogaster

Certain aspects of mating behavior in two different types of Drosophila melanogaster females (Basc and Bv) and wildtype males (Samarkand) have been investigated and compared.
Date: December 6, 1960
Creator: Hildreth, Philip E. & Becker, Gweneth Carson
System: The UNT Digital Library
Possible Manifestations Of A Pion-Pion Interaction (open access)

Possible Manifestations Of A Pion-Pion Interaction

The pion-pion interaction is of great theoretical importance and must be understood before the other and more familiar interactions can be systematically analyzed. Therefore, various experiments to verify the existence of a P resonance in the w w system are proposed.
Date: January 6, 1960
Creator: Chew, Geoffrey F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Correction to the Debye-Huckel Theory (open access)

Correction to the Debye-Huckel Theory

In a recent paper, Bowers and Salpeter described a method for calculating the correlation energy of a classical one-component electron gas. The same problem has been considered by Meeron, Friedman, and Abe, using methods involving the summation of cert infinite classes of diagrams. While the relation between these theories and that of Bowers and Saltpeter is not year clear, it is interesting to note that Abe obtained an equivalent expression by approximating an integral. We have calculated the contribution to the equation of state using Abe's original expression and we found that the equation is valid only for certain values and it gives a correction of the wrong sign. On the other hand, our results are comparable to those which Bowers and Salpeter obtain from higher approximations.
Date: October 7, 1960
Creator: Trulio, John G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Experimental Check On The Range-Energy Curve Of Pions In Propane (open access)

An Experimental Check On The Range-Energy Curve Of Pions In Propane

The kinetic energies of pions from radioactive decays in propane have been determined by using the information given by the angles of the secondary particles. This method is independent of any range-energy relation.
Date: October 24, 1960
Creator: Patrick, Jack W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photoproduction Of Neutral Pions As A Function Of Mass Number (open access)

Photoproduction Of Neutral Pions As A Function Of Mass Number

The relative yield of neutral photopions from various elements was determined as a function of the quantum limit energy of the Berkeley synchrotron. Single decay photons from neutral pions were observed at 45, 90, and 135 deg to the incident bremsstrahlung in the laboratory system. Mean free paths for neutral pions in nuclear matter were obtained, an optical model prediction of the photopion yields based upon pion-nucleus scattering data was confirmed, and the presence of coherent pion production in the forward direction was detected.
Date: November 4, 1960
Creator: Anderson, John D.; Goodwin, Lester K. & Kenney, Robert W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resistance Measurements To 400 Kilobars (open access)

Resistance Measurements To 400 Kilobars

A modification of the Bridgeman anvils is described. This modification permits studies to be made to a load of 400 kbars, about twice that previously available.
Date: November 8, 1960
Creator: Vaisnys, Juozas; Stromberg, Harold & Jura, George
System: The UNT Digital Library
The RCA 6949 As A Self-Excited Cyclotron Oscillator (open access)

The RCA 6949 As A Self-Excited Cyclotron Oscillator

The oscillator of the 88-in. cyclotron which is being built in Berkeley is tunable from 5.3 to 16.5 Mc. It delivers a maximum c-w power of 300 kw. At the rated doc voltage of 75 kv the resonator stores 4.5 joules of electrical energy. The transients produced by this amount of energy, during sparking, place unusual requirements upon the design of the oscillator tube. The features of the RCA 6949 which make it particularly well-suited to this type of application are discussed in this paper. Other topics covered are the oscillator anode power supply, the hard-tube modulator, protective equipment, and oscillator instrumentation.
Date: October 25, 1960
Creator: Smith, Bob H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Cowboy : Use of Large Cavities to Reduce Seismic Waves From Underground Explosions (open access)

Project Cowboy : Use of Large Cavities to Reduce Seismic Waves From Underground Explosions

This technical report analyzes an experiment designed to test the theory of seismic decoupling of underground explosives proposed by Latter, LeLevier, Martinelli, and McMillan [1959]. The theory calculated the amplitude of a 1.7-kiloton nuclear explosive in a hole in salt and compares it to the measured value of the 1.7-kt Rainier shot in tuff at the same distance. A decoupling factor of about 300 resulted. The experiment, called Cowboy, was designed to test the decoupling principle by carrying out a series of eight high-explosive shots in two spheres made in a salt dome and nine tamped shots for comparison purposes. The seismic data reported here was obtained primarily at 14,000 and 22,000 feet from the shot at frequencies of 10 to 30 cps. A salt-to-salt decoupling factor of 100 was obtained which is consistent wit the predicted 300 tuff-to-salt factor. When the sphere was over-driven so that the walls did not move elastically (a condition which violates the theory), decoupling factors of 10 and 30 were measured. The report interprets the seismic data to give the dependence of decoupling on the various parameters of the experiment. The decoupling deduced from measurements made 80 feet from the shot points is found …
Date: September 29, 1960
Creator: Herbst, Roland F.; Werth, Glenn C. & Springer, Donald L.
System: The UNT Digital Library