The Escape of Fission Products From an Uranium Rod; Application to the B. N. L. Reactor (open access)

The Escape of Fission Products From an Uranium Rod; Application to the B. N. L. Reactor

Technical report covering the functions of the Oak Ridge reactor, difficulties encountered with cartridge failures in the Oak Ridge reactor, and possible solutions including the incorporation of leak detection systems into the design of the reactor.
Date: November 3, 1968
Creator: Chernick, J. & Kaplan, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FUDGE 4A: A Computer Program for Gamma Dose Rate Distribution from Rectangular Sources (open access)

FUDGE 4A: A Computer Program for Gamma Dose Rate Distribution from Rectangular Sources

Report issued by the Brookhaven National Laboratory discussing the recently modified FUDGE 4A computer program. As stated in the introduction, "this report presents the details and technical information required for the proper use of FUDGE 4A" (p. 1). This report includes tables, and illustrations.
Date: August 1968
Creator: Galanter, Leonard & Krishnamurthy, Krishnaswamy
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cosmic Ray Produced Ar37 and Ar39 Activities in Recently Fallen Meteorites (open access)

Cosmic Ray Produced Ar37 and Ar39 Activities in Recently Fallen Meteorites

Several methods of determining meteorite ages depend ages upon nuclides formed by cosmic ray interactions. The tactic assumption is always made that the intensity of cosmic radiation does not vary in time or space. However it is known that the intensity of cosmic radiation at the earth varies with the solar activity. The spectrum of cosmic ray protons and alpha particles exhibit a marked drop at the low energy end (<1.5 GeV) and the intensity in the region appears to follow the 11 year cycle of solar activity. The low energy cosmic rays increase in intensity with a decrease in solar activity. These changes in cosmic ray intensities are generally attributed to a modulation of the galactic cosmic radiation by the magnetic fields associated with the outward streaming solar material, the solar wind. One would therefore expect that the cosmic ray intensity several astronomical units from the sun is greater than the intensity at the earth's orbit, particularly at the low energy end of the spectrums.
Date: February 1, 1968
Creator: Davis, R. Jr.; Stoenner, R. W. & Schaeffer, O. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Mg-MgCl2 System — A Chronopotentiometric Study (open access)

The Mg-MgCl2 System — A Chronopotentiometric Study

The mode of dissolution of magnesium in molten magnesium chloride contacted with Mg-Pb alloys was studied at 750°C using anodic chronopotentiometry. An inert tantalum anode was used to determine relative amounts of magnesium dissolved in its chloride as a function of magnesium activity in the alloy. According to the law of mass action a linear dependence of magnesium solubility on a Mg indicates Mg2Cl2 as the reaction product and a parabolic dependence indicates MgCl. It was found that the amount of magnesium dissolved in its chloride was directly proportional to the magnesium activity in the metal phase, i.e., a linear dependence, indicating Mg2Cl2 as the subhalide species. Due to the corrosive nature of the Mg-MgCl2 system a special apparatus was used so that only the inert metals tantalum and molybdenum came in contact with the melt. Purification procedures and conditions for proper equilibration and measurement were established and are reported. The basic equation of chronopotentiometry, [equation not transcribed], was found to hold and at given magnesium activities the product [unintelligible] did not vary with the current, indicating the validity of the analytical technique.
Date: February 1, 1968
Creator: Van Norman, John D. & Egan, James J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Status of Meteorological Knowledge as a Factor in Air Pollution Control (open access)

The Status of Meteorological Knowledge as a Factor in Air Pollution Control

The first national Technical Conference on Air Pollution (1) held in this city in 1950 included eight papers on meteorology; the present session contains one. On this basis, one night conclude that recent progress in meteorology has been virtually nonexistent or that the importance of meteorological factors has been diminishing, Neither could be further from the truth, as the number and quality of papers relating to air pollution meteorology in recent scientific and technical sessions will attest. It is particularly appropriate to review the status of meteorological "know-how" at this time, because of the many situations in which the ultimate capability of the atmosphere to absorb pollution is in question. Both in connection with highly toxic materials on the one hand and the "megalopolis" on the other, estimates of the "atmospheric sewer capacity" are becoming increasingly necessary to industrial and municipal planning.
Date: 1968
Creator: Smith, Maynard E.
System: The UNT Digital Library