A Comparison of Benefits Earned Under Social Security and Civil Service Retirement (open access)

A Comparison of Benefits Earned Under Social Security and Civil Service Retirement

This report provides a brief side-by-side comparison of Civil Service Retirement and Social Security benefits.
Date: August 2, 1982
Creator: Snook, Dennis W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gyrokinetic equilibrium and stability in quadrupole tandem mirrors (open access)

Gyrokinetic equilibrium and stability in quadrupole tandem mirrors

This paper discusses recent theoretical work on the equilibrium and stability of quadrupole tandem mirrors in the paraxial limit. It reviews calculations of three-dimensional equilibria by means of a ..beta..-expansion technique which lead to an understanding of the important role played by parallel currents and the corollary importance of careful design of the structure of the vacuum geodesic curvature. The previously predicted scaling with central-cell length of the finite-..beta.. distortion of vacuum flux surfaces is shown to saturate because of finite orbit effects. An adaptation to tandem geometries of the reduced MHD technique for calculating high-..beta.. three-dimensional equilibria is described. This approach uses the paraxial expansion to resolve the time-dependent relaxation to equilibrium into three distinct timescales on which the motion can be followed independently. Regarding stability, it is shown that kinetic effects suppress ballooning modes of short-to-moderate perpendicular wavelength; in the limit that such effects are dominant only rigid modes are possible. The stability of the latter modes is investigated within the context of the energy principle. Results of equilibrium and stability calculations for the TMX-U and MFTF-B experiments at Livermore are presented.
Date: August 2, 1982
Creator: Bulmer, R. H.; Kaiser, T. B.; Nevins, W. M.; Newcomb, W. A.; Pearlstein, L. D.; Strauss, H. R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kinetics of elementary atom and radical reactions. Progress report, December 1, 1981-November 30, 1982 (open access)

Kinetics of elementary atom and radical reactions. Progress report, December 1, 1981-November 30, 1982

Research projects discussed include: the branching ratio for abstraction vs. exchange in the reaction D + HCl; kinetics of O + H/sub 2/; energy storage in polyatomic molecules; and optoacoustic measurements of ir absorption and relaxation in large molecules. (GHT)
Date: August 2, 1982
Creator: Gordon, R J
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear-waste disposal in geologic repositories (open access)

Nuclear-waste disposal in geologic repositories

Deep geologic repositories are being widely studied as the most favored method of disposal of nuclear waste. Scientists search for repository sites in salt, basalt, tuff and granite that are geologically and hydrologically suitable. The systematic evaluation of the safety and reliability of deep geologic disposal centers around the concept of interacting multiple barriers. The simplest element to describe of the geologic barrier is the physical isolation of the waste in a remote region at some depth within the rock unit. Of greater complexity is the hydrologic barrier which is determined by the waste dilution factors and groundwater flow rates. The least understood is the geochemical barrier, identified as a series of waste/water/rock interactions involving sorption, membrane filtration, precipitation and complexing. In addition to the natural barriers are the engineered barriers, which include the waste form and waste package. The relative effectiveness of these barriers to provide long-term isolation of nuclear waste from the human environment is being assessed through the use of analytical and numerical models. The data used in the models is generally adequate for parameter sensitivity studies which bound the uncertainties in the release and transport predictions; however, much of the data comes from laboratory testing, and …
Date: August 2, 1982
Creator: Isherwood, D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Seismic Safety Margins Research Program: Phase II program plan (FY 83-FY 84) (open access)

Seismic Safety Margins Research Program: Phase II program plan (FY 83-FY 84)

The Seismic Safety Margins Research Program (SSMRP) is an NRC-funded, multiyear program conducted by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). Its goal is to develop a complete, fully coupled analysis procedure (including methods and computer codes) for estimating the risk of an earthquake-caused radioactive release from a commercial nuclear power plant. The analysis procedure is based upon a state-of-the-art evaluation of the current seismic analysis and design process and explicitly includes the uncertainties inherent in such a process. The results will be used to improve seismic licensing requirements for nuclear power plants. As currently planned, the SSMRP will be completed in September, 1984. This document presents the program plan for work to be done during the remainder of the program. In Phase I of the SSMRP, the necessary tools (both computer codes and data bases) for performing a detailed seismic risk analysis were identified and developed. Demonstration calculations were performed on the Zion Nuclear Power Plant. In the remainder of the program (Phase II) work will be concentrated on developing a simplified SSMRP methodology for routine probabilistic risk assessments, quantitative validation of the tools developed and application of the simplified methodology to a Boiling Water Reactor. (The Zion plant is a …
Date: August 2, 1982
Creator: Bohn, M. P.; Bernreuter, D. L.; Cover, L. E.; Johnson, J. J.; Shieh, L. C.; Shukla, S. N. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library