12 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

Geothermal Energy Development in the Eastern United States, Sensitivity analysis-cost of geothermal energy (open access)

Geothermal Energy Development in the Eastern United States, Sensitivity analysis-cost of geothermal energy

The Geothermal Resources Interactive Temporal Simulation (GRITS) model is a computer code designed to estimate the costs of geothermal energy systems. The interactive program allows the user to vary resource, demand, and financial parameters to observe their effects on delivered costs of direct-use geothermal energy. Due to the large number and interdependent nature of the variables that influence these costs, the variables can be handled practically only through computer modeling. This report documents a sensitivity analysis of the cost of direct-use geothermal energy where each major element is varied to measure the responsiveness of cost to changes in that element. It is hoped that this analysis will assist those persons interested in geothermal energy to understand the most significant cost element as well as those individuals interested in using the GRITS program in the future.
Date: December 1, 1982
Creator: Kane, S. M.; Kroll, P. & Nilo, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, October-December 1982 (open access)

Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, October-December 1982

Research progress is reported on developing Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC) systems that will provide synthetic fuels (e.g., methanol), energy-intensive products such as ammonia (for fertilizers and chemicals), and aluminum. The work also includes assessment and design concepts for hybrid plants, such as geothermal-OTEC (GEOTEC) plants. Another effort that began in the spring of 1982 is a technical advisory role to DOE with respect to their management of the conceptual design activity of the two industry teams that are designing offshore OTEC pilot plants that could deliver power to Oahu, Hawaii. In addition, a program is underway in which tests of a different kind of ocean-energy device, a turbine that is air-driven as a result of wave action in a chamber, are being planned. This Quarterly Report summarizes the work on the various tasks as of 31 December 1982.
Date: December 1, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, July-September 1982 (open access)

Ocean energy systems. Quarterly report, July-September 1982

This quarterly report summarizes work on the following tasks as of September 30, 1982: (1) OTEC pilot plant conceptual design review; (2) OTEC methanol; (3) financial and legal considerations in OTEC implementation; (4) GEOTEC resource exploration at Adak, Alaska, and Lualualei, Hawaii; (5) preliminary GEOTEC plant cost estimates; and (6) supervision of testing of pneumatic wave energy conversion system.
Date: September 30, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Oral History Association History Interview with Peter Olch] transcript

[Oral History Association History Interview with Peter Olch]

Sound recording of Martha Ross interviewing Peter Olch about the history of the Oral History Association at the united services medical school in Bethesda, Maryland.
Date: September 15, 1982
Creator: Oral History Association
Object Type: Sound
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ocean thermal energy. Quarterly report, April-June 1982 (open access)

Ocean thermal energy. Quarterly report, April-June 1982

This quarterly report includes summaries of the following tasks: (1) OTEC pilot plant conceptual design review; (2) OTEC methanol; (3) management decision requirements for OTEC construction; (4) hybrid geothermal - OTEC (GEOTEC) power plant performance estimates; and (5) supervision of testing of pneumatic wave energy conversion system.
Date: June 30, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Water-Quality of Three Major Tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay, the Susquehanna Potomac, and James Rivers, January 1979--April 1981 (open access)

Water-Quality of Three Major Tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay, the Susquehanna Potomac, and James Rivers, January 1979--April 1981

This report evaluate the water quality of the three major tributaries to the Chesapeake Bay, the Susquehanna, Potomac, and James Rivers.
Date: May 1982
Creator: Lang, David J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ocean thermal energy. Quarterly report, January-March 1982 (open access)

Ocean thermal energy. Quarterly report, January-March 1982

This quarterly report summarizes work of the following tasks as of March 31, 1982: OTEC pilot plant conceptual design review; OTEC methanol; review of electrolyzer development programs and requirements; financial and legal considerations in OTEC implementation; potential Navy sites for GEOTEC systems; hybrid geothermal-OTEC power plants: single-cycle performance estimates; and supervision of testing of pneumatic wave energy conversion system.
Date: March 30, 1982
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Baltimore Harbor and Channels Deepening Study: Chesapeake Bay Hydraulic Model Investigation (open access)

Baltimore Harbor and Channels Deepening Study: Chesapeake Bay Hydraulic Model Investigation

From abstract: Tests on the Chesapeake Bay hydraulic model were conducted to specifically investigate possible changes in the hydrodynamic characteristics of velocity, salinity, and tidal elevations associated with the proposed channel enlargements.
Date: February 1982
Creator: Granat, Mitchell A. & Gulbrandsen, Leif F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Downstream Effects of Reservoir Releases to the Potomac River from Luke, Maryland, to Washington D.C. (open access)

Downstream Effects of Reservoir Releases to the Potomac River from Luke, Maryland, to Washington D.C.

From purpose and scope: This report describes a method of estimating downstream responses of reservoir releases from the Bloomington and Savage Reservoirs in the upper Potomac River basin.
Date: 1982
Creator: Trombley, Thomas J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Map Showing the Difference between the Potentiometric Surfaces of the Magothy Aquifer of September 1975 and September 1982 in Southern Maryland (open access)

Map Showing the Difference between the Potentiometric Surfaces of the Magothy Aquifer of September 1975 and September 1982 in Southern Maryland

This is a map, scale 1:250,000, showing the difference between the potentiometric surfaces of the Magothy aquifer of September 1975 and September 1982 in southern Maryland.
Date: 1982
Creator: Mack, Frederick K.; Wheeler, Judith C. & Curtin, Stephen E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Map Showing the Potentiometric Surface of the Magothy Aquifer in Southern Maryland, September 1982 (open access)

Map Showing the Potentiometric Surface of the Magothy Aquifer in Southern Maryland, September 1982

This is a map showing the potentiometric surface of the Magothy aquifer in southern Maryland, scale 1:250,000.
Date: 1982
Creator: Mack, Frederick K.; Wheeler, Judith C. & Curtin, Stephen E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar wind iron abundance variations at solar wind speeds > 600 km s/sup -1/, 1972 to 1976 (open access)

Solar wind iron abundance variations at solar wind speeds > 600 km s/sup -1/, 1972 to 1976

We have analyzed the Fe/H ratios in the peaks of high speed streams (HSS) during the decline of Solar Cycle 20 and the following minimum (October 1972 to December 1976). We utilized the response of the 50 to 200 keV ion channel of the APL/JHU energetic particle experiment (EPE) onIMP-7 and 8 to solar wind iron ions at high solar wind speeds (V greater than or equal to 600 km sec/sup -1/), and compared our Fe measurements with solar wind H and He parameters from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) instruments on the same spacecraft. In general, the Fe distribution parameters (bulk velocity, flow direction, temperature) are found to be similar to the LANL He parameters. Although the average Fe/H ration in many steady HSS peaks agrees within observational uncertainties with the nominal coronal ratio of 4.7 x 10/sup -5/, abundance variations of a factor of up to 6 are obtained across a given coronal-hole associated HSS. There are, as well, factor of 2 variations between stream-averaged abundances for recurent HSS emanating from different coronal holes occurring on the sun on the same solar rotation. flare-related solar wind streams sometimes show Fe/H ratios enhanced by factors of 4 to …
Date: January 1, 1982
Creator: Mitchell, D. G.; Roelof, E. C. & Bame, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library