A Decision-Making Process for Selection of a Low-Kilowatt Space Nuclear Power System for Development (open access)

A Decision-Making Process for Selection of a Low-Kilowatt Space Nuclear Power System for Development

There is an extra copy in the ESD files. Not appropriate for OSTI submission.
Date: July 14, 1983
Creator: Kling, Harry P
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Luminosity Estimates For The Lighter Ions: Equal Mass Collisions C+C, S+S, Cu+Cu, I+I (open access)

Luminosity Estimates For The Lighter Ions: Equal Mass Collisions C+C, S+S, Cu+Cu, I+I

None
Date: December 14, 1983
Creator: R., Young G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress on axicell MFTF-B superconducting magnet systems (open access)

Progress on axicell MFTF-B superconducting magnet systems

Since the entire Mirror Fusion Test Facility (MFTF-B) Magnet System was reconfigured from the original A-cell to an axicell design, much progress has been made on the design, fabrication, and installation planning. The axicell MFTF-B magnet array consists of a total of 26 large superconducting main coils. This paper provides an engineering overview of the progress of these coils. Recent studies on the effects of field errors on the plasma at the recircularizing region (transition coils) show that small field errors will generate large displacements of the field lines. These field errors might enhance radial electron heat transport and deteriorate the plasma confinement. Therefore, 16 superconducting trim coils have been designed to correct the coil misalignments. Progress of the trim coils are reported also.
Date: November 14, 1983
Creator: Wang, S. T.; Kozman, T. A.; Hanson, C. L.; Shimer, D. W.; VanSant, J. H. & Zbasnik, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polarizing holographic reflector for electron cyclotron resonant heating (ECRH) on the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade (TMX-U) (open access)

Polarizing holographic reflector for electron cyclotron resonant heating (ECRH) on the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade (TMX-U)

A reflector for electron cyclotron resonant heating on the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade has been designed to convert the high-power TE/sub 01/ output of the circular waveguide system into a linearly polarized gaussian intensity pattern in the plasma. The reflector is a computer-generated holographic optical element with a twist polarizer. Its design, fabrication, and performance are discussed. Results of the low- and high-power tests are presented. Low-power tests were used to determine the beam pattern and the degree of cross-polarization. High-power tests verified that arcing across the grooves of the twist polarizer does not occur.
Date: November 14, 1983
Creator: Coffield, F.E.; Felker, B.; Gallagher, N.C. Jr.; Pedrotti, L.R.; Stallard, B.W.; Sweeney, D.W. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of small additions of silicon, iron, and aluminum on the room-temperature tensile properties of high-purity uranium (open access)

Effect of small additions of silicon, iron, and aluminum on the room-temperature tensile properties of high-purity uranium

Eleven binary and ternary alloys of uranium and very low concentrations of iron, silicon, and aluminum were prepared and tested for room-temperature tensile properties after various heat treatments. A yield strength approximately double that of high-purity derby uranium was obtained from a U-400 ppM Si-200 ppM Fe alloy after beta solution treatment and alpha aging. Higher silicon plus iron alloy contents resulted in increased yield strength, but showed an unacceptable loss of ductility.
Date: November 14, 1983
Creator: Ludwig, R.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Issues in radioactivity for fusion energy: remote maintenance rating (open access)

Issues in radioactivity for fusion energy: remote maintenance rating

Recent technical progress in fusion research has been sufficient to encourage the development of conceptual designs for fusion power systems. These design efforts suggest that more attention should be paid to the safety and environmental effects of the radioactivity induced in the structural materials by the fusion neutrons. In particular, radioactivity from neutron activation of the structural components of a fusion power system will be a concern for occupational exposure of personnel. Careful choice of structural materials can significantly reduce this exposure. We propose the Remote Maintenance Rating (RMR) as a numerical means of comparing materials and machine designs with respect to occupational exposures. The RMR is defined as the dose rate at the surface of a uniformly activated, thick, infinite slab with the same composition and density as the machine component. We used the RMR rating system to evaluate the suitability of several different iron-based alloys. The specific fusion power system design used in our evaluation was a conceptual design from the Mirror Advanced Reactor Study (MARS). We determined that HT-9 is significantly better in terms of radiological dose rates at early times than the other iron-based alloys (by a factor of 3 to 7). We also calculated the …
Date: September 14, 1983
Creator: Dorn, D.W. & Maninger, R.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microwave interferometer using 94-GHz solid-state sources (open access)

Microwave interferometer using 94-GHz solid-state sources

A 94-GHz microwave interferometer has been designed for the Tandem Mirror Experiment Upgrade and the Mirror Fusion Test Facility to replace the 140-GHz system. The new system is smaller and has modular single-channel units designed for high reliability. It is magnetically shielded and can be mounted close to the machine, which allows the use of lower power solid-state sources. Test results of the 94-GHz prototype indicate that the phase resolution is better than 1/sup 0/, the Impatt FM noise is 5 MHz wide, and the Gunn FM noise is 6 kHz wide. This paper presents the antenna designs along with the test results and discusses the unique problems associated with diagnosing a high electron temperature plasma in the presence of electron cyclotron resonant heating.
Date: November 14, 1983
Creator: Coffield, F. E.; Thomas, S. R.; Lang, D. D. & Stever, R. D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Problems in astrophysical radiation hydrodynamics (open access)

Problems in astrophysical radiation hydrodynamics

The basic equations of radiation hydrodynamics are discussed in the regime that the radiation is dynamically as well as thermally important. Particular attention is paid to the question of what constitutes an acceptable approximate non-relativistic system of dynamical equations for matter and radiation in this regime. Further discussion is devoted to two classes of application of these ideas. The first class consists of problems dominated by line radiation, which is sensitive to the velocity field through the Doppler effect. The second class is of problems in which the advection of radiation by moving matter dominates radiation diffusion.
Date: September 14, 1983
Creator: Castor, John I.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interaction of a stream of dielectric spheres in an electric field in a high vacuum (open access)

Interaction of a stream of dielectric spheres in an electric field in a high vacuum

The interaction of a stream of dielectric spheres in an electric field in a high vacuum is investigated both theoretically and experimentally. This investigation is motivated by an elaborate attempt to detect fractional electric charges which might exist in matter, namely, a search for isolated quarks in matter. The theoretical analysis is intended for pinpointing the basic interaction mechanism by which a stream of dielectric spheres becomes destablized in an electric field. One important result of this analysis is a suggested method by which to eliminate the destabilizing forces. The experiments performed are intended to study the behavior of a stream of monodisperse dielectric liquid drops in an electric field in a high vacuum. It is seen from these experiments that the deflections of any two drops in the stream with charges differing by one electronic charge is not always the same due to the destabilization effects.
Date: June 14, 1983
Creator: Hendricks, C.D. & Kim, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gas box control system for Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (open access)

Gas box control system for Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade

The Tandem Mirror Experiment-Upgrade (TMX-U) uses several methods to feed gas (usually deuterium) at different energies into the plasma region of the machine. One is an arrangement of eight high-speed piezo-electric valves mounted on special manifolds (gas box) that feed cold gas directly to the plasma. This paper describes the electronic valve control and data acquisition portions of the gas box, which are controlled by a desk-top computer. Various flow profiles have been developed and stored in the control computer for ready access by the operator. The system uses two modes of operation, one that exercises and characterizes the valves and one that operates the valves with the rest of the experiment. Both the valve control signals and the pressure transducers data are recorded on the diagnostics computer so that they are available for experiment analysis.
Date: November 14, 1983
Creator: Bell, H.H. Jr.; Hunt, A.L. & Clower, C.A. Jr.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Localized hole effects in inner-shell excitation (open access)

Localized hole effects in inner-shell excitation

Ab initio calculations of valence shell ionization potentials have shown that orbital relaxation and correlation differences usually make contributions of comparable magnitude. In marked contrast to this observation is the situation for deep core ionization, where correlation differences (approx. 1 eV) play a relatively minor role compared to orbital relaxation (approx. 20 eV). Theoretical calculations have shown that this relaxation is most easily described if the 1s-vacancy created by a K-shell excitation is allowed to localize on one of the atomic centers. For molecules possessing a center of inversion, this means that the molecular orbitals that best describe the final state do not transform as any irreducible representation of the molecular point group. Recent experimental work by Shaw, King, Read and Cvejanovic and by Stefani and coworkers has prompted us to carry out further calculations on N/sub 2/, as well as analogous investigations of 1s/sub N/ ..-->.. ..pi..* excitation in NO and N/sub 2/O. The generalized oscillator strengths display a striking similarity and point to the essential correctness of the localized hole picture for N/sub 2/. The theoretical calculations are briefly described, followed by a summary of the results and comparison to experiment, followed by a short discussion.
Date: October 14, 1983
Creator: Rescigno, T. N. & Orel, A. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fueling of fusion devices by pellet injection: development in the USA (open access)

Fueling of fusion devices by pellet injection: development in the USA

A comprehensive review of the pellet injector program is given. Some operational basics and future prospects of light gas guns, centrifugal techniques, and railgun accelerators are discussed. (MOW)
Date: June 14, 1983
Creator: Hendricks, C.D.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Linear nonradial pulsation theory. Lecture 7 (open access)

Linear nonradial pulsation theory. Lecture 7

Many of the upper main-sequence stars pulsate in spheroidal nonradial modes. We know this to be true in numerous cases, as we have tabulated for the ..beta.. Cephei and delta Scuti variables in previous lectures. However, we cannot identify the actual mode for any star except for the low-order pressure p and f modes of our sun. It remains a great challenge to clearly state what really is occurring, in the process we learn more about how stars evolve and pulsate.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Properties of coaxial magnetocumulative generators (open access)

Properties of coaxial magnetocumulative generators

The properties of a coaxial magnetocumulative generator (MCG) in which the current increases exponetially with time are derived and discussed. Such an exponential MCG possess highly desirable performance characteristics that are readily derived and expressed in terms of simple formulas. It is concluded that an exponential MCG may approach a capability of delivering 100 megajoules to a 1 nanohenry load in 1 microsecond.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Kidder, R.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stellar-opacity calculations. I. Lecture 2 (open access)

Stellar-opacity calculations. I. Lecture 2

In this study of stellar structure, evolution, stability, and pulsation or explosion, there are three very vital pieces of physical information needed. We assume the composition is known from observations of assumption. To construct a model of a star we then need to know the nuclear generation rates which give the luminosity the star emits, the pressure and energy equation of state which determines the flow of radiation through the star. It is the equation of state and opacity that we will be discussing in the next two lectures.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
53 Per, slow, and Be star pulsations. Lecture 8 (open access)

53 Per, slow, and Be star pulsations. Lecture 8

Spectral variations of the class of variable stars that seems to have no radial pulsations at all are discussed. Models of the rotation of these stars are considered. (GHT)
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reaction of hydrogen sulfide with oxygen in the presence of sulfite (open access)

Reaction of hydrogen sulfide with oxygen in the presence of sulfite

Commonly, abatement of hydrogen sulfide emission from a geothermal powerplant requires that hydrogen sulfide dissolved in the cooling water be eliminated by chemical reaction. Oxidation by atmospheric oxygen is the preferred reaction, but requires a suitable catalyst. Nickel is the most potent and thereby cheapest catalyst for this purpose. One mg/L nickel in the cooling water would allow 99% removal of hydrogen sulfide to be attained. A major drawback of catalytic air oxidation is that colloidal sulfur is a major reaction product; this causes rapid sludge accumulation and deposition of sulfur scale. We studied the kinetics and product distribution of the reaction of hydrogen sulfide with oxygen, catalyzed by nickel. Adding sodium sulfite to the solution completely suppresses formation of colloidal sulfur by converting it to thiosulfate. The oxidation reaction is an autocatalytic, free radical chain reaction. A rate expression for this reaction and a detailed reaction mechanism were developed. Nickel catalyzes the chain initiation step, and polysulfidoradical ions propagate the chains. Several complexes of iron and cobalt were also studied. Iron citrate and iron N-hydroxyEDTA are the most effective iron based catalysts. Uncomplexed cobalt is as effective as nickel, but forms a precipitate of cobalt oxysulfide and is too …
Date: January 14, 1983
Creator: Weres, O. & Tsao, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supergiant radial and nonradial pulsations. Lecture 10 (open access)

Supergiant radial and nonradial pulsations. Lecture 10

The stars that we consider here have luminosities above 10,000 solar luminosities and masses above 15 solar masses. We contact the 53 Per stars such as ..nu.. Ori, 10 Lac, and iota CMa at our lower luminosity limit, and at the most luminous limit, we have the famous stars eta Car, Cyg OB12, and P Cyg. Evolution tracks including a reasonable mass loss rate are given for 15, 30, 60, and 120 solar masses. It appears that our pulsators have masses less than 60 solar masses, but how do the most luminous stars observed survive mass loss. Do they have masses above 100 solar masses as indicated, or are these stars somehow superluminous due to their erratic mass loss behavior. Popper (1980) studying the masses in binary systems has never found one with a value greater than 27 solar masses.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Environmental monitoring at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. 1982 annual report (open access)

Environmental monitoring at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. 1982 annual report

Environmental monitoring efforts spanned air, water, vegetation and foodstuffs, and radiation doses. Monitoring data collection, analysis, and evaluation are presented for air, soils, sewage, water, vegetation and foodstuffs, milk, and general environmental radioactivity. Non-radioactive monitoring addresses beryllium, chemical effluents in sewage, noise pollution, and storm runoff and liquid discharge site pollutants. Quality assurance efforts are addressed. Five appendices present tabulated data; environmental activity concentration; dose calculation method; discharge limits to sanitary sewer systems of Livermore; and sampling and analytical procedures for environmental monitoring. (PSB)
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Griggs, K.S.; Gonzalez, M.A. & Buddemeier, R.W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
First order comparison of numerical calculation and two different turtle input schemes to represent a SLC defocusing magnet (open access)

First order comparison of numerical calculation and two different turtle input schemes to represent a SLC defocusing magnet

Correcting the dispersion function in the SLC north arc it turned out that backleg-windings (BLW) acting horizontally as well as BLW acting vertically have to be used. In the latter case the question arose what is the best representation of a defocusing magnet with excited BLW acting in the vertical plane for the computer code TURTLE. Two different schemes, the 14.-scheme and the 20.-scheme were studied and the TURTLE output for one ray through such a magnet compared with the numerical solution of the equation of motion; only terms of first order have been taken into account.
Date: July 14, 1983
Creator: Jaeger, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nonlinear hydrodynamics. Lecture 9 (open access)

Nonlinear hydrodynamics. Lecture 9

A very sophisticated method for calculating the stability and pulsations of stars which make contact with actual observations of the stellar behavior, hydrodynamic calculations are very simple in principle. Conservation of mass can be accounted for by having mass shells that are fixed with their mass for all time. Motions of these shells can be calculated by taking the difference between the external force of gravity and that from the local pressure gradient. The conservation of energy can be coupled to this momentum conservation equation to give the current temperatures, densities, pressures, and opacities at the shell centers, as well as the positions, velocities, and accelerations of the mass shell interfaces. Energy flow across these interfaces can be calculated from the current conditions, and this energy is partitioned between internal energy and the work done on or by the mass shell. We discuss here only the purely radial case for hydrodynamics because it is very useful for stellar pulsation studies.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kinetics of tritium removal from heavy water by exchange with deuterochloroform (open access)

Kinetics of tritium removal from heavy water by exchange with deuterochloroform

A technique was developed to determine the rate and equilibrium constants for the base-catalyzed exchange of tritium from ehavy water to deuterochloroform. An activation energy and entropy were also calculated. These quantities are comparable with those reported in the literature for a similar reaction involving the exchange of deuterium from deuterochloroform to water. It was found that the exchange reaction occurred predominately between the dissolved reactants in the D/sub 2/O and CDCl/sub 3/ phases. The rate constant is a strong direct function of temperature while the equilibrium constant is a weak inverse function.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Hsiao, Peter
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fast imaging applications in the Nuclear Test Program (open access)

Fast imaging applications in the Nuclear Test Program

Applications of fast imaging employ both streak cameras and fast framing techniques. Image intensifier tubes are gated to provide fast two-dimensional shutters of 2 to 3 ns duration with shatter ratios of greater than 10/sup 6/ and resolution greater than 10/sup 4/ pixels. Shutters of less than 1 ns have been achieved with experimental tubes. Characterization data demonstrate the importance of tube and pulser design. Streak cameras are used to simultaneously record temporal and intensity information from up to 200 spatial points. Streak cameras are combined with remote readout for downhole uses and are coupled to fiber optic cables for uphole uses. Optical wavelength multiplexing is being studied as a means of compressing additional image data onto optical fibers. Performance data demonstrate trade-offs between image resolution and system sensitivity.
Date: October 14, 1983
Creator: Lear, R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beta-Cephei variables. Lecture 1 (open access)

Beta-Cephei variables. Lecture 1

In discussing upper-main-sequence stars and their intrinsic pulsations, we need to realize that theory has not yet been able to understand these pulsations. In many discussions the character of the pulsations has been described, and in many cases these theoretical solutions of the stellar pulsation theory may be the actual ones occurring. But the specific driving mechanism, so well known for the yellow and red giants and supergiants, and very recently known for the white dwarf stars, remains the subject for intense discussion. My ideas will pervade all my discussion, but many of them concerning the details such as the cause of the pulsations have not yet been proved correct.
Date: March 14, 1983
Creator: Cox, A. N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library