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[Letter from McGregor Gray to Anthony Principi - June 6, 2005] (open access)

[Letter from McGregor Gray to Anthony Principi - June 6, 2005]

Letter from McGregor Gray to Anthony Principi in support of Naval Air Station Brunswick.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Gray, McGregor
Object Type: Letter
System: The UNT Digital Library
[Memorandum of Meeting: Military Sealift Command, June 6, 2005] (open access)

[Memorandum of Meeting: Military Sealift Command, June 6, 2005]

Memorandum of meeting with Military Sealift Command (MSC) representatives regarding the collection of information for HAS-0114, Consolidate Transportation Command Components.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: United States. Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron Dynamics of Silicon Surface States: Second-Harmonic HoleBurning on Si(111)7x7 (open access)

Electron Dynamics of Silicon Surface States: Second-Harmonic HoleBurning on Si(111)7x7

The ultrafast dynamics of electronic excitations of the surface dangling bond states of Si(111) 7 x 7 has been investigated by second harmonic generation as a probe of transient spectral hole burning. Spectral holes induced by a 100 fs pump at {approx_equal} 1.5 eV and their decay are interpreted in terms of electronic dephasing times as short as 15 fs. This fast time scale together with the strong excitation-induced dephasing observed is interpreted in terms of carrier-carrier scattering. In addition, strong coupling of the electronic excitation to surface optical phonons is observed and attributed to the localization at adatom sites of a surface electronic excitation and a surface phonon mode.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: McGuire, John A.; Raschke, Markus B. & Shen, Yuen-Ron
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A hybrid method for computing forces on curved dislocations threading to free surfaces (open access)

A hybrid method for computing forces on curved dislocations threading to free surfaces

Dislocations threading to free surfaces present a challenge for numerical implementation of traction-free boundary conditions. The difficulty arises when canonical (singular) solutions of dislocation mechanics are used in combination with the Finite Element or Boundary Element (Green's function) methods. A new hybrid method is developed here in which the singular part and the non-singular (regular) part of the image stress are dealt with separately. A special analytical solution for a semi-infinite straight dislocation intersecting the surface of a half-space is used to account for the singular part of the image stress, while the remaining regular part of the image stress field is treated using the standard Finite Element Method. The numerical advantages of such regularization are demonstrated with examples.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Tang, M; Cai, W; Xu, G & Bulatov, V V
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, House Bill 2161, Chapter 267 (open access)

79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, House Bill 2161, Chapter 267

Bill introduced by the Texas House of Representatives relating to the power of the Railroad Commission of Texas to adopt and enforce safety standards and practices applicable to the transportation by pipeline of certain substances and to certain pipeline facilities, the provision of severance tax credits and exemptions and other incentives and procedures for producing oil or gas from certain wells or plugging wells, and the procedure for computing severance taxes in connection with certain gas sales; imposing an administrative penalty.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Texas. Legislature. House of Representatives.
Object Type: Legislative Document
System: The Portal to Texas History
79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, House Joint Resolution 80 (open access)

79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, House Joint Resolution 80

Joint resolution introduced by the Texas House of Representatives and Senate proposing a constitutional amendment clarifying that certain economic development programs do not constitute a debt.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Texas. Legislature. House of Representatives.
Object Type: Legislative Document
System: The Portal to Texas History
79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, Senate Bill 419, Chapter 269 (open access)

79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, Senate Bill 419, Chapter 269

Bill introduced by the Texas Senate relating to the continuation and functions of the Texas State Board of Medical Examiners, Texas State Board of Physician Assistant Examiners, and Texas State Board of Acupuncture Examiners and the regulation of health care professions regulated by those state agencies; providing administrative penalties.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Texas. Legislature. Senate.
Object Type: Legislative Document
System: The Portal to Texas History
79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, Senate Bill 6, Chapter 268 (open access)

79th Texas Legislature, Regular Session, Senate Bill 6, Chapter 268

Bill introduced by the Texas Senate relating to protective services and certain family law matters; providing penalties.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Texas. Legislature. Senate.
Object Type: Legislative Document
System: The Portal to Texas History
A First Look at Beam Diagnostics for the Rhic Electron Cooling Project. (open access)

A First Look at Beam Diagnostics for the Rhic Electron Cooling Project.

High energy electron cooling [1] is essential to meet the luminosity specification for RHIC II [2]. In preparation for electron cooling, an Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) test facility [3] is under construction at BNL. A preliminary description of Diagnostics for the ERL was presented at an earlier workshop [4]. A significant portion of the eCooling Diagnostics will be a simple extension of those developed for the ERL test facility. In this paper we present a preliminary report on eCooling Diagnostics. We summarize the planned conventional Diagnostics, and follow with more detailed descriptions of Diagnostics specialized to the requirements of high-energy magnetized cooling.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Cameron, P.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Kewisch, J. & Litvinenko, V.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects and Possible Origins of Mains Ripple in the Vicinity of the Betatron Spectrum. (open access)

The Effects and Possible Origins of Mains Ripple in the Vicinity of the Betatron Spectrum.

With the advent of significant improvement in the sensitivity of observation of the betatron spectrum, the appearance of spectral lines at harmonics of the mains power frequency has been observed in the PS and SPS at CERN, the Tevatron at FNAL, and RHIC at BNL. These lines are potentially problematic for accurate tune tracking and the implementation of tune feedback We discuss the possible origins of these lines, and present data to support our discussion.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Cameron, P.; Gasior, M.; Jones, R. & Tan, C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Trade-Through Rule (open access)

The Trade-Through Rule

None
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ADVANCES TOWARDS THE MEASUREMENT AND CONTROL LHC TUNE AND CHROMATICITY (open access)

ADVANCES TOWARDS THE MEASUREMENT AND CONTROL LHC TUNE AND CHROMATICITY

Requirements for tune and chromaticity control in most superconducting hadron machines, and in particular the LHC, are stringent. In order to reach nominal operation, the LHC will almost certainly require feedback on both tune and chromaticity. Experience at RHIC has also shown that coupling control is crucial to successful tune feedback. A prototype baseband phase-locked loop (PLL) tune measurement system has recently been brought into operation at RHIC as part of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). We report on the performance of that system and compare it with the extensive accumulation of data from the RHIC 245MHz PLL.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Cameron, P.; Cupolo, J.; Degen, C.; Dellapenna, A.; Hoff, L.; Mead, J. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adsorption of biometals to monosodium titanate in biological environments (open access)

Adsorption of biometals to monosodium titanate in biological environments

Monosodium titanate (MST) is an inorganic sorbent/ion exchanger developed for the removal of radionuclides from nuclear wastes. We investigated the ability of MST to bind Cd(II), Hg(II), or Au(III) to establish the utility of MST for applications in environmental decontamination or medical therapy (drug delivery). Adsorption isotherms for MST were determined at pH 7-7.5 in water or phosphate-buffered saline. The extent of metal binding was determined spectroscopically by measuring the concentrations of the metals in solution before and after contact with the MST. Cytotoxic responses to MST were assessed using THP1 monocytes and succinate dehydrogenase activity. Monocytic activation by MST was assessed by TNF{alpha} secretion (ELISA) with or without lipopolysaccharide (LPS) activation. MST sorbed Cd(II), Hg(II), and Au(III) under conditions similar to that in physiological systems. MST exhibited the highest affinity for Cd(II) followed by Hg(II) and Au (III). MST (up to 100 mg/L) exhibited only minor (< 25% suppression of succinate dehydrogenase) cytotoxicity and did not trigger TNF{alpha} secretion nor modulate LPS-induced TNF{alpha} secretion from monocytes. MST exhibits high affinity for biometals with no significant biological liabilities in these introductory studies. MST deserves further scrutiny as a substance with the capacity to decontaminate biological environments or deliver metals in …
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Hobbs, D. T.; Messer, R. L. W.; Lewis, J. B.; Click, D. R. Lockwood, P. E. & Wataha, J. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser Guiding for GeV Laser-Plasma Accelerators (open access)

Laser Guiding for GeV Laser-Plasma Accelerators

Guiding of relativistically intense laser beams in preformed plasma channels is discussed for development of GeV-class laser accelerators. Experiments using a channel guided laser wakefield accelerator (LWFA) at LBNL have demonstrated that near mono-energetic 100 MeV-class electron beams can be produced with a 10 TW laser system. Analysis, aided by particle-in-cell simulations, as well as experiments with various plasma lengths and densities, indicate that tailoring the length of the accelerator, together with loading of the accelerating structure with beam, is the key to production of mono-energetic electron beams. Increasing the energy towards a GeV and beyond will require reducing the plasma density and design criteria are discussed for an optimized accelerator module. The current progress and future directions are summarized through comparison with conventional accelerators, highlighting the unique short term prospects for intense radiation sources based on laser-driven plasma accelerators.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Leemans, Wim; Esarey, Eric; Geddes, Cameron; Schroeder, C.B. & Toth, Csaba
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technetium Chemistry in HLW (open access)

Technetium Chemistry in HLW

Tc contamination is found within the DOE complex at those sites whose mission involved extraction of plutonium from irradiated uranium fuel or isotopic enrichment of uranium. At the Hanford Site, chemical separations and extraction processes generated large amounts of high level and transuranic wastes that are currently stored in underground tanks. The waste from these extraction processes is currently stored in underground High Level Waste (HLW) tanks. However, the chemistry of the HLW in any given tank is greatly complicated by repeated efforts to reduce volume and recover isotopes. These processes ultimately resulted in mixing of waste streams from different processes. As a result, the chemistry and the fate of Tc in HLW tanks are not well understood. This lack of understanding has been made evident in the failed efforts to leach Tc from sludge and to remove Tc from supernatants prior to immobilization. Although recent interest in Tc chemistry has shifted from pretreatment chemistry to waste residuals, both needs are served by a fundamental understanding of Tc chemistry.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Hess, Nancy J.; Felmy, Andrew R.; Rosso, Kevin M. & Yuanxian, Xia
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
2-D or not 2-D, that is the question: A Northern California test (open access)

2-D or not 2-D, that is the question: A Northern California test

Reliable estimates of the seismic source spectrum are necessary for accurate magnitude, yield, and energy estimation. In particular, how seismic radiated energy scales with increasing earthquake size has been the focus of recent debate within the community and has direct implications on earthquake source physics studies as well as hazard mitigation. The 1-D coda methodology of Mayeda et al. has provided the lowest variance estimate of the source spectrum when compared against traditional approaches that use direct S-waves, thus making it ideal for networks that have sparse station distribution. The 1-D coda methodology has been mostly confined to regions of approximately uniform complexity. For larger, more geophysically complicated regions, 2-D path corrections may be required. The complicated tectonics of the northern California region coupled with high quality broadband seismic data provides for an ideal ''apples-to-apples'' test of 1-D and 2-D path assumptions on direct waves and their coda. Using the same station and event distribution, we compared 1-D and 2-D path corrections and observed the following results: (1) 1-D coda results reduced the amplitude variance relative to direct S-waves by roughly a factor of 8 (800%); (2) Applying a 2-D correction to the coda resulted in up to 40% variance …
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Mayeda, K; Malagnini, L; Phillips, W S; Walter, W R & Dreger, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced 3D Photocathode Modeling and Simulations Final Report (open access)

Advanced 3D Photocathode Modeling and Simulations Final Report

High brightness electron beams required by the proposed Next Linear Collider demand strong advances in photocathode electron gun performance. Significant improvement in the production of such beams with rf photocathode electron guns is hampered by the lack high-fidelity simulations. The critical missing piece in existing gun codes is a physics-based, detailed treatment of the very complex and highly nonlinear photoemission process.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Dimitrov, Dimitre A. & Bruhwiler, David L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Resolution/High Fidelity Seismic Imaging and Parameter Estimation for Geological Structure and Material Characterization (open access)

High Resolution/High Fidelity Seismic Imaging and Parameter Estimation for Geological Structure and Material Characterization

In this project, we develop new theories and methods for multi-domain one-way wave-equation based propagators, and apply these techniques to seismic modeling, seismic imaging, seismic illumination and model parameter estimation in 3D complex environments. The major progress of this project includes: (1) The development of the dual-domain wave propagators. We continue to improve the one-way wave-equation based propagators. Our target is making propagators capable of handling more realistic velocity models. A wide-angle propagator for transversely isotropic media with vertically symmetric axis (VTI) has been developed for P-wave modeling and imaging. The resulting propagator is accurate for large velocity perturbations and wide propagation angles. The thin-slab propagator for one-way elastic-wave propagation is further improved. With the introduction of complex velocities, the quality factors Qp and Qs have been incorporated into the thin-slab propagator. The resulting viscoelastic thin-slab propagator can handle elastic-wave propagation in models with intrinsic attenuations. We apply this method to complex models for AVO modeling, random media characterization and frequency-dependent reflectivity simulation. (2) Exploring the Information in the Local Angle Domain. Traditionally, the local angle information can only be extracted using the ray-based method. We develop a wave-equation based technique to process the local angle domain information. The approach …
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Ru-Shan Wu, Xiao-Bi Xie, Thorne Lay
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Numerical Study of Field-reversed Configurations: The Formation and Ion Spin-up (open access)

Numerical Study of Field-reversed Configurations: The Formation and Ion Spin-up

Results of three-dimensional numerical simulations of field-reversed configurations (FRCs) are presented. Emphasis of this work is on the nonlinear evolution of magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) instabilities in kinetic FRCs, and the new FRC formation method by counter-helicity spheromak merging. Kinetic simulations show nonlinear saturation of the n = 1 tilt mode, where n is the toroidal mode number. The n = 2 and n = 3 rotational modes are observed to grow during the nonlinear phase of the tilt instability due to the ion spin-up in the toroidal direction. The ion toroidal spin-up is shown to be related to the resistive decay of the internal flux, and the resulting loss of particle confinement. Three-dimensional MHD simulations of counter-helicity spheromak merging and FRC formation show good qualitative agreement with results from the SSX-FRC experiment. The simulations show formation of an FRC in about 20-30 Alfven times for typical experimental parameters. The growth rate of the n = 1 tilt mode is shown to be significantly reduced compared to the MHD growth rate due to the large plasma viscosity and field-line-tying effects.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Belova, E. V.; Davidson, R. C.; Ji, H.; Yamada, M.; Cothran, C. D.; Brown, M. R. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High-resolution ab-initio three-dimensional coherence X-ray diffraction microscopy (open access)

High-resolution ab-initio three-dimensional coherence X-ray diffraction microscopy

Three-dimensional diffraction microscopy offers the potential for high-resolution aberration-free diffraction-limited 3D images without the resolution and depth-of-field limitations of lens-based tomographic systems. Critical issues in obtaining a high-quality image include: (1) Data collection--signal to noise, system stability, dynamic range, automation; (2) Alignment of diffraction patterns with respect to one another; (3) Assembly of the diffraction data into a diffraction volume; and (4) Efficient algorithms for applying phase retrieval techniques to the diffraction volume; (5) Stability of the three-dimensional phase retrieval process; (6) Techniques for determining the object support; and (7) Treatment of missing data, both within the beamstop region and elsewhere. They have obtained high-quality 3D reconstructions from X-ray diffraction data alone. This is an important step, as it does not require a low-resolution image to fill in the beamstop region.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Barty, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, June 6, 2005 (open access)

The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 84, No. 184, Ed. 1 Monday, June 6, 2005

Daily newspaper from Baytown, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Cash, Wanda Garner
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
Softwood Lumber Imports from Canada: Issues and Events (open access)

Softwood Lumber Imports from Canada: Issues and Events

This report provides a concise historical account of the dispute over softwood lumber imports from Canada, summarizes the subsidy and injury evidence, and discusses current issues and events.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Gorte, Ross W. & Grimmett, Jeanne
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Teacher Recruitment and Retention: Federal, State, and Local Programs (open access)

Teacher Recruitment and Retention: Federal, State, and Local Programs

None
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Oral History Interview with Wayne Landes, June 6, 2005 transcript

Oral History Interview with Wayne Landes, June 6, 2005

The National Museum of the Pacific War presents an interview with Wayne Landes. Landes was drafted into the Army in June, 1944. He was hurried overseas during the Battle of the Bulge and joined the 333rd Infantry Regiment, 84th Infantry Division in Belgium. Then, they proceeded to attack into Germany. Landes returned home after the war with several German souvenirs.
Date: June 6, 2005
Creator: Landes, Wayne E.
Object Type: Sound
System: The Portal to Texas History