MACK/MACKLIB System for Nuclear Response Functions (open access)

MACK/MACKLIB System for Nuclear Response Functions

The MACK computer program calculates energy pointwise and multigroup nuclear response functions from basic nuclear data in ENDF/B format. The new version of the program MACK-IV, incorporates major developments and improvements aimed at maximizing the utilization of available nuclear data and ensuring energy conservation in nuclear heating calculations. A new library, MACKLIB-IV, of nuclear response functions was generated in the CTR energy group structure of 171 neutron groups and 36 gamma groups. The library was prepared using MACK-IV and ENDF/B-IV and is suitable for fusion, fusion-fission hydrids, and fission applications.
Date: March 15, 1978
Creator: Abdou, M. A. & Gohar, Y. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent progress in inertial confinement fusion at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (open access)

Recent progress in inertial confinement fusion at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory

The Shiva and Argus laser systems at Livermore have been developed to study the physics of inertial confinement fusion. Both laser system designs are predicated on the use of large aperture Nd-glass disk amplifiers and high power spatial filters. During the past year we have irradiated DT filled microshell targets with and without polymer coatings. Recently new instruments have been developed to investigate implosion dynamics and to determine the maximum fuel density achieved by these imploded fusion pellets. A series of target irradiations with thin wall microshells at 15 to 20 TW, exploding pusher designs, resulted in a maximum neutron yield of 3 x 10/sup 10/. Polymer coated microshells designed for high compression were subjected to 4 kJ for 0.2 ns and reached fuel densities of 2.0 to 3.0 gm/cm/sup 3/. Results of these and other recent experiments will be reviewed.
Date: October 15, 1979
Creator: Ahlstrom, H. G. & Manes, K. R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biphase turbine bottoming cycle for a diesel engine (open access)

Biphase turbine bottoming cycle for a diesel engine

Application of a two-phase turbine system to waste heat recovery was examined. Bottoming cycle efficiencies ranging from 15 to 30% were calculated for a 720/sup 0/F diesel exhaust temperature. A single stage demonstration unit, designed for non-toxic fluids (water and DowTherm A) and for atmospheric seals and bearings, had a cycle efficiency of 23%. The net output power was 276 hp at 8,100 rpm, increasing the total shaft power from 1,800 hp for the diesel alone, to 2,076 hp for the combined system. A four stage organic turbine, for the same application, had a rotational speed of 14,700 rpm while a four stage steam turbine had 26,000 rpm. Fabrication drawings were prepared for the turbine and nozzle. The major improvement leading to higher cycle efficiency and lower turbine rpm was found to be the use of a liquid component with lower sensible heat. A reduction in capital cost was found to result from the use of a contact heat exchanger instead of tube-fin construction. The cost for a contact heat exchanger was only $35-52/kWe compared to $98/kWe for a tube-fin heat exchanger. Design drawings and materials list were prepared. A program resulting in the demonstration of a two-phase bottoming system …
Date: February 15, 1977
Creator: Ahmad, S. & Hays, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coal feeder survey for Illinois coal gasification group. [Lockhopper, Fuller Kinyon screw, Foster Miller pocket feeder] (open access)

Coal feeder survey for Illinois coal gasification group. [Lockhopper, Fuller Kinyon screw, Foster Miller pocket feeder]

An evaluation of three coal feeder concepts (lockhopper, Fuller Kinyon screw and Foster Miller pocket feeder) for use in the ICGG first stage gasifier was made. For the sake of consistency, all feed concepts were evaluated on the same basis, that is, feeding a nominal 100 Tons per hour (TPH) against a back pressure of 50 psig. Also, all feed systems were assumed to have similar atmospheric storage hoppers and final injection systems. Accordingly, no further consideration of these support systems was made. This survey was accomplished by reviewing the literature, interviewing vendors, contacting applicable facilities and performing necessary original analysis. The emphasis of the survey was on the test and industrial experience of each system. The results of this survey which are summarized on Table I show that the lockhopper system still should be considered as the baseline system because it is a proven system with extensive operating experience. On the other hand, if definitive tests can prove conclusively that the Fuller Kinyon screw pump will deliver coal against 50 psig back pressure with acceptable efficiencies and coal particle attrition characteristics, it would be the preferred system because it is the lowest cost and easiest to maintain. The Foster …
Date: May 15, 1979
Creator: Alfi, A.; Fukuzawa, J. & Rezos, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Boundary Conditions on a Non-Equilibrium Transient Marshak Wave Problem (open access)

Effect of Boundary Conditions on a Non-Equilibrium Transient Marshak Wave Problem

Transient processes in radiative transfer have recently become of interest in the modeling of astrophysical phenomena, particularly with regard to the brightness of novae, supernovae, and perhaps even galactic clouds adjacent to quasars. Analytic solutions to a particular class of Marshak wave problems are presented with and without the Marshak (Milne) boundary condition. The choice of boundary condition can have a decisive effect on the coupling of radiative energy to the material energy in the vicinity of a material boundary. The analytic solution obtained can be useful as a tool for calibrating numerical calculation techniques.
Date: January 15, 1979
Creator: Alonso, C. T. & Pomraning, G. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive liquid wastes discharged to ground in the 200 areas during 1973 (open access)

Radioactive liquid wastes discharged to ground in the 200 areas during 1973

None
Date: April 15, 1974
Creator: Anderson, J. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive liquid wastes discharged to ground in the 200 areas during the first three quarters of 1973 (open access)

Radioactive liquid wastes discharged to ground in the 200 areas during the first three quarters of 1973

None
Date: January 15, 1974
Creator: Anderson, J. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of neutron measurements for the Viking Program (open access)

Summary of neutron measurements for the Viking Program

None
Date: August 15, 1975
Creator: Anderson, M.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced instrumentation for nuclear monitoring (open access)

Advanced instrumentation for nuclear monitoring

None
Date: September 15, 1975
Creator: Armantrout, G.; McGibbon, A.; Swierkowski, S.; Sherohman, J. & Yee, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development and function of membrane systems in plant tissue. Annual progress report, 15 July 1974--14 July 1975. [Ion transport in corn roots] (open access)

Development and function of membrane systems in plant tissue. Annual progress report, 15 July 1974--14 July 1975. [Ion transport in corn roots]

None
Date: July 15, 1975
Creator: Arntzen, C.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of shock wave risetime on material ejection from aluminum surfaces (open access)

Effect of shock wave risetime on material ejection from aluminum surfaces

The effect of shock wave risetime on material ejection in aluminum has been studied for loading stresses of 21 GPa. Uniform loading was accomplished with plate impact techniques by mounting specimens on a ramp wave generator. Projectile impact on one side of the wave generator produced a wave which dispersed with propagation distance. This wave was then made incident to an aluminum specimen, so that the specimen experienced non-shock loading. It was found that mass ejection from aluminum surfaces can be reduced by over two orders of magnitude relative to shock loading conditions by accelerating the surface with a wave risetime greater than about 35 ns. These results suggest an explanation for the apparent discrepancies which are sometimes observed in mass ejection measurements utilizing either plate impact or electron beam deposition to generate stress waves.
Date: September 15, 1977
Creator: Asay, J.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structure and electrical activity of planar defects in EFG ribbons. First quarterly report, January 1--March 31, 1979 (open access)

Structure and electrical activity of planar defects in EFG ribbons. First quarterly report, January 1--March 31, 1979

The structure and electrical activity of planar defects in EFG Silicon was investigated by optical, electron beam induced current (EBIC), and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). What appears to be twin boundaries by both optical microscopy + etching, and by EBIC are in reality systems of microtwins, some of which are only a few atomic lattice planes thick. The electrical activity of planar defects appears to be correlated with emission of dislocations especially at termination points. Impurity effects may also play a role. Twin boundaries per se appear not to be electricaly active.
Date: April 15, 1979
Creator: Ast, D.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neon gas imaging of gold in the field ion microscope. Report No. 1973 (open access)

Neon gas imaging of gold in the field ion microscope. Report No. 1973

None
Date: March 15, 1973
Creator: Averback, R.S. & Seidman, D.N.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test of the External Muon Identifier Efficiency (open access)

Test of the External Muon Identifier Efficiency

We wish to measure the EMI efficiency at hadron momenta higher than the 3 GeV used at the Beavatron. We propose to use the 30 M{sup 3} bubble chamber as the momentum and spatial analyzer of charged hadrons both of the incident beam and those final state hadrons of interactions that occur within the chamber. We would use the EMI modules as mounted on the bubble chamber vacuum tank to measure the efficiency of the EMI absorbers (coils and zinc) over a wide range of momenta. A hadron signature would be either the lack of a proportional chamber (pc) encoding within the '96% muon-circle' or a multiple PC encoding. We shall attempt to identify {pi}-{mu} decays in the chamber to use as a source of muons. Such a test would give us experience in spatially reconstructing tracks within the chamber and in projecting their trajectories out to the EMI detector modules. The early portion of this test could utilize whatever hadron beam the NAL bubble chamber group would be using at the time. We would make a copy of an adequate number of the original frames and compare the film quality with the original ones to test whether the EMI …
Date: August 15, 1972
Creator: Babaro-Galtieri, A.; Solmitz, F. T.; Stevenson, M. L.; Cence, R. J.; Harris, F. A.; Parker, S. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Isotopic HCl transfer laser (open access)

Isotopic HCl transfer laser

An HCl laser which uses isotopic V-V energy transfer collisions as a pumping mechanism has been demonstrated. This multiline laser, which utilized an intracavity cold gas isotope filter, increased the energy from the P/sub 1/ lines of H/sup 37/Cl while decreasng the energies of the P/sub 1/ and P/sub 2/ lines of H/sup 35/Cl. Previously unreported lines, including emission from R branch transitions, have also been observed from single-line HCl and HBr lasers.
Date: December 15, 1977
Creator: Badcock, C.C.; Hwang, W.C.; Kalsch, J.F. & Kamada, R.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of emission from hydrogenic ions in super liquid density plasmas (open access)

Calculation of emission from hydrogenic ions in super liquid density plasmas

Previous calculations of line emission were extended to higher density, lower temperature plasmas, typical of those expected in early ablative compression experiments. Emission from Ne-seeded fuel was analyzed in order to diagnose the density and temperature of the compressed core. The Stark/Doppler broadened emission profile is calculated for the H-like Ne resonance line. The observable lineshape is then obtained by time-averaging over expected density and temperature profiles and by including the effects of radiative transfer.
Date: November 15, 1976
Creator: Bailey, D. S. & Valeo, E. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary summary of particle transport effects in non-axisymmetric tandem mirrors (open access)

Preliminary summary of particle transport effects in non-axisymmetric tandem mirrors

This report reviews the physical basis for the theory of enhanced transport in non-axisymmetric tandem mirror systems recently published by Ryutov, et al. For TMX and thermal ions in a reactor, the radial loss is estimated to be somewhat less than the axial loss; energetic alphas in reactors are susceptible to rapid loss. A number of variations of current magnetic field designs are suggested for reducing this transport.
Date: September 15, 1978
Creator: Baldwin, D.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Number systems: cross-reference guide MCS-8 microcomputer. [Decimal binary, octal, and hexidecimal number systems equivalents, and corresponding teletype characters] (open access)

Number systems: cross-reference guide MCS-8 microcomputer. [Decimal binary, octal, and hexidecimal number systems equivalents, and corresponding teletype characters]

This Number System Cross Reference Guide constitutes a ready reference for programing the MCS-8 Microcomputer or designing logic systems. Columns give the number equivalents of decimal, binary, octal, and hexidecimal systems for decimal numbers zero through 255, as well as a corresponding teletype character opposite each row of equivalent numbers. (RWR)
Date: August 15, 1974
Creator: Ball, M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some considerations in the design of a Venetian Blind direct converter (open access)

Some considerations in the design of a Venetian Blind direct converter

The structural design of a Venetian Blind direct converter will depend on the choice, for example, of: 1) Expander field, (2) Selective leakage, (3) Number of collector stages, (4) Method of cooling and (5) The general configuration and orientation. This note is intended to outline the major compromises that will result from the variation of parameters to fit a particular design. The relationships given are for a two-stage unit, but it is straightforward to extend them to multiple-stage units. (auth)
Date: December 15, 1975
Creator: Barr, W.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Luminescence studies of oxygen absorption on thorium (open access)

Luminescence studies of oxygen absorption on thorium

The interaction of oxygen with a thorium metal surface is being studied by monitoring the luminescence of thorium in an electron beam. By combining luminescence measurements with Auger electron spectroscopy data, it is possible to distinguish between processes that depend upon the oxygen pressure at the sample surface, and those that depend only upon the amount of adsorbed oxygen.
Date: February 15, 1977
Creator: Bastasz, R.; Colmenares, C. A.; Smith, R. L. & Somorjai, G. A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Technology of mirror machines: LLL facilities for magnetic mirror fusion experiments (open access)

Technology of mirror machines: LLL facilities for magnetic mirror fusion experiments

Significant progress in plasma confinement and temperature has been achieved in the 2XIIB facility at Livermore. These encouraging results, and their theoretical corroboration, have provided a firm basis for the design of a new generation of magnetic mirror experiments, adding support to the mirror concept of a fusion reactor. Two new mirror experiments have been proposed to succeed the currently operating 2XIIB facility. The first of these called TMX (Tandem Mirror Experiment) has been approved and is currently under construction. TMX is designed to utilize the intrinsic positive plasma potential of two strong, and relatively small, minimum B mirror cells to enhance the confinement of a much larger, magnetically weaker, centrally-located mirror cell. The second facility, MFTF (Mirror Fusion Test Facility), is currently in preliminary design with line item approval anticipated for FY 78. MFTF is designed primarily to exploit the experimental and theoretical results derived from 2XIIB. Beyond that, MFTF will develop the technology for the transition from the present small mirror experiments to large steady-state devices such as the mirror FERF/FTR. The sheer magnitude of the plasma volume, magnetic field, neutral beam power, and vacuum pumping capacity, particularly in the case of MFTF, has placed new and exciting …
Date: September 15, 1977
Creator: Batzer, T. H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental drifts of juvenile salmonids through effluent discharges at Hanford, Part 2, 1969 drifts and conclusions (open access)

Experimental drifts of juvenile salmonids through effluent discharges at Hanford, Part 2, 1969 drifts and conclusions

None
Date: July 15, 1970
Creator: Becker, C. D.; Coutant, C. C. & Prentice, E. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A proposal to study particle production spectra and multiplicities in high energy hadron-hadron collisions, and for a beam survey and quark search (open access)

A proposal to study particle production spectra and multiplicities in high energy hadron-hadron collisions, and for a beam survey and quark search

We propose an experimental study at the new 500 GeV accelerator of the differential cross-section for particle production in hadron-hadron collisions. The projectile, and the observed single particle, will range over all combinations of positive and negative {pi}, K and p, with momenta extending up to the highest available. Enough of the secondary particle momentum range will be covered to permit us to determine by integration the multiplicity of the produced particle. Single particles will be detected in a simple spectrometer consisting of wire chambers and a small bending magnet. The configuration of the spectrometer components will be variable so that the overall spectrometer length can be kept proportional to the secondary momentum. The momentum resolution {male}P/P = {+-}0.8% and the invariant phase space acceptance P{sup 2}d{Omega}dP/E = 1.3x10{sup -3} (GeV/c){sup 2} will then be the same at all momenta. Particle identification will be by means of threshold Cherenkov counters, with 10{sup 4}: 1 rejection up to at least 250 GeV/c. Our experimental arrangement is thought to be simple and yet powerful, and we propose its use initially with incident protons and a nuclear target for a beam survey and quark search. Subsequent measurements will be carried out with a …
Date: June 15, 1970
Creator: Beier, E.W.; Kreinick, D.L.; Weisberg, H. & U., /Pennsylvania
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of pattern recognition techniques to crime analysis (open access)

Application of pattern recognition techniques to crime analysis

The initial goal was to evaluate the capabilities of current pattern recognition techniques when applied to existing computerized crime data. Performance was to be evaluated both in terms of the system's capability to predict crimes and to optimize police manpower allocation. A relation was sought to predict the crime's susceptibility to solution, based on knowledge of the crime type, location, time, etc. The preliminary results of this work are discussed. They indicate that automatic crime analysis involving pattern recognition techniques is feasible, and that efforts to determine optimum variables and techniques are warranted. 47 figures (RWR)
Date: August 15, 1976
Creator: Bender, C. F.; Cox, L. A., Jr. & Chappell, G. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library