Limits on likesign dilepton production in nu/sub. mu. / interactions (open access)

Limits on likesign dilepton production in nu/sub. mu. / interactions

We have searched for the production of likesign dilepton events (nu/sub ..mu../ + Ne ..-->.. ..mu../sup -/ + e/sup -/ + ...) in a wideband neutrino beam at FNAL using the 15' bubble chamber. We observe no signal above the background arising from conventional sources. We set 90% confidence level upper limits for the production rates of (nu/sub ..mu../ + Ne ..-->.. ..mu../sup -/ + e/sup -/ + ...)/(nu/sub ..mu../ + Ne ..-->.. ..mu../sup -/ + ...) less than or equal to 8 * 10/sup -5/ and (nu/sub ..mu../ + Ne ..-->.. ..mu../sup -/ + e/sup -/ + ...)/(nu/sub ..mu../ + Ne ..-->.. ..mu../sup -/ + e/sup +/ + ...) less than or equal to 6 * 10/sup -2/.
Date: May 21, 1985
Creator: Baker, N. J.; Connolly, P. L.; Kahn, S. A.; Murtagh, M. J.; Palmer, R. B.; Samios, N. P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-ray diffraction study of reversible deformation mechanisms in the aged uranium-6. 5 niobium alloy (open access)

X-ray diffraction study of reversible deformation mechanisms in the aged uranium-6. 5 niobium alloy

The x-ray diffraction (XRD) data from 200/sup 0/C/2h-aged uranium-6.5 wt % niobium (U-6.5Nb) alloys, taken under stress as a function of strain, revealed a gamma-zero (..gamma../sup 0/)..-->.. alpha prime-prime (..cap alpha..'') thermoelastic martensitic phase transformation. It was concluded that the primary reversible deformation modes consisted of the movement of ..gamma../sup 0//..cap alpha..'' interphase interfaces and ..cap alpha..'' intervariant interfaces. Specimen elasticity at low strains was associated with the retreat of interphase interfaces. At higher strains, interphase interfaces did not recover significantly on unloading, and elasticity was due primarily to the retreat of ..cap alpha..'' intervariant interfaces.
Date: June 21, 1985
Creator: Carpenter, D.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elimination of electromagnetic radiation in plasma simulation: the Darwin or magnetoinductive approximation (open access)

Elimination of electromagnetic radiation in plasma simulation: the Darwin or magnetoinductive approximation

For many astrophysical and most magnetic fusion applications, the purely electromagnetic modes generated by real as well as simulation ''plasma'' fluctuations are a source of high frequency radiation that is often irrelevant to the physics of interest. Unfortunately, a numerical CFL stability limit prevents either making c infinite or deltat large while using the usual explicit Maxwell's equations for the fields. A modification of Maxwell's equations, which provides implicitly the field components, circumvents this problem. The solution is to neglect retardation effects so that the electromagnetic propagation speed is effectively infinite. The purely electromagnetic modes in this limit evolve ''instantly'' to a time-asymptotic configuration about the macroscopic plasma configuration at each new time level. The Darwin or magnetoinductive approximation effectively provides infinite propagation speeds for purely electromagnetic modes by converting Maxwell's equations from hyperbolic to elliptic in character. In practice, this is accomplished by neglecting the solenoidal part of the displacement current. The elimination of the CFL time step constraint more than offsets the substantially more complicated field solution that is required. The details of a numerical implementation of this model will be presented. Numerical examples will be given and extentions of the Darwin field solution to other plasma models …
Date: February 21, 1985
Creator: Hewett, D.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of somatic mutations in human erythrocytes by cytometry (open access)

Determination of somatic mutations in human erythrocytes by cytometry

Flow cytometric assays of human erythrocytes labeled with monoclonal antibodies specific for glycophorin A were used to enumerate variant cells that appear in peripheral blood as a result of somatic gene-loss mutations in erythrocyte precursor cells. The assay was performed on erythrocytes from 10 oncology patients who had received at least one treatment from radiation or mutagenic chemotherapy at least 3 weeks before being assayed. The patients were suffering from many different malignancies (e.g., breast, renal, bone, colon and lung), and were treated with several different mutagenic therapeutics (e.g., cisplatinum, adriamycin, daunomycin, or cyclophosphamide). The frequency of these variant cells is an indication of the amount of mutagenic damage accumulated in the individual's erythropoietic cell population. Comparing these results to HPRT clonogenic assays, we find similar baseline frequencies of somatic mutation as well as similar correlation with mutagenic exposures. 9 refs., 3 figs., 1 tab.
Date: June 21, 1985
Creator: Jensen, R.H.; Langlois, R.G. & Bigbee, W.L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Forced-convection boiling tests performed in parallel simulated LMR fuel assemblies (open access)

Forced-convection boiling tests performed in parallel simulated LMR fuel assemblies

Forced-convection tests have been carried out using parallel simulated Liquid Metal Reactor fuel assemblies in an engineering-scale sodium loop, the Thermal-Hydraulic Out-of-Reactor Safety facility. The tests, performed under single- and two-phase conditions, have shown that for low forced-convection flow there is significant flow augmentation by thermal convection, an important phenomenon under degraded shutdown heat removal conditions in an LMR. The power and flows required for boiling and dryout to occur are much higher than decay heat levels. The experimental evidence supports analytical results that heat removal from an LMR is possible with a degraded shutdown heat removal system.
Date: April 21, 1985
Creator: Rose, S. D.; Carbajo, J. J.; Levin, A. E.; Lloyd, D. B.; Montgomery, B. H. & Wantland, J. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nondestructive assay instrumentation for Savannah River Plant reprocessing accountability (open access)

Nondestructive assay instrumentation for Savannah River Plant reprocessing accountability

We have designed, developed, and calibrated three different types of nondestructive assay systems for the Savannah River Plant (SRP). These systems will be delivered to SRP in 1986 and become part of the nuclear material accounting instrumentation at one of SRP's reprocessing facilities. Among the various types of nondestructive assay systems to be implemented are a neutron counter (Los Alamos National Laboratory - LANL), a four-station calorimeter (Mound Laboratories), a waste solution assay system (LANL), two gamma-ray solution concentration assay systems (LLNL), two x-ray fluorescence analysis concentration assay systems (LLNL), and one 2-detector plutonium solids isotopics system (LLNL). Los Alamos also has the responsibility of combining the individual measurement systems into an integrated accountability capability. Each NDA instrument will report results to a central Instrument Control Computer (ICC). Figure 1 illustrates schematically the integrated system with each Laboratory's contribution shown by dotted lines.
Date: June 21, 1985
Creator: Ruhter, W. D.; Camp, D. C.; Gunnink, R. & Prindle, A. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Intrabeam Scattering for a Proton Beam in RHIC (open access)

Intrabeam Scattering for a Proton Beam in RHIC

None
Date: January 21, 1985
Creator: Parzen, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fireball Ridge Geothermal Prospect, Churchill County, Nevada (open access)

Fireball Ridge Geothermal Prospect, Churchill County, Nevada

None
Date: February 21, 1985
Creator: Desormier, William L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Software requirements definition Shipping Cask Analysis System (SCANS) (open access)

Software requirements definition Shipping Cask Analysis System (SCANS)

The US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) staff reviews the technical adequacy of applications for certification of designs of shipping casks for spent nuclear fuel. In order to confirm an acceptable design, the NRC staff may perform independent calculations. The current NRC procedure for confirming cask design analyses is laborious and tedious. Most of the work is currently done by hand or through the use of a remote computer network. The time required to certify a cask can be long. The review process may vary somewhat with the engineer doing the reviewing. Similarly, the documentation on the results of the review can also vary with the reviewer. To increase the efficiency of this certification process, LLNL was requested to design and write an integrated set of user-oriented, interactive computer programs for a personal microcomputer. The system is known as the NRC Shipping Cask Analysis System (SCANS). The computer codes and the software system supporting these codes are being developed and maintained for the NRC by LLNL. The objective of this system is generally to lessen the time and effort needed to review an application. Additionally, an objective of the system is to assure standardized methods and documentation of the confirmatory analyses …
Date: July 21, 1985
Creator: Johnson, G. L. & Serbin, R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library