Global Analysis Of The Negative Parity Non-Strange Baryons In The 1/N{sub c} Expansion (open access)

Global Analysis Of The Negative Parity Non-Strange Baryons In The 1/N{sub c} Expansion

A global study of the negative parity non-strange baryon observables is performed in the framework of the 1/N{sub c} expansion. Masses, partial decay widths and photo-couplings are simultaneously analyzed. A main objective is to determine the composition of the spin 1/2 and 3/2 nucleon states, which come in pairs and involve two mixing angles which can be determined and tested for consistency by the mentioned observables. The issue of the assignment of those nucleon states to the broken SU(4) X O(3) mixed-symmetry multiplet is studied in detail, with the conclusion that the assignment made in the old studies based on the non-relativistic quark model is the preferred one. In addition, the analysis involves an update of the input data with respect to previous works.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: Goity, Jose L.; Hampton University, Hampton, VA (United States)]; Gonzalez de Urreta, Emiliano Jose; CONICET, Rivadavia 1917, (1033) Buenos Aires (Argentina)]; Scoccola, Norberto N.; CONICET, Rivadavia 1917, (1033) Buenos Aires (Argentina) et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Final Report: Building a Community Infrastructure for Scalable On-Line Performance Analysis Tools around Open|SpeedShop (open access)

Project Final Report: Building a Community Infrastructure for Scalable On-Line Performance Analysis Tools around Open|SpeedShop

In this project we created a community tool infrastructure for program development tools targeting Petascale class machines and beyond. This includes tools for performance analysis, debugging, and correctness tools, as well as tuning and optimization frameworks. The developed infrastructure provides a comprehensive and extensible set of individual tool building components. We started with the basic elements necessary across all tools in such an infrastructure followed by a set of generic core modules that allow a comprehensive performance analysis at scale. Further, we developed a methodology and workflow that allows others to add or replace modules, to integrate parts into their own tools, or to customize existing solutions. In order to form the core modules, we built on the existing Open|SpeedShop infrastructure and decomposed it into individual modules that match the necessary tool components. At the same time, we addressed the challenges found in performance tools for petascale systems in each module. When assembled, this instantiation of community tool infrastructure provides an enhanced version of Open|SpeedShop, which, while completely different in its architecture, provides scalable performance analysis for petascale applications through a familiar interface. This project also built upon and enhances capabilities and reusability of project partner components as specified in …
Date: January 6, 2014
Creator: Galarowicz, James
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of MMC Gamma Detectors for Nuclear Analysis (open access)

Development of MMC Gamma Detectors for Nuclear Analysis

None
Date: January 23, 2014
Creator: Bates, C. R.; Pies, C.; Kempf, S.; Gastaldo, L.; Fleischmann, A.; Enss, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Retrofit Variable-Speed Furnace Fan Motors (open access)

Evaluation of Retrofit Variable-Speed Furnace Fan Motors

In conjunction with the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) and Proctor Engineering Group, Ltd. (PEG), the Consortium for Advanced Residential Buildings (CARB) has evaluated the Concept 3 (tm) replacement motors for residential furnaces. These brushless, permanent magnet (BPM) motors can use much less electricity than their PSC (permanent split capacitor) predecessors. This evaluation focuses on existing homes in the heating-dominated climate of upstate New York with the goals of characterizing field performance and cost-effectiveness. The results of this study are intended to be useful to home performance contractors, HVAC contractors, and home efficiency program stakeholders. The project includes eight homes in and near Syracuse, NY. Tests and monitoring was performed both before and after fan motors were replaced. Average fan power reductions were approximately 126 Watts during heating and 220 Watts during cooling operation. Over the course of entire heating and cooling seasons, these translated into average electric energy savings of 163 kWh. Average cost savings were $20 per year. Homes where the fan was used outside of heating and cooling mode saved an additional $42 per year on average. Results indicate that BPM replacement motors will be most cost-effective in HVAC systems with longer run …
Date: January 2014
Creator: Aldrich, R. & Williamson, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Upper Bound on the First Star Formation History (open access)

Upper Bound on the First Star Formation History

None
Date: January 9, 2014
Creator: Inoue, Yoshiyuki; Tanaka, Yasuyuki T.; Madejski, Grzegorz M. & Dominguez, Alberto
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feasibility Study For Use Of Commercial Cask Vendor Dry Transfer Systems To Unload Used Fuel Assemblies In L-Area (open access)

Feasibility Study For Use Of Commercial Cask Vendor Dry Transfer Systems To Unload Used Fuel Assemblies In L-Area

The purpose of this study is to determine whether a commercial dry transfer system (DTS) could be used for loading or unloading used nuclear fuel (UNF) in L-Basin and to determine if a DTS pool adapter could be made for L-Basin Transfer Pit #2 that could accommodate a variety of DTS casks and fuel baskets or canisters up to 24” diameter.[1, 2] This study outlines the technical feasibility of accommodating different vendor dry transfer systems in the L-Basin Transfer Bay with a general work scope. It identifies equipment needing development, facility modifications, and describes the needed analyses and calculations. After reviewing the L-Basin Transfer Bay area layout and information on the only DTS system currently in use for the Nuclear Assurance Corporation Legal Weight Truck cask (NAC LWT), the authors conclude that use of a dry transfer cask is feasible. AREVA was contacted and acknowledged that they currently do not have a design for a dry transfer cask for their new Transnuclear Long Cask (TN-LC) cask. Nonetheless, this study accounted for a potential future DTS from AREVA to handle fuel baskets up to 18” in diameter. Due to the layout of the Transfer Bay, it was determined that a DTS …
Date: February 6, 2014
Creator: Krementz, Dan; Rose, David & Dunsmuir, Mike
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Trace Simulation of Bwr Anticipated Transient Without Scram Leading to Emergency Depressurization (open access)

Trace Simulation of Bwr Anticipated Transient Without Scram Leading to Emergency Depressurization

N/A
Date: June 15, 2014
Creator: Cheng, L. Y.; J., Beak; Cuadra, A.; Aronson, A.; Diamond, D. & Yarsky, P. (with the NRC)
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Solar Resource Measurements in Humboldt State University, Arcata, California: Cooperative Research and Development Final Report, CRADA Number CRD-08-262 (open access)

Solar Resource Measurements in Humboldt State University, Arcata, California: Cooperative Research and Development Final Report, CRADA Number CRD-08-262

Site-specific, long-term, continuous, and high-resolution measurements of solar irradiance are important for developing renewable resource data. These data are used for several research and development activities consistent with the NREL mission: establish a national 30-year climatological database of measured solar irradiances; provide high quality ground-truth data for satellite remote sensing validation; support development of radiative transfer models for estimating solar irradiance from available meteorological observations; provide solar resource information needed for technology deployment and operations. Data acquired under this agreement will be available to the public through NREL's Measurement & Instrumentation Data Center - MIDC (www.nrel.gov/midc) or the Renewable Resource Data Center - RReDC (http://rredc.nrel.gov). The MIDC offers a variety of standard data display, access, and analysis tools designed to address the needs of a wide user audience (e.g., industry, academia, and government interests).
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Stoffel, T. & Andreas, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
NREL Demonstrates Efficient Solar Water Splitting by Metal Oxide Photoabsorber (Fact Sheet) (open access)

NREL Demonstrates Efficient Solar Water Splitting by Metal Oxide Photoabsorber (Fact Sheet)

New development demonstrates that inexpensive and robust metal oxide photoabsorbers hold great promise as photoanodes for water oxidation.
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ILC Higgs White Paper (open access)

ILC Higgs White Paper

None
Date: January 9, 2014
Creator: Barklow, T.; Asner, D. M.; Calancha, C.; Fujii, K.; Graf, N.; Haber, H. E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Annual Report: Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) (30 September 2013) (open access)

Annual Report: Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) (30 September 2013)

The Carbon Capture Simulation Initiative (CCSI) is a partnership among national laboratories, industry and academic institutions that is developing and deploying state-of-the-art computational modeling and simulation tools to accelerate the commercialization of carbon capture technologies from discovery to development, demonstration, and ultimately the widespread deployment to hundreds of power plants. The CCSI Toolset will provide end users in industry with a comprehensive, integrated suite of scientifically validated models, with uncertainty quantification (UQ), optimization, risk analysis and decision making capabilities. The CCSI Toolset incorporates commercial and open-source software currently in use by industry and is also developing new software tools as necessary to fill technology gaps identified during execution of the project. Ultimately, the CCSI Toolset will (1) enable promising concepts to be more quickly identified through rapid computational screening of devices and processes; (2) reduce the time to design and troubleshoot new devices and processes; (3) quantify the technical risk in taking technology from laboratory-scale to commercial-scale; and (4) stabilize deployment costs more quickly by replacing some of the physical operational tests with virtual power plant simulations. CCSI is led by the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) and leverages the Department of Energy (DOE) national laboratories’ core strengths in modeling …
Date: March 5, 2014
Creator: Miller, David C.; Syamlal, Madhava; Cottrell, Roger; Kress, Joel D.; Sundaresan, S.; Sun, Xin et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
National Ignition Facility, High-Energy-Density and Inertial Confinement Fusion, Peer-Review Panel (PRP) Final Report (open access)

National Ignition Facility, High-Energy-Density and Inertial Confinement Fusion, Peer-Review Panel (PRP) Final Report

None
Date: January 28, 2014
Creator: Keane, C. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydronic Heating Coil Versus Propane Furnace, Rehoboth Beach, Delaware (Fact Sheet) (open access)

Hydronic Heating Coil Versus Propane Furnace, Rehoboth Beach, Delaware (Fact Sheet)

Insight Homes constructed two houses in Rehoboth Beach, Delaware, with identical floor plans and thermal envelopes but different heating and domestic hot water (DHW) systems. Each house is 1,715-ft<sup>2</sup> with a single story, three bedrooms, two bathrooms, and the heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems and ductwork located in conditioned crawlspaces. The standard house, which the builder offers as its standard production house, uses an air source heat pump (ASHP) with supplemental propane furnace heating. The Building America test house uses the same ASHP unit with supplemental heat provided by the DHW heater (a combined DHW and hydronic heating system, where the hydronic heating element is in the air handler). Both houses were occupied during the test period. Results indicate that efficiency of the two heating systems was not significantly different. Three issues dominate these results; lower system design performance resulting from the indoor refrigerant coil selected for the standard house, an incorrectly functioning defrost cycle in the standard house, and the low resolution of the natural gas monitoring equipment. The thermal comfort of both houses fell outside the ASHRAE Standard 55 heating range but was within the ACCA room-to-room temperature range when compared to the thermostat temperature. The …
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of Excited Hyperons in Photoproduction at CLAS (open access)

Measurement of Excited Hyperons in Photoproduction at CLAS

Measurement results of photoproduced excited hyperon states using the CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab are shown. The invariant mass distribution of the {Lambda}(1405) has recently been shown to be different for each of the three Sigma pi channels that it decays to, showing that there is prominent interference between the isospin I=0 and I=1 isospin amplitudes. Measurements of the differential and total cross sections of the three hyperons {Lambda}(1405), {Sigma}{sup 0}(1385), and Lambda(1520) are presented and compared. Prospects of future studies using a 12 GeV beam with the GlueX detector are briefly given.
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Moriya, Kei & Schumacher, Reinhard A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron g-2 in Light-Front Quantization (open access)

Electron g-2 in Light-Front Quantization

None
Date: February 24, 2014
Creator: Zhao, Xingbo; Honkanen, Heli; Maris, Pieter; Vary, James P. & Brodsky, Stanley J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid-Air Interface Corrosion Testing Simulating The Environment Of Hanford Double Shell Tanks (open access)

Liquid-Air Interface Corrosion Testing Simulating The Environment Of Hanford Double Shell Tanks

Coupon tests on A537 carbon steel materials were conducted to evaluate the Liquid-Air Interface (LAI) corrosion susceptibility in a series of solutions designed to simulate conditions in the radioactive waste tanks located at the Hanford Nuclear Facility. The new stress corrosion cracking requirements and the impact of ammonia on LAI corrosion were the primary focus. The minimum R value (i.e., molar ratio of nitrite to nitrate) of 0.15 specified by the new stress corrosion cracking requirements was found to be insufficient to prevent pitting corrosion at the LAI. The pH of the test solutions was 10, which was actually less than the required pH 11 defined by the new requirements. These tests examined the effect of the variation of the pH due to hydroxide depletion at the liquid air interface. The pits from the current testing ranged from 0.001 to 0.008 inch in solutions with nitrate concentrations of 0.4 M and 2.0 M. The pitting and general attack that occurred progressed over the four-months. No significant pitting was observed, however, for a solution with a nitrate concentration of 4.5 M. The pitting depths observed in these partial immersion tests in unevaporated condensates ranged from 0.001 to 0.005 inch after 4 …
Date: January 30, 2014
Creator: Wiersma, B.; Gray, J. R.; Garcia-Diaz, B. L.; Murphy, T. H. & Hicks, K. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ECR Nb Films Grown on Amorphous and Crystalline Cu Substrates: Influence of Ion Energy (open access)

ECR Nb Films Grown on Amorphous and Crystalline Cu Substrates: Influence of Ion Energy

In the pursuit of niobium (Nb) films with similar performance with the commonly used bulk Nb surfaces for Superconducting RF (SRF) applications, significant progress has been made with the development of energetic condensation deposition techniques. Using energetic condensation of ions extracted from plasma generated by Electron Cyclotron Resonance, it has been demonstrated that Nb films with good structural properties and RRR comparable to bulk values can be produced on metallic substrates. The controlled incoming ion energy enables a number of processes such as desorption of adsorbed species, enhanced mobility of surface atoms and sub-implantation of impinging ions, thus producing improved film structures at lower process temperatures. Particular attention is given to the nucleation conditions to create a favourable template for growing the final surface exposed to SRF fields. The influence of the deposition energy on film growth on copper substrates is investigated with the characterization of the film surface, structure, superconducting properties and RF performance.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: Valente, Anne-Marie; Eremeev, Grigory V.; Spradlin, Joshua K.; Phillips, H. Lawrence; Reece, Charles E.; Cao, C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization and Fabrication of Spoke Cavities for High-Velocity Applications (open access)

Characterization and Fabrication of Spoke Cavities for High-Velocity Applications

A 500 MHz, velocity-of-light, two-spoke cavity has been designed and optimized for possible use in a compact light source. Here we present the mechanical analysis and steps taken in fabrication of this cavity at Jefferson Lab.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: Hopper, Christopher S.; Park, HyeKyoung & Delayen, Jean R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Semiconductor detectors with proximity signal readout (open access)

Semiconductor detectors with proximity signal readout

Semiconductor-based radiation detectors are routinely used for the detection, imaging, and spectroscopy of x-rays, gamma rays, and charged particles for applications in the areas of nuclear and medical physics, astrophysics, environmental remediation, nuclear nonproliferation, and homeland security. Detectors used for imaging and particle tracking are more complex in that they typically must also measure the location of the radiation interaction in addition to the deposited energy. In such detectors, the position measurement is often achieved by dividing or segmenting the electrodes into many strips or pixels and then reading out the signals from all of the electrode segments. Fine electrode segmentation is problematic for many of the standard semiconductor detector technologies. Clearly there is a need for a semiconductor-based radiation detector technology that can achieve fine position resolution while maintaining the excellent energy resolution intrinsic to semiconductor detectors, can be fabricated through simple processes, does not require complex electrical interconnections to the detector, and can reduce the number of required channels of readout electronics. Proximity electrode signal readout (PESR), in which the electrodes are not in physical contact with the detector surface, satisfies this need.
Date: January 30, 2014
Creator: Asztalos, Stephen J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Final Technical Report (open access)

Final Technical Report

The project, �Capital Investment to Fund Equipment Purchases and Facility Modifications to Create a Sustainable Future for EnergyXchange� served to replace landfill gas energy with alternative energy resources, primarily solar and wood waste. This is the final project closeout report.
Date: November 13, 2014
Creator: Gilbert, Chris
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library

Polarization Observables From The Photoproduction Of Omega-Mesons Using Linearly Polarized Photons

We report on the extraction of Polarization Observables Spin Density Matrix Elements (SDMEs), and Beam Asymmetry Sigma for omega meson photoproduction using a beam of linearly polarized photons in the photon energy region of Egamma = 1.3 to 1.7 GeV, by means of the angular distributions of the daughter pions from omega decay. These preliminary results are from the g8b dataset, which were collected with the CLAS detector in Hall B of Jefferson Lab.
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Martinez, Danny & Cole, Philip L.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sea quark transverse momentum distributions and dynamical chiral symmetry breaking (open access)

Sea quark transverse momentum distributions and dynamical chiral symmetry breaking

Recent theoretical studies have provided new insight into the intrinsic transverse momentum distributions of valence and sea quarks in the nucleon at a low scale. The valence quark transverse momentum distributions (q - qbar) are governed by the nucleon's inverse hadronic size R{sup -1} ~ 0.2 GeV and drop steeply at large p{sub T}. The sea quark distributions (qbar) are in large part generated by non-perturbative chiral-symmetry breaking interactions and extend up to the scale rho{sup -1} ~ 0.6 GeV. These findings have many implications for modeling the initial conditions of perturbative QCD evolution of TMD distributions (starting scale, shape of p{sub T}. distributions, coordinate-space correlation functions). The qualitative difference between valence and sea quark intrinsic p{sub T}. distributions could be observed experimentally, by comparing the transverse momentum distributions of selected hadrons in semi-inclusive deep-inelastic scattering, or those of dileptons produced in pp and pbar-p scattering.
Date: January 1, 2014
Creator: Schweitzer, Peter; Strikman, Mark & Weiss, Christian
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent BaBar Charm Physics Results (open access)

Recent BaBar Charm Physics Results

None
Date: February 26, 2014
Creator: Martinelli, Maurizio
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Passive Room-to-Room Air Transfer, Fresno, California (Fact Sheet) (open access)

Passive Room-to-Room Air Transfer, Fresno, California (Fact Sheet)

Field testing was performed in a retrofit unoccupied test house in Fresno, California. Three air-based heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) distribution systems - a typical airflow ducted system to the bedrooms, a low airflow ducted system to the bedrooms, and a system with no ductwork to the bedrooms - were evaluated during heating, cooling, and midseason conditions. The relative ability of each of the three systems was assessed with respect to relevant Air Conditioning Contractors of America (ACCA) and ASHRAE standards for house temperature uniformity and stability, respectively. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling also was performed and refined based on comparison to field test results to determine the air flow rate into the bedrooms of over-door and bottom-of-door air transfer grilles.
Date: February 1, 2014
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library