The Escape of Fission Products From an Uranium Rod; Application to the B. N. L. Reactor (open access)

The Escape of Fission Products From an Uranium Rod; Application to the B. N. L. Reactor

Technical report covering the functions of the Oak Ridge reactor, difficulties encountered with cartridge failures in the Oak Ridge reactor, and possible solutions including the incorporation of leak detection systems into the design of the reactor.
Date: November 3, 1968
Creator: Chernick, J. & Kaplan, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Colors of Signal Lights: Their Selection, Definition, Measurement, Production, and Use (open access)

Colors of Signal Lights: Their Selection, Definition, Measurement, Production, and Use

Report discussing the selection, specifications, and use of signal-light colors. It discusses the nature of the problem, and the mathematical representation, recognition, production, control, and use of such colors. The characteristics of different types of chromaticity boundaries and the purpose and effect of the requirement for similarity of chromaticity characteristics are given special consideration. The treatment is varied according to the intended use. The discussion of the control of colors and the section on the use of colors are nontechnical, whereas the section on the production of signal colors is designed for the colorimetrist who is faced with the problem of selecting limit filters or drafting a specification.
Date: April 3, 1967
Creator: Breckenridge, F. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microwave Attenuation Standards and Measurements (open access)

Microwave Attenuation Standards and Measurements

Report discussing microwave attenuation measurement methods and standards. In addition, a relatively new and more precise way of representing and analyzing an attenuation measurement is presented. This in turn permits more rigorous definitions and error analyses than were previously possible. The referral of microwave attenuation measurements to standards operating at lower frequencies is discussed with particular attention to the errors in the referral processes as well as the errors in the standards themselves. Desirable characteristics are listed for attenuators which are suitable for calibration. Measurement methods are classified and described. Comments are made on the accuracy and convenience of various methods, and references are given which cover most of the basic and important research in this field. Key words: Microwave, attenuation, measurements, standards, tutorial.
Date: April 3, 1967
Creator: Beatty, Robert W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Project Dugout: Apparent Crater Studies (open access)

Project Dugout: Apparent Crater Studies

From abstract: This report analyzes the dimensions and geometry of the Dugout crater, produced by the detonation of a row of five 18,144 kg nitromethane charges in basalt, were analyzed.
Date: August 3, 1965
Creator: Spruill, Joseph L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Line Parameters and Computed Spectra for Water Vapor Bands at 2.7 mu (open access)

Line Parameters and Computed Spectra for Water Vapor Bands at 2.7 mu

From Foreword: "This Monograph is one of a series intended to provide fundamental information required for the estimation and interpretation of atmospheric transmittance at infrared frequencies. Part I of this Monograph presents the fundamental properties of the 2.7m water vapor band in terms of line absorptions and the integrated transmittance at any frequency for infinite resolution. Part II presents examples of the "degraded" transmittance for finite resolution, as a function of the spectral slit width, concentration, and pressure with which direct observations may be compared."
Date: August 3, 1964
Creator: Gates, David M.; Calfee, Robert F.; Hansen, David W. & Benedict, W. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Burn-up Tests on U-Al Fuel Elements (open access)

High Burn-up Tests on U-Al Fuel Elements

The desired neutron spectrum for the High Flux Beam Reactor under construction at BNL requires use of U-Al fuel elements with more then 30 wt% U235 in the meat. The operating cycle of this reactor requires a minimum burn-up of 20%, and preferably 40% of the uranium in the element.
Date: March 3, 1964
Creator: Weeks, J. R.; McRickard, S. B. & Gurinsky, D. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
80" Chamber - Low Energy Beams (open access)

80" Chamber - Low Energy Beams

One of the major, as well as first, decisions which must be taken on a large chamber is to decide on the direction of the magnetic field, i.e., vertical or horizontal. Either alternative has advantages and disadvantages ad it is the intention of this note to discuss these features.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Rau, R. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Autoradiographic Study on the Origin and Fate of Small Lymphoid Cells in the Dog Bone Marrow: Effect of Femoral Artery Clamping During in Vivo Availability of Thymidine-H (open access)

Autoradiographic Study on the Origin and Fate of Small Lymphoid Cells in the Dog Bone Marrow: Effect of Femoral Artery Clamping During in Vivo Availability of Thymidine-H

Mammalian bone marrow contains a considerable number of small lymphoid cells (small lymphocytes and small lymphocyte-like cells). The total number of these cells (50,000 to 500,000 per mm3) depends on species, age and other factors. The origin, function and fate of these cells remain obscure in many respects. In particular, it has not been shown beyond doubt, if and to what extent small lymphoid cells enter the bone marrow via the blood stream or if their origin is in part or entirely within the bone marrow. In addition it has not been clearly shown whether or not these cells may function as multipotential hemopoietic stem cells. Results obtained from experiments with irradiated parabiotic animals and animals given regional fractioned doses of X-irradiation, and transplantation of leukocytes from peripheral blood into lethally irradiated recipients afford indirect evidence that peripheral blood of mice and rats may contain stem cells capable of DNA synthesis and division.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Keiser, G.; Cottier, H.; Odartchenko, N. & Bond, V. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bubble Chamber Vacuum System (open access)

Bubble Chamber Vacuum System

The vacuum system for the bubble chamber must evacuate rapidly a volume of approximately 500 cubic feet and eliminate the outgassing of a surface area of approximately 50,000 square inches. The backstreaming of oil from the diffusion pump must be kept to an absolute minimum to prevent oil films forming on the window. The vacuum system must also provide the protection against liquid nitrogen and hydrogen/leaks to prevent pressure buildup.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Gould, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Past Decimal Counting with Binary-Decimal Logic (open access)

Past Decimal Counting with Binary-Decimal Logic

Speed limits of decimal counting schemes based on binary-to-decimal conversion are considered. A simple "1-2-4-8" decimal logic is described, which is inherently as fast as the basic bistable. A decade for counting in 100-200 Mc/sec range, based on this logic and the tunnel diode-transistor bistable, is presented.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Radeka, V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of the Localization, Physiochemical Properties, and Action of Phycocyanin in Anacystis Nidulans (open access)

Studies of the Localization, Physiochemical Properties, and Action of Phycocyanin in Anacystis Nidulans

The blue-green algae, classed as primitive monerans, represent the lowest level of organization known to possess a higher plant type of photosynthesis. The role in photosynthesis of the phycocyanin in these organisms is particularly interesting from the point of view of ultrastructural biochemistry. It has been shown repeatedly that despite the primacy normally assigned to chlorophyll, the light absorbed by phycocyanin is used more efficiently for photosynthesis (equated with photosynthetic oxygen evolution). This property is all the more intriguing since Hill activity is very labile in these organisms; the loss being correlated with the release of phycocyanin. Then too, it has been observed that fluorescence at about 685 mμ, attributed to chlorophyll, is proportionately greater for wavelengths absorbed by phycocyanin. French and Young attributed the differential to inactive absorption by carotenoids in the "Soret" region of chlorophyll, but Duysens concluded that the magnitude of the difference observed by him was too great to be explained by screening. Duysens proposed the existence of two pools of chlorophyll of about equal size; one containing fluorescent, photosynthetically active chlorophyll in proximity to phycocyanin, the other nonfluorescent, photosynthetically inactive and remote from phycocyanin.
Date: January 3, 1964
Creator: Bergeron, John A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cellular Differences Between Acute and Chronic Neutron and Gamma Ray Irradiation in Mice (open access)

The Cellular Differences Between Acute and Chronic Neutron and Gamma Ray Irradiation in Mice

It has been well established that even small doses of radiation will shorten life expectancy of animals, and that in general the causes of death are the same for the irradiated as for the normal animals. When x or γ rays are compared with neutrons in their ability to shorten the life span, some interesting differences appear. All available data from different laboratories on the shortening of the life span by x or γ on the one hand and neutrons on the other, have been compared. In spite of the obvious difficulties in comparing such data, if one expresses dose in terms of the LD 50/30 dose required for acute survival, one can pool the data from other laboratories and plot them on a single graph without excessive error. Results of such a compilation for single acute exposures are shown for x or γ rays in Figure 1 and for neutrons in Figure 2.
Date: November 3, 1963
Creator: Curtis, H. J.; Tilley, J & Crowley, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of 2.0 BeV Protons in Mice (open access)

The Effects of 2.0 BeV Protons in Mice

The Brookhaven proton synchrotron (Cosmotron) is capable of accelerating protons to energies as high as 3.0 BeV. The biologic effects of particle bombardment at these energies have not been investigated but are of considerable radiobiologic interest. In addition, particle beams have long been discussed with regard to their potential usefulness in medical therapy, and actual clinical applications have been made, although at lower particle energies. Recent rapid advances in space technology have raised serious questions regarding the dosimetry of cosmic and solar radiations, the spectra of which contain energies in excess of those which have been investigated experimentally. For all of these reasons, we have recently begun a study of the effects of protons at 2.0-2.2 BeV, using the external beam of the Cosmotron.
Date: November 3, 1963
Creator: Jesseph, John E.; Moore, William H.; Bond, Victor P. & Lippincott, Stuart W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progressive Epithelial Dysplasia in Mouse Skin Irradiated with 10 MeV Protons (open access)

Progressive Epithelial Dysplasia in Mouse Skin Irradiated with 10 MeV Protons

It has been previously reported that within twenty days following bombardment of mice 10 MeV protons (as well as with 20 MeV deuterons and 40 MeV alpha particles) that atypical epithelial hyperplasia developed without underlying recognizable vascular or collagen alterations as predisposing factors. The source of these monoenergetic accelerator-produced heavy ionizing particles was the 60-inch cyclotron of the Brookhaven National Laboratory. The technique employed utilized a variable-thickness filter in the beam in order to deliver multiple Bragg peaks in depth in the path of the charged particles in the tissue being irradiated. In this way a cylinder of skin was bombarded with essentially uniform ionization limited to a depth of 1-2 mm. In some instances the epidermal lesions resulting from an exposure of 2000 to 5000 rad resembled the type of lesion considered in the skin of man to be carcinoma in situ. The eventual fate of such lesions then constituted a question of importance in the possible relationship atypical hyperplasia in the pathogenesis of carcinoma in situ and of invasive carcinoma in skin. It is with this problem that the currently reported study is concerned.
Date: November 3, 1963
Creator: Lippincott, Stuart W.; Jesseph, John E.; Calvo, Wenceslao G. & Baker, Charles P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Total Neutron Average Cross Sections in the keV Region and the Optical Model (open access)

Total Neutron Average Cross Sections in the keV Region and the Optical Model

Many workers have recently attempted to evaluate the P-wave strength function from a measurement of average capture cross sections or average total cross sections in the kiloelectron volt region. The primary interest of these measurements has been to determine the strength of the spin-orbit potential in the optical model. In view of the interest in determining the size of the spin-orbit coupling and in view of the considerable disagreement group has undertaken to measure the average total neutron cross sections from 10 to 100 keV in the region of the P-wave giant resonance. The following elements were studied: Nb, Mo, Rh, Ag, Cd, and In. The wok was carried out at the BNL-AECL fast chopper facility at Chalk River, using an 88-meter flight path and a nominal resolution of 15 nsec/meter.
Date: November 3, 1963
Creator: Jain, A. P.; Chrien, R. E.; Moore, J. A. & Palevsky, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of Failure of Type 304 Stainless Steel Clad Swaged Powder Fuel Assembly (open access)

Analysis of Failure of Type 304 Stainless Steel Clad Swaged Powder Fuel Assembly

From introduction: "The purpose of this report is to describe the observations made during the post-irradiation examination of HPD-2S, and to discuss possible modes of failure.
Date: October 3, 1963
Creator: Lees, E. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Current-Carrying Capacity and Transition State of Superconducting Solenoids (open access)

Current-Carrying Capacity and Transition State of Superconducting Solenoids

Montgomery and Chandrasekhar and Hulm suggested models for predicting Im and Hm of high-field superconducting solenoids. Montgomery's model for predicting the degradation effect of superconducting solenoids leads to a unique coil quenching characteristics if geometrically similar solenoids are considered. Experiments do not verify these predicted results. Chandrasekhar and Hulm's model leads to one unique coil quenching characteristic for all solenoids with identical wire type and turn distance; coils with identical load factor should display identical values im and Hm. An analysis of the surface currents in an ideal superconducting infinitely long solenoid demonstrated possible forms of shielding currents. Experiments with Pb coils with and without NbZr and compensation agree with results expected from this analysis, but contradict Chandrasekhar and Hulm's model. Measurements of individual turn resistances show behavior of a soft superconductor solenoid in the intermediate state.
Date: September 3, 1963
Creator: Gauster, W. F. & Coffey, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Feasibility of Constructing Large Underground Cavities: Volume 3, Report on Cost and Constructability (open access)

Feasibility of Constructing Large Underground Cavities: Volume 3, Report on Cost and Constructability

A report on the cost and constructibility of the construction of underground cavities.
Date: July 3, 1963
Creator: Jacobs Associates
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mass Systematics Involving Low-Lying Excited States (open access)

Mass Systematics Involving Low-Lying Excited States

Technical report. From Abstract : "A step phenomenon in the nuclidic mass excess surface associated with magic numbers N, Z = 8 and 20 is shown to exist, whereas only breaks occur at higher magic numbers. Excited states are included which reveals possible smooth trends within Shell-Model subshells."
Date: July 3, 1963
Creator: Everling, F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemical Binding in the Water Molecule (open access)

Chemical Binding in the Water Molecule

From Introduction : "This analysis partitions the electron density and the electronic pair density of the molecule into components corresponding promoted atomic states, to quasiclassical coulombic interactions of these promoted states, and to interactions resulting from the sharing of electrons between atoms."
Date: May 3, 1963
Creator: Edmiston, Clyde & Ruedenberg, Klaus, 1920-
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mass Spectrometric Evidence for the Pyridoxal-Leucine Reaction Mechanism (open access)

Mass Spectrometric Evidence for the Pyridoxal-Leucine Reaction Mechanism

From Abstract : "The mass spectrum of leucine-dn, prepared by the reaction of pyridoxal with excess leucine in D2O medium, has been established using the crucible source techniques. ... The reaction can be used for the selective α, β-deuteration of amino acids other than leucine.
Date: May 3, 1963
Creator: Junk, G. A. & Svec, H. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Normal Elliptic Integrals of the First and Second Kinds (open access)

Normal Elliptic Integrals of the First and Second Kinds

From Introduction : "In this paper we describe a choice of normal elliptic integrals which appears to be very well suited for use in integral tables as well as for numerical work."
Date: May 3, 1963
Creator: Carlson, B. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reinvestigation of the CC Stretching and CH3 Rocking Assignments In Isopropyl and tert-Butyl Halides (open access)

Reinvestigation of the CC Stretching and CH3 Rocking Assignments In Isopropyl and tert-Butyl Halides

From report: "In a series of paper (1-3) Sheppard has analyzed the vibrational spectra of simple alkyl halides. During the course of an investigation of the spectra of similar alkyl thiocyanates certain anomalies appeared in the assignments of the CC stretching and methyl rocking vibrations in isopropyl and tert.-butyl halides."
Date: May 3, 1963
Creator: Hirschmann, R. P. & Kniseley, R. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Standard X-ray Diffraction Powder Patterns: Section 2. Data for 37 Substances (open access)

Standard X-ray Diffraction Powder Patterns: Section 2. Data for 37 Substances

Report documenting standard x-ray diffraction powder patterns for various compounds, intended to replace previous data or provide information for new substances. It describes the methods and, for each substance, outlines any previous data as well as information about the sample used and structural data, with a table of diffraction patterns.
Date: May 3, 1963
Creator: Swanson, Howard E.; Morris, M. C.; Stinchfield, Roger P. & Evans, Eloise H.
System: The UNT Digital Library