137Cs and 210Po in Pacific Walrus and Bearded Seal from St. Lawrence Island, Alaska (open access)

137Cs and 210Po in Pacific Walrus and Bearded Seal from St. Lawrence Island, Alaska

The activity concentration of Cesium-137 ({sup 137}Cs) and naturally-occurring Polonium-210 ({sup 210}Po) were measured in the muscle tissue, kidney and liver of Pacific walrus (Odobenus rosmarus divergens) and bearded seal (Erignathus barbatus) collected by native hunters from the Bering Sea. The mean {sup 137}Cs concentrations in muscle, liver and kidney of Pacific walrus were 0.07, 0.09 and 0.07 Bq kg{sup -1} (N= 5, wet weight), respectively, and 0.17, 0.10, and 0.17 Bq kg{sup -1} (N=2, wet weight), respectively, in bearded seal. In general, {sup 137}Cs tissue concentrations are significantly lower than those previously reported for mammals from other regions. By comparison, {sup 210}Po activity concentrations appear to be higher than those reported elsewhere but a larger variation. The mean {sup 210}Po concentration in the muscle tissue, liver and kidney of Pacific walrus (N=5, wet weight) were 28.7, 189, and 174 Bq kg{sup -1}, respectively. This compares with {sup 210}Po concentration values (N=2, wet weight) of 27, 207, and 68 Bq kg{sup -1} measured in the muscle tissue, liver and kidney, of bearded seal, respectively. Estimated bioaccumulation factors--as defined by the radionuclide concentration ratio between the target tissue to that in sea water--were two to three orders of magnitude higher for …
Date: February 2, 2005
Creator: Hamilton, T F; Seagars, D J; Jokela, T & Layton, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library

2008 B20 Survey Results

Describes results of a sample survey of the quality of B20, a biodiesel blend, collected from U.S. public pumps and fleets as part of a joint effort by NREL, the NBB, and engine manufacturers.
Date: February 2, 2009
Creator: Alleman, T. L. & McCormick, R. L.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive Wavefront Calibration and Control for the Gemini Planet Imager (open access)

Adaptive Wavefront Calibration and Control for the Gemini Planet Imager

Quasi-static errors in the science leg and internal AO flexure will be corrected. Wavefront control will adapt to current atmospheric conditions through Fourier modal gain optimization, or the prediction of atmospheric layers with Kalman filtering.
Date: February 2, 2007
Creator: Poyneer, L A & Veran, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
adendum for )6 report (open access)

adendum for )6 report

Prior to using human nasopharyngeal samples, we will use prepared mixtures of viruses with bacteria and eukaryotic cells in our research on microfluidic separation techniques. Some examples of these mixtures are the bacteriophage MS2 with its host bacteria, E. coli, and BSL-1, Risk-Group-1 virus such as fowlpox virus vaccine with its host cell, DF-1, derived from chickens.
Date: February 2, 2007
Creator: Mariella, R.; Borucki, M.; Miles, R.; Claugue, D.; Dougherty, G. & Fisher, K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Air Quality and Road Emission Results for Fort Stewart, Georgia (open access)

Air Quality and Road Emission Results for Fort Stewart, Georgia

The Directorate of Public Works Environmental & Natural Resources Division (Fort Stewart /Hunter Army Airfield) contracted with the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) to monitor particulate matter (PM) concentrations on Fort Stewart, Georgia. The purpose of this investigation was to establish a PM sampling network using monitoring equipment typically used in U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ''saturation sampling'', to determine air quality on the installation. In this initial study, the emphasis was on training-generated PM, not receptor PM loading. The majority of PM samples were 24-hr filter-based samples with sampling frequency ranging from every other day, to once every six days synchronized with the EPA 6th day national sampling schedule. Eight measurement sites were established and used to determine spatial variability in PM concentrations and evaluate whether fluctuations in PM appear to result from training activities and forest management practices on the installation. Data collected to date indicate the average installation PM2.5 concentration is lower than that of nearby urban Savannah, Georgia. At three sites near the installation perimeter, analyses to segregate PM concentrations by direction of air flow across the installation boundary indicate that air (below 80 ft) leaving the installation contains less PM2.5 than that entering the installation. …
Date: February 2, 2004
Creator: Kirkham, Randy R.; Driver, Crystal J.; Chamness, Mickie A. & Barfuss, Brad C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
AMR++: Object-Oriented Parallel Adaptive Mesh Refinement (open access)

AMR++: Object-Oriented Parallel Adaptive Mesh Refinement

Adaptive mesh refinement (AMR) computations are complicated by their dynamic nature. The development of solvers for realistic applications is complicated by both the complexity of the AMR and the geometry of realistic problem domains. The additional complexity of distributed memory parallelism within such AMR applications most commonly exceeds the level of complexity that can be reasonable maintained with traditional approaches toward software development. This paper will present the details of our object-oriented work on the simplification of the use of adaptive mesh refinement on applications with complex geometries for both serial and distributed memory parallel computation. We will present an independent set of object-oriented abstractions (C++ libraries) well suited to the development of such seemingly intractable scientific computations. As an example of the use of this object-oriented approach we will present recent results of an application modeling fluid flow in the eye. Within this example, the geometry is too complicated for a single curvilinear coordinate grid and so a set of overlapping curvilinear coordinate grids' are used. Adaptive mesh refinement and the required grid generation work to support the refinement process is coupled together in the solution of essentially elliptic equations within this domain. This paper will focus on the …
Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: Quinlan, D. & Philip, B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An analytical model of nonproportional scintillator light yield in terms of recombination rates (open access)

An analytical model of nonproportional scintillator light yield in terms of recombination rates

This report talks about An analytical model of nonproportional scintillator light yield in terms of recombination rates
Date: February 2, 2009
Creator: Bizarri, Gregory; Moses, William W.; Singh, Jai; Williams, Richard T. & Vasil'ev, Andrey N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of dynamic linear regression to improve the skill of ensemble-based deterministic ozone forecasts (open access)

Application of dynamic linear regression to improve the skill of ensemble-based deterministic ozone forecasts

Forecasts from seven air quality models and surface ozone data collected over the eastern USA and southern Canada during July and August 2004 provide a unique opportunity to assess benefits of ensemble-based ozone forecasting and devise methods to improve ozone forecasts. In this investigation, past forecasts from the ensemble of models and hourly surface ozone measurements at over 350 sites are used to issue deterministic 24-h forecasts using a method based on dynamic linear regression. Forecasts of hourly ozone concentrations as well as maximum daily 8-h and 1-h averaged concentrations are considered. It is shown that the forecasts issued with the application of this method have reduced bias and root mean square error and better overall performance scores than any of the ensemble members and the ensemble average. Performance of the method is similar to another method based on linear regression described previously by Pagowski et al., but unlike the latter, the current method does not require measurements from multiple monitors since it operates on individual time series. Improvement in the forecasts can be easily implemented and requires minimal computational cost.
Date: February 2, 2006
Creator: Pagowski, M O; Grell, G A; Devenyi, D; Peckham, S E; McKeen, S A; Gong, W et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atmospheric Dispersion Analysis using MACCS2 (open access)

Atmospheric Dispersion Analysis using MACCS2

The Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) Regulatory Guide 1.145 requires an evaluation of the offsite atmospheric dispersion coefficient, {Chi}/Q, as a part of the acceptance criteria in the accident analysis. In it, it requires in sequence computations of (1) the overall site 95th percentile {Chi}/Q, (2) the maximum of the sixteen sector 99.5th percentile {Chi}/Q, and (3) comparison and selection of the worst of the two values for reporting in the safety analysis report (SAR). In all cases, the site-specific meteorology and sector-specific site boundary distances are employed in the evaluation. There are sixteen 22.5-sectors, the nearest site boundary of which is determined within the 45-arc centered on each of the sixteen compass directions.
Date: February 2, 2004
Creator: Glaser, R. & Yang, J. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Autocatalytic Behavior of Trimethylindium During Thermal Decomposition (open access)

The Autocatalytic Behavior of Trimethylindium During Thermal Decomposition

Pyrolysis of trimethylindium (TMIn) in a hot-wall flow-tube reactor has been investigated at temperatures between 573 and 723 K using a modulated molecular-beam mass-sampling technique and detailed numerical modeling. The TMIn was exposed to various mixtures of carrier gases: He, H{sub 2}, D{sub 2}, and C{sub 2}H{sub 4}, in an effort to elucidate the behavior exhibited by this compound in different chemical environments. The decomposition of TMIn is a heterogeneous, autocatalytic process with an induction period that is carrier-gas dependent and lasts on the order of minutes. After activation of the tube wall, the thermolysis exhibits a steady-state behavior that is surface mediated. This result is contrary to prior literature reports, which state that decomposition occurs in the gas phase via successive loss of the CH{sub 3} ligands. This finding also suggests that the bond dissociation energy for the (CH{sub 3}){sub 2}In-CH{sub 3} bond derived from flow-tube investigations is erroneous and should be reevaluated.
Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: McDaniel, Anthony H. & Allendorf, M. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Automatic Quenching of High Energy gamma-ray Sources by Synchrotron Photons (open access)

Automatic Quenching of High Energy gamma-ray Sources by Synchrotron Photons

Here we investigate evolution of a magnetized system, in which continuously produced high energy emission undergoes annihilation on a soft photon field, such that the synchrotron radiation of the created electron-positron pairs increases number density of the soft photons. This situation is important in high energy astrophysics, because, for an extremely wide range of magnetic field strengths (nano to mega Gauss), it involves {gamma}-ray photons with energies between 0.3GeV and 30TeV. We derive and analyze the conditions for which the system is unstable to runaway production of soft photons and ultrarelativistic electrons, and for which it can reach a steady state with an optical depth to photon-photon annihilation larger than unity, as well those for which efficient pair loading of the emitting volume takes place. We also discuss the application of our analysis to a realistic situation involving astrophysical sources of a broad-band {gamma}-ray emission and briefly consider the particular case of sources close to active supermassive black holes.
Date: February 2, 2007
Creator: Stawarz, Lukasz; /KIPAC, Menlo Park /SLAC /Jagiellonian U., Astron. Observ.; Kirk, John & /Heidelberg, Max Planck Inst.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
C0 low-{beta} optics (open access)

C0 low-{beta} optics

A low-{beta} insertion has been designed for the BTeV experiment at C0. With {+-} 12 m for detector space, a {beta}* of 0.5 m can be achieved using 170 T/m magnets in the final focus triplets. A total half-crossing angle of 240 {micro}r is necessary to keep the beams separated by 5{sigma} at the 2nd parasitic crossing. There are 2 possible Tevatron collision scenarios: B0 and D0, but not C0, and; C0, but not B0 or D0.
Date: February 2, 2001
Creator: Johnstone, J.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carbon contamination of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) mask and its effect on imaging (open access)

Carbon contamination of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) mask and its effect on imaging

Carbon contamination of extreme ultraviolet (EUV) masks and its effect on imaging is a significant issue due to lowered throughput and potential effects on imaging performance. In this work, a series of carbon contamination experiments were performed on a patterned EUV mask. Contaminated features were then inspected with a reticle scanning electron microscope (SEM) and printed with the SEMA TECH Berkeley Microfield-Exposure tool (MET) [1]. In addition, the mask was analyzed using the SEMA TECH Berkeley Actinic-Inspection tool (AIT) [2] to determine the effect of carbon contamination on the absorbing features and printing performance. To understand the contamination topography, simulations were performed based on calculated aerial images and resist parameters. With the knowledge of the topography, simulations were then used to predict the effect of other thicknesses of the contamination layer, as well as the imaging performance on printed features.
Date: February 2, 2009
Creator: Fan, Yu-Jen; Yankulin, Leonid; Antohe, Alin; Garg, Rashi; Thomas, Petros; Mbanaso, Chimaobi et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cerocene Revisited: The Electronic Structure of and Interconversion Between Ce2(C8H8)3 and Ce(C8H8)2 (open access)

Cerocene Revisited: The Electronic Structure of and Interconversion Between Ce2(C8H8)3 and Ce(C8H8)2

New synthetic procedures for the preparation of Ce(cot)2, cerocene, from [Li(thf)4][Ce(cot)2], and Ce2(cot)3 in high yield and purity are reported. Heating solid Ce(cot)2 yields Ce2(cot)3 and COT while heating Ce2(cot)3 with an excess of COT in C6D6 to 65oC over four months yields Ce(cot)2. The solid state magnetic susceptibility of these three organocerium compounds shows that Ce(cot)2 behaves as a TIP (temperature independent paramagnet) over the temperature range of 5-300 K, while that of Ce2(cot)3 shows that the spin carriers are antiferromagnetically coupled below 10 K; above 10 K, the individual spins are uncorrelated, and [Ce(cot)2]- behaves as an isolated f1 paramagnet. The EPR at 1.5K for Ce2(cot)3 and [Ce(cot)2]- have ground state of MJ= +- 1/2. The LIII edge XANES of Ce(cot)2 (Booth, C.H.; Walter, M.D.; Daniel, M.; Lukens, W.W., Andersen, R.A., Phys. Rev. Lett. 2005, 95, 267202) and 2Ce2(cot)3 over 30-500 K are reported; the Ce(cot)2 XANES spectra show Ce(III) and Ce(IV) signatures up to a temperature of approximately 500 K, whereupon the Ce(IV) signature disappears, consistent with the thermal behavior observed in the melting experiment. The EXAFS of Ce(cot)2 and Ce2(cot)3 are reported at 30 K; the agreement between the molecular parameters for Ce(cot)2 derived from EXAFS …
Date: February 2, 2009
Creator: Walter, Marc D.; Booth, Corwin H.; Lukens, Wayne W. & Andersen, Richard A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Certification of solar products - The Florida experience (open access)

Certification of solar products - The Florida experience

Florida legislation enacted in 1976 directed the Florida Solar Energy Center (FSEC) to develop standards for solar energy systems manufactured or sold in the state, establish criteria for testing the performance of solar energy systems, and provide a means to display compliance with approved performance tests for these systems. This mandate has been effectively implemented for both solar domestic water heating and solar pool heating systems. With growing interest and markets for photovoltaic systems, plans are presently being developed to expand the scope of the mandate to include photovoltaic technology. This paper discusses four complementary facets of a photovoltaic (PV) system certification program. They include PV module performance characterization and rating; PV system design review and approval; examination and authorization of photovoltaic system installers; and inspection and acceptance testing of PV system installation. The suggested photovoltaic system process builds on lessons learned from over 20 years of testing, certifying and labeling of solar thermal collectors, and the certification of solar thermal systems.
Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: POST,HAROLD N.; ROLAND,JAMES D.; VENTRE,GERARD G. & HUGGINS,JAMES C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Common Mode Rejection Calculations on the Debuncher Upgrade (open access)

Common Mode Rejection Calculations on the Debuncher Upgrade

The 4-8 GHz Transverse Debuncher Cooling Systems are power limited. Misalignments and imperfections in the transverse pickup arrays will generate a longitudinal signal in addition to the betatron signal. This longitudinal signal can use up a significant fraction of the precious TWT power if the imperfections are large enough. This note will summarize calculations of the contributions to the longitudinal signal observed in the transverse systems of the 4-8 GHz Debuncher slow-wave pickup arrays due to various misalignments and imperfections.
Date: February 2, 2001
Creator: McGinnis, Dave
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A comparison of spin observable predictions for RHIC (open access)

A comparison of spin observable predictions for RHIC

There have been many versions of spin-dependent parton distributions in the literature. Although most agree with present data within uncertainties, they are based upon different physical assumptions. Some physical models are discussed and the corresponding predictions for double spin asymmetries are shown. A summary of the most feasible measurements in the appropriate kinematic regions at RHIC, which should yield the most useful information about the polarized gluon distribution, is given.
Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: Ramsey, G. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Computational Model with Experimental Validation for DNA Flow in Microchannels (open access)

A Computational Model with Experimental Validation for DNA Flow in Microchannels

The authors compare a computational model to experimental data for DNA-laden flow in microchannels. The purpose of this work in progress is to validate a new numerical algorithm for viscoelastic flow using the Oldroyd-B model. The numerical approach is a stable and convergent polymeric stress-splitting scheme for viscoelasticity. They treat the hyperbolic part of the equations of motion with an embedded boundary method for solving hyperbolic conservation laws in irregular domains. They enforce incompressibility and evolve velocity and pressure with a projection method. The experiments are performed using epifluorescent microscopy and digital particle image velocimetry to measure velocity fields and track the conformation of biological macromolecules. They present results comparing velocity fields and the observations of computed fluid stress on molecular conformation in various microchannels.
Date: February 2, 2005
Creator: Nonaka, A; Gulati, S; Trebotich, D; Miller, G H; Muller, S J & Liepmann, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computational modeling of alloys at the atomic scale: from ab initio and thermodynamics to radiation-induced heterogeneous precipitation (open access)

Computational modeling of alloys at the atomic scale: from ab initio and thermodynamics to radiation-induced heterogeneous precipitation

We describe the path we are following in the development of a computational approach to simulate radiation damage in FeCr ferritic steels. In these alloys magnetism introduces an anomaly in the heat of formation of the solid solution that has implications on the way excess Cr precipitates in the {alpha}{prime} phase in presence of heterogeneities. These complexities represent a challenge for atomistic (empirical) approaches that we address: (i) by proposing a modified many body potential, (ii) by using a thermodynamic package that determines free energy and phase diagrams, and (iii) by using a displacement Monte Carlo code in the transmutation ensemble that can deal with millions of atoms in parallel computational environments. This approach predicts that grain boundaries, dislocations and free surfaces are not preferential sites for precipitation of {alpha}{prime}.
Date: February 2, 2007
Creator: Caro, A.; Caro, M.; Klaver, P.; Sadigh, B.; Lopasso, E. M. & Srivilliputhur, S. G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computed Tomography (CT) Standards (open access)

Computed Tomography (CT) Standards

There is currently no standardized method to check the measurement capabilities of computed tomography (CT) systems within industry. The current method to determine the functionality of CT systems is by use of a test phantom to represent the actual part to be tested. A standard method to check the software algorithms when measuring such parameters as density of a material and the size of an object is not readily available. Many different materials are evaluated by CT systems. A set of standards necessitates the inclusion of materials that cover the gambit of materials encountered. The Federal Manufacturing and Technologies (FM and T) CT standards are designed to accommodate a variety of materials and several different sizes. This provides a method to check the CT system for size measurement capabilities and material density measurement as well as aid in optimizing the geometric parameters of the machine configuration.
Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: Hubert, R. R. & Beach, J. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conceptual Models of Flow through a Heterogeneous, Layered Vadose Zone under a Percolation Pond (open access)

Conceptual Models of Flow through a Heterogeneous, Layered Vadose Zone under a Percolation Pond

Understanding how water and solutes move through the vadose zone is necessary to make effective remedial action decisions where contaminants were spilled or leaked at the ground surface or were buried in shallow land-disposal sites. In layered, heterogeneous systems, high contrasts in hydraulic conductivity can lead to formation of perched water zones, and enhanced lateral spread of contamination. Two conceptual models are considered solute for migration through the vadose zone. In the diffuse flow conceptual model, perched water zones accumulate until the head over the perching layer becomes sufficient to drive the infiltration through the perching layer. In the preferential flow conceptual model, perched water moves laterally until a path around the perching layer is encountered. Preferential flow paths can enhance contaminant migration because greater moisture saturation leads to higher advective velocities, and the preferential flow paths bypass low permeability layers with higher sorption capacity. Monitoring wells and instrumented boreholes were installed around a newly constructed industrial-waste percolation pond and an ephemeral river that lie over a 150-m-thick layered vadose zone. Background data gathered before discharge to the pond began show the presence of at least one, and possibly two, deep perched zones. The shallower zone, at approximately 45-m below …
Date: February 2, 2004
Creator: Baker, Kristine; Hull, Larry; Bennett, Jesse; Ansley, Shannon & Heath, Gail
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Conductor development for High Energy Physics - Plans and Status of the U.S. Program (open access)

Conductor development for High Energy Physics - Plans and Status of the U.S. Program

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Date: February 2, 2000
Creator: Scanlan, R. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Cost of Transmission for Wind Energy: A Review of Transmission Planning Studies (open access)

The Cost of Transmission for Wind Energy: A Review of Transmission Planning Studies

The rapid development of wind power that the United States has experienced over the last several years has been coupled with a growing concern that wind development will require substantial additions to the nation's transmission infrastructure. Transmission is particularly important for wind power due to the locational dependence of wind resources, the relatively low capacity factor of wind plants, and the mismatch between the short lead time to build a new wind project and the longer lead time often needed to plan, permit, and construct transmission. It is clear that institutional issues related to transmission planning, siting, and cost allocation will pose major obstacles to accelerated wind power deployment, but also of concern is the potential cost of this infrastructure build out. Simply put, how much extra cost will society bear to deliver wind power to load centers? Without an answer to this question, there can be no consensus on whether or not the cost of developing transmission for wind will be a major barrier to further wind deployment, or whether the institutional barriers to transmission expansion are likely to be of more immediate concern. In this report, we review a sample of 40 detailed transmission studies that have included …
Date: February 2, 2009
Creator: Mills, Andrew D.; Wiser, Ryan & Porter, Kevin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Creating Ensembles of Decision Trees Through Sampling (open access)

Creating Ensembles of Decision Trees Through Sampling

Recent work in classification indicates that significant improvements in accuracy can be obtained by growing an ensemble of classifiers and having them vote for the most popular class. This paper focuses on ensembles of decision trees that are created with a randomized procedure based on sampling. Randomization can be introduced by using random samples of the training data (as in bagging or arcing) and running a conventional tree-building algorithm, or by randomizing the induction algorithm itself. The objective of this paper is to describe our first experiences with a novel randomized tree induction method that uses a subset of samples at a node to determine the split. Our empirical results show that ensembles generated using this approach yield results that are competitive in accuracy and superior in computational cost.
Date: February 2, 2001
Creator: Kamath, C & Cantu-Paz, E
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library