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Defense Management: Continuing Questionable Reliance on Commercial Contracts to Demilitarize Excess Ammunition When Unused, Environmentally Friendly Capacity Exists at Government Facilities (open access)

Defense Management: Continuing Questionable Reliance on Commercial Contracts to Demilitarize Excess Ammunition When Unused, Environmentally Friendly Capacity Exists at Government Facilities

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "In April 2001, we reported that the Army Materiel Command's guidance required that 50 percent of the excess conventional ammunition demilitarization budget--a figure for which we did not find any analytical basis--be set aside for commercial firms that use environmentally friendly demilitarization processes. This resulted in the retention and underutilization of environmentally friendly demilitarization capabilities at government facilities and in additional program costs. We thus recommended that the Department of Defense (DOD) develop a plan in consultation with Congress that included procedures for assessing the appropriate mix of government and commercial sector capacity needed to demilitarize excess ammunition. Our intent was to have DOD reexamine the cost-effectiveness of using commercial versus government facilities to demilitarize excess ammunition. Over the past several months we have conducted work to determine the specific actions taken to implement our recommendation. We made extensive use of our prior work as a baseline to compare the changes in demilitarization capacity and utilization at government-owned facilities since our prior report. We conducted our analysis of DOD's demilitarization program in accordance with generally accepted government auditing standards. The purpose of this letter is to note that …
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
NASA: Compliance with Cost Limits (open access)

NASA: Compliance with Cost Limits

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Section 202 of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Authorization Act of 2000 (P.L. 106-391) requires that GAO verify NASA's accounting for amounts obligated against established limits for the space station and related space shuttle support. Under the act, obligations are limited to $25 billion for the space station and $17.7 billion for shuttle support."
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gamma-Ray Imaging with Position-Sensitive HPGe detectors (open access)

Gamma-Ray Imaging with Position-Sensitive HPGe detectors

None
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Vetter, K.; Burks, M. & Mihailescu, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

University Press (Beaumont, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 42, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Semiweekly newspaper from Lamar University in Beaumont, Texas that includes local, national, and campus news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Gurski, Patrick
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 109, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

The Clifton Record (Clifton, Tex.), Vol. 109, No. 23, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Weekly newspaper from Clifton, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Smith, W. Leon
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
National facility for advanced computational science: A sustainable path to scientific discovery (open access)

National facility for advanced computational science: A sustainable path to scientific discovery

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) proposes to create a National Facility for Advanced Computational Science (NFACS) and to establish a new partnership between the American computer industry and a national consortium of laboratories, universities, and computing facilities. NFACS will provide leadership-class scientific computing capability to scientists and engineers nationwide, independent of their institutional affiliation or source of funding. This partnership will bring into existence a new class of computational capability in the United States that is optimal for science and will create a sustainable path towards petaflops performance.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Simon, Horst; Kramer, William; Saphir, William; Shalf, John; Bailey, David; Oliker, Leonid et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of the beam-beam limit in e{sup +}e{sup -} circular colliders (open access)

Study of the beam-beam limit in e{sup +}e{sup -} circular colliders

Beam-beam effects limit the luminosity of circular colliders. Once the bunch population exceeds a threshold, the luminosity increases at a slower rate. This phenomenon is called the beam-beam limit. Onset of the beam-beam limit has been analyzed with various simulation methods based on the weak-strong and strong-strong models. We have observed that an incoherent phenomenon is mainly concerned in the beam-beam limit. The simulation have shown that equilibrium distributions of the two colliding beams are distorted from Gaussians when the luminosity is limited. The beam-beam limit is estimated to be (xi) {approx} 0.1 for a B factory with damping time of several thousand turns.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Ohmi, K.; Tawada, M.; Cai, Y.; Kamada, S.; Oide, K. & Qiang, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Applying Simple Technology Accomplishes Visual Inspection Challenges (open access)

Applying Simple Technology Accomplishes Visual Inspection Challenges

This paper discusses the successful implementation of simple video technologies at the Savannah River Site (SRS) to perform complex visual inspection, monitoring, and surveillance tasks. The constraints and challenges associated with remote viewing are discussed, and examples of applications are given. Work at SRS involves many radioactive, hazardous, and remote operations and activities, which require monitoring or surveillance. As well, many facilities, including tanks, cells, and pipelines, require inspections but are inaccessible to humans. SRTC supports SRS in these situations by applying simple remote viewing technologies to address these issues and accomplish monitoring and inspection goals.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: ROBINSON, CASANDRA
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Compatibility of Alternative Chlorinated Solvent Source Treatment Strategies With Monitored Natural Attenuation (open access)

Compatibility of Alternative Chlorinated Solvent Source Treatment Strategies With Monitored Natural Attenuation

One of the most powerful and promising strategies for optimizing environmental restoration is the use of combinations of technologies rather than a single technology to reach the target cleanup goals. The U. S. Department of Energy (DOE) is actively working to clean up legacy contamination from its operations. Notably, DOE is responsible for the cleanup of many sites where the contamination includes chlorinated solvents (or chlorinated volatile organic contaminants (CVOCs)). At some sites, groundwater plumes containing CVOCs tend to become relatively large. Estimates for times to remediate sites often ranges up to 100s of years for these large plumes. As a result, the CVOC plumes are a concern to DOE, regulators and stakeholders. In response to this challenge, DOE initiated a project to ''provide the technical and policy support to facilitate implementing appropriate passive cleanup... leading to responsible completion of active remediation activities at high risk DOE waste sites.'' A combined approach benefits from the ability to match the invasiveness and aggressiveness of the remedial action to the amount of contamination and level of risk. This matching process is particularly important for recalcitrant contaminants such as chlorinated solvents. Highly contaminated areas justify more intense remediation action(s) while minimally contaminated areas …
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: LOONEY, BRIANB.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of the Emission, Transport, and Deposition of Mercury, Fine Particulate Matter, and Arsenic From Coal-Based Power Plants in the Ohio River Valley Region Progress Report (open access)

Evaluation of the Emission, Transport, and Deposition of Mercury, Fine Particulate Matter, and Arsenic From Coal-Based Power Plants in the Ohio River Valley Region Progress Report

Ohio University, in collaboration with CONSOL Energy, Advanced Technology Systems, Inc. (ATS) and Atmospheric and Environmental Research, Inc. (AER) as subcontractors, is evaluating the impact of emissions from coal-fired power plants in the Ohio River Valley region as they relate to the transport and deposition of mercury, arsenic, and associated fine particulate matter. This evaluation will involve two interrelated areas of effort: ambient air monitoring and regional-scale modeling analysis. The scope of work for the ambient air monitoring will include the deployment of a surface air monitoring (SAM) station in southeastern Ohio. The SAM station will contain sampling equipment to collect and measure mercury (including speciated forms of mercury and wet and dry deposited mercury), arsenic, particulate matter (PM) mass, PM composition, and gaseous criteria pollutants (CO, NOx, SO{sub 2}, O{sub 3}, etc.). Laboratory analysis of time-integrated samples will be used to obtain chemical speciation of ambient PM composition and mercury in precipitation. Near-real-time measurements will be used to measure the ambient concentrations of PM mass and all gaseous species including Hg{sup 0} and RGM. Approximately 18 months of field data will be collected at the SAM site to validate the proposed regional model simulations for episodic and seasonal model …
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Crist, Kevin
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The CKM matrix and the unitarity triangle. Proceedings, workshop, Geneva, Switzerland, February 13-16, 2002 (open access)

The CKM matrix and the unitarity triangle. Proceedings, workshop, Geneva, Switzerland, February 13-16, 2002

This report contains the results of the Workshop on the CKM Unitarity Triangle that was held at CERN on 13-16 February 2002. There had been several Workshops on B physics that concentrated on studies at e{sup +}e{sup -} machines, at the Tevatron, or at LHC separately. Here we brought together experts of different fields, both theorists and experimentalists, to study the determination of the CKM matrix from all the available data of K, D, and B physics. The analysis of LEP data for B physics is reaching its end, and one of the goals of the Workshop was to underline the results that have been achieved at LEP, SLC, and CESR. Another goal was to prepare for the transfer of responsibility for averaging B physics properties, that has developed within the LEP community, to the present main actors of these studies, from the B factory and the Tevatron experiments. The optimal way to combine the various experimental and theoretical inputs and to fit for the apex of the Unitarity Triangle has been a contentious issue. A further goal of the Workshop was to bring together the proponents of different fitting strategies, and to compare their approaches when applied to the …
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Battaglia, M.; Buras, A. J.; Gambino, P. & Stocchi, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
15th Street News (Midwest City, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

15th Street News (Midwest City, Okla.), Vol. 33, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Newspaper from Rose State College in Midwest City, Oklahoma that includes national, local, and campus news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Pound, Jaylynn Christian
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Weekly newspaper from Dell City, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Lynch, Mary Louise
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 123, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 123, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Daily newspaper from Baytown, Texas that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Cash, Wanda Garner
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 99, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

North Texas Daily (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 99, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Daily student newspaper from the University of North Texas in Denton, Texas that includes local, state and campus news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Portal to Texas History
Interpreting Mammalian Evolution using Fugu Genome Comparisons (open access)

Interpreting Mammalian Evolution using Fugu Genome Comparisons

Comparative sequence analysis of the human and the pufferfish Fugu rubripes (fugu) genomes has revealed several novel functional coding and noncoding regions in the human genome. In particular, the fugu genome has been extremely valuable for identifying transcriptional regulatory elements in human loci harboring unusually high levels of evolutionary conservation to rodent genomes. In such regions, the large evolutionary distance between human and fishes provides an additional filter through which functional noncoding elements can be detected with high efficiency.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Stubbs, L; Ovcharenko, I & Loots, G G
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Post-Closure Groundwater Monitoring Plan for the 1324-N Surface Impoundment and 1324-NA Percolation Pond (open access)

Post-Closure Groundwater Monitoring Plan for the 1324-N Surface Impoundment and 1324-NA Percolation Pond

The 1324-N Surface Impoundment and the 1324-NA Percolation Pond, located in the 100-N Area of the Hanford Site, are regulated under the Resource Consevation and Recovery Act (RCRA). Surface and underground features of the facilities have been removed and laboratory analyses showed that soil met the closure performance standards. These sites have been backfilled and revegetated.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Hartman, Mary J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Modeling Approach for Burn Scar Assessment Using Natural Features and Elastic Property (open access)

A Modeling Approach for Burn Scar Assessment Using Natural Features and Elastic Property

A modeling approach is presented for quantitative burn scar assessment. Emphases are given to: (1) constructing a finite element model from natural image features with an adaptive mesh, and (2) quantifying the Young's modulus of scars using the finite element model and the regularization method. A set of natural point features is extracted from the images of burn patients. A Delaunay triangle mesh is then generated that adapts to the point features. A 3D finite element model is built on top of the mesh with the aid of range images providing the depth information. The Young's modulus of scars is quantified with a simplified regularization functional, assuming that the knowledge of scar's geometry is available. The consistency between the Relative Elasticity Index and the physician's rating based on the Vancouver Scale (a relative scale used to rate burn scars) indicates that the proposed modeling approach has high potentials for image-based quantitative burn scar assessment.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Tsap, L V; Zhang, Y; Goldgof, D B & Sarkar, S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrothermal Alteration Mineral Mapping Using Hyperspectral Imagery in Dixie Valley, Nevada (open access)

Hydrothermal Alteration Mineral Mapping Using Hyperspectral Imagery in Dixie Valley, Nevada

Hyperspectral (HyMap) data was used to map the location of outcrops of high temperature, hydrothermally alterated minerals (including alunite, pyrophyllite, and hematite) along a 15 km swath of the eastern front of the Stillwater Mountain Range in Dixie Valley, Nevada. Analysis of this data set reveals that several outcrops of these altered minerals exist in the area, and that one outcrop, roughly 1 square kilometer in area, shows abundant high temperature alteration. Structural analysis of the altered region using a Digital Elevation Model (DEM) suggests that this outcrop is bounded on all sides by a set of cross-cutting faults. This fault set lies within the Dixie Valley Fault system (Caskey et al. 1996). Both the intense alteration in this area and the presence of cross-cutting faults indicate a high probability of recent hot fluid escape.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Kennedy-Bowdoin, T.; Martini, B. A.; Silver, E. A. & Pickles, W. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Science and Technology Review May 2004 (open access)

Science and Technology Review May 2004

This month's issue has the following articles: (1) ''A Multidisciplinary Attack on Bioterrorism''--Commentary by Tomas Diaz de la Rubia. (2) ''Life at the Nanoscale''--Livermore researchers are exploring the molecules of life at the nanoscale to fight bioterrorism, improve human health, and understand how proteins function. (3) ''Screening Cargo Containers to Remove a Terrorist Threat''--A detection system for cargo containers will search for hidden nuclear materials that terrorists might try to ship to U.S. seaports. (4) ''Improved Algorithms Speed It Up for Codes''--Recent changes to the algorithms used in Monte Carlo calculations are reducing the time needed to run the high-fidelity simulations being developed for the nation's supercomputers. (5) ''The Siren Call of the Seas: Sequestering Carbon Dioxide''--Scientists at Livermore evaluate possible methods for removing carbon dioxide from Earth's atmosphere and storing it in the planet's waters.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Henson, V E
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficient traffic grooming in SONET/WDM BLSR Networks (open access)

Efficient traffic grooming in SONET/WDM BLSR Networks

In this paper, we study traffic grooming in SONET/WDM BLSR networks under the uniform all-to-all traffic model with an objective to reduce total network costs (wavelength and electronic multiplexing costs), in particular, to minimize the number of ADMs while using the optimal number of wavelengths. We derive a new tighter lower bound for the number of wavelengths when the number of nodes is a multiple of 4. We show that this lower bound is achievable. All previous ADM lower bounds except perhaps that in were derived under the assumption that the magnitude of the traffic streams (r) is one unit (r = 1) with respect to the wavelength capacity granularity g. We then derive new, more general and tighter lower bounds for the number of ADMs subject to that the optimal number of wavelengths is used, and propose heuristic algorithms (circle construction algorithm and circle grooming algorithm) that try to minimize the number of ADMs while using the optimal number of wavelengths in BLSR networks. Both the bounds and algorithms are applicable to any value of r and for different wavelength granularity g. Performance evaluation shows that wherever applicable, our lower bounds are at least as good as existing bounds …
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Awwal, Abdul S.; Billah, Abdur R. B. & Wang, Bin
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Year 6 Post-Remediation Biomonitoring and Phase II Source Investigation at the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California (open access)

Year 6 Post-Remediation Biomonitoring and Phase II Source Investigation at the United Heckathorn Superfund Site, Richmond, California

The Heckathorn Superfund Site in Richmond, California, encompasses the property of the former United Heckathorn pesticide packaging plant and the adjacent waterway, Lauritzen Channel. The site was used from 1945 to 1966 by several operators to produce various agricultural chemicals. The site was placed on the National Priorities List of Superfund sites in 1990, which resulted in the removal of pesticide-contaminated soil from the upland portion of the site and dredging the marine portion of the site. Post-remediation marine monitoring and associated studies conducted through 2002 indicate that the contamination in the channel continues to pose a significant risk to biota and human health. This report documents continued marine monitoring and source investigation studies conducted in 2003.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Kohn, Nancy P. & Evans, Nathan R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Altus Times (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 106, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004 (open access)

Altus Times (Altus, Okla.), Vol. 106, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 2, 2004

Daily newspaper from Altus, Oklahoma that includes local, state, and national news along with advertising.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Andrews, Mike
Object Type: Newspaper
System: The Gateway to Oklahoma History
Texas Register, Volume 29, Number 14, Pages 3311-3540, April 2, 2004 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 29, Number 14, Pages 3311-3540, April 2, 2004

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: April 2, 2004
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History