Computation at the edge of chaos: Phase transition and emergent computation (open access)

Computation at the edge of chaos: Phase transition and emergent computation

In order for computation to emerge spontaneously and become an important factor in the dynamics of a system, the material substrate must support the primitive functions required for computation: the transmission, storage, and modification of information. Under what conditions might we expect physical systems to support such computational primitives This paper presents research on Cellular Automata which suggests that the optimal conditions for the support of information transmission, storage, and modification, are achieved in the vicinity of a phase transition. We observe surprising similarities between the behaviors of computations and systems near phase-transitions, finding analogs of computational complexity classes and the Halting problem within the phenomenology of phase-transitions. We conclude that there is a fundamental connection between computation and phase-transitions, and discuss some of the implications for our understanding of nature if such a connection is borne out. 31 refs., 16 figs.
Date: January 25, 1990
Creator: Langton, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Asymptotic Freedom in the Diffusive Regime of Neutron Transport (open access)

Asymptotic Freedom in the Diffusive Regime of Neutron Transport

The accuracy of a numerical method for solving the neutron transport equation is limited by the smallest mean free path in the problem. Since problems in the asymptotic diffusive regimes have vanishingly small mean free paths, it seems hopeless, given a limited amount of computer memory, that an accurate solution can be obtained for these problems. However we found that the accuracy of a numerical method improves as the scattering ratio increases with the total cross section and the grid spacing held fixed for problems that are in the asymptotic diffusive regime. This phenomenon is independent of the numerical method and can be explained on physical grounds. The numerical results by the Diamond Difference Method are given to show this phenomenon.
Date: January 25, 2005
Creator: Chang, B.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Temperature and Wavelength Dependent Emissivity of a Shocked Surface: A First Experiment (open access)

Temperature and Wavelength Dependent Emissivity of a Shocked Surface: A First Experiment

We have conducted an experiment in which the temperature and the wavelength dependent emissivity of a shocked surface has been measured. In the past, only the thermal emission from the shocked surface has been measured. The lack of knowledge of the emissivity as a function of wavelength leads to uncertainty in converting the measured emission spectrum into a surface temperature. We have developed a technique by which we are able to calculate both the emissivity of the shocked surface over a range of relevant wavelengths and the temperature of the surface. We use a multi-channel spectrometer in combination with a pulsed light source having a known spectrum of infrared radiation. Two separate techniques using a pulse of reflected radiation are employed and described. Both give the same result: An initially polished molybdenum surface that is shocked and partially released has a temperature of 1040 degrees Kelvin and a wavelength ({lambda}) dependent emissivity of 0.16 ({lambda}=1.2{micro}m), 0.10 ({lambda} =1.6 {micro}m), and 0.20 ({lambda} =2.3 {micro}m).
Date: January 25, 2002
Creator: Poulsen, P & Hare, D E
System: The UNT Digital Library
Coupled map lattice model of jet breakup (open access)

Coupled map lattice model of jet breakup

An alternative approach is described to evaluate the statistical nature of the breakup of shaped charge liners. Experimental data from ductile and brittle copper jets are analyzed in terms of velocity gradient, deviation of {Delta}V from linearity, R/S analysis, and the Hurst exponent within the coupled map lattice model. One-dimensional simulations containing 600 zones of equal mass and using distinctly different force-displacement curves are generated to simulate ductile and brittle behavior. A particle separates from the stretching jet when an element of material reaches the failure criterion. A simple model of a stretching rod using brittle, semi-brittle, and ductile force-displacement curves is in agreement with the experimental results for the Hurst exponent and the phase portraits and indicates that breakup is a correlated phenomenon.
Date: January 25, 2001
Creator: Minich, R W; Schwartz, A J & Baker, E L
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct Comparison Between Modeling and Experiment: An (Alpha)-Fe Ion Implantation Study (open access)

Direct Comparison Between Modeling and Experiment: An (Alpha)-Fe Ion Implantation Study

Advances in computational capability and modeling techniques, as well as improvements in experimental characterization methods offer the possibility of directly comparing modeling and experiment investigations of irradiation effects in metals. As part of a collaboration among the Instituto de Fusion Nuclear (DENIM), Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) and CIEMAT, single and polycrystalline {alpha}-Fe samples have been irradiated with 150 keV Fe-ions to doses up to several dpa. The irradiated microstructure is to be examined with both transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and positron annihilation spectroscopy (PAS). Concurrently, we have modeled the damage accumulation in Fe under these irradiation conditions using a combination of molecular dynamics (MD) and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC). We aim to make direct comparison between the simulation results and the experiments by simulating TEM images and estimating positron lifetimes for the predicted microstructures. While the identity of the matrix defect features cannot be determined from TEM observations alone, we propose that both large self-interstitial loops, trapped at impurities within the material, and small, spherical nanovoids form.
Date: January 25, 2001
Creator: Marian, J.; Wirth, B. D.; Perlado, J. M.; Diaz de la Rubia, T.; Schaublin, R.; Lodi, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Focal Length Measurements for the National Ignition Facility Large Lenses (open access)

Focal Length Measurements for the National Ignition Facility Large Lenses

The focal length of the spatial filter and final focus lenses for the National Ignition Facility are measured to < {+-} 0.01% using a combination of master lenses and production-oriented techniques for relative focal length.
Date: January 25, 2002
Creator: Parham, T G; McCarville, T J; Johnson, M A & Kiikka, C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomistic Simulation of Vacancy and Self-Interstitial Diffusion in Fe-Cu Alloys (open access)

Atomistic Simulation of Vacancy and Self-Interstitial Diffusion in Fe-Cu Alloys

Neutron hardening and embrittlement of pressure vessel steels is due to a high density of nanometer scale features, including Cu-rich precipitates which form as a result of radiation enhanced diffusion. High-energy displacement cascades generate large numbers of both isolated point defects and clusters of vacancies and interstitials. The subsequent clustering, diffusion and ultimate annihilation of primary damage is inherently coupled with solute transport and hence, the overall chemical and microstructural evolutions under irradiation. In this work, we present atomistic simulation results, based on many-body interatomic potentials, of the migration of vacancies, solute and self-interstitial atoms (SIA) in pure Fe and binary Fe-0.9 and 1.0 at.% Cu alloys. Cu diffusion occurs by a vacancy mechanism and the calculated Cu diffusivity is in good agreement with experimental data. Strain field interactions between the oversized substitutional Cu solute atoms and SIA and SIA clusters are predominantly repulsive and result in both a decreased activation energy and diffusion pre-factor for SIA and small (N < 5) SIA cluster migration, which occurs by three-dimensional motion. The Cu appears to enhance the reorientation of the SIA clusters to different <111> directions, as well as the transition from <110> to mobile <111> configurations. The migration behavior of …
Date: January 25, 2001
Creator: Marian, J.; Wirth, B. D.; Perlado, J. M.; Odette, G. R. & Diaz de la Rubia, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
An analysis of the Cured-in-Place Pipe (CIPP) subproject of the sanitary sewer rehabilitation project (open access)

An analysis of the Cured-in-Place Pipe (CIPP) subproject of the sanitary sewer rehabilitation project

The comprehensive rehabilitation of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory Sanitary Sewer System centers around a Cured-in-Place Pipe project. Driven by regulatory requirements to eliminate the potential for exfiltration, a careful condition assessment of the existing infrastructure was conducted. Under programmatic constraints to maintain continuous operations, the INLINER USA cured-in-place pipe system was selected as the appropriate technology, and the project is currently under contract.
Date: January 25, 1994
Creator: Morrow, W. & Siemiatkoski, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Utilization of a hydraulic barrier to control migration of a uranium plume (open access)

Utilization of a hydraulic barrier to control migration of a uranium plume

A uranium plume emanating from the U.S. Department of Energy`s Fernald Environmental Management Project (FEMP) in Fernald, Ohio had migrated off site and the leading edge of the plume had already mixed with an organic and inorganic plume emanating from two industries south of the FEMP. A method was needed to prevent the further southern migration of the plume, minimize any impacts to the geometry, concentrations, distribution or flow patterns of the organic and inorganic plumes emanating from the off-site industries, while meeting the ultimate cleanup goals for the FEMP. This paper discusses the use of a hydraulic barrier created to meet these goals by pumping a five well recovery system and the problems associated with the disposition of over 2 million gallons per day of water with low concentrations of uranium.
Date: January 25, 1995
Creator: Brettschneider, D. J.; Simmons, R. A. Jr.; Kappa, J. D. & Stover, J. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scaling of laser-plasma interactions with laser wavelength and plasma size (open access)

Scaling of laser-plasma interactions with laser wavelength and plasma size

Plasma size is an important parameter in wavelength-scaling experiments because it determines both the threshold and potential gain for a variety of laser-plasma instabilities. Most experiments to date have of necessity produced relatively small plasmas, due to laser energy and pulse-length limitations. We have discussed in detail three recent Livermore experiments which had large enough plasmas that some instability thresholds were exceeded or approached. Our evidence for Raman scatter, filamentation, and the two-plasmon decay instability needs to be confirmed in experiments which measure several instability signatures simultaneously, and which produce more quantitative information about the local density and temperature profiles than we have today.
Date: January 25, 1983
Creator: Max, C. E.; Campbell, E. M.; Mead, W. C.; Kruer, W. L.; Phillion, D. W.; Turner, R. E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of an Advanced Bundle Divertor for the Demonstration Tokamak Hybrid Reactor (open access)

Design of an Advanced Bundle Divertor for the Demonstration Tokamak Hybrid Reactor

The conclusion of this work is that a bundle divertor, using an improved method of designing the magnetic field configuration, is feasible for the Demonstration Tokamak Hybrid Reactor (DTHR) investigated by Westinghouse. The most significant achievement of this design is the reduction in current density (1 kA/cm/sup 2/) in the divertor coils in comparison to the overall averaged current densities per tesla of field to be nulled for DITE (25 kA/cm/sup 2/) and for ISX-B/sup 2/ (11 kA/cm/sup 2/). Therefore, superconducting magnets can be built into the tight space available with a sound mechanical structure.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Yang, T. F.; Lee, A. Y.; Ruck, G. W.; Prevenslik, T. V. & Smeltzer, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stainless steel blanket concept for tokamaks (open access)

Stainless steel blanket concept for tokamaks

The purpose of this joint ORNL/Westinghouse Program is to develop a design concept for a tokamak reactor blanket system which satisfies engineering requirements for a utility environment. While previous blanket studies have focused primarily on performance issues (thermal, neutronic, and structural), this study has emphasized consideration of reliability, fabricability, and lifetime.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Karbowski, J.S.; Lee, A.Y.; Prevenslik, T.V.; Ruck, G.W. & Shannon, T.E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enhanced fuel production in thorium fusion hybrid blankets utilizing uranium multipliers (open access)

Enhanced fuel production in thorium fusion hybrid blankets utilizing uranium multipliers

The multiplication of 14 MeV D-T fusion neutrons via (n,2n), (n,3n), and fission reactions by /sup 238/U is well known and established. This study consistently evaluates the effectiveness of a depleted (tails) UO/sub 2/ multiplier on increasing the production of /sup 233/U and tritium in a thorium/lithium fusion--fission hybrid blanket. Nuclear performance is evaluated as a function of exposure and zone thickness.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Pitulski, R. H.; Chapin, D. L. & Klevans, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design of a negative ion neutral beam system for TNS (open access)

Design of a negative ion neutral beam system for TNS

A design is presented that suggests that a negative ion neutral beam based on direct extraction is applicable to TNS, assuming technological advancements in several areas. Improvements in negative ion sources, direct energy conversion of charged beams, and high speed cryogenic pumping are needed. The increase in efficiency over a positive ion system and the encouraging results of the first attempt at a total design justify increased effort in the development of the above mentioned areas.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Easoz, J. R. & Sink, D. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potential commercial reactor based on a small tokamak hybrid design (open access)

Potential commercial reactor based on a small tokamak hybrid design

An ignition tokamak reactor design has been obtained which represents a starting point for the conceptual design of a 1000 MW/sub e/ commercial system. The design includes Nb/sub 3/Sn superconducting coils (TF, OH, and SF), water-cooled fissile blanket (e.g., uranium oxide), positive-ion based neutral beams with no direct energy recovery, and an ignited plasma with a = 0.9 m and an aspect ratio A = 4.0. The TF coil bore has a vertical bore of 7 m and a horizontal bore of 5 m both of which are a factor of two larger than the corresponding bore dimensions of the LCP (Large Coil Project) TF coil. The plasma is characterized as follows: stability factor q = 2.5, Z/sub eff/ approx. 1, poloidal beta ..beta../sub p/ less than or equal to A, a elongation delta in the range between 1.6 and 1.7. A number of potential operating conditions for the plasma and device have been identified for which the plasma beta ..beta.. lies within the range from 6.5% to 7.3%, and the plasma temperature has an average value between 11 keV and 12.5 keV. The design was obtained using the computer code COAST and represents a self-consistent sizing and costing result.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Sink, D. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fusion blanket integral neutronics experiments (open access)

Fusion blanket integral neutronics experiments

The feasibility of conducting fusion blanket integral neutronics experiments at the Rotating Target Neutron Source-II (RTNS-II) accelerator facility and the Tokamak Fusion Test Reactor (TFTR) was investigated. RTNS-II recently became operational, and the TFTR is scheduled to begin D-T operations during 1983. The experiments would provide reaction rate data of direct importance to blanket design in environments (neutron spectra) close to those expected in actual blankets. Data of this kind are especially important for a hybrid blanket, where design depends upon a balance of breeding and power production requirements. The blanket also provides an essential part of the toroidal field (TF) coil shielding. Therefore, experimental verification of design model calculations is important before any commitment to a definitie design is made.
Date: January 25, 1979
Creator: Green, L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Engineering design of the Nova Laser Facility for inertial-confinement fusion (open access)

Engineering design of the Nova Laser Facility for inertial-confinement fusion

The design of the Nova Laser Facility for inertial confinement fusion experiments at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory is presented from an engineering perspective. Emphasis is placed upon design-to-performance requirements as they impact the various subsystems that comprise this complex experimental facility.
Date: January 25, 1982
Creator: Simmons, W. W.; Godwin, R. O.; Hurley, C. A.; Wallerstein, E. P.; Whitham, K.; Murray, J. E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Atomic processes in matter-antimatter interactions (open access)

Atomic processes in matter-antimatter interactions

Atomic processes dominate antiproton stopping in matter at nearly all energies of interest. They significantly influence or determine the antiproton annihilation rate at all energies around or below several MeV. This article reviews what is known about these atomic processes. For stopping above about 10 eV the processes are antiproton-electron collisions, effective at medium keV through high MeV energies, and elastic collisions with atoms and adiabatic ionization of atoms, effective from medium eV through low keB energies. For annihilation above about 10 eV is the enhancement of the antiproton annihilation rate due to the antiproton-nucleus coulomb attraction, effective around and below a few tens of MeV. At about 10 eV and below, the atomic rearrangement/annihilation process determines both the stopping and annihilation rates. Although a fair amount of theoretical and some experimental work relevant to these processes exist, there are a number of energy ranges and material types for which experimental data does not exist and for which the theoretical information is not as well grounded or as accurate as desired. Additional experimental and theoretical work is required for accurate prediction of antiproton stopping and annihilation for energies and material relevant to antiproton experimentation and application.
Date: January 25, 1988
Creator: Morgan, D. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Case for Including Transactions in OpenMP (open access)

A Case for Including Transactions in OpenMP

Transactional Memory (TM) has received significant attention recently as a mechanism to reduce the complexity of shared memory programming. We explore the potential of TM to improve OpenMP applications. We combine a software TM (STM) system to support transactions with an OpenMP implementation to start thread teams and provide task and loop-level parallelization. We apply this system to two application scenarios that reflect realistic TM use cases. Our results with this system demonstrate that even with the relatively high overheads of STM, transactions can outperform OpenMP critical sections by 10%. Overall, our study demonstrates that extending OpenMP to include transactions would ease programming effort while allowing improved performance.
Date: January 25, 2010
Creator: Wong, M.; Bihari, B. L.; de Supinski, B. R.; Wu, P.; Michael, M.; Liu, Y. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Assessing out-of-band flare effects at the wafer level for EUV lithography (open access)

Assessing out-of-band flare effects at the wafer level for EUV lithography

To accurately estimate the flare contribution from the out-of-band (OOB), the integration of a DUV source into the SEMATECH Berkeley 0.3-NA Micro-field Exposure tool is proposed, enabling precisely controlled exposures along with the EUV patterning of resists in vacuum. First measurements evaluating the impact of bandwidth selected exposures with a table-top set-up and subsequent EUV patterning show significant impact on line-edge roughness and process performance. We outline a simulation-based method for computing the effective flare from resist sensitive wavelengths as a function of mask pattern types and sizes. This simulation method is benchmarked against measured OOB flare measurements and the results obtained are in agreement.
Date: January 25, 2010
Creator: George, Simi; Naulleau, Patrick; Kemp, Charles; Denham, Paul & Rekawa, Senajith
System: The UNT Digital Library
A ROSE-based OpenMP 3.0 Research Compiler Supporting Multiple Runtime Libraries (open access)

A ROSE-based OpenMP 3.0 Research Compiler Supporting Multiple Runtime Libraries

OpenMP is a popular and evolving programming model for shared-memory platforms. It relies on compilers for optimal performance and to target modern hardware architectures. A variety of extensible and robust research compilers are key to OpenMP's sustainable success in the future. In this paper, we present our efforts to build an OpenMP 3.0 research compiler for C, C++, and Fortran; using the ROSE source-to-source compiler framework. Our goal is to support OpenMP research for ourselves and others. We have extended ROSE's internal representation to handle all of the OpenMP 3.0 constructs and facilitate their manipulation. Since OpenMP research is often complicated by the tight coupling of the compiler translations and the runtime system, we present a set of rules to define a common OpenMP runtime library (XOMP) on top of multiple runtime libraries. These rules additionally define how to build a set of translations targeting XOMP. Our work demonstrates how to reuse OpenMP translations across different runtime libraries. This work simplifies OpenMP research by decoupling the problematic dependence between the compiler translations and the runtime libraries. We present an evaluation of our work by demonstrating an analysis tool for OpenMP correctness. We also show how XOMP can be defined using …
Date: January 25, 2010
Creator: Liao, C.; Quinlan, D. & Panas, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Amplitude (delta)-Scutis in the Large Magellanic Cloud (open access)

High Amplitude (delta)-Scutis in the Large Magellanic Cloud

The authors present 2323 High-Amplitude {delta}-Scutis (HADS) candidates discovered in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by the SuperMACHO survey (Rest et al. 2005). Frequency analyses of these candidates reveal that several are multimode pulsators, including 119 whose largest amplitude of pulsation is in the fundamental (F) mode and 19 whose largest amplitude of pulsation is in the first overtone (FO) mode. Using Fourier decomposition of the HADS light curves, they find that the period-luminosity (PL) relation defined by the FO pulsators does not show a clear separation from the PL-relation defined by the F pulsators. This differs from other instability strip pulsators such as type c RR Lyrae. They also present evidence for a larger amplitude, subluminous population of HADS similar to that observed in Fornax (Poretti et al. 2008).
Date: January 25, 2010
Creator: Garg, A.; Cook, K. H.; Nikolaev, S.; Huber, M. E.; Rest, A.; Becker, A. C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cosmology and the S-matrix (open access)

Cosmology and the S-matrix

We study conditions for the existence of asymptotic observables in cosmology. With the exception of de Sitter space, the thermal properties of accelerating universes permit arbitrarily long observations, and guarantee the production of accessible states of arbitrarily large entropy. This suggests that some asymptotic observables may exist, despite the presence of an event horizon. Comparison with decelerating universes shows surprising similarities: Neither type suffers from the limitations encountered in de Sitter space, such as thermalization and boundedness of entropy. However, we argue that no realistic cosmology permits the global observations associated with an S-matrix.
Date: January 25, 2005
Creator: Bousso, Raphael
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lithium Coatings on NSTX Plasma Facing Components and Its Effects On Boundary Control, Core Plasma Performance, and Operation (open access)

Lithium Coatings on NSTX Plasma Facing Components and Its Effects On Boundary Control, Core Plasma Performance, and Operation

NSTX high-power divertor plasma experiments have used in succession lithium pellet injection (LPI), evaporated lithium, and injected lithium powder to apply lithium coatings to graphite plasma facing components. In 2005, following wall conditioning and LPI, discharges exhibited edge density reduction and performance improvements. Since 2006, first one, and now two lithium evaporators have been used routinely to evaporate lithium onto the lower divertor region at total rates of 10-70 mg/min for periods 5-10 min between discharges. Prior to each discharge, the evaporators are withdrawn behind shutters. Significant improvements in the performance of NBI heated divertor discharges resulting from these lithium depositions were observed. These evaporators are now used for more than 80% of NSTX discharges. Initial work with injecting fine lithium powder into the edge of NBI heated deuterium discharges yielded comparable changes in performance. Several operational issues encountered with lithium wall conditions, and the special procedures needed for vessel entry are discussed. The next step in this work is installation of a Liquid Lithium Divertor surface on the outer part of the lower divertor.
Date: January 25, 2010
Creator: H.W.Kugel, M.G.Bell, H.Schneider, J.P.Allain, R.E.Bell, R Kaita, J.Kallman, S. Kaye, B.P. LeBlanc, D. Mansfield, R.E. Nygen, R. Maingi, J. Menard, D. Mueller, M. Ono, S. Paul, S.Gerhardt, R.Raman, S.Sabbagh, C.H.Skinner, V.Soukhanovskii, J.Timberlake, L.E.Zakharov, and the NSTX Research Team
System: The UNT Digital Library