Lee College Courier, Volume 4, Number 19, September 1995 (open access)

Lee College Courier, Volume 4, Number 19, September 1995

Newsletter of Lee College discussing news, events, and other updates.
Date: September 25, 1995
Creator: Lee College (Baytown, Tex.)
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Pecan Pest Management Newsletter, Volume 95, Number 4, June 1995 (open access)

Texas Pecan Pest Management Newsletter, Volume 95, Number 4, June 1995

Newsletter focusing on pecan disease and pest control in Texas, including prevention, identification, treatment, and educational opportunities.
Date: June 25, 1995
Creator: Texas Agricultural Extension Service
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Balanced Dairying: Economics, Volume 13, Number 1, January 1993 (open access)

Balanced Dairying: Economics, Volume 13, Number 1, January 1993

Newsletter of the Texas Agricultural Extension Service discussing topics related to economic aspects of raising dairy cows, dairy production, and managing dairy operations.
Date: January 25, 1993
Creator: Texas Agricultural Extension Service
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Computer Analysis of Geochemical Data of Stream Sediment and Waters of the Montrose 1° X 2° Quadrangle, Colorado (open access)

Computer Analysis of Geochemical Data of Stream Sediment and Waters of the Montrose 1° X 2° Quadrangle, Colorado

The following preliminary report is a computer analysis of HSSR data from the Montrose 1x2 Quadrangle, Colorado.
Date: November 25, 1991
Creator: Proctor, Paul Dean
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pass or fail: A new test for password legitimacy (open access)

Pass or fail: A new test for password legitimacy

While other programs check for bad passwords after the fact, it in important to have good passwords at all times, not just after the latest Crack run. To this end we have modified Larry Wall's Perl password program and added, among other features, the ability to check a sorted list of all the bad passwords'' that Crack will generate, given all the dictionaries that we could get our hands on (107 MB of unique words, so far). The combination of improvements has turned publicly available code into a powerful tool that can aid sites in the maintenance of local security.
Date: September 25, 1992
Creator: Cherry, Andrew; Henderson, Mark W.; Nickless, William K.; Olson, Robert & Rackow, Gene
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Studies of combustion reactions at the state-resolved differential cross section level (open access)

Studies of combustion reactions at the state-resolved differential cross section level

State-resolved differential reaction cross sections provide perhaps the most detailed information about the mechanism of chemical reaction, but heretofore they have been extremely difficult to measure. This program explores a new technique for obtaining differential cross sections with product state resolution. The three-dimensional velocity distribution of state-selected reaction products is determined by ionizing the appropriate product, waiting for a delay while it recoils along the trajectory imparted by the reaction, and finally projecting the spatial distribution of ions onto a two dimensional screen using a pulsed electric field. Knowledge of the arrival time allows the ion position to be converted to a velocity, and the density of velocity projections can be inverted mathematically to provide the three-dimensional velocity distribution for the selected product. The main apparatus has been constructed and tested using photodissociations. The proposed research will both develop the new technique and employ it to investigate methyl radical, formyl radical, and hydrogen atom reactions which are important in combustion processes. We intend specifically to characterize the reactions of CH{sub 3} with H{sub 2} and H{sub 2}CO; of HCO with O{sub 2}; and of H with CH{sub 4},CO{sub 2}, and O{sub 2}.
Date: March 25, 1992
Creator: Houston, P. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological processes in the water column of the South Atlantic Bight: Zooplankton responses (open access)

Biological processes in the water column of the South Atlantic Bight: Zooplankton responses

This study sought to determine and understand the major processes governing the abundance, distribution, composition and eventual fate of zooplankton on the southeastern shelf of the US in relation to water circulation. Over much of the shelf circulation is dominated by the Gulf Stream and/or atmospheric forcing. Most of our studies concentrated on processes on the middle and outer shelf. On the latter, pronounced biological production occurs year-round at frequent intervals and is due to Gulf Stream eddies which move by at an average frequency of one every week. These eddies are rich in nutrients which, when upwelled into the euphoric zone, lead to pronounced primary production which then triggers zooplankton production.
Date: September 25, 1992
Creator: Paffenhofer, G. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spray nozzle pattern test for the DWPF HEME Task QA Plan. [Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF), High Efficiency Mist Eliminator (HEME)] (open access)

Spray nozzle pattern test for the DWPF HEME Task QA Plan. [Defense Waste Processing Facility (DWPF), High Efficiency Mist Eliminator (HEME)]

The DWPF melter off-gas systems have two High Efficiency Mist Eliminators (HEME) upstream of the High-Efficiency Particulates Air filters (HEPA) to remove fine mists and particulates from the off-gas. To have an acceptable filter life and an efficient operation, an air atomized water is spray on the HEME. The water spray keeps the HEME wet and dissolves the soluble particulates and enhances and HEME efficiency. DWPF Technical asked SRL to determine the conditions which will give satisfactory atomization and distribution of water so that the HEME will operate efficiently. The purpose of this document is to identify, QA controls to be applied in the pursuit of this task (WSRC-RP-91-1151).
Date: November 25, 1991
Creator: Lee, L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
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.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of in situ hydrothermal oxidative destruction of NDMA (open access)

Investigation of in situ hydrothermal oxidative destruction of NDMA

Rate constants for the aqueous oxidation of N-nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) have been measured in aqueous phosphate-buffered solutions using Dickson-type vessels. The initial NDMA concentrations ranged from 2.5 to 2.8 ppm and reaction temperatures varied from 180 C to 220 C. Quantitation of NDMA was performed by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) using selected ion monitoring (SIM). NDMA loss with concomitant production of nitrite and nitrate confirmed that mineralization of NDMA occurred, and no intermediates amenable to GC-MS were formed during the oxidation experiments. First order reaction rate constants for the loss of NDMA were determined by the integral method and the results are as follows: k{sub 1} = 5.21 x 10{sup -7} s{sup -1} at 180 C, k{sub 1} = 1.14 x 10{sup -6} s{sup -1} at 190 C, k{sub 1} = 2.05 x 10{sup -6} s{sup -1} at 200 C, k{sub 1} = 4.53 x 10{sup -6} s{sup -1} at 210 C and k{sub 1} = 8.81 x 10{sup -6} s{sup -1} at 220 C. The Arrhenius equation for this data is listed below: ln (k) = 20.21 - 15716 (1/T). The activation energy for this process is calculated to be 130.7 {+-} 3.5 kJ/mole. Extrapolating to a temperature of 125 …
Date: February 25, 1999
Creator: Leif, R N; Knauss, K G & Aines, R D
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Health and safety guide for inorganic compounds and metals used in the fabrication of superconductive alloys (open access)

Health and safety guide for inorganic compounds and metals used in the fabrication of superconductive alloys

This health and safety guide was written to satisfy two objectives: to summarize the toxicity of metals and alloys used in superconductivity for the benefit of those who work with these materials, and to summarize and describes the basic principles of a highly technical field from a health and safety point-of-view for the benefit of health professionals. The guide begins with a profile of the superconductivity industry, including a list of current and potential applications, a literature review of the market potential, and summary of the current industry status. The body of the paper provides a toxicity and hazard summary for 50 metals, alloys and metal oxides used in superconductivity. The toxicity and hazard summary for all 50 compounds includes: occupational exposure limits, explosiveness and flammability potential, LD{sub 50}'s, chemical and physical properties, incompatibilities and reactivities, recommended personal protective equipment, symptoms of acute and chronic exposure, target organs and toxic effects, and steps for emergency first aid. Finally, a discussion of general occupational hygiene principles is provided, with emphasis on how these principles apply to the unique field of superconductivity. 41 refs.
Date: April 25, 1990
Creator: Arnold, S. D. & Talley, G. M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
ICOOLl: A Simulation Code for Ionization Cooling of Muon Beams. (open access)

ICOOLl: A Simulation Code for Ionization Cooling of Muon Beams.

Current ideas [1,2] for designing a high luminosity muon collider require significant cooling of the phase space of the muon beams. The only known method that can cool the beams in a time comparable to the muon lifetime is ionization cooling [3,4]. This method requires directing the particles in the beam at a large angle through a low Z absorber material in a strong focusing magnetic channel and then restoring the longitudinal momentum with an rf cavity. We have developed a new 3-D tracking code ICOOL for examining possible configurations for muon cooling. A cooling system is described in terms of a series of longitudinal regions with associated material and field properties. The tracking takes place in a coordinate system that follows a reference orbit through the system. The code takes into account decays and interactions of {approx}50-500 MeV/c muons in matter. Material geometry regions include cylinders and wedges. A number of analytic models are provided for describing the field configurations. Simple diagnostics are built into the code, including calculation of emittances and correlations, longitudinal traces, histograms and scatter plots. A number of auxiliary files can be generated for post-processing analysis by the user.
Date: March 25, 1999
Creator: Fernow, R. C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (open access)

Status of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider

Accelerator Physics issues, such as the dynamical aperture, the beam lifetime and the current--intensity limitation are carefully studied for the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The single layer superconducting magnets, of 8 cm coil inner diameter, satisfying the beam stability requirements have also been successfully tested. The proposal has generated wide spread interest in the particle and nuclear physics. 1 ref., 4 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: April 25, 1990
Creator: Lee, S. Y.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
TMACS Test Procedure TP010: Integration summary. Revision 5 (open access)

TMACS Test Procedure TP010: Integration summary. Revision 5

None
Date: August 25, 1994
Creator: Spurling, D. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hypersingular integrals at a corner (open access)

Hypersingular integrals at a corner

For a smooth boundary, hypersingular integrals can be defined as a limit from the interior, the approach direction being taken, for convenience, normal to the surface. At a boundary corner, the limit process, with a necessarily non-normal approach direction, provides a valid definition of the hypersingular equation, as long as the direction is employed for all integrations. The terms which are potentially singular in the limit are shown to cancel, provided the function approximations at the corner are consistent. The analytical formulas for the singular integrals are more complicated than for a smooth surface, but are easily obtained using symbolic computation. These techniques have been employed to accurately solve the ``L-shaped domain`` potential problem considered by Jaswon and Symm.
Date: March 25, 1993
Creator: Gray, L. J. & Manne, L. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
TMACS test procedure TP012: Panalarm software bridge (open access)

TMACS test procedure TP012: Panalarm software bridge

This Test Procedure addresses the testing of the functionality of the Tank Monitor and Control System (TMACS) Panalarm bridge software. The features to be tested are: Bridge Initialization Options; Bridge Communication; Bridge Performance; Testing Checksum Errors; and Testing Command Reject Errors. Only the first three could be tested; the last two have been deferred to a later date.
Date: August 25, 1994
Creator: Washburn, S. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance test procedure for tank bottom thermocouples on Tank 241-SY-101. Revision 2 (open access)

Acceptance test procedure for tank bottom thermocouples on Tank 241-SY-101. Revision 2

None
Date: October 25, 1994
Creator: Zuehlke, A. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Monitoring the response of the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere to a greenhouse gas scenario. Final report, 1 May 1990--30 June 1994 (open access)

Monitoring the response of the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere to a greenhouse gas scenario. Final report, 1 May 1990--30 June 1994

A measurement system for examining the possible linkage between an increased concentration of Greenhouse Gases (GGs) and symptoms of climate change has been designed and evaluated. The system consists of a dual port emission interferometer and supporting data analysis algorithms for the remote sensing the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere from a high elevation ground site deployment. Two blackbody systems were designed and tested to provide necessary calibration targets for the interferometer. The interferometer was deployed during four different periods at climatologically distinct locations to test the capabilities of the system. Over two hundred spectra were collected in a variety of conditions ranging from a clear middle latitude atmosphere viewed from mountain site at 3.0 km ASL to sub-tropical marine stratocumulus cloudiness measured at Porto Santo Island near Madeira. The algorithm has been used successfully to retrieve temperature and moisture profiles from both the mountain and sea level deployments. These initial retrievals indicate that ground based systems may only be effective in sensing the temperature and moisture profiles for the first few kilometers above the instrument. The interferometric data have been used to estimate the size of ``equivalent spherical`` ice particles in cirrus clouds. The data from the sea level deployment were …
Date: September 25, 1994
Creator: Davis, J. M. & Cox, S. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
CDMS: CAD data set system design description. Revision 1 (open access)

CDMS: CAD data set system design description. Revision 1

None
Date: October 25, 1994
Creator: Gray, E. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nitrogen availability as a control mechanism of secondary succession within a semiarid shrubland ecosystem. Final report, October 1, 1990--June 27, 1992 (open access)

Nitrogen availability as a control mechanism of secondary succession within a semiarid shrubland ecosystem. Final report, October 1, 1990--June 27, 1992

Three experiments were conducted within a semiarid shrubland to test the role of nitrogen availability as a control mechanism in secondary succession. Secondary succession patterns were documented for seven years and effects of increased and decreased N availability levels, fumigation, and competition by early-seral species were tested. Differential responses by seral species were determined and related to successional patterns. Nitrogen availability was found to be a primary mechanism controlling the rate of succession. Relative growth rate was an important factor determining which species initially dominated and N availability became the primary control factor by the third year. As N availability increased, the rate of succession decreased. Conversely, as N availability was decreased, the rate of succession increased. The abundance of annuals was increased and abundance of perennials decreased by increased N availability. Tissue N concentration was related to lifeform and seral position, and these relationships were important in the transition from early- to mid-seral stages. Decomposer subsystem dynamics were correlated with seral community dynamics. The effect of fumigation was minimized by initially planting with late-seral species. A conceptual model of secondary succession is presented based on N availability, relative growth rate, lifeform, and decomposition dynamics.
Date: September 25, 1992
Creator: Redente, E. F. & McLendon, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
TMACS test procedure TP003: Graphics. Revision 5 (open access)

TMACS test procedure TP003: Graphics. Revision 5

The TMACS Software Project Test Procedures translate the project`s acceptance criteria into test steps. Software releases are certified when the affected Test Procedures are successfully performed and the customers authorize installation of these changes. This Test Procedure addresses the graphics requirements of the TMACS. The features to be tested are the data display graphics and the graphic elements that provide for operator control and selection of displays.
Date: August 25, 1994
Creator: Scanlan, P. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal distortion tests of aluminum and stainless steel plates (open access)

Thermal distortion tests of aluminum and stainless steel plates

An important upgrade to the STAR detector at the Brookhaven National Laboratory RHIC accelerator will be an electromagnetic calorimeter. One design being considered for this calorimeter involves cast lead modules covering {Delta}{phi} = 6{degree} and 0 {le} {vert_bar}{eta}{vert_bar} {le} 1. These modules would consist of alternating layers of lead and sheets of plastic scintillator. The gaps for scintillator between the layers of lead would be created by parallel aluminum plates of thickness {approx_equal}6.6 mm = 0.260in. in the mold for the modules. These plates would need to be machined or ground to be reasonably flat, perhaps to {plus_minus}0.003in., and of uniform thickness from plate to plate. These requirements are imposed by the need to remove the plates from the casting after cooling, and to have good uniformity of the lead layer thickness, which gives good performance for the modules as a calorimeter. Aluminum was chosen for the plates because of its high coefficient of thermal expansion. An important cost in this calorimeter design is associated with the machining or grinding of the plates to proper thickness and flatness. In most cost estimates, it has been assumed that the mold parts could be used many times. This note describes a simple …
Date: June 25, 1993
Creator: Bielick, E.; Fornek, T.; Spinka, H. & Underwood, D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
241-U-701 new compressor building and instrument air piping analyses (open access)

241-U-701 new compressor building and instrument air piping analyses

Building anchorage analysis is performed to qualify the design of the new compressor building foundation given in the ECN ``241-U-701 New Compressor Building.`` Recommendations for some changes in the ECN are made accordingly. Calculations show that the 6-in.-slab is capable of supporting the pipe supports, and that the building foundation, air compressor and dryer anchorage, and electric rack are adequate structurally. Analysis also shows that the instrument air piping and pipe supports for the compressed air system meet the applicable code requirements and are acceptable. The building is for the U-Farm instrument air systems.
Date: August 25, 1994
Creator: Huang, F. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cratering rates from lunar xenospherules (open access)

Cratering rates from lunar xenospherules

The goal of this project is to obtain the time history of impacts on the moon, with emphasis on recent impacts. In particular, the project could prove (or disprove) the existence of comet sores and provide the dates when they occurred.
Date: May 25, 1993
Creator: Muller, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library