2010 Census: Population Measures Are Important for Federal Funding Allocations (open access)

2010 Census: Population Measures Are Important for Federal Funding Allocations

Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The decennial census is a constitutionally-mandated activity that produces critical data used to apportion congressional seats, redraw congressional districts, and allocate billions of dollars in federal assistance. This testimony discusses (1) the various measures of population used to allocate federal grant funds (2) how the accuracy of the population count and measurement of accuracy have evolved and the U.S. Census Bureau's (Bureau) plan for coverage measurement in 2010; and (3) the potential impact that differences in population estimates can have on the allocation of grant funds. This testimony is based primarily on GAO's issued work in which it evaluated the sensitivity of grant formulas to population estimates."
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: United States. Government Accountability Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Compact Linac for Proton Therapy Based on a Dielectric Wall Accelerator (open access)

A Compact Linac for Proton Therapy Based on a Dielectric Wall Accelerator

A novel compact CT-guided intensity modulated proton radiotherapy (IMPT) system is described. The system is being designed to deliver fast IMPT so that larger target volumes and motion management can be accomplished. The system will be ideal for large and complex target volumes in young patients. The basis of the design is the dielectric wall accelerator (DWA) system being developed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). The DWA uses fast switched high voltage transmission lines to generate pulsed electric fields on the inside of a high gradient insulating (HGI) acceleration tube. High electric field gradients are achieved by the use of alternating insulators and conductors and short pulse times. The system will produce individual pulses that can be varied in intensity, energy and spot width. The IMPT planning system will optimize delivery characteristics. The system will be capable of being sited in a conventional linac vault and provide intensity modulated rotational therapy. Feasibility tests of an optimization system for selecting the position, energy, intensity and spot size for a collection of spots comprising the treatment are underway. A prototype is being designed and concept designs of the envelope and environmental needs of the unit are beginning. The status of …
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Caporaso, G. J.; Mackie, T. R.; Sampayan, S.; Chen, Y.; Wang, L.; Blackfield, D. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
X-Ray Active Matrix Pixel Sensors Basedon J-FET Technology Developed for the Linac Coherent Light Source. (open access)

X-Ray Active Matrix Pixel Sensors Basedon J-FET Technology Developed for the Linac Coherent Light Source.

An X-ray Active Matrix Pixel Sensor (XAMPS) is being developed for recording data for the X-ray Pump Probe experiment at the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS). Special attention has to be paid to some technological challenges that this design presents. New processes were developed and refined to address problems encountered during previous productions of XAMPS. The development of these critical steps and corresponding tests results are reported here.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Carini, G. A.; Chen, W.; Li, Z.; Rehak, P. & Siddons, D. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies of water on metals and oxides at ambient conditions (open access)

In-situ X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy studies of water on metals and oxides at ambient conditions

X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) is a powerful tool for surface and interface analysis, providing the elemental composition of surfaces and the local chemical environment of adsorbed species. Conventional XPS experiments have been limited to ultrahigh vacuum (UHV) conditions due to a short mean free path of electrons in a gas phase. The recent advances in instrumentation coupled with third-generation synchrotron radiation sources enables in-situ XPS measurements at pressures above 5 Torr. In this review, we describe the basic design of the ambient pressure XPS setup that combines differential pumping with an electrostatic focusing. We present examples of the application of in-situ XPS to studies of water adsorption on the surface of metals and oxides including Cu(110), Cu(111), TiO2(110) under environmental conditions of water vapor pressure. On all these surfaces we observe a general trend where hydroxyl groups form first, followed by molecular water adsorption. The importance of surface OH groups and their hydrogen bonding to water molecules in water adsorption on surfaces is discussed in detail.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Salmeron, Miquel; Yamamoto, S.; Bluhm, H.; Andersson, K.; Ketteler, G.; Ogasawara, H. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Capture gamma ENDF libraries for modeling and identification of neutron sources (open access)

Neutron Capture gamma ENDF libraries for modeling and identification of neutron sources

There are a number of inaccuracies and data omissions with respect to gammas from neutron capture in the ENDF libraries used as field reference information and by modeling codes used in JTOT. As the use of Active Neutron interrogation methods is expanded, these shortfalls become more acute. A new, more accurate and complete evaluated experimental database of gamma rays (over 35,000 lines for 262 isotopes up to U so far) from thermal neutron capture has recently become available from the IAEA. To my knowledge, none of this new data has been installed in ENDF libraries and disseminated. I propose to upgrade libraries of {sup 184,186}W, {sup 56}Fe, {sup 204,206,207}Pb, {sup 104}Pd, and {sup 19}F the 1st year. This will involve collaboration with Richard Firestone at LBL in evaluating the data and installing it in the libraries. I will test them with the transport code MCNP5.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Sleaford, B
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of Random Clustering on Surface Damage Density Estimates (open access)

Effect of Random Clustering on Surface Damage Density Estimates

Identification and spatial registration of laser-induced damage relative to incident fluence profiles is often required to characterize the damage properties of laser optics near damage threshold. Of particular interest in inertial confinement laser systems are large aperture beam damage tests (>1cm{sup 2}) where the number of initiated damage sites for {phi}>14J/cm{sup 2} can approach 10{sup 5}-10{sup 6}, requiring automatic microscopy counting to locate and register individual damage sites. However, as was shown for the case of bacteria counting in biology decades ago, random overlapping or 'clumping' prevents accurate counting of Poisson-distributed objects at high densities, and must be accounted for if the underlying statistics are to be understood. In this work we analyze the effect of random clumping on damage initiation density estimates at fluences above damage threshold. The parameter {psi} = a{rho} = {rho}/{rho}{sub 0}, where a = 1/{rho}{sub 0} is the mean damage site area and {rho} is the mean number density, is used to characterize the onset of clumping, and approximations based on a simple model are used to derive an expression for clumped damage density vs. fluence and damage site size. The influence of the uncorrected {rho} vs. {phi} curve on damage initiation probability predictions is …
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Matthews, M J & Feit, M D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Inelastic final-state interaction (open access)

Inelastic final-state interaction

The final-state interaction in multichannel decay processes is systematically studied with application to B decay in mind. Since the final-state interaction is intrinsically interwoven with the decay interaction in this case, no simple phase theorem like"Watson's theorem" holds for experimentally observed final states. We first examine in detail the two-channel problem as a toy-model to clarify the issues and to remedy common mistakes made in earlier literature. Realistic multichannel problems are too challenging for quantitative analysis. To cope with mathematical complexity, we introduce a method of approximation that is applicable to the case where one prominent inelastic channel dominates over all others. We illustrate this approximation method in the amplitude of the decay B to pi K fed by the intermediate states of a charmed meson pair. Even with our approximation we need more accurate information of strong interactions than we have now. Nonetheless we are able to obtain some insight in the issue and draw useful conclusions on general features on the strong phases.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Suzuki, Mahiko & Suzuki, Mahiko
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Downstream Intensification Effects Associated with CO2 Laser Mitigation of Fused Silica (open access)

Downstream Intensification Effects Associated with CO2 Laser Mitigation of Fused Silica

Mitigation of 351nm laser-induced damage sites on fused silica exit surfaces by selective CO{sub 2} treatment has been shown to effectively arrest the exponential growth responsible for limiting the lifetime of optics in high-fluence laser systems. However, the perturbation to the optical surface profile following the mitigation process introduces phase contrast to the beam, causing some amount of downstream intensification with the potential to damage downstream optics. Control of the laser treatment process and measurement of the associated phase modulation is essential to preventing downstream 'fratricide' in damage-mitigated optical systems. In this work we present measurements of the surface morphology, intensification patterns and damage associated with various CO{sub 2} mitigation treatments on fused silica surfaces. Specifically, two components of intensification pattern, one on-axis and another off-axis can lead to damage of downstream optics and are related to rims around the ablation pit left from the mitigation process. It is shown that control of the rim structure around the edge of typical mitigation sites is crucial in preventing damage to downstream optics.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Matthews, M. J.; Bass, I. L.; Guss, G. M.; Widmayer, C. C. & Ravizza, F. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Growth of laser damage in fused silica: diameter to depth ratio (open access)

Growth of laser damage in fused silica: diameter to depth ratio

Growth of laser initiated damage plays a major role in determining optics lifetime in high power laser systems. Previous measurements have established that the lateral diameter grows exponentially. Knowledge of the growth of the site in the propagation direction is also important, especially so when considering techniques designed to mitigate damage growth, where it is required to reach all the subsurface damage. In this work, we present data on both the diameter and the depth of a growing exit surface damage sites in fused silica. Measured growth rates with both 351 nm illumination and with combined 351 nm and 1054 nm illumination are discussed.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Norton, M. A.; Adams, J. J.; Carr, C. W.; Donohue, E. E.; Feit, M. D.; Hackel, R. P. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design for a High Energy Density Kelvin-Helmholtz Experiment (open access)

Design for a High Energy Density Kelvin-Helmholtz Experiment

While many high energy density physics (HEDP) Rayleigh-Taylor and Richtmyer-Meshkov instability experiments have been fielded as part of basic HEDP and astrophysics studies, not one HEDP Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) experiment has been successfully performed. Herein, a design for a novel HEDP x-ray driven KH experiment is presented along with supporting radiation-hydrodynamic simulation and theory.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Hurricane, O A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Wavelet Denoising of Mobile Radiation Data (open access)

Wavelet Denoising of Mobile Radiation Data

The investigation of wavelet analysis techniques as a means of filtering the gross-count signal obtained from radiation detectors has shown promise. These signals are contaminated with high frequency statistical noise and significantly varying background radiation levels. Wavelet transforms allow a signal to be split into its constituent frequency components without losing relative timing information. Initial simulations and an injection study have been performed. Additionally, acquisition and analysis software has been written which allowed the technique to be evaluated in real-time under more realistic operating conditions. The technique performed well when compared to more traditional triggering techniques with its performance primarily limited by false alarms due to prominent features in the signal. An initial investigation into the potential rejection and classification of these false alarms has also shown promise.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Campbell, D & Lanier, R
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SRNL PARTICIPATION IN THE MULTI-SCALE ENSEMBLE EXERCISES (open access)

SRNL PARTICIPATION IN THE MULTI-SCALE ENSEMBLE EXERCISES

Consequence assessment during emergency response often requires atmospheric transport and dispersion modeling to guide decision making. A statistical analysis of the ensemble of results from several models is a useful way of estimating the uncertainty for a given forecast. ENSEMBLE is a European Union program that utilizes an internet-based system to ingest transport results from numerous modeling agencies. A recent set of exercises required output on three distinct spatial and temporal scales. The Savannah River National Laboratory (SRNL) uses a regional prognostic model nested within a larger-scale synoptic model to generate the meteorological conditions which are in turn used in a Lagrangian particle dispersion model. A discussion of SRNL participation in these exercises is given, with particular emphasis on requirements for provision of results in a timely manner with regard to the various spatial scales.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Buckley, R
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evaluation of Neutron Cross Sections for a Complete Set of Nd Isotopes. (open access)

Evaluation of Neutron Cross Sections for a Complete Set of Nd Isotopes.

Neutron cross sections for a complete set of Nd isotopes, {sup 142,143,144,145,146,147,148,150}Nd, were evaluated in the incident energy range from 10{sup -5} eV to 20 MeV. In the low energy region, including thermal and resolved resonances, our evaluations are based on the latest data published in the Atlas of Neutron Resonances. In the unresolved resonance region we performed additional evaluation by using the averages of the resolved resonances and adjusting them to the experimental data. In the fast neutron region, we used the nuclear reaction model code EMPIRE-2.19 validated against the experimental data. The results are compared to the existing nuclear data libraries, including ENDF/B-VI.8, JENDL-3.3 and JEFF-3.1, and to the available experimental data. The new evaluations are suitable for neutron transport calculations and they were adopted by the new evaluated nuclear data file of the United States, ENDF/B-VII.0, released in December 2006.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Kim, H.; Herman, M.; Mughabghab, S. F.; Oblozinsky, P.; Rochman, D. & Lee, Y. O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Work in Multiphase Flow at NETL (open access)

Recent Work in Multiphase Flow at NETL

No abstract - only slideshow attached
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Syamlal, Madhava
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
LIGHT INDUCED TELLURIUM ENRICHMENT ON CDZNTE CRYSTALSURFACES DETECTED BY RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY (open access)

LIGHT INDUCED TELLURIUM ENRICHMENT ON CDZNTE CRYSTALSURFACES DETECTED BY RAMAN SPECTROSCOPY

Synthetic CdZnTe or 'CZT' crystals can be grown under controlled conditions to produce high quality crystals to be used as room temperature radiation detectors. Even the best crystal growth methods result in defects, such as tellurium secondary phases, that affect the crystal's performance. In this study, CZT crystals were analyzed by micro Raman spectroscopy. The growth of Te rich areas on the surface was induced by low powered lasers. The growth was observed versus time with low power Raman scattering and was observed immediately under higher power conditions. The detector response was also measured after induced Te enrichment.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Hawkins, S; Eliel Villa-Aleman, E; Martine Duff, M & Douglas02 Hunter, D
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
OPTIMIZING RADIOLOGICAL MONITOR SITING OVER THE CONTINENTAL U.S. (open access)

OPTIMIZING RADIOLOGICAL MONITOR SITING OVER THE CONTINENTAL U.S.

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is installing a network of sensors in the US to monitor background radiation and elevated radiation levels expected from a possible nuclear incident. The network (RadNet) of 180 fixed sensors is intended to provide a basic estimate of the radiation level throughout the US and enhanced accuracy near population centers. This report discusses one of the objective methods for locating these monitors based on criteria outlined by the EPA. The analysis employs a representative climatology of incident scenarios that includes 50 release locations, four seasons and four times of the day. This climatology was calculated from 5,600 simulations generated with NOAA-ARL's HYSPLIT Lagrangian trajectory model. The method treats the release plumes as targets and monitors are located to maximize the number of plumes detected with the network. Weighting schemes based on detection only, dose-weighted detection and population-dose weighted detection were evaluated. The result shows that most of the monitors are located around the population centers, as expected. However, there are monitors quite uniformly distributed around the less populated areas. The monitors at the populated areas will provide early warning to protect the general public, and the monitors spread across the country will provide valuable …
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Chen, K; Robert Buckley, R; Robert Kurzeja, R; Lance Osteen, L & Saleem Salaymeh, S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Renewable Energy Policy in the 2007 Farm Bill (open access)

Renewable Energy Policy in the 2007 Farm Bill

None
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical Cluster-Finding with an Adaptive Matched-Filter Technique: Algorithm and Comparison with Simulations (open access)

Optical Cluster-Finding with an Adaptive Matched-Filter Technique: Algorithm and Comparison with Simulations

We present a modified adaptive matched filter algorithm designed to identify clusters of galaxies in wide-field imaging surveys such as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. The cluster-finding technique is fully adaptive to imaging surveys with spectroscopic coverage, multicolor photometric redshifts, no redshift information at all, and any combination of these within one survey. It works with high efficiency in multi-band imaging surveys where photometric redshifts can be estimated with well-understood error distributions. Tests of the algorithm on realistic mock SDSS catalogs suggest that the detected sample is {approx} 85% complete and over 90% pure for clusters with masses above 1.0 x 10{sup 14}h{sup -1} M and redshifts up to z = 0.45. The errors of estimated cluster redshifts from maximum likelihood method are shown to be small (typically less that 0.01) over the whole redshift range with photometric redshift errors typical of those found in the Sloan survey. Inside the spherical radius corresponding to a galaxy overdensity of {Delta} = 200, we find the derived cluster richness {Lambda}{sub 200} a roughly linear indicator of its virial mass M{sub 200}, which well recovers the relation between total luminosity and cluster mass of the input simulation.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Dong, Feng; Pierpaoli, Elena; Gunn, James E. & Wechsler, Risa H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
SARC: Development and Support of a Sarcoma Research Consortium Infrastructure (open access)

SARC: Development and Support of a Sarcoma Research Consortium Infrastructure

SARC is a non-for-profit organization whose mission and vision is to advocate for the collaboration on the design of clinical trials on sarcoma, to further the knowledge regarding the diagnosis and treatment of sarcoma and provide accurate and up to date information to physicians, patients and families. The objectives are to assist in the development of the infrastructure for the continued growth and spectrum of clinical research, to facilitate biannual meeting of investigators, and to develop a preclinical research base that would design and conduct research that would improve the process of drug treatments selected for clinical research trials.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Arkison, Jim
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Suzaku Observations of AGN and Synergy with GLAST (open access)

Suzaku Observations of AGN and Synergy with GLAST

In next five years, dramatic progress is anticipated for the AGN studies, as we have two important missions to observe celestial sources in the high energy regime: GLAST and Suzaku. Suzaku is the 5th Japanese X-ray astronomy satellite which was successfully launched in July 2005. It carries four X-ray sensitive imaging CCD cameras (0.2-12 keV) located in the focal planes of X-ray telescope, and a non-imaging, collimated hard X-ray detector, which extends the bandpass of the observatory to include the 10-600 keV range. Simultaneous monitoring observations by the two instruments (GLAST and Suzaku) will be particularly valuable for variable radio-loud AGN, allowing the cross-correlations of time series as well as detailed modeling of the spectral evolution between the X-ray and gamma-ray energy bands. In this paper, we show early highlights from Suzaku observations of radio-loud AGNs, and discuss what we can do with GLAST in forthcoming years.
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Kataoka, Jun; Takahashi, Tad & Madejski, Greg
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Supermassive Black Hole Growth and Merger Rates from Cosmological N-body Simulations (open access)

Supermassive Black Hole Growth and Merger Rates from Cosmological N-body Simulations

Understanding how seed black holes grow into intermediate and supermassive black holes (IMBHs and SMBHs, respectively) has important implications for the duty-cycle of active galactic nuclei (AGN), galaxy evolution, and gravitational wave astronomy. Most studies of the cosmological growth and merger history of black holes have used semianalytic models and have concentrated on SMBH growth in luminous galaxies. Using high resolution cosmological N-body simulations, we track the assembly of black holes over a large range of final masses - from seed black holes to SMBHs - over widely varying dynamical histories. We used the dynamics of dark matter halos to track the evolution of seed black holes in three different gas accretion scenarios. We have found that growth of a Sagittarius A* - size SMBH reaches its maximum mass M{sub SMBH}={approx}10{sup 6}M{sub {circle_dot}} at z{approx}6 through early gaseous accretion episodes, after which it stays at near constant mass. At the same redshift, the duty-cycle of the host AGN ends, hence redshift z=6 marks the transition from an AGN to a starburst galaxy which eventually becomes the Milky Way. By tracking black hole growth as a function of time and mass, we estimate that the IMBH merger rate reaches a maximum …
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Micic, Miroslav; Holley-Bockelmann, Kelly; Sigurdsson, Steinn & Abel, Tom
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design, Fabrication, and Test of a 5-kWh/100-kW Flywheel Energy Storage Utilizing a High-Temperature Superconducting Bearing (open access)

Design, Fabrication, and Test of a 5-kWh/100-kW Flywheel Energy Storage Utilizing a High-Temperature Superconducting Bearing

None
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Dr. Michael Strasik, Philip E Johnson; Day, A. C.; Mittleider, J.; Higgins, M. D.; Edwards, J.; Schindler, J. R. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
DESTRUCTIVE EXAMINATION OF SHIPPING PACKAGE 9975-00600 (open access)

DESTRUCTIVE EXAMINATION OF SHIPPING PACKAGE 9975-00600

The Savannah River Site (SRS) stores packages containing plutonium (Pu) materials in the K-Area Complex (KAC). The Pu materials are packaged per the DOE 3013 Standard and stored within Model 9975 shipping packages in KAC. The KAC facility DSA (Document Safety Analysis) [1] credits the Model 9975 package to perform several safety functions, including criticality, impact resistance, containment, and fire resistance to ensure the plutonium materials remain in a safe configuration during normal and accident conditions. The Model 9975 package is expected to perform its safety function for at least 12 years from initial packaging. The DSA recognizes the degradation potential for the materials of package construction over time in the KAC storage environment and requires an assessment of materials performance to validate the assumptions of the analysis and ultimately predict service life. As part of the comprehensive Model 9975 package surveillance program [2-3], destructive examination of package 9975-00600 was performed following field surveillance in accordance with Reference [4]. Field surveillance of the Model 9975 package in KAC included nondestructive examination of the drum, fiberboard, lead shield and containment vessels [5]. Results of the field surveillance are provided in Attachment 1. Destructive and non-destructive examinations have been performed on specified …
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: Daugherty, W. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
SCHIP: Differences Between H.R. 3963 and the Vetoed H.R. 976 (open access)

SCHIP: Differences Between H.R. 3963 and the Vetoed H.R. 976

None
Date: October 29, 2007
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library