Resource Type

Salt Method for Determining Pond Volume (open access)

Salt Method for Determining Pond Volume

Abstract: "Present methods of determining pond volume are time-consuming and laborious. This paper describes a simple, rapid method for determining water volume in ponds by measuring the change in chloride concentration caused by the addition of a known weight of salt. Mean volume estimates derived by this method were not significantly different (F-test; 0.01 level) from those obtained by multiplying surface area by mean depth or measuring the flow rate through fill pipes."
Date: January 1977
Creator: Provine, William C.
System: The Portal to Texas History
Schedule of fees  for jurisdictions under the international registration plan (open access)

Schedule of fees for jurisdictions under the international registration plan

This report shows the Schedule of fees for jurisdictions [i.e. jurisdictions] under the International Registration Plan
Date: 1995
Creator: Texas. Department of Transportation.
System: The Portal to Texas History
Successful Spawning of Orangemouth Corvina Following Injection with des-Gly^10, [d-Ala^6] - Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone (1-9) Ethylamide and Pimozide (open access)

Successful Spawning of Orangemouth Corvina Following Injection with des-Gly^10, [d-Ala^6] - Luteinizing Hormone-Releasing Hormone (1-9) Ethylamide and Pimozide

Report on the experimentation to spawn mature orangemouth corvina with hormone injections.
Date: August 1987
Creator: Prentice, John A. & Thomas, Peter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Steepened magnetosonic waves in the high. beta. plasma surrounding Comet Giacobini-Zinner (open access)

Steepened magnetosonic waves in the high. beta. plasma surrounding Comet Giacobini-Zinner

We extend the previous studies of intense hydromagnetic waves at Giacobini-Zinner to investigate the mode and direction of wave propagation. Simultaneous high-resolution measurements of electron density fluctuations demonstrate that the long period (approx.100 s) waves are propagating in the magnetosonic mode. Principal axis analyses of the long period waves and accompanying partial rotations show that the sum of the wave phase rotations is 360/sup 0/C, indicating that both are parts of the same wave oscillation. From the time sequence of the steepened waveforms observed by ICE, we demonstrate that the waves must propagate towards the sun with C/sub ph/ < V/sub sw/. All available observations are consistent with wave generation by the resonant ion ring or ion beam instability which predicts right-hand polarized waves propagating in the ion beam (solar) direction. The large amplitudes ..delta.. polarized B/absolute value of Bapprox.0(1) and small scale sizes (rotational discontinuities) of the cometary waves suggest that rapid pitch-angle scattering and energy transfer with energetic ions should occur. Since the waves are highly compressive, ..delta.. absolute value of B/absolute value of B = 0(0.5), one can also anticipate first-order Fermi acceleration. 15 refs., 6 figs.
Date: January 1, 1986
Creator: Tsurutani, B. T.; Smith, E. J.; Thorne, R. M.; Gosling, J. T. & Matsumoto, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Weather in the Mediterranean (open access)

General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Weather in the Mediterranean

The occurrence of mistral winds in the Mediterranean shows a correlation with blocking activity over the eastern Atlantic. Apparently for this reason periods with a &#x27;&#x27;midwinter dip&#x27;&#x27; in the zonal available potential energy of the northern hemisphere are favored by mistral occurrence. There also is a tendency for a 22- to 26-day cycle to appear in pressure gradients at the 500- and 100-mb surfaces along the southern coast of France. Such pressure gradients, if they exceed a certain magnitude, are indicative of mistral episodes.
Date: January 1, 1976
Creator: Reiter, Elmar R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Roster of registered Architects (open access)

Roster of registered Architects

This report includes the Roster of registered Architects as of October 1980.
Date: October 1980
Creator: Texas Board of Architectural Examiners
System: The Portal to Texas History
Tornado:The voice of the people in disaster and after (open access)

Tornado:The voice of the people in disaster and after

This report provides information about the tornado damages , history of Lubbock and how the community responded to the Tornado.
Date: September 1971
Creator: Texas Tech University
System: The Portal to Texas History
Sources of revenue growth: a history of state taxes and fees in Texas, 1972-2016 (open access)

Sources of revenue growth: a history of state taxes and fees in Texas, 1972-2016

This publication updates the source of revenues last issued by the comptroller.
Date: January 2017
Creator: Texas. Comptroller's Office.
System: The Portal to Texas History
Air Quality Modeling Guidelines (open access)

Air Quality Modeling Guidelines

Document "provid[ing] guidance on models and modeling procedures that are used in support of air permitting in the State of Texas" (p. i).
Date: November 9, 1992
Creator: Texas Air Control Board
System: The Portal to Texas History
An Examination of the Texas Episodic Model and Its Time-Saving Table Interpolation Scheme (open access)

An Examination of the Texas Episodic Model and Its Time-Saving Table Interpolation Scheme

"This paper discusses a model developed by the Texas Air Control Board to expedite the air quality studies required by the state permitting process" (p. 1).
Date: 198X
Creator: Texas Air Control Board
System: The Portal to Texas History
Salmonella -- An Unwelcome Dinner Guest (open access)

Salmonella -- An Unwelcome Dinner Guest

Newsletter that details how to properly cook food in order to prevent salmonella.
Date: November 8, 1987
Creator: Moeller, Mike
System: The Portal to Texas History
Experimental evaluation of a fixed collector employing vee-trough concentrator and vacuum tube receivers (open access)

Experimental evaluation of a fixed collector employing vee-trough concentrator and vacuum tube receivers

A test bed for experimental evaluation of a fixed solar collector which combines an evacuated glass tube solar receiver with a flat plate/black chrome plated copper absorber and an asymmetric veetrough concentrator was designed and constructed. Earlier predictions of thermal performance were compared with test data acquired for a bare vacuum tube receiver; and receiver tubes with Alzak aluminum, aluminized FEP Teflon film laminated sheet metal and second surface ordinary mirror reflectors. Test results and system economics as well as objectives of an ongoing program to obtain long-term performance data are discussed.
Date: January 1, 1977
Creator: Selcuk, M. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geochemical reconnaissance for uranium in the arid regions of the western United States (open access)

Geochemical reconnaissance for uranium in the arid regions of the western United States

In developing the sampling strategy for the seven western states, the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory (LLL) divided the region into geologic and physiographic provinces. A large part of the LLL region of responsibility lies within the arid to semi-arid Basin and Range province. This region is characterized as an area of rather complex geology with internal drainage. The desert-like conditions in many parts of this region result in a unique set of problems which requires a unique reconnaissance program. In this paper, I will describe some of the features of the LLL program which are keyed to the desert environment in the northern Basin and Range province.
Date: March 1, 1977
Creator: Leach, D. L., Jr.
System: The UNT Digital Library
SP-100, a project manager`s view. Technical information report (open access)

SP-100, a project manager`s view. Technical information report

Born to meet the special needs of America`s space effort, the SP-100 Program testifies to the cooperation among government agencies. The Department of Energy (DOE), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), and the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) are working together to produce a 100-kW power system for use in outer space. At this point in the effort, it is appropriate to review: The approach to meet program goals; the status of activities of the Project Office, managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL); and, because this is a meeting on materials, answers beings developed by the Project Office to vital questions on refractory alloy technology.
Date: December 1, 1983
Creator: Truscello, V. C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
External flow radiators for reduced space powerplant temperatures. Technical information report (open access)

External flow radiators for reduced space powerplant temperatures. Technical information report

Nuclear space powerplants can operate at temperatures below 900 K and use stainless steel construction without a weight penalty if new radiator concepts can achieve radiator weights of 1-3 kg/m{sup 2}. Conventional tube-and-fin radiators weight about 10 kg/m{sup 2} because of heavy tube walls to prevent meteroid puncture. Radiator designs that do not require meteroid protection are possible; they operate with fluids of low vapor pressure that can be exposed directly to space in external-flow radiators. An example is the {open_quotes}rotating disk radiator{close_quotes} in which centrifugal force drives a liquid film radially outward across a thin rotating metal disk; meteroid punctures cause no loss of fluid other than from evaporation, which can be small. An even lighter concept is the liquid drop radiator in which heat is radiated directly from moving liquid drops. Such radiator concepts look practical, and they may be much easier to develop than the high-temperature, refractory-metal power systems necessitated by conventional radiators.
Date: January 1, 1984
Creator: Elliott, D. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reversible thermodynamic cycle for AMTEC power conversion (open access)

Reversible thermodynamic cycle for AMTEC power conversion

The thermodynamic cycle appropriate to an AMTEC (alkali metal thermal-to-electric converter) cell is discussed for both liquid- and vapor-fed modes of operation, under the assumption that all processes can be performed reversibly. In the liquid-fed mode, the reversible efficiency is greater than 89.6% of Carnot efficiency for heat input and rejection temperatures (900--1300 K and 400--800 K, respectively) typical of practical devices. Vapor-fed cells can approach the efficiency of liquid-fed cells. Quantitative estimates confirm that the efficiency is insensitive to either the work required to pressurize the sodium liquid or the details of the state changes associated with cooling the low pressure sodium gas to the heat rejection temperature. 10 refs.
Date: July 1, 1992
Creator: Vining, C. B.; Williams, R. M.; Underwood, M. L.; Ryan, M. A. & Suitor, J. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design considerations for a fiber optic communications network for power systems (open access)

Design considerations for a fiber optic communications network for power systems

The design of a fiber optic communication network for monitoring and control in power systems is discussed. It is shown that by appropriate choice of protocols, a fault-tolerant system can be built that operates in any arbitrary configuration. Since the network is based on fiber optics, it can be made fast enough for substation monitoring and control. In this application, a relatively small number of cables is required to implement a high reliability system. The network can also be used for distribution automation. In this application the network is required to reach all parts of the power system, and the fiber cable itself becomes a significant fraction of the cost of communications. However, since many applications can be supported at once, the cost per function can be reasonable.
Date: August 1, 1993
Creator: Kirkham, H.; Johnston, A. R. & Allen, G. D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficiency of an AMTEC recirculating test cell, experiments and projections (open access)

Efficiency of an AMTEC recirculating test cell, experiments and projections

The alkali metal thermal to electric converter (AMTEC) is an electrochemical device for the direct conversion of heat to electrical energy with efficiencies potentially near Carnot. The future usefulness of AMTEC for space power conversion depends on the efficiency of the devices. Systems studies have projected from 15% to 35% thermal to electric conversion efficiencies, and one experiment has demonstrated 19% efficiency for a short period of time. Recent experiments in a recirculating test cell (RTC) have demonstrated sustained conversion efficiencies as high as 10.2% early in cell life and 9.7% after maturity. Extensive thermal and electrochemical analysis of the cell during several experiments demonstrated that the efficiency could be improved in two ways. First, the electrode performance could be improved. The electrode for these tests operated at about one third the power density of state of the art electrodes. The low power density was caused by a combination of high series resistance and high mass flow resistance. Reducing these resistances could improve the efficiency to greater than 10%. Second, the cell thermal performance could be improved. Efficiencies greater than 14% could be realized through reducing the radiative thermal loss. Further improvements to the efficiency range predicted by systems studies …
Date: May 1, 1992
Creator: Underwood, M. L.; O`Connor, D.; Williams, R. M.; Jeffries-Nakamura, B. & Ryan, M. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Activated transport in AMTEC electrodes (open access)

Activated transport in AMTEC electrodes

Transport of alkali metal atoms through porous cathodes of alkali metal thermal-to-electric converter (AMTEC) cells is responsible for significant, reducible losses in the electrical performance of these cells. Experimental evidence for activated transport of metal atoms at grain surfaces and boundaries within some AMTEC electrodes has been derived from temperature dependent studies as well as from analysis of the detailed frequency dependence of ac impedance results for other electrodes, including thin, mature molybdenum electrodes which exhibit transport dominated by free molecular flow of sodium gas at low frequencies or dc conditions. Activated surface transport will almost always exist in parallel with free molecular flow transport, and the process of alkali atom adsorption/desorption from the electrode surface will invariably be part of the transport process, and possibly a dominant part in some cases. Little can be learned about the detailed mass transport process from the ac impedance or current voltage curves of an electrode at one set of operating parameters, because the transport process includes a number of important physical parameters that are not all uniquely determined by one experiment. The temperature dependence of diffusion coefficient of the alkali metal through the electrode in several cases provides an activation energy and …
Date: July 1, 1992
Creator: Williams, R. M.; Jeffries-Nakamura, B.; Ryan, M. A.; Underwood, M. L.; O`Connor, D. & Kikkert, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A 2D electrostatic PIC code for the Mark III Hypercube (open access)

A 2D electrostatic PIC code for the Mark III Hypercube

We have implemented a 2D electrostastic plasma particle in cell (PIC) simulation code on the Caltech/JPL Mark IIIfp Hypercube. The code simulates plasma effects by evolving in time the trajectories of thousands to millions of charged particles subject to their self-consistent fields. Each particle`s position and velocity is advanced in time using a leap frog method for integrating Newton`s equations of motion in electric and magnetic fields. The electric field due to these moving charged particles is calculated on a spatial grid at each time by solving Poisson`s equation in Fourier space. These two tasks represent the largest part of the computation. To obtain efficient operation on a distributed memory parallel computer, we are using the General Concurrent PIC (GCPIC) algorithm previously developed for a 1D parallel PIC code.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Ferraro, R. D.; Liewer, P. C. & Decyk, V. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic load balancing in a concurrent plasma PIC code on the JPL/Caltech Mark III hypercube (open access)

Dynamic load balancing in a concurrent plasma PIC code on the JPL/Caltech Mark III hypercube

Dynamic load balancing has been implemented in a concurrent one-dimensional electromagnetic plasma particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation code using a method which adds very little overhead to the parallel code. In PIC codes, the orbits of many interacting plasma electrons and ions are followed as an initial value problem as the particles move in electromagnetic fields calculated self-consistently from the particle motions. The code was implemented using the GCPIC algorithm in which the particles are divided among processors by partitioning the spatial domain of the simulation. The problem is load-balanced by partitioning the spatial domain so that each partition has approximately the same number of particles. During the simulation, the partitions are dynamically recreated as the spatial distribution of the particles changes in order to maintain processor load balance.
Date: December 31, 1990
Creator: Liewer, P. C.; Leaver, E. W.; Decyk, V. K. & Dawson, J. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advances in high temperature components for AMTEC (alkali metal thermal-to-electric converter) (open access)

Advances in high temperature components for AMTEC (alkali metal thermal-to-electric converter)

Long lifetimes are required for AMTEC (or sodium heat engine) components for aerospace and terrestrial applications, and the high heat input temperature as well as the alkali metal liquid and vapor environment places unusual demands on the materials used to construct AMTEC devices. In addition, it is important to maximize device efficiency and power density, while maintaining a long life capability. In addition to the electrode, which must provide both efficient electrode kinetics, transport of the alkali metal, and low electrical resistance, other high temperature components of the cell face equally demanding requirements. The beta{double_prime} alumina solid electrolyte (BASE), the seal between the BASE ceramic and its metallic transition to the hot alkali metal (liquid or vapor) source, and metallic components of the device are exposed to hot liquid alkali metal. Modification of AMTEC components may also be useful in optimizing the device for particular operating conditions. In particular, a potassium AMTEC may be expected to operate more efficiently at lower temperatures.
Date: December 31, 1991
Creator: Williams, R. M.; Jeffries-Nakamura, B.; Underwood, M. L.; Ryan, M. A.; O`Connor, D. & Kikkert, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Direct Conversion of Methane to Methanol in a Non-Isothermal Catalytic Membrane Reactor (open access)

Direct Conversion of Methane to Methanol in a Non-Isothermal Catalytic Membrane Reactor

The direct partial oxidation of CH{sub 4} to CH{sub 3}OH has been studied in a non-permselective, non-isothermal catalytic membrane reactor system. A cooling tube introduced coaxially inside a tubular membrane reactor quenches the product stream rapidly so that further oxidation of CH{sub 3}OH is inhibited. Selectivity for CH{sub 3}OH formation is significantly higher with quenching than in experiments without quenching. For CH{sub 4} conversion of 4% to 7% CH{sub 3}OH selectivity is 40% to 50% with quenching and 25% to 35% without quenching.
Date: December 31, 1993
Creator: Noble, R. D. & Falconer, J. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reglamentos De Caza Y Pesca (open access)

Reglamentos De Caza Y Pesca

This book is part of the collection entitled: Texas State Publications and was provided by UNT Libraries Government Documents Department to The Portal to Texas History, a digital repository hosted by the UNT Libraries.
Date: 2017
Creator: Texas. Parks and Wildlife Department.
System: The Portal to Texas History