A Sublimation Pump (open access)

A Sublimation Pump

During a visit to Professor H.G. Harb at the University of Wisconsin, it was apparent that he had succeeded in obtaining fresh, clean chemisorptive layers of titanium by sublimation and chat that this could be adapted into an effective high vacuum pump. Two previous techniques of obtaining a chemisorptive layer of titanium, namely catholic sputtering and evaporation from the liquid droplet, have been extensively investigated and reported. Each of these seem to have inherent difficulties in stability and continuity of operation that appear to be eliminated or effectively reduced by the sublimation procedure. A development program was started at Brookhaven National Laboratory to investigate the possibilities of each sublimation of titanium as opposed to evaporation from the liquid.
Date: September 20, 1962
Creator: Gould, C. L. & Mandel, P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plant Fructose-1,6-Diphosphatases (open access)

Plant Fructose-1,6-Diphosphatases

Several important metabolic processes in plants involve the conversion of triose phosphate to hexose monophosphate. These include the synthesis of carbohydrates from precursors such as pyruvate and acetyl-coenzyme A, the reductive pentose phosphate cycle of photosynthesis, and the oxidative pentose phosphate cycle. This conversion cannot be accomplished solely by glycolytic enzymes because of the irreversible nature of phosphofructokinase. Racker and Schroeder (1958) have suggested two possible enzymic pathways for the formation of fructose 6-phosphate from triose phosphate. The most direct route is via a phosphate specific for the phosphates attached to carbon-1 of FDP. A combination of aldolase, transaldolase and sedoheptulose diphosphates may provide an alternative pathway.
Date: December 7, 1962
Creator: Saillie, Robert M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Specific Considerations of the Potential Hazards of Heavy Primary Cosmic Rays (open access)

Some Specific Considerations of the Potential Hazards of Heavy Primary Cosmic Rays

The radiation of the Van Allen belts and the solar flares consists primarily of electrons and protons, the biological effects of which are reasonably well known. However, there is a very small component of the galactic cosmic rays which consists of stripped atomic nuclei of atoms as heavy as iron. The biological effects of such particles have not been extensively investigated because it is impossible to produce them in the laboratory with an energy high enough to use for mammalian experiments. Consequently it has been necessary to approach the problem by indirect methods.
Date: December 7, 1962
Creator: Curtis, Howard J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Brookhaven Chemo-Nuclear In-Pile Research Loop (open access)

Brookhaven Chemo-Nuclear In-Pile Research Loop

The purpose of the Chemo-nuclear In-pile Research Loop is to provide a versatile facility for investigating chemo-nuclear reactions under flow conditions. The loop os designed to handle gaseous systems in conjunction with fixed packages of solid fuel.
Date: October 1962
Creator: Steinber, Meyer; Tucker, Walter; Waide, Charles & Bezler, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Future Program for the Cern PS and the Brookhaven AGS (open access)

Future Program for the Cern PS and the Brookhaven AGS

The alternating-gradient proton synchrotrons at CERN and Brookhaven are very similar in size, design and in their experimental use. For this reason, collaboration between the groups at CERN and Brookhaven has been close throughout the history of these two machines. For the most part this has taken the form of exchanges of visits of individual machine designers and of high-energy physicists. By 1962, however, it appeared that the reciprocal flow of information was not adequate and a more formal meeting was arranged. This meeting took place at Brookhaven during the week of September 10, 1962. CERN sent a representative group of machine physicists and high-energy physicists. The meeting was attended also by observers from several American high-energy installations. The discussion covered a wide range of topics, from operating characteristics of the machines themselves to future trends in design of experimental equipment. Plans for beam ejection were presented, techniques were described for better use of secondary beams from internal targets, progress was summarized on dc and rf particle separators. and future trends in neutrino experimentation were predicted.
Date: 1962-09-10/1962-09-14
Creator: Blewett, J. P.; Bittner, J. W.; Brown, H. N. & Maschke, A. W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Some Applications of the Chase Two-Dimensional Analyzer at Brookhaven National Laboratory (open access)

Some Applications of the Chase Two-Dimensional Analyzer at Brookhaven National Laboratory

The Chase two-dimensional analyzer is a 64 channel by 64 channel analyzer with a magnetic drum memory and a buffered storage system. The memory capacity is 2 counts per channel. The maximum storage rate is limited by the drum speed and is about 800 counts per second for a featureless spectrum.
Date: November 6, 1962
Creator: Donovan, Paul F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Status of Meteorological Knowledge as a Factor in Air Pollution Control (open access)

The Status of Meteorological Knowledge as a Factor in Air Pollution Control

The first national Technical Conference on Air Pollution (1) held in this city in 1950 included eight papers on meteorology; the present session contains one. On this basis, one night conclude that recent progress in meteorology has been virtually nonexistent or that the importance of meteorological factors has been diminishing, Neither could be further from the truth, as the number and quality of papers relating to air pollution meteorology in recent scientific and technical sessions will attest. It is particularly appropriate to review the status of meteorological "know-how" at this time, because of the many situations in which the ultimate capability of the atmosphere to absorb pollution is in question. Both in connection with highly toxic materials on the one hand and the "megalopolis" on the other, estimates of the "atmospheric sewer capacity" are becoming increasingly necessary to industrial and municipal planning.
Date: 1968
Creator: Smith, Maynard E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fundamental Problem of Late Neurological EffectFollowing Acute Irradiation (open access)

Fundamental Problem of Late Neurological EffectFollowing Acute Irradiation

Since the end of the last century (Tarknow, 1896) radiation effect o the nervous tissue has been studied in experimental animals and humans by numerous investigators, using mostly pathomorphological changes as a parameter of radiosensitivity . With increasing time intervals following radiation, pathomorphological changes are more evident, which has been known for quite some time.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Yamamoto, Y. L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Tritiated Thymidine on the Morphogenesis of Lateral Roots (open access)

The Effect of Tritiated Thymidine on the Morphogenesis of Lateral Roots

Most studies of the effect of radiation upon plant development utilized external sources of irradiation. Where radioactive isotopes were used these were primarily applied in metabolic or cytological studies. The effects of these isotopes are similar to those produced by external irradiation, modified by such phenomena as specific localization, timing of irradiation, modified by such phenomena as specific localization, timing of irradiation, etc. The advent of tritium as a means of irradiation over very restricted areas has opened a new possibility in radiobiology. Many substances have been tagged with tritium and its application has been manifold (1). Tritiated thymidine has found special favor in studies where the labeling of DNA was the prime aim. It also serves as a means of specifically irradiating regions where DNA is being formed (2). Wimber (3) was the first to examine in detail the effect of tritiated thymidine on the development of the plant have not yet been studied. The purpose these experiments was to study the effect of nuclear irradiation on the formation and differentiation of the root of Zea mays.
Date: unknown
Creator: Stein, O. L. & Quastler, H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transport of FissionProducts Through the Soil Following Injection From a Well and Methods Used for Removal (open access)

Transport of FissionProducts Through the Soil Following Injection From a Well and Methods Used for Removal

In the summer of 1960 one of the little used wells on the Brookhaven National Laboratory site became accidentally contaminated with radioactive material. The contamination was discovered during a routine sampling of all wells in the waste disposal area, so there was a period of several weeks between the time of discharge.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Gemmell, L. & Pearsall, S. G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Di-Interstitial Annealing During the First Neutron Irradiation of Graphite: The Mobility of C2 (open access)

Di-Interstitial Annealing During the First Neutron Irradiation of Graphite: The Mobility of C2

Radiation and annealing mechanisms for dimensional and c-axis changes in which the di-interstitial can be mobile at any or all temperatures above absolute zero are shown to be concordant with earlier work used to determine the migration energy energy of single interstitials and the absolute rate of displacing atoms in graphite. The mechanisms account for the stability of c-axis and dimensional changes with time in the absence of irradiation and with observed c-axis annealing at room temperature following irradiation at low temperatures.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Schweitzer, Donals G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Function of Bridging Groups in Electron-Transfer Reactions (open access)

The Function of Bridging Groups in Electron-Transfer Reactions

Electron-transfer reactions involving bridged transition states are examined from the point of view of adiabatic electron transfer theory. One important function of the bridging group is to decrease the effective dipole moment of the charge system of the reaction ions. The effect on the activation energy is different for outer-sphere and inner-sphere reactions. Trends in the halide and hydroxide catalysis of isotopic exchange reactions of transition metal ions are discussed.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Hush, N. S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chronic Excess Salt Consumption as an Etiologic Factor in Human Hypertension (open access)

Chronic Excess Salt Consumption as an Etiologic Factor in Human Hypertension

Since 1940 it has been known that extra salt (i.e. sodium chloride) facilitated the development of experimental hypertension induced by various sterols; subsequently hypertension was induced by desoxycorticosterone acetate plus sodium chloride; then hypertension was produced by using hypertonic saline as the sole source of liquid; and finally, in 1953, Menesly and his associates reported that chronic ingestion of excess dietary salt alone would produce hypertension in rats. Furthermore, in conformity with general pharmacologic experience relating dose response to successive increments of a drug, as the average daily salt intake increased, the average systolic, blood pressure increased.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Dahl, Lewis K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Chronic Gamma Irradiation on the Growth of Kalanchoe cv. "Brilliant Star" (open access)

The Effects of Chronic Gamma Irradiation on the Growth of Kalanchoe cv. "Brilliant Star"

Kalanchoe seedlings were exposed to 330 r/20 hrs/day from a Co60 source. Samples were harvested weekly. No new leaves were produced after initial exposure to irradiation. Mitosis in the apical meristem appears to have been suppressed. However, the axillary meristem and the cambium continue their activity. This results in a much broadened stem tip with enlarged cells, supported by a stout internode in which cell size has remained relatively normal but cell number has increased. After about 26 days of exposure, meristematic activity in the shoot apex region appears to resume. This results in the formation of growth centers which can give rise to leaves or malformed structures. The original phyllotaxy is not recovered. It is suggested that this resumption of growth may be an instance of adaptation to irradiation.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Stein, O. L. & Sparrow, A. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of Radiations of Different let on Early Responses in the Mammal (open access)

The Effects of Radiations of Different let on Early Responses in the Mammal

This paper will first note briefly the place and status of radiobiotopical investigations with fast neutrons. The monoenergetic (fast) neutron technique employed at this laboratory will be then described and results of studies with various criteria-of-effect in the mouse will be reviewed. Finally, certain general patterns of response for these systems will be pointed out as functions of neutron energy.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Bateman, J. L. & Bond, V. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Fate of Transfused H3 Thymidine Labeled Bone Marrow Cells in Irradiated Recipients (open access)

The Fate of Transfused H3 Thymidine Labeled Bone Marrow Cells in Irradiated Recipients

It has been established by chromosome marker studies, histochemical, immunological, and cytological methods that the hemopoietic tissues of animals exposed to lethal doses of whole-body irradiation can be repopulated by transfused autologous, homologous or heterologous bone marrow cells. However, the morphology of the cell responsible for the regeneration of hematopoietic activity in the various hemopoietic organs has not been identified. It has been shown that the bone marrow contains the cell or cells capable of regenerating all types of hemopoietic tissues. In order to identify transfused cells, one must have a label which persists through successive divisions. Odell and Smith labeled the donors with S35 methionin and were thus able to follow the accumulation of the donor marrow cells in the recipients lungs and subsequently their releases to the bone marrow and spleen. However, this compound has a relatively rapid turnover in the labeled cells and thus a relatively limited capability of serial studies to observe mitosis and differentiation. Tritiated thymidine is ideal for this purpose since it is incorporated solely into DNA and is diluted only by mitosis. In addition the high resolution with tritium makes it certain that one is observing nuclear labeling. Bond et al. have studied …
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Fliedner, T. M.; Thomas, E. D.; Meyer, L. M. & Cronkite, E. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Tissue Distribution and Storage Forms of Vitamin B12 Injected and Orally Administered to the Dog (open access)

Tissue Distribution and Storage Forms of Vitamin B12 Injected and Orally Administered to the Dog

Previous attempts by the present authors to compare the behavior of orally administered vitamin B12 with that of injected material have been inconclusive. Thus, 30 days after administration to normal humans, 0.19% of a tracer amount (0.5 μg) of injected radioactive vitamin B12 is excreted per day; and in an independent study, the eventual daily output was found to be 0.23% of a 3 μg dose. By contrast the total excretion rate of normal vitamin B12 from body stores appears to be only ≈0.03% per day. Such a divergence may result from incomplete mixing of radioactive vitamin B12 and body stores of the vitamin. Alternatively it may actually reflect the functioning of different compartments attending the several modes of administration involved. The possibility of degradation or transformation of vitamin within tissues and organs must also be considered.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Rosenblum, Charles; Reizenstein, Peter G.; Cronicite, Eugene P. & Meriwether, Henry T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lysogeny in Rhizobium Leguminosarum and R. Trifolii (open access)

Lysogeny in Rhizobium Leguminosarum and R. Trifolii

Seven lysogenic strains - three of Rhizobium Leguminosarum and four of R-trifolii - were identified among a total of 54 strains from these two species and R. phascoli. The R. leguminosarum strain may be multiply lysogenic; two of them also produce lethal agents resembling bacteriocins in their effects. Lysogeny was confirmed by standard criteria of UV-inducibility, self-immunity, and reproductive ability. Lysogenic conversion involving symbiotic characteristics was not observed. A minimum of six different temperate phage were identified. The host range includes strains of the above three rhizobial species, but not of R. mclilotii. Variation in host specificity of some phage following host passage is under investigation.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Schwinghamer, E. A. & Reinhardt, D. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Indirect Effect of X-Radiation on Bone Growth in Rats (open access)

Indirect Effect of X-Radiation on Bone Growth in Rats

It has been known for many years that bone growth may be retarded by relatively large doses of therapeutic radiation. Similar doses of radiation have also shown retarded growth in animals. More recently, reports of studies of Japanese children exposed to the Atomic Bomb Detentions at Hiroshima and Nagasaki and Marshallese children exposed to radiation in the fallout accident of 1954 have indicated some impairment in their growth and development, possibly related to radiation exposure. Since the doses of radiation received by these children were lower than would be expected to produce retardation of bone growth by direct irradiation, it was considered that indirect mechanisms might play a part. This preliminary report summarizes investigations of possible indirect effects of X-irradiation in bone growth in rats.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Conard, R. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Growth Factor Interactions in the Tissue Culture of Tumorous and Nontumorous Nitiana Glauca-Langsdorffii (open access)

Growth Factor Interactions in the Tissue Culture of Tumorous and Nontumorous Nitiana Glauca-Langsdorffii

Tissues representing tumorous and nontumorous Nicotiana glauca-langadorffii were cultured on high (5x) and low (1x) concentrations of a modified White's basic medium containing 2.9 x 10-6 M indoleacetic acid. The growth response of tissues of both the tumorous and nontumorous genotypes to supplements of kinetin, glutamine, inositol and nucleic acid constituents added singly and in all combinations were noted on high salt media. The nucleic acid components inhibited growth and were omitted from low salt media.
Date: unknown
Creator: Schaeffer, Gideon W.; Smith, Harold H. & Partridge, Marion
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elimination of Phases the Life Cycle of Leukemic Cells From in Vivo Labeling in Human Beings With Tritiated Thymidine (open access)

Elimination of Phases the Life Cycle of Leukemic Cells From in Vivo Labeling in Human Beings With Tritiated Thymidine

Our earlier in vitro studies have suggested that malignant tumors may not produce new cells more rapidly than normal cells are produced in the "steady state" equilibrium. Obviously tumors of all typed represent a diversion from "steady state" production with a net gain in mass of tissue. However, the increase in mass is not necessarily constant and may fluctuate in the natural history of the disorder. DNA labeling with tritiated thymidine had made it possible to characterize normal "steady state" hemopoietic growth parameters. We therefore thought it mandatory to extend these techniques to the study of growth rates of human leukemic cells. Also, since current therapy is more or less closely tied to a concept of unrestrained rapid growth, which we in part have begun to question, it appeared wise to look back at the historical development of knowledge about tumor growth. The existence of tumors in man has been known for millenia.
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Killmann, S. A.; Cronkite, E. P.; Robertson, J. S.; Fliedner, T. M. & Bond, V. P.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects of 250-kv X-Ray on the Dog's Pancreas: Morphological and Functional Changes (open access)

The Effects of 250-kv X-Ray on the Dog's Pancreas: Morphological and Functional Changes

Previous investigations that the pancreas is a radioresistant organ. Ivy in 1924 noted the presence of a fibrotic atrophic pancreas in a dog which had received one erythema dose to the epigastrium. Fisher in 1923 reported that four to five erythema doses delivered in a single application caused complete disappearance of the irradiated pancreatic remnant in about two months. These dogs died because of uncontrolled diabetes. One dog that received four erythema doses (possibly 200 r) was sacrificed after five months. At autopsy the irradiated pancreas had disappeared, but 275 mgm of regenerated pancreas were found at the base of the main duct and 100 mgm at the base of the accessory duct. Leven in 1933 implanted radon seeds into the pancreas. Dosages varied from 528 to 1584 millicurie hours. At postmorten the pancreas surrounding the seeds demonstrated fibrous atropy and foci of necrosis. The islets appeared normal but were relatively larger in size. Rauch in 1952 reported that dogs given 200 r in air over the pancreas on alternate days until a total of 1600 r was received failed to show any histological changes after two months. Lushbaugh and Spalding and Lushbaugh reported that over 1500 r of whole-body …
Date: February 1, 1963
Creator: Archamefau, John; Griem, Melvin & Harper, Paul
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiation Damage in Solid Tetramethyl Ammonium Halides. Free Radicals Stable at Low Temperature (open access)

Radiation Damage in Solid Tetramethyl Ammonium Halides. Free Radicals Stable at Low Temperature

Electron spin resonance (ESR) spectral studies were carried out on tetramethyl ammonium halides which were irradiated at 298 and 77 deg K. The ESR spectra of the iodide and bromide irradiated at 298 deg K consisted of a single line of width 30 to 40 gauss, while that of the chloride gave a weak complex pattern. When the irradiations and ESR studies were performed at 77 deg K, considerable fine structure was observed which was centered about g = 2.003 plus or minus 0.001. The iodide spectrum at 77 deg K is a quartet superimposed on a broad line and is not materially affected by thermal annealing at 148 deg K. The quartet is identified as a methyl radical. The bromide spectrum at 77 deg K consists of a quartet superimposed on a triplet, and thermal annealing at 148 deg K reduces it to a triplet and at 298 deg K to a single broad line. The chloride spectrum is similar to the bromide except that the quartet is just observable and slowly anneals at 77 deg K.
Date: 1962
Creator: Tench, A. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Magnetic Road: A New Form of Transport (open access)

The Magnetic Road: A New Form of Transport

A study is made of the technical and economic feasibility of a frictionless magnetic suspension generated by superconductors for transportation. Experiments relating to the suspension are described. A conceptual design is presented where vehicles suspended by magnetic interaction with two small insulated superconducting rails carry passengers and freight in vacuum tunnels at 600-1000 mph or in air at 200-300 mph. Other applications are possible, particularly for spacecraft and aircraft launching. Potential improvements are suggested to reduce the estimated cost of $700,000 per mile, among these is the use of cheap normal conducting sodium rail.
Date: 1962
Creator: Powell, James R.
System: The UNT Digital Library