Table of Proton-Proton Scattering Phase Shift as Calculated from the One-Pion Exchange Contribution (open access)

Table of Proton-Proton Scattering Phase Shift as Calculated from the One-Pion Exchange Contribution

The phase shifts for proton-proton scattering as calculated from the one-pion exchange contribution (OPEC) alone are of some interest because they describe the scattering correctly in the high angular momentum states, and because in the lower angular momentum states the deviation from the OPEC phases is an indication of the strength of the two-pion and higher exchanges processes. The attached table gives the proton-proton nuclear-bar phase shifts as calculated from OPEC. Phase shifts and mixing parameters are given in degrees, as function of the T, the laboratory kinetic energy of the incoming protons in Mev. Phase shift and mixing parameters are listed in the angular momentum states.
Date: April 5, 1969
Creator: Johnston, Bradley M. & Moravcsik, Michael J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Equation Of State Of PBX 9404 And LX04-01 (open access)

The Equation Of State Of PBX 9404 And LX04-01

The Chapman-Jouguet pressure and equation of state of the high explosives PBX 9404 and LX04-01 have been experimentally derived. To assure a strictly one-dimensional geometry, spheres of high explosives were used. Experimental measurements of the radius-time history of material accelerated by the explosive gases were used in conjunction with finite difference calculations of the hydrodynamic equations to obtain some previous inaccessible data on high explosives.
Date: April 27, 1964
Creator: Wilkins, Mark L.; Squier, Bailey & Halperin, Bertram
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measuring Rotary Table Angle Error (open access)

Measuring Rotary Table Angle Error

The angle errors of a rotary table can be accurately measured by stepping off the angles with an optical caliper and computing table error from (1) the error readings at each angle measured and (2) the cumulative caliper error that will be evident when the circle is closed at 360', eliminating the necessity of adjusting the caliper to the exact setting.
Date: April 27, 1964
Creator: Bryan, J. & Mohl, O.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of Explosion-Produced Craters (open access)

Calculation of Explosion-Produced Craters

In this study, a physical-numerical model is used to investigate processes important for cratering, or excavation, physics for high-explosive sources in desert alluvium. High explosives do not vaporize much of the geological environment surrounding the initial cavity containing the explosive. Thus, a relatively simple, and in some cases a well-known, equation of state exists for the high-explosive cavity gas for pressure greater than 1 atmosphere. However, nuclear explosives are known to vaporize a great deal of surrounding geological environment during the early part of cavity life history. This vaporized material is believed to condense late in the life history of the cavity, and prior to vent of the cavity gas to the atmosphere, such that the latent heat of condensation plays an important role in nuclear excavation. So far, no numerical-physical models of the response of a geologic environment to a nuclear explosive includes the effect of condensation on the hydrodynamics of late times. Thus, the calculation of the cavity pressure at late times including the effect of condensation is one of the current unsolved problems in the calculation of a crater formed by nuclear explosives. This study, then, develops a predictive, numerical-physical model for H.E. sources of the cavity …
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Knox, Joseph B. & Terhune, R. W. (Robert William)
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation Of The Shock Wave From An Underground Nuclear Explosion In Granite (open access)

Calculation Of The Shock Wave From An Underground Nuclear Explosion In Granite

In any underground nuclear explosion, the shock front that propagates from the shot point carries with it energy from the explosion, and distributes this energy by doing work on the surrounding material. In the process, the material undergoes changes in both its physical and mechanical states. If enough energy is deposited in the material, it will vaporize or melt thus changing its physical state, or cause it to crush or crack. During the past few years, special computer codes have been developed for predicting the close-in phenomena of underground nuclear explosions using the laws of physics, and the knowledge of the properties of the materials in which the detonations occur. As a consequence, a better understanding of experimental observations and measurements has evolved.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Butkovich, Theodore R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characteristics Of Radioactivity Produced By Nuclear Explosives (open access)

Characteristics Of Radioactivity Produced By Nuclear Explosives

The production of energy by nuclear reactions results in the production of radioactive nuclei. Therefore, in considering the possible utilization of nuclear explosives for peaceful purposes it is necessary to be able to predict the expected activities, their amounts, and dispositions. The amounts and kinds of radioactivities produced by detonation of a nuclear explosive are dependent upon the specific design of the explosive. The behavior and ultimate fate of the activities produced by the explosion depend on the composition of the medium in which the detonation occurs, the nature of the detonation, and the chemical species involved.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Miskel, John A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contained Nuclear Detonations in Four Media - Geological Factors in Cavity and Chimney Formation (open access)

Contained Nuclear Detonations in Four Media - Geological Factors in Cavity and Chimney Formation

Recent underground nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission have yielded data on the effects of contained nuclear explosions in four rock mediums: tuff, alluvium, rock salt, and granite. This report presents and compares data obtained primarily through exploratory mining and drilling into the postshot environment of 35 such events.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Boardman, Charles R.; Rabb, David D. & McArthur, Richard D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effects Of Seismic Waves On Structures And Other Facilities (open access)

The Effects Of Seismic Waves On Structures And Other Facilities

The effects of explosion-induced ground motion must be evaluated in planning and executing any nuclear excavation project. For some projects ground use intensity may dictate the use of less-than-optimum yields to minimize damaging effects. In remote areas, weighing the alternatives of outright purchase of some property or use of smaller yields may be required. The cost of indemnifying owners against damage must be considered in any case. Discussions of the effects of ground motion on three broad types of facilities - engineered structures, residential buildings, and equipment required for the support of nuclear excavation operations - are presented. A method of predicting the response of single- and multi-storied buildings, the response spectrum technique, is discussed, with emphasis on the application of explosion-induced spectra.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Cauthen, Lewis J., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heavy Isotope Production By Nuclear Devices (open access)

Heavy Isotope Production By Nuclear Devices

In November 1952 an event took place which was to have a profound effect on political alignments of the world. This event was the detonation of "Mike", the first large thermonuclear device. The political implications of this experiment overshadowed what has come to be a major advance in the development of scientific tools; the experimentally verified, extremely high thermal neutron flux observed in Mike. Subsequent to this observation, the Atomic Energy Commission established a study program to investigate this particular characteristic of nuclear devices. Under the program, Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory and Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, Livermore, have studied the mechanisms of high fluxes, capture systematics, general stability characteristics, and more specifically, nuclear design to accomplish this massive neutron irradiation. Utilization of these greatly increased fluxes can be expected to significantly advance understanding in many fields.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Dorn, David W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Deposition Of Thermal Energy By Nuclear Explosives (open access)

Deposition Of Thermal Energy By Nuclear Explosives

A fraction of the energy released by the underground detonation of nuclear explosives is locally deposited as residual thermal energy. An accurate prediction of this usable fraction of the energy released is necessary to evaluate the feasibility of several of the proposed projects in the Plowshare Program. This paper will present a summary of the available data on residual thermal energy from nuclear detonations in three different geological media: tuff, halite, and granodiorite.
Date: April 6, 1964
Creator: Heckman, Richard A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exponential Signal Rate-Of-Rise Measurement Instrument (open access)

Exponential Signal Rate-Of-Rise Measurement Instrument

The increasing exponential function e-at [a > 0] characterizes such natural events as gas discharges, neutron multiplication, and the transistor avalanche phenomenon. This report describes an instrument for measuring the rate of rise, a, of an increasing electrical exponential signal.
Date: April 6, 1964
Creator: Holladay, Gale; Behrin, Ervin & Campbell, Donald
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Integral Design Technique for Wideband Multistage Transistor Amplifiers (open access)

An Integral Design Technique for Wideband Multistage Transistor Amplifiers

Presented herein is a philosophy for designing wideband multistage transistor amplifiers. The amplifier is visualized as an integral unit, the interstage networks constituting the elements of the amplifier unit. By designing the amplifier as a unit and adjusting the overall response (gain and bandwidth) with the interstage time constants, an increase in gain-bandwidth product is realized over the iteratively designed amplifiers. The resulting increase in gain-bandwidth product results from absence of the bandwidth shrinkage factor for multistage amplifiers. Formulas are derived for both a two- and three-transistor integrally designed wideband amplifier, in which shunt peaking networks are used for coupling. Experimental amplifiers were constructed following these formulas, and the observed performance agreed quite well with the calculations.
Date: April 27, 1962
Creator: Scott, Larry
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Crystal Structure Of B 'Cu0.75Al0.25 (open access)

Crystal Structure Of B 'Cu0.75Al0.25

The problem of crystal structure of the martensitic B1 phase of the eutectic alloy in the Cu-Al system still requires a more accurate clarification (Hun ger and Dienst 1960, Tarora 1949). Martensitic phases in general are formed through small thrust (shear) deformations of the original lattice. On this basis the results of Hunger and Dienst (1960) are doubtful, since the lattice constants found by them have required a considerable reclassification. From the known lattice constants of the B1 phase (Tarora, 1949) and the orientation relationships of the B1 phase (Wassermann, 1934) one has expected a hexagonal lattice for the martensitic phase with [formula].
Date: April 20, 1962
Creator: Thomas, G. & Huffstutler, M.C., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron Dosimetry in and Around Human Phantoms By Use of Nuclear Track Emulsion (open access)

Neutron Dosimetry in and Around Human Phantoms By Use of Nuclear Track Emulsion

The validity of the nuclear track emulsion technique for fast-neutron dosimetry is examined in the exposure of a human phantom to PuBe neutrons, Semiautomatic track scanning and high-speed data analysis obviate the major disadvantages of emulsion dosimetry, and allow the absolute differential proton track energy spectrum at various locations in the phantom to be obtained without a serious cost in time. From this are calculated the total absorbed local tissue dose due to proton recoils and the local thermal neutron intensity during irradiation.
Date: April 1962
Creator: Akagi, Hiroaki & Lehman, Richard L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Revised Version Of A Review Of Nuclear Fission. Part One - Fission Phenomena At Low Energy (open access)

A Revised Version Of A Review Of Nuclear Fission. Part One - Fission Phenomena At Low Energy

This revised version contains material published in the two years since the original report was issued in January 1960. The report covers the history of the discovery of fission, fission theory, and the probability of fission. It discusses the distribution of mass in fission, the distribution of nuclear charge in fission, kinetic energy of fission fragments, and the role of neutrons and gamma rays in fission.
Date: April 1962
Creator: Hyde, Earl K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence For a T = 0 Resonance in the Z[ ] System (open access)

Evidence For a T = 0 Resonance in the Z[ ] System

In previous letters we have reported a Av resonance, called Y*1, observed through the study of the interaction of 1.15-Bev/c K* mesons in hydrogen in the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory 15-in. bubble chamber. We now wish to report the results of the study of the three reactions [formula](1), [formula](2) and [formula](3).
Date: April 28, 1961
Creator: Alston, Margaret H.; Alvarez, Luis W., 1911-1988; Eberhard, Phillippe; Good, Myron L.; Graziano, William; Ticho, Harold K., 1921-2020 et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The [Sigma/Alpha] Branching Ratio Of [Y*1] (open access)

The [Sigma/Alpha] Branching Ratio Of [Y*1]

Recently a T=1 resonance in the [Alpha w] system called [Y*1] has been observed with a mass of 1385 Mev. Two types of resonances have been predicted that might relate this observation to other elementary-particle interactions: (1) P 3/2 resonances in the Alpha w and Sigma w systems predicted by global symmetry corresponding to the (3/2, 3/2) resonance of the wN system, (2) a spin-1/2 Y-w resonance resulting from a bound state in the KN system. The position and width of the observed [Y*1] resonance agree with both theories but since the spin and parity have not yet been determined, it is impossible at present to distinguish between the two theoretical interpretations.
Date: April 25, 1961
Creator: Alston, Margaret H.; Alvarez, Luis W., 1911-1988; Eberhard, Phillippe; Good, Myron L.; Graziano, William; Ticho, Harold K., 1921-2020 et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Sensitive Differential Pressure System For Measuring Cryogenic Liquid Depths (open access)

A Sensitive Differential Pressure System For Measuring Cryogenic Liquid Depths

A system for measuring depths of cryogenic liquids is described. The indicating device is a modified differential pressure gage. The level sensing probes are of various types, either permanent or removable. The heat leak to cryogenic liquids may be made negligibly small.
Date: April 21, 1961
Creator: Pope, William L. & McLaughlin, Edwin F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrical Limitations To Energy Resolution In Semiconductor Particle Detectors (open access)

Electrical Limitations To Energy Resolution In Semiconductor Particle Detectors

Based on the assumption that the noise contribution of a semiconductor detector is due solely to the bulk properties of the semiconductor, equations are presented which indicate the theoretical limits of noise in detector-amplifier combinations. These equations show that an optimum amplifier time constant and detector bias voltage exist for which condition the minimum noise is independent of the semiconductor resistivity. The optimum performance of a detector-amplifier system is shown to depend only upon detector area, input capacity (less detector capacity), semiconductor minority carrier lifetime, and the transconductance of the amplifier input tube. A new detector structure including a guard-ring electrode as an integral part of the detector structure is described which largely eliminates noise due to surface leakage. Experimental results for detector leakage and energy resolution are presented which agree well with theory.
Date: April 5, 1961
Creator: Hansen, William L. & Goulding, Frederick S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cyclotrons (open access)

Cyclotrons

The structure and operation of cyclotrons are discussed. Factors limiting cyclotron size and energy are given. Improvements to the basic continuous-wave cyclotron are described, including frequency modulation, strong focusing, and variable-energy facilities.
Date: April 4, 1961
Creator: Smith, Bob H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Instrumentation Of Multi-Channel Counting Experiments (open access)

Instrumentation Of Multi-Channel Counting Experiments

Recent experience in instrumentation of several nuclear-physics experiments has demonstrated the feasibility of automating the data-acquisition phases of the experiment. Electronic circuits are employed wherever the rate of data flow would be slowed by the use of human operations. Information is selected, temporarily stored, and then recorded in a form suitable for immediate entry into a computer. Experimenters thus freed from the tedious aspects of data collection can devote their time to studying the results of the experiments. Potentially useful nuclear events are first selected by the fast-logic part of the instrumentation. Circuits performing simple logical functions are packaged in modular form for easy grouping into particular coincidence, gating, and mixing configurations. Circuits with slower response times are used for temporary storage and recording operations. Automatic test routines are used to initially align the equipment as well as provide continuous calibration during the experiments. Some of the high-speed circuits are described as well as the methods used to incorporate them into a large counting system.
Date: April 4, 1961
Creator: Kirsten, Frederick A. & Mack, Dick A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Martensite In CU-12.0% AL Alloy (open access)

Martensite In CU-12.0% AL Alloy

Thin foils suitable for transmission electron microscopy have been prepared from bulk specimens of Cu-12.0% Al alloy quenched from 800' C to produce martensite. The martensitic structure consists of long lenticular plates which are twinned on 20-50A scale. The twin planes in the martensite are shown to be [formula]. There is evidence that this structure is ordered as expected for a transformation from an ordered parent lattice. Experiments using a high temperature stage show that the decomposition of the martensite on tempering can be followed directly, but the martensitic transformation did not recur on cooling.
Date: April 1961
Creator: Thomas, G. & Huffstutler, M.C., Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Theory of Electromagnetic Field From a High Altitude Shot (open access)

Theory of Electromagnetic Field From a High Altitude Shot

"This study is primarily concerned with obtaining an order-of-magnitude estimate of the electromagnetic fields to be expected from a high-altitude nuclear bomb explosion; and it is not intended to be a complete analysis."
Date: April 1961
Creator: Wesley, James Paul
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Measurement of Air Flow Through High Efficiency Filters (open access)

The Measurement of Air Flow Through High Efficiency Filters

Abstract. An inexpensive method for detection of dust-loaded high efficiency filters is described. Air flow is continuously indicated by elementary pitot tubes and plastic rotameters. Accuracy obtained is within +- 15%. Information as to construction, installation, and use is presented.
Date: April 29, 1960
Creator: Lindeken, C. L.; Montan, Donald N. & Beard, Edgar L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library