ATOMLLL: atoms with shading and highlights (open access)

ATOMLLL: atoms with shading and highlights

The ATOMS program, written at Bell Telephone Laboratory, is capable of determining the visible portions of a scene consisting of interpenetrating spheres and cylinders, put together to represent space-filling or ball-and-stick molecular models. The Lawrence Livermore Laboratory version contains enhancements to add shading and highlights, and to render the spheres on film as ellipses, so they will appear round when projected in various wide-screen formats. The visible parts of each sphere or cylinder are shaded by a minicomputer controlling the film recorder, thus releasing the main computer from transferring the millions of intensity values for each frame. The minicomputer is microprogrammed with an efficient algorithm for the intensities, which uses the color look-up tables in the film recorder to store the reflectance as a function of angle of incidence. 8 references.
Date: May 11, 1979
Creator: Max, N.L.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Fabrication of glass sphere laser fusion targets (open access)

Fabrication of glass sphere laser fusion targets

We have developed processes at LLL for mass producing the high quality glass microspheres required for current laser fusion targets. Here we describe the methods and the materials used in our liquid-droplet and dried-gel systems. Glass microspheres ranging from 70 to 600 microns O.D., with walls from 0.5 to 18 microns thick and which satisfy the exacting surface and symmetry specifications of targets for high density experiments are now produced routinely.
Date: May 11, 1979
Creator: Hendricks, C. D.; Rosencwaig, A.; Woerner, R. L.; Koo, J. C.; Dressler, J. L.; Sherohman, J. W. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nova Event Logging System (open access)

Nova Event Logging System

Nova is a 200 terawatt, 10-beam High Energy Glass Laser currently under construction at LLNL. This facility, designed to demonstrate the feasibility of laser driven inertial confinement fusion, contains over 5000 elements requiring coordinated control, data acquisition, and analysis functions. The large amounts of data that will be generated must be maintained over the life of the facility. Often the most useful but inaccessible data is that related to time dependent events associated with, for example, operator actions or experiment activity. We have developed an Event Logging System to synchronously record, maintain, and analyze, in part, this data. We see the system as being particularly useful to the physics and engineering staffs of medium and large facilities in that it is entirely separate from experimental apparatus and control devices. The design criteria, implementation, use, and benefits of such a system will be discussed.
Date: May 11, 1981
Creator: Calliger, R.J. & Suski, G.J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thyratron characteristics under high di/dt and high-repetition-rate operation (open access)

Thyratron characteristics under high di/dt and high-repetition-rate operation

Power conditioning systems for high peak and average power, high repetition rate discharge excited lasers involve operation of modulator components in unconventional regimes. Reliable operation of switches and energy storage elements under high voltage and high di/dt conditions is a pacing item for laser development at the present time. To test and evaluate these components a Modulator Component Test Facility (MCTF) was constructed. The MCTF consists of a command charge system, energy storage capacitors, thyratron switch with inverse thyratron protection, and a resistive load. The modulator has initially been operated at voltages up to 60 kV at 600 Hz. Voltage, current, and calorimetric diagnostics are provided for major modulator components. Measurements of thyratron characteristics under high di/dt operation are presented. Commutation energy loss and di/dt have been measured as functions of the tube hydrogen pressure.
Date: May 11, 1981
Creator: Ball, D.; Hill, J. & Kan, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Computational method for realistic estimates of the dose to active marrow (open access)

Computational method for realistic estimates of the dose to active marrow

Calculation of absorbed dose to active marrow from photon radiation is a complex problem because electronic equilibrium may not exist in the vicinity of soft tissue-bone mineral interfaces. Snyder et al. recognized the intractable geometry of trabecular bone in their studies of photon transport in the body and formulated marrow dose estimates in a conservative manner. Other investigators have noted that this approach leads to overestimate by factors of 3 or more at low photon energy. In this paper the absorbed dose is formulated in terms of physical and anatomical parameters defining the energy deposition in the marrow space. 17 references, 2 figures, 1 table.
Date: May 11, 1984
Creator: Eckerman, K.F. & Cristy, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Small t Physics at the TEVATRON Collider (open access)

Small t Physics at the TEVATRON Collider

The first physics run of the superconducting Tevatron Collider at Fermilab ended this morning. A status report will be presented on the progress of the small angle elastic scattering and total cross section experiment, E710. The goals of this experiment are to measure the total proton-antiproton cross section from ..sqrt..s = 300 to 2000 GeV, the slope of the diffraction peak and rho, the ratio of the real to imaginary part of the forward scattering amplitude, at these energies. 1 ref., 8 figs.
Date: May 11, 1987
Creator: Bertani, M.; Giacomalli, G.; Maleyran, R.; Manarin, A.; Amos, N.; DeSalvo, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamical evolution of cosmic strings (open access)

Dynamical evolution of cosmic strings

The author have studied by means of numerical simulations the dynamical evolution of a network of cosmic strings, both in the radiation and matter era. Our basic conclusion is that a scaling solution exists, i.e., the string energy density evolves as t/sup -2/. This means that the process by which long strings dump their energy into closed loops (which can gravitationally radiate away) is efficient enough to prevent the string domination over other forms of energy. This conclusion does not depend on the initial string energy density, nor on the various numerical parameters. On the other hand, the generated spectrum of loop sizes does depend on the value of our numerical lower cutoff (i.e., the minimum length of loop we allow to be chopped off the network). Furthermore, the network evolution is very different from what was assumed before), namely the creation of a few horizon sized loops per horizon volume and per hubble time, which subsequently fragment into about 10 smaller daughter loops. Rather, many tiny loops are directly cut from the network of infinite strings, and it appears that the only fundamental scale (the horizon) has been lost. This is probably because a fundamental ingredient had been overlooked, …
Date: May 11, 1988
Creator: Bouchet, F. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Equivalence of two formalisms for calculating higher order synchrotron sideband spin resonances (open access)

Equivalence of two formalisms for calculating higher order synchrotron sideband spin resonances

Synchrotron sideband resonances of a first order spin resonance are generally regarded as the most important higher order spin resonances in a high-energy storage ring. Yokoya's formula for these resonances is rederived, including some extra terms, which he neglected, but which turn out to be of comparable magnitude to the terms retained. Including these terms, Yokoya's formalism and the SMILE algorithm are shown to be equivalent to leading order in the resonance strengths. The theoretical calculations are shown to agree with certain measurements from SPEAR.
Date: May 11, 1988
Creator: Mane, S.R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Non-linear scale invariance in a cold-dark-matter universe (open access)

Non-linear scale invariance in a cold-dark-matter universe

The observed decomposition of the lowest (N = 3,4) N-point correlation functions in symmetrized (N - 1) products of two-point correlation functions suggest the possibility that the Universe may obey a specific scale invariance, at least in some range. Assuming that this scale invariance is strictly verified for all N, some specific predictions concerning the void probability function P(sub O), and more generally the count probabilities P(sub N), as well as the fractal dimensions of the system can be made. In this report, the authors investigate the possibility that the non-linear evolution in a CDM Universe indeed to such a scale invariance.
Date: May 11, 1988
Creator: Bouchet, F. R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
One dimensional simulations of transients in heavy ion injectors (open access)

One dimensional simulations of transients in heavy ion injectors

A fast-running time-dependent one-dimensional particle code has been developed to simulate transients in both electrostatic quadrupole and electrostatic column heavy-ion injectors. Two-dimensional effects are incorporated through the use of an approximation to the transverse part of the Laplacian operator. Longitudinal electric fields are solved on a mesh. An external circuit is coupled to the column, and the effect of the beam on the circuit is modeled. Transients such as initial current spikes, space-charge de-bunching, and beam loading of the circuit, are simulated. Future directions for the code include introduction of envelope and centroid equations to provide beam radius and displacement information and the modeling of secondary electron currents arising from beam-spill.
Date: May 11, 1993
Creator: Barnard, J. J.; Caporaso, G. J.; Yu, S. S. & Eylon, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety aspects with regard to plutonium vitrification techniques (open access)

Safety aspects with regard to plutonium vitrification techniques

Substantial inventories of excess plutonium are expected to result from dismantling US and Russian nuclear weapons. Disposition of this material should be a high priority in both countries. Various disposition options are under consideration. One option is to vitrify the plutonium with the addition of {sup 137}Cs or high-level waste to act as a deterrent to proliferation. The primary safety problem associated with vitrification of plutonium is to avoid criticality in form fabrication and in the final repository over geologic time. Recovery should be as difficult (costly) as the recovery of plutonium from spent fuel.
Date: May 11, 1995
Creator: Gray, L.W. & Kan, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of separatrix plasma parameters using local and multi-machine databases (open access)

Analysis of separatrix plasma parameters using local and multi-machine databases

The ITER divertor modeling and database expert groups have assembled a scalar database of the edge plasma parameters for existing diverted tokamak devices as a means of enabling scaling studies of the SOL plasma. Data exist from ASDEX, ASDEX-Upgrade, C-MOD, COMPASS-D, DIII-D, JET, JFT-2M, and JT-6OU. We describe the scaling of plasma parameters at the outer midplane obtained from examination of this multi-machine database in this paper. The plasma parameters at the outer rnidplane are used as a boundary condition for all simulations of the SOL plasma, and hence understanding of the expected value of these parameters is crucial for the successful design of the ITER divertor.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Porter, G. D., LLNL
System: The UNT Digital Library
Diagnostics for a 1.2 kA, 1 MeV electron induction injector (open access)

Diagnostics for a 1.2 kA, 1 MeV electron induction injector

We are constructing a 1.2-kA, 1-MeV, electron induction injector as part of the RTA program, a collaborative effort between LLNL and LBNL to develop relativistic klystrons for Two-Beam Accelerator applications. The RTA injector will also be used in the development of a high-gradient, low-emittance, electron source and beam diagnostics for the second axis of the Dual Axis Radiographic Hydrodynamic Test (DARHT) Facility. The electron source will be a 3.5``-diameter, thermionic, flat-surface, m-type cathode with a maximum shroud field stress of approximately 165 kV/cm. Additional design parameters for the injector include a pulse length of over 150-ns flat top (1% energy variation), and a normalized edge emittance of less than 200 {pi}-mm-mr. Precise measurement of the beam parameters is required so that performance of the RTA injector can be confidently scaled to the 4-kA, 3-MeV, and 2-microsecond pulse parameters of the DARHT injector. Planned diagnostics include an isolated cathode with resistive divider for direct measurement of current emission, resistive wall and magnetic probe current monitors for measuring beam current and centroid position, capacitive probes for measuring A-K gap voltage, an energy spectrometer, and a pepper-pot emittance diagnostic. Details of the injector, beam line, and diagnostics are presented.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Houck, T. L.; Anderson, D. E.; Eylon, S.; Henestroza, E.; Lidia, S. M.; Vanecek, D. L. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Edge plasma modeling of limiter surfaces in a Tokamak divertor configuration (open access)

Edge plasma modeling of limiter surfaces in a Tokamak divertor configuration

During the startup phase of a tokamak the plasma configuration may evolve from a limiter to a divertor configuration. Some of the particle and heat flux from the core will be deposited on material surfaces near the separatrix instead of the divertor plates. Examples of such surfaces include the center-post in most tokamaks, baffles near the x-point that create closed divertors, and outboard limiter surfaces. Two-dimensional edge plasma models for tokamak divertor configurations typically give detailed information about the particle and heat fluxes on the divertor plates, but yield little or no information about fluxes on these other localized surfaces near the core plasma. To realistically model the startup phase of a tokamak it is necessary to compute the plasma interaction with both limiter and divertor surfaces. The UEDGE code [l] has been modified to include these limiter surfaces. In this report we present simulation results for an idealized ITER [2] startup configuration with variations in the limiter penetration depth and surface shape.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Rensink, M. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrothermal growth kinetics of Np(IV) oxide (open access)

Hydrothermal growth kinetics of Np(IV) oxide

Toulouse, France All previous knowledge leading to this estimate is of NpO2(c) is indirect, based on thermodynamic cycles. The phase itself has heretofore not been observed as a precipitate from aqueous solution. Recent attempts (e.g., Nitsche et al., 1993; Efurd et al., 1996) to establish solubility controls on Np in oxidizing groundwaters (including J-13 groundwater) starting from high concentrations (i.e., supersaturation) have shown the formation of one or both of two Np(V) phases, NaNpO2CO3:3.5H2O(c) (with variable stoichiometry) and Np2O5(c). These are both highly soluble, yielding Np concentrations on the order of 1 x 10 -4 to 1 x 10 -3 molal, in accord with existing thermodynamic data for these phases. No evidence was found of the formation of NpO2(c). Under reducing conditions, experiments (Rai et al., 1987 and references cited therein) have shown the formation of Np(IV) polymer, which may be viewed as a hydrated form of NpO2. It is orders of magnitude less soluble than the Np(V) phases, but still orders of magnitude more soluble than NpO2(c). No undersaturation experiments with NpO2(c) are known to have been performed. However, both NpO2(c) and Np(IV) polymer are known to be difficult to dissolve. We have hypothesized that NpO2(c) is simply a …
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Palmer, C. E.; Roberts, K. & Wolery, T. J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impacts of Large-scale Surface Modifications on Meteorological Conditions and Energy Use: A 10-Region Modeling Study (open access)

Impacts of Large-scale Surface Modifications on Meteorological Conditions and Energy Use: A 10-Region Modeling Study

None
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Taha, H.; Konopacki, S. & Gabersek, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Issues involved with non-characterized control of methanotrophic bacteria (open access)

Issues involved with non-characterized control of methanotrophic bacteria

Methane-utilizing bacteria, methanotrophs, have application as biocatalysts in the commodity chemical production, waste treatment and environmental remediation industries. Methanotrophs have the ability to oxidize many chemical compounds into more desired products, such as the production of propylene oxide. Methanotrophs can also degrade toxic compounds such as trichloroethylene. However, there are many physical, chemical and biological problems associated with the continuous oxidation of chemicals. These include, low mass transfer of methane, oxygen and propylene; toxicity of substrates and degradation products, and competition between the growth substrate, i.e., methane and chemical feed stock, e.g., propylene for the biocatalyst. To supervise methanotrophic bioprocesses, an intelligent control system must accommodate any biological limitations, e.g., toxicity, and mitigate the impact of the physical and chemical limitations, e.g., mass transfer of methane and the solubility of propylene. The intelligent control system must have the capability to assess the current conditions and metabolic state of the bacteria; recognize and diagnose instrument faults; and select and maintain sets of parameters that will result in high production and growth.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Stoner, Daphne L.; Tolle, Charles R.; Noah, Karl S.; Davis, Dennis A.; Miller, Karen S. & Fife, Dee Jay
System: The UNT Digital Library
One- and Two-Dimensional Wave Fronts in Diffusive Systems With Discrete Sets of Nonlinear Sources (open access)

One- and Two-Dimensional Wave Fronts in Diffusive Systems With Discrete Sets of Nonlinear Sources

The authors study the dynamics of on- and two-dimensional diffusion systems with sets of discrete nonlinear sources. They show that wave fronts propagating in such systems are pinned if the diffusion constant is below a critical value which corresponds to a saddle-node bifurcation of the dynamics. In two dimensions they find that the dissipation is enhanced and moving plain and circular fronts are stable with respect to any perturbations.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Mitkov, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Polycrystal Simulations of Texture Evolution during Deformation Processing (open access)

Polycrystal Simulations of Texture Evolution during Deformation Processing

Some recent research on the hot deformation of aluminum alloys has indicated that at elevated temperatures, slip occurs on {110}<110> systems in addition to the usual {111}<110> systems active at lower temperatures. The effect of these additional slip systems on the texture evolution of aluminum single and polycrystals is studied using finite element simulations. The crystals are deformed in plane strain compression, and the constitutive response is modeled using crystal plasticity to track the reorientation of the crystals. By discretizing each crystal with a large number of elements, the non-uniform deformations due to local inhomogeneities and interactions with neighboring crystals are modeled. The resulting textures and microstructures are examined with regard to effect of including the additional systems, initial orientation of the single crystals, and stability of the cube orientation.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Radhakrishnan, B.; Sarma, G. & Zacharia, T.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Predictability of Minimum Noise in Electron Transport Through a Disordered Semiconductor (open access)

Predictability of Minimum Noise in Electron Transport Through a Disordered Semiconductor

The authors present an inverse method for electron transport which allows one to minimize the value of shot noise for a given value of the conductance by optimizing the spatial structure of a disordered semiconductor region. The method is based on the Green's function approach which is usually applied to the direct transport problem. A specific experimentally realizable example of a two-dimensional disordered semiconductor is presented which demonstrates the method of minimization of shot noise for insulator, metallic, and transitional conductance regions.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Berman, G. P.; Doolen, G. D.; Nagaev, K. E. & Rehacek, J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary (Summary Talk at the Quarkonium Production in Nuclear Collisions Workshop). (open access)

Summary (Summary Talk at the Quarkonium Production in Nuclear Collisions Workshop).

This summary is an attempt to overview the wealth of new results and ideas in quarkonium physics presented at the Seattle Workshop. The Workshop in Seattle has shown that the physics of heavy quarkonium continues to develop at a fast pace; moreover, we have every reason to believe that the next year, with RHIC turning on, will mark the beginning of the new exciting era in this field.
Date: May 11, 1998
Creator: Kharzeev, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Apparent Charge Transfer at Semiconductor Surfaces (open access)

Apparent Charge Transfer at Semiconductor Surfaces

We investigate the apparent charge transfer between adatoms in the GeXPb[l.XjGe(lll) interface both experimentally and theoretically. Scanning tunneling microscopy and surface core level measurements suggest significant charge transfer from the Ge adatoms to the Pb adatoms. However, first-principles calculations unambiguously find that the total electronic displacement is negligibly small, and that the results of published experiments can be explained as a result of bond rearrangement.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Carpinelli, Joseph M.; Stumpf, Roland R. & Weitering, Hanno H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam instabilities in very large hadron collider (open access)

Beam instabilities in very large hadron collider

The Very Large Hadron Collider (VLHC) is a supercon-ducting proton-proton collider with approximately 100 TeV cm and approximately 10{sup 34} s{sup -1}cm{sup -2} luminosity [1]. Currently, beam dynamics in this future accelerator is the subject of intensive studies within the framework of the US-wide VLHC R&D program. This presentation sum-marizes recent developments in the field. Besides general discussion on relevant VLHC parameters, we consider various beam instabilities and ways to avoid them. Finally, we outline possibilities for theoretical and experimental R&D.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Marriner, J.; Danilov, V. & Shiltsev, V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Benchmarking D and D procurement best practices at four commercial nuclear power plants. (open access)

Benchmarking D and D procurement best practices at four commercial nuclear power plants.

The Department of Energy (DOE) has as two of its strategic objectives to safely accomplish the world's largest environmental clean-up of contaminated sites and the adoption of the best management practices of the private sector to achieve business-like results efficiently and effectively. An integral part of the strategic response to the challenges facing the Department has been the use of benchmarking and best practice management to facilitate identifying and implementing leading-edge thinking, practices, approaches, and solutions.
Date: May 11, 1999
Creator: Arflin, J.; Baker, G.; Bidwell, B.; Bugielski, D.; Cavanagh, J. & Sandlin, N.
System: The UNT Digital Library