The National Guard, State Defense Forces, And the Militias: Official and Unofficial Status (open access)

The National Guard, State Defense Forces, And the Militias: Official and Unofficial Status

This short report discusses the differences between state militias (e.g. state Army National Guard and Air National Guard units), state military forces with no federal connections, and private organizations that claim to be state militias but which are not sanctioned by the state.
Date: May 9, 1995
Creator: Goldich, Robert L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 20, Number 35, Pages 3391-3511, May 9, 1995 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 20, Number 35, Pages 3391-3511, May 9, 1995

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: May 9, 1995
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Register, Volume 22, Number 35, Pages 4037-4122, May 9, 1997 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 22, Number 35, Pages 4037-4122, May 9, 1997

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-049 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-049

Letter opinion issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether a school district is authorized to pay legal defense costs incurred by an employee in a criminal proceeding (ID# 39382)
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-050 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-050

Letter opinion issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether bail bond may grant a license to an applicant who will do business under an assumed name recently abandoned by another licensee, and related questions (ID# 39375)
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-051 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO97-051

Letter opinion issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether a county commissioners court is authorized to create a new position in the middle of a fiscal year (ID# 39410)
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Measured and theoretical characterization of the RF properties of stacked, high-gradient insulator material (open access)

Measured and theoretical characterization of the RF properties of stacked, high-gradient insulator material

Recent high-voltage breakdown experiments of periodic metallic-dielectric insulating structures have suggested several interesting high-gradient applications. One such area is the employment of high-gradient insulators in high-current, electron-beam, accelerating induction modules. For this application, the understanding of the rf characteristics of the insulator plays an important role in estimating beam-cavity interactions. In this paper, we examine the rf properties of the insulator comparing simulation results with experiment. Different insulator designs are examined to determine their rf transmission properties in gap geometries.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Houck, T. L., LLNL
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effect of ELMs on the SOL plasma in DIII-D (open access)

Effect of ELMs on the SOL plasma in DIII-D

We have studied the evolution of the edge plasma in VH-mode discharges in DIII-D as the discharge evolves from the ELM-free H-mode phase through the VH-mode phase to the final ELMing H-mode phase, by following the changes in the radial profiles of the density and temperature, in the core plasma near the separatrix and in the scrape-off-layer (SOL) plasma outside the separatrix. The electron density and temperature profiles in the SOL do not show any significant difference between the ELM-free H-mode and VH-mode phases. In the ELMing phase, the, density profile broadens during an ELM, forming a high density (n{sub e} > 1 x 10{sup 19}/m{sup 3}) plateau that extends out into the SOL to the limit of the measurement. This density plateau persists between the ELMs, although the density in the SOL does relax somewhat between the ELMs, with a characteristic time that can be larger than ten milliseconds, much longer than the sonic particle flow time to the divertor plates. The time average density scale length measured at the separatrix increases by about a factor of two after the ELMs begin. This density scale length increases with the ELM background, as measured by the photo-diodes nearest to, but …
Date: May 9, 1995
Creator: Jong, R. A.; Porter, G. D. & Groebner, R. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recrystallization of high temperature superconductors (open access)

Recrystallization of high temperature superconductors

Currently one of the most widely used high {Tc} superconductors is the Bi-based compounds Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub z} and Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}Ca{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub z} (known as BSCCO 2212 and 2223 compounds) with {Tc} values of about 85 K and 110 K respectively. Lengths of high performance conductors ranging from 100 to 1000 m long are routinely fabricated and some test magnets have been wound. An additional difficulty here is that although Bi-2212 and Bi-2223 phases exist over a wide range of stoichiometries, neither has been prepared in phase-pure form. So far the most successful method of constructing reliable and robust wires or tapes is the so called powder-in-tube (PIT) technique [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7] in which oxide powder of the appropriate stoichiometry and phase content is placed inside a metal tube, deformed into the desired geometry (round wire or flat tape), and annealed to produce the desired superconducting properties. Intermediate anneals are often incorporated between successive deformation steps. Silver is the metal used in this process because it is the most compatible with the reacting phase. In all of the commercial processes for BSCCO, Ag seems to play a special catalytic role promoting the growth …
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Kouzoudis, D.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scalar mass relations and flavor violations in supersymmetric theories (open access)

Scalar mass relations and flavor violations in supersymmetric theories

Supersymmetry provides the most promising solution to the gauge hierarchy problem. For supersymmetry to stablize the hierarchy, it must be broken at the weak scale. The combination of weak scale supersymmetry and grand unification leads to a successful prediction of the weak mixing angle to within 1{percent} accuracy. If supersymmetry is a symmetry of nature, the mass spectrum and the flavor mixing pattern of the scalar superpartners of all the quarks and leptons will provide important information about a more fundamental theory at higher energies. We studied the scalar mass relations which follow from the assumption that at high energies there is a grand unified theory which leads to a significant prediction of the weak mixing angle; these will serve as important tests of grand unified theories. Two intragenerational mass relations for each of the light generations are derived. A third relation is also found which relates the Higgs masses and the masses of all three generation scalars. In a realistic supersymmetric grand unified theory, nontrivial flavor mixings are expected to exist at all gaugino vertices. This could lead to important contributions to the neutron electric dipole moment, the decay mode p {r_arrow} K{sup 0}{mu}{sup +}, weak scale radiative corrections …
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Cheng, Hsin-Chia
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Neutron scattering studies of RENi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C: Magnetic structures and lattice dynamics (open access)

Neutron scattering studies of RENi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C: Magnetic structures and lattice dynamics

Neutron scattering techniques have been used to study the magnetic structure and lattice dynamical properties of various members of the recently discovered RENi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C family, were RE stands for a rare-earth element. The magnetic structures of superconducting DyNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C, ErNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C, HoNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C, and non superconducting TbNi{sub 2}B{sub 2}C have been determined as a function of temperature, in the 2-300 K temperature range.
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Dervenagas, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Groundwater hydrology study of the Ames Chemical Disposal Site (open access)

Groundwater hydrology study of the Ames Chemical Disposal Site

The Ames Laboratory Chemical Disposal Site is located in northwestern Ames, Iowa west of Squaw Creek. From 1957 to 1966, Ames Laboratory conducted research to develop processes to separate uranium and thorium from nuclear power fuel and to separate yttrium from neutron shielding sources. The wastes from these processes, which contained both hazardous and radiological components, were placed into nine burial pits. Metal drums, plywood boxes, and steel pails were used to store the wastes. Uranium was also burned on the ground surface of the site. Monitoring wells were placed around the waste burial pits. Groundwater testing in 1993 revealed elevated levels of Uranium 234, Uranium 238, beta and alpha radiation. The north side of the burial pit had elevated levels of volatile organic compounds. Samples in the East Ravine showed no volatile organics; however, they did contain elevated levels of radionuclides. These analytical results seem to indicate that the groundwater from the burial pit is flowing down hill and causing contamination in the East Ravine. Although there are many avenues for the contamination to spread, the focus of this project is to understand the hydrogeology of the East Ravine and to determine the path of groundwater flow down the …
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Stickel, T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Safety analysis report for packaging, onsite, long-length contaminated equipment transport system (open access)

Safety analysis report for packaging, onsite, long-length contaminated equipment transport system

This safety analysis report for packaging describes the components of the long-length contaminated equipment (LLCE) transport system (TS) and provides the analyses, evaluations, and associated operational controls necessary for the safe use of the LLCE TS on the Hanford Site. The LLCE TS will provide a standardized, comprehensive approach for the disposal of approximately 98% of LLCE scheduled to be removed from the 200 Area waste tanks.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: McCormick, W.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Spent nuclear fuel project quality assurance program plan (open access)

Spent nuclear fuel project quality assurance program plan

This main body of this document describes how the requirements of 10 CFR 830.120 are met by the Spent Nuclear Fuel Project through implementation of WHC-SP-1131. Appendix A describes how the requirements of DOE/RW-0333P are met by the Spent Nuclear Fuel Project through implementation of specific policies, manuals, and procedures.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Lacey, R. E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Independent design review report for truck {number_sign}1 modifications for flammable gas tanks (open access)

Independent design review report for truck {number_sign}1 modifications for flammable gas tanks

The East and West Tank Farm Standing Order 97-01 requires that the PMST be modified to include purging of the enclosed space underneath the shielded receiver weather cover per National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) 496, Purged and Pressurized Enclosures for Electrical Equipment. The Standing Order also requires that the PMST be modified by replacing the existing electrical remote latch (RLU) unit with a mechanical remote latch unit. As the mechanical remote latch unit was exactly like the RLU installed on the Rotary Mode Core Sampler Trucks (RMCST) and the design for the RMCST went through formal design review, replacing the RLU was done utilizing informal design verification and was completed per work package ES-97-0028. As the weather cover purge was similar to the design for the RMCSTS, this design was reviewed using the independent review method with multiple independent reviewers. A function design criteria (WHC-SD-WM-FDC-048, Functional Design Criteria for Core Sampling in Flammable Gas Watch List Tanks) provided the criteria for the modifications. The review consisted of distributing the design review package to the reviewers and collecting and dispositioning the RCR comments. The review package included the ECNs for review, the Design Compliance Matrix, copies of all drawings affected, and …
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Wilson, G. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pu 4f XPS spectra analyzed in the Anderson impurity model (open access)

Pu 4f XPS spectra analyzed in the Anderson impurity model

X-ray photoemission spectra of the {alpha},{beta},{gamma}, and {delta} phases of Pu have been analyzed using the Gunnarsson-Schonhammer implementation of the Anderson impurity model. Changes in the relative intensities of the two spectral features representing mixed f{sup 5} and f{sup 6} final states are in reasonable agreement with the model`s predictions. The coulomb terms, U{sub ff} and U{sub fc}, are quite consistent with those derived from atomic and LDA calculations. Multiplet structure, which agrees with atomic calculations for 4f{sup 13}5f{sup 5}, strongly suggests 5f localization in the final state.
Date: May 9, 1998
Creator: Cox, L. E.; Peek, J. M. & Allen, J. W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford`s progress toward dry interim storage of K basin`s spent fuel (open access)

Hanford`s progress toward dry interim storage of K basin`s spent fuel

This paper highlights the progress made toward removing the U.S. Department of Energy`s (DOE) approximately 2, 100 metric tons of metallic spent nuclear fuel from two outdated K Basins on the banks of the Columbia River and placing it in safe, economic interim dry storage beginning in December 1997. A new way of doing business at the Hanford Site and within DOE is being used to achieve the fast-track schedule, , cost savings, and public cooperation needed for success. In February 1994, the Spent Nuclear Fuel (SNF) Project was formed to solve serious safety and environmental problems associated with corroding metallic spent fuel stored in 1950`s vintage, leak-prone, water- filled concrete basins located within 365 meters (400 yards) of the last remaining unspoiled section of the Columbia River. Working together, the integrated project team focused on quickly getting the fuel out of the basins and into safe, dry storage. The team involved the public, government, regulators, and other stakeholders and forged a common understanding. The DOE transferred authority to the field to shorten approval times, and Site contractors reengineered processes to improve efficiency. Within nine months of creating the project, a plan was recommended to the DOE. It was approved …
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Culley, G.E., Westinghouse Hanford
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exploratory research on novel coal liquefaction concept. [Quarterly report], January 1--March 31, 1996 (open access)

Exploratory research on novel coal liquefaction concept. [Quarterly report], January 1--March 31, 1996

Work this quarter concentrated on evaluating the effects of low- severity, first stage reaction conditions on coal conversions, exploring the effect of solvent-to-coal ratio on filtration performance, exploring the effects of pretreatment on dispersed catalysts for hydrotreating tests, and the installation and calibration of a simulated distillation instrument. Additional work included continued review of the technical and patent literature and expansion of the annotated bibliography.
Date: May 9, 1996
Creator: Burke, F. P.; Brandes, S. D.; Winschel, R. A.; Derbyshire, F. J.; Kimber, G.; Anderson, R. K. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Informal science educators network project Association of Science-Technology Centers Incorporated. Final report (open access)

Informal science educators network project Association of Science-Technology Centers Incorporated. Final report

Funding from the Department of Energy and the Annenberg/CPB Math and Science Project have helped the Association of Science-technology Centers Incorporated (ASTC) to establish and sustain an on-line community of informal science educators nationwide. The Project, called the Informal Science Educators Network Project (ISEN), is composed primarily of informal science educators and exhibit developers from science centers, museums, zoos, aquariums, botanical gardens, parks, and nature centers. Although museum-based professionals represent the majority of subscribers to ISEN, also involved are some classroom teachers and teacher educators from colleges and universities. Common to all ISEN participants is a commitment to school and science education reform. Specifically, funding from the Department of Energy helped to boot strap the effort, providing Barrier Reduction Vouchers to 123 educators that enabled them participate in ISEN. Among the major accomplishments of the Project are these: (1) assistance to 123 informal science educators to attend Internet training sessions held in connection with the Project and/or purchase hardware and software that linked them to the Internet; (2) Internet training for 153 informal science educators; (3) development of a listserv which currently has over 180 subscribers--an all-time high; (4) opportunity to participate in four web chats involving informal science educators …
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
State heating oil and propane program, 1994--1995 heating season. Final technical report (open access)

State heating oil and propane program, 1994--1995 heating season. Final technical report

Propane prices and No. 2 fuel prices during the 1994-1995 heating season are tabulated for the state of Ohio. Nineteen companies were included in the telephone survey of propane prices, and twenty two companies for the fuel oil prices. A bar graph is also presented for average residential prices of No. 2 heating oil.
Date: May 9, 1995
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Finite element radiation transport in one dimension (open access)

Finite element radiation transport in one dimension

A new physics package solves radiation transport equations in one space dimension, multiple energy groups and directions. A discontinuous finite element method discretizes radiation intensity with respect to space and angle, and a continuous finite element method discretizes electron temperature `in space. A splitting method solves the resulting linear equations. This is a one-dimensional analog of Kershaw and Harte`s two-dimensional package. This package has been installed in a two-dimensional inertial confinement fusion code, and has given excellent results for both thermal waves and highly directional radiation. In contrast, the traditional discrete ordinate and spherical harmonic methods show less accurate results in both cases.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Painter, J.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam expansion with specified final distributions (open access)

Beam expansion with specified final distributions

The formation of nearly uniformly distributed beams has been accomplished by the use of multipole magnets. Multipole fields, however, are an inappropriate basis for creating precise distributions, particularly since substantial departures from uniformity are produced with a finite number of multipole elements. A more appropriate formalism that allows precise formation of a desired distribution is presented. Design of nonlinear magnets for uniform-beam production and the optics of an accompanying expansion system are presented.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Jason, A.J.; Blind, B. & Halbach, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Quarterly environmental data summary for first quarter 1997 (open access)

Quarterly environmental data summary for first quarter 1997

This report supports the Weldon Spring Site Remedial Action Project Federal Facilities Agreement. All data received and verified during the fourth quarter were within a permissible range of variability except for those detailed in this support. Above normal occurrences are cited for groundwater data and NPDES. There were none for air, surface water or springs. A brief summary is presented of the data that met the above normal criteria merged during the first quarter and updates on past reported above normal data.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: McCracken, S.H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Increased Oil Production and Reserves from Improved Completion Techniques in the Bluebell Field, Uinta Basin, Utah (open access)

Increased Oil Production and Reserves from Improved Completion Techniques in the Bluebell Field, Uinta Basin, Utah

The objective of this project is to increase oil production and reserves in the Uinta Basin by demonstrating improved completion techniques. Low productivity of Uinta Basin wells is caused by gross production intervals of several thousand feet that contain perforated thief zones, water-bearing zones, and perforated oil-bearing intervals. Geologic and engineering characterization and computer simulation of the Green River and Wasatch Formations in the Bluebell field will determine reservoir heterogeneities related to fractures and depositional trends. This will be followed by drilling and recompletion of several wells to demonstrate improved completion techniques based on the reservoir characterization. Transfer of the project results will be an ongoing component of the project.
Date: May 9, 1997
Creator: Morgan, C. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library