Crystal Structure Of Propionic Acid (open access)

Crystal Structure Of Propionic Acid

The crystal structures of the normal fatty acids of low molecular weight have been rather neglected until recently. Formic acid and acetic acid occur in the solid as hydrogen-bonded linear polymers, while several acids with eleven or more carbon atoms per molecule exist in the solid as dimers. The melting points of these acids, when plotted against number of carbon atoms, fall on two rather similar curves for even and odd numbers of carbon atoms, respectively, each with a minimum near five carbon atoms. These facts and hope of explaining the melting-point behavior led us to examine the structures of propionic and butyric acid crystals. These crystals have different structures, but both contain dimers.
Date: May 23, 1961
Creator: Strieter, Frederick J. & Templeton, David H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydromagnetic Ionizing Waves (open access)

Hydromagnetic Ionizing Waves

It is possible to generate a relatively uniform, highly ionized plasma by passing a powerful discharge between electrodes so arranged that the current is forced to flow across an initial strong magnetic field. The magnetic induction due to the discharge causes a bending of the original field. If the discharge is operated with a low-impedance current source, the electric breakdown starts in a limited region near the current-input connections (minimum-inductance path) and propagates as a well-defined front in the manner of a hydromagnetic shock wave. In this paper we analyze the phenomenon as a one-dimensional single-fluid hydromagnetic problem, neglecting dissipation behind the wave.
Date: May 16, 1961
Creator: Kunkel, Wulf B. & Gross, Robert A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experiments On Alfven-Wave Propagation (open access)

Experiments On Alfven-Wave Propagation

This paper reports an extension of previous experimental work with Alfven waves. We consider hydromagnetic waves propagating in a cylindrical plasma in a uniform axial magnetic field. The copper tube is filled with highly ionized plasma by an electrically driven switch-on ionizing wave. After the tube is filled with plasma, a hydromagnetic wave is induced by a radial current flow from the small molybdenum electrode to the copper tube. The force produced by this radial current together with the static axial magnetic field displaces the plasma in the azimuthal direction, and a transverse wave is propagated in the axial direction, along magnetic field lines. The transient magnetic field associated with the wave is also in the azimuthal direction.
Date: May 10, 1961
Creator: Wilcox, John M.; DeSilva, Alan W. & Cooper, William S., III
System: The UNT Digital Library
Carrier-Free Separation Of Hafnium From Rare-Earth Oxides (open access)

Carrier-Free Separation Of Hafnium From Rare-Earth Oxides

A carrier-free separation of hafnium from several hundred milligrams of rare earth oxides by anion exchange from saturated HC1 solution is given. The procedure is completed in 4-8 hours and is suitable for remote control work.
Date: May 1961
Creator: Tocher, Mab I. & Hollander, Jack M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Reference Manual For KICK IBM Program (open access)

Reference Manual For KICK IBM Program

This reference manual describes the IBM 704 program called Kick, by which complete bubble chamber events are kinematically analyzed. Kick's input data is the output from the Pang program, which uses raw track measurements to spatially reconstruct the tracks, and fits appropriate curves to them.
Date: May 1961
Creator: Rosenfeld, Arthur H., 1926-2017
System: The UNT Digital Library