A real time integrated environment for Motorola 680xx-based VME and FASTBUS modules (open access)

A real time integrated environment for Motorola 680xx-based VME and FASTBUS modules

The Software Components Group pSOS operating system kernel and pROBE debugger have been extended to support the Fermilab PAN-DA system for a variety of Motorola 680xx-based VME and FASTBUS modules. These extensions include: a multi-tasking, reentrant implementation of Microtec C/Pascal; a serial port driver for terminal I/O and data transfer; a message reporting facility; and enhanced debugging tools. 5 refs., 1 fig.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Berg, D.; Heinicke, P.; MacKinnon, B.; Nicinski, T. & Oleynik, G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Real-time applications of neural nets (open access)

Real-time applications of neural nets

Producing, accelerating and colliding very high power, low emittance beams for long periods is a formidable problem in real-time control. As energy has grown exponentially in time so has the complexity of the machines and their control systems. Similar growth rates have occurred in many areas, e.g., improved integrated circuits have been paid for with comparable increases in complexity. However, in this case, reliability, capability and cost have improved due to reduced size, high production and increased integration which allow various kinds of feedback. In contrast, most large complex systems (LCS) are perceived to lack such possibilities because only one copy is made. Neural nets, as a metaphor for LCS, suggest ways to circumvent such limitations. It is argued that they are logically equivalent to multi-loop feedback/forward control of faulty systems. While complimentary to AI, they mesh nicely with characteristics desired for real-time systems. Such issues are considered, examples given and possibilities discussed. 21 refs., 6 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Spencer, J.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Pseudorapidity distributions, nuclear stopping, and the failures and successes of the fireball model (open access)

Pseudorapidity distributions, nuclear stopping, and the failures and successes of the fireball model

Pseudorapidity distributions of multiplicity and transverse energy are a useful probe of nuclear stopping. Emulsion results at the AGS and CERN, as well as E/sub T/ measurements at both laboratories are discussed, and show that the fireball model with crisp and precise predictions of the pseudorapidity distributions, utterly fails to reproduce the measurements. By stark contrast, the fireball model is very successful in predicting the observed ratio of E/sub T/ production in central /sup 32/S and /sup 16/O interactions in Au and other heavy targets. This conundrum is explored and explained, leading to a systematic comparison of measurements from all the RHI experiments at the AGS and CERN. 14 refs., 3 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Tannenbaum, Michael J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Fermilab Central Computing Facility architectural model (open access)

The Fermilab Central Computing Facility architectural model

The goal of the current Central Computing Upgrade at Fermilab is to create a computing environment that maximizes total productivity, particularly for high energy physics analysis. The Computing Department and the Next Computer Acquisition Committee decided upon a model which includes five components: an interactive front end, a Large-Scale Scientific Computer (LSSC, a mainframe computing engine), a microprocessor farm system, a file server, and workstations. With the exception of the file server, all segments of this model are currently in production: a VAX/VMS Cluster interactive front end, an Amdahl VM computing engine, ACP farms, and (primarily) VMS workstations. This presentation will discuss the implementation of the Fermilab Central Computing Facility Architectural Model. Implications for Code Management in such a heterogeneous environment, including issues such as modularity and centrality, will be considered. Special emphasis will be placed on connectivity and communications between the front-end, LSSC, and workstations, as practiced at Fermilab. 2 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Nicholls, J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A primer on Higgs boson low-energy theorems (open access)

A primer on Higgs boson low-energy theorems

We give a pedagogical review of Higgs boson low-energy theorems and their applications in the study of light Higgs boson interactions with mesons and baryons. In particular, it is shown how to combine the chiral Lagrangian method with the Higgs low-energy theorems to obtain predictions for the interaction of Higgs bosons and pseudoscalar mesons. Finally, we discuss the relation between the low-energy theorems and a technique which makes use of the trace of the QCD energy-momentum tensor. 35 refs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Dawson, S. & Haber, H.E.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cost analysis of power plant cooling using aquifer thermal energy storage (open access)

Cost analysis of power plant cooling using aquifer thermal energy storage

Most utilities in the US experience their peak demand for electric power during periods with high ambient temperature. Unfortunately, the performance of many power plants decreases with high ambient temperature. The use of aquifer thermal energy storage (ATES) for seasonal storage of chill can be an alternative method for heat rejection. Cold water produced during the previous winter is stored in the aquifer and can be used to provide augmented cooling during peak demand periods increasing the output of many Rankine cycle power plants. This report documents an investigation of the technical and economic feasibility of using aquifer thermal energy storage for peak cooling of power plants. 9 refs., 15 figs., 5 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Zimmerman, P.W. & Drost, M.K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Processes of community development and responses of ecosystems to climate change (open access)

Processes of community development and responses of ecosystems to climate change

Our studies focus on attempting to understand the role of decomposer-primary producer linkages in successional dynamics. We are testing a series of hypotheses that relate changes in plant species composition during succession to changes in activity and structure of the soil microfloral and faunal community, dynamics of soil organic matter, and availability of soil nutrients. As these successional patterns are identified, they are being applied to understanding specific processes and mechanics involved in ecosystem development during recovery from moderate and severe disturbances. These findings are then being used in conjunction with simulation models to assess potential effects of climate change on ecosystems. Our research involves field studies in northwestern Colorado and southeastern Washington, laboratory studies, and simulation modeling. Ongoing projects include studies of response patterns of primary producer and soil microbial communities to nutrient additions (N, P, and sucrose), the function of mycorrhizal fungi in plant community development, and the dynamics of litter decomposition under semiarid conditions. New studies are being implemented to investigate the significance of nutrient transfers from VAM fungi to plants and plant-root exudate interactions, and to relate this to understanding their roles in succession.
Date: May 26, 1989
Creator: Redente, E.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
FEREAD: Front End Readout software for the Fermilab PAN-DA data acquisition system (open access)

FEREAD: Front End Readout software for the Fermilab PAN-DA data acquisition system

The FEREAD system provides a multi-tasking framework for controlling the execution of experiment specific front end readout processes. It supports initializing the front end data acquisition hardware, queueing and processing readout activation signals, cleaning up at the end of data acquisition, and transferring configuration parameters and statistical data between a ''Host'' computer and the readout processes. FEREAD is implemented as part of the PAN-DA software system and is designed to run on any Motorola 68k based processor board. It has been ported to the FASTBUS General Purpose Master (GPM) interface board and the VME MVME133A processor board using the pSOS/Microtec environment. 12 refs., 2 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Dorries, T.; Haire, M.; Moore, C.; Pordes, R. & Votava, M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommendations for energy conservation standards for new residential buildings: Volume 4, Description of the testing process (open access)

Recommendations for energy conservation standards for new residential buildings: Volume 4, Description of the testing process

This report documents the development and testing of recommendations, from the American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers, Inc. (ASHRAE) Special Projects Committee No. 53, designed to provide the technical foundation for the Congressionally-mandated energy standard for new residential buildings. The recommendations were developed over a 25-month period by a multidisciplinary project team, under the management of the US Department of Energy and its prime contractor, Pacific Northwest Laboratory. The report has been issued in four volumes, VOLUME IV - Description of the Testing Process details how the Standard was tested and provides case studies of the possible impact of the Standard in select locations throughout the country. It is supported by a description of the assumptions and input data, and an analysis of the results.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: unknown
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
High intensity hadron accelerators (open access)

High intensity hadron accelerators

This rapporteur report consists mainly of two parts. Part I is an abridged review of the status of all High Intensity Hadron Accelerator projects in the world in semi-tabulated form for quick reference and comparison. Part II is a brief discussion of the salient features of the different technologies involved. The discussion is based mainly on my personal experiences and opinions, tempered, I hope, by the discussions I participated in in the various parallel sessions of the workshop. In addition, appended at the end is my evaluation and expression of the merits of high intensity hadron accelerators as research facilities for nuclear and particle physics.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Teng, L.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Field study plan for alternate barriers (open access)

Field study plan for alternate barriers

Pacific Northwest Laboratory (PNL) is providing technical assistance in selecting, designing, evaluating, and demonstrating protective barriers. As part of this technical assistance effort, asphalt, clay, and chemical grout will be evaluated for use as alternate barriers. The purpose of the subsurface layer is to reduce the likelihood that extreme events (i.e., 100-year maximum storms, etc.) will cause significant drainage through the barrier. The tests on alternate barriers will include laboratory and field analysis of the subsurface layer performance. This field test plan outlines the activities required to test and design subsurface moisture barriers. The test plan covers activities completed in FY 1988 and planned through FY 1992 and includes a field-scale test of one or more of the alternate barriers to demonstrate full-scale application techniques and to provide performance data on a larger scale. Tests on asphalt, clay, and chemical grout were initiated in FY 1988 in small (30.5 cm diameter) tube-layer lysimeters. The parameters used for testing the materials were different for each one. The tests had to take into account the differences in material characteristics and response to change in conditions, as well as information provided by previous studies. 33 refs., 8 figs., 1 tab.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Freeman, H. D.; Gee, G. W. & Relyea, J. F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Exact solutions for symmetric deformations of hollow bodies of ideal fluids with application to inertial stability (open access)

Exact solutions for symmetric deformations of hollow bodies of ideal fluids with application to inertial stability

We present solutions for the problems of radial motion of spherical and cyclindrical bodies of an incompressible inviscid fluid, with an initial kinetic energy, and subjected to pressure on the outer (or equivalently, inner) boundary. These solutions have bearing on the inertial stability of ejecta in hypervelocity impact and of explosively compressed shells. 15 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Passman, S.L. & Grady, D.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Anisotropic distribution function of minority tail ions generated by strong ion-cyclotron resonance heating (open access)

Anisotropic distribution function of minority tail ions generated by strong ion-cyclotron resonance heating

The highly anisotropic particle distribution function of minority tail ions driven by ion-cyclotron resonance heating at the fundamental harmonic is calculated in a two-dimensional velocity space. It is assumed that the heating is strong enough to drive most of the resonant ions above the in-electron critical slowing-down energy. Simple analytic expressions for the tail distribution are obtained fro the case when the Doppler effect is sufficiently large to flatten the sharp pitch angle dependence in the bounce averaged qualilinear heating coefficient, D/sub b/, and for the case when D/sub b/ is assumed to be constant in pitch angle and energy. It is found that a simple constant-D/sub b/ solution can be used instead of the more complicated sharp-D/sub b/ solution for many analytic purposes. 4 refs., 4 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Chang, C. S. & Colestock, P.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Results of the independent radiological verification survey of the lower Sheffield Brook floodplain, Wayne, New Jersey (open access)

Results of the independent radiological verification survey of the lower Sheffield Brook floodplain, Wayne, New Jersey

Prior to 1971, the W.R. Grace Company processed and stored radioactive materials at Wayne, New Jersey, under license to the Atomic Energy Commission. Decontamination of structures and storage of waste materials on the property at the Wayne Interim Storage Site (WISS) took place in 1974. Surveys by the State of New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and by Oak Ridge Associated Universities for the NRC in 1982 indicated that properties adjacent to the WISS contained surface contamination by radioactive residuals in amounts exceeding those acceptable under US Department of Energy (DOE) remedial action guidelines. At the request of DOE, remedial actions have been conducted by Bechtel National, Inc., to remove radioactive residuals from properties adjacent to the site. It is the policy of DOE to assign an independent verification contractor to ensure the effectiveness of remedial actions performed within the Formerly Utilized Sites Remedial Action Program. This report describes the methods and results of those studies that were conducted by the Measurement Applications and Development Group of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory for the lower Sheffield Brook floodplain west of the WISS. Based upon post-remedial action and verification survey data, it was concluded that residual soil concentrations and gamma levels …
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Yalcintas, M.G. & Carrier, R.F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Uniform communications software using TCP/IP (open access)

Uniform communications software using TCP/IP

Data acquisition applications at Fermilab require a reliable, distributed communication system for downloading, diagnostics, control, and data distribution. TCP/IP over Ethernet was chosen because of its uniform user interface and commercial availability for a number of processors and operating systems. This paper describes our software and hardware support for TCP/IP on VAX/VMS, VME/pSOS, FASTBUS/pSOS, and Unix systems. It includes plans to provide a portable, hardware independent implementation of TCP/IP based on Berkeley BSD software. 8 refs., 3 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Bernett, M. & Oleynik, G.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Channelling and related effects in electron microscopy: The current status (open access)

Channelling and related effects in electron microscopy: The current status

Channelling or Borrmann effect in electron diffraction has been developed into a versatile, high spatial resolution, crystallographic technique with demonstrated applicability in solving a variety of materials problems. In general, either the characteristic x-ray emissions or the electron energy-loss intensities are monitored as a function of the orientation of the incident beam. The technique, as formulated in the planar geometry has found wide applications in specific site occupancy and valence measurements, determination of small atomic displacements and crystal polarity studies. For site occupancy studies, the appropriate orientations in most cases can be determined by inspection and the analysis carried out according to a simple classification of the crystal structure discussed in this paper. Concentration levels as low as 0.1 wt% can be easily detected. The reciprocity principle may be used to advantage in all these studies, if electron energy-loss spectra are monitored, as both the channelling of the incoming beam and the blocking of the outgoing beam are included in the formulation and analysis. The formulation in the axial geometry is an useful alternative, particularly for monatomic crystals. Localization effects are important if, either the experiment is performed in the axial geometry or if low atomic number elements (z < …
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Krishnan, K.M.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Gravel admix, vegetation, and soil water interactions in protective barriers: Experimental design, construction, and initial conditions (open access)

Gravel admix, vegetation, and soil water interactions in protective barriers: Experimental design, construction, and initial conditions

The purpose of this study is to measure the interactive effects of gravel admix and greater precipitation on soil water storage and plant abundance. The study is one of many tasks in the Protective Barrier Development Program for the disposal of Hanford defense waste. A factorial field-plot experiment was set up at the site selected as the borrow area for barrier topsoil. Gravel admix, vegetation, and enhanced precipitation treatments were randomly assigned to the plots using a split-split plot design structure. Changes in soil water storage and plant cover were monitored using neutron probe and point intercept methods, respectively. The first-year results suggest that water extraction by plants will offset gravel-caused increases in soil water storage. Near-surface soil water contents were much lower in graveled plots with plants than in nongraveled plots without plants. Large inherent variability in deep soil water storage masked any effects gravel may have had on water content below the root zone. In the future, this source of variation will be removed by differencing monthly data series and testing for changes in soil water storage. Tests of the effects of greater precipitation on soil water storage were inconclusive. A telling test will be possible in the …
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Waugh, W.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Linear analysis of the momentum cooling Fokker-Planck equation (open access)

Linear analysis of the momentum cooling Fokker-Planck equation

In order to optimize the extraction scheme used to take antiprotons out of the accumulator, it is necessary to understand the basic processes involved. At present, six antiproton bunches per Tevatron store are removed sequentially by RF unstacking from the accumulator. The phase space dynamics of this process, with its accompanying phase displacement deceleration and phase space dilution of portions of the stack, can be modelled by numerical solution of the longitudinal equations of motion for a large number of particles. We have employed the tracking code ESME for this purpose. In between RF extractions, however, the stochastic cooling system is turned on for a short time, and we must take into account the effect of momentum stochastic cooling on the antiproton energy spectrum. This process is described by the Fokker-Planck equation, which models the evolution of the antiproton stack energy distribution by accounting for the cooling through an applied coherent drag force and the competing heating of the stack due to diffusion, which can arise from intra-beam scattering, amplifier noise and coherent (Schottky) effects. In this note we examine the aspects of the Fokker-Planck in the regime where the nonlinear terms due to Schottky effects are small. This discussion …
Date: May 4, 1989
Creator: Rosenzweig, J.B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The standard model and beyond (open access)

The standard model and beyond

In these lectures, my aim is to present a status report on the standard model and some key tests of electroweak unification. Within that context, I also discuss how and where hints of new physics may emerge. To accomplish those goals, I have organized my presentation as follows. I survey the standard model parameters with particular emphasis on the gauge coupling constants and vector boson masses. Examples of new physics appendages are also commented on. In addition, I have included an appendix on dimensional regularization and a simple example which employs that technique. I focus on weak charged current phenomenology. Precision tests of the standard model are described and up-to-date values for the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa (CKM) mixing matrix parameters are presented. Constraints implied by those tests for a 4th generation, extra Z' bosons, and compositeness are discussed. An overview of the physics of tau decays is also included. I discuss weak neutral current phenomenology and the extraction of sin/sup 2//theta/W from experiment. The results presented there are based on a global analysis of all existing data. I have chosen to concentrate that discussion on radiative corrections, the effect of a heavy top quark mass, implications for grand unified theories (GUTS), extra …
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Marciano, William J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Remote procedure execution software for distributed systems (open access)

Remote procedure execution software for distributed systems

Remote Procedure Execution facilitates the construction of distributed software systems, spanning computers of various types. Programmers who use the RPX package specify subroutine calls which are to be executed on a remote computer. RPX is used to generate code for dummy routines which transmit input parameters and receive output parameters, as well as a main program which receives procedure call requests, calls the requested procedure, and returns the result. The package automatically performs datatype conversions and uses an appropriate connection oriented protocol. Supported operating systems/processors are VMS(VAX), UNIX(MIPS R2000, R3000) and Software Components Group's pSOS (680x0). Connection oriented protocols are supported over Ethernet (TCP/IP) and RS232 (a package of our own design). 2 refs., 2 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Petravick, D. L.; Berman, E. F. & Sergey, G. P.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Biological testing of sediment for the Olympia Harbor Navigation Improvement Project, 1988: Geoduck, amphipod, and echinoderm bioassays (open access)

Biological testing of sediment for the Olympia Harbor Navigation Improvement Project, 1988: Geoduck, amphipod, and echinoderm bioassays

The Olympia Harbor Navigation Improvement Project requires the dredging of approximately 330,000 cubic yards (cy) of sediment from the harbor entrance channel and 205,185 cy from the turning basin. Puget Sound Dredged Disposal Analysis (PSDDA) partial characterization studies were used to plan a full sediment characterization in which chemical analyses and biological testing of sediments evaluated the suitability of the dredged material for unconfined, open-water disposal. The US Army Corps of Engineers (COE), Seattle District, contracted with NOAA/NMFS, Environmental Conservation Division, to perform the chemical analysis and Microtox bioassay tests, and with the Battelle/Marine Sciences Laboratory (MSL) in Sequim to perform flow-through solid-phase bioassays utilizing juvenile (8 to 10 mm) geoduck clams, Panopea generosa, and static solid phase bioassays using the phoxocephalid amphipod, Rhepoxynius abronius, developing embryos and gametes of the purple sea urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus, and the larvae of the Pacific oyster Crassostrea gigas. When the results of the biological tests were evaluated under PSDDA guidelines, it was found that all the tested sediment treatments from Olympia Harbor are suitable for unconfined open-water disposal. 14 refs., 12 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Ward, J. A.; Word, J. Q. & Antrim, L. D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three level constraints on conformal field theories and string models (open access)

Three level constraints on conformal field theories and string models

Simple tree level constraints for conformal field theories which follow from the requirement of crossing symmetry of four-point amplitudes are presented, and their utility for probing general properties of string models is briefly illustrated and discussed. 9 refs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Lewellen, D.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A new string model (VENUS 2) for hadronic collisions based on color exchange between quarks and antiquarks (open access)

A new string model (VENUS 2) for hadronic collisions based on color exchange between quarks and antiquarks

We describe the latest version of the string model VENUS, taking also into account antiquarks as participants in the color exchange (string flip) process, the basic mechanism to form strings. An important consequence is a rapidity plateau for protons and lambdas in symmetric heavy ion collision contradicting the assumption of transparency. 10 refs., 7 figs.
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Werner, K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hanford Site ground-water monitoring for January through June 1988 (open access)

Hanford Site ground-water monitoring for January through June 1988

The Pacific Northwest Laboratory monitors ground-water quality at the Hanford Site for the US Department of Energy to assess the impact of Site operations on the environment. Work undertaken between January and June 1988 included monitoring ground-water elevations across the Site, and monitoring hazardous chemicals and radionuclides in ground water. Water levels continued to rise in areas receiving increased recharge (e.g., beneath B Pond) and decline in areas where the release of water to disposal facilities has been terminated (e.g., U Pond). The major areas of ground-water contamination defined by monitoring activities are (1) carbon tetrachloride in the 200-West Area; (2) cyanide in and north of the 200-East and 200-West Areas; (3) hexavalent chromium contamination in the 100-B, 100-D, 100-F, 100-H, 100-K, and 200-West Areas; (4) chlorinated hydrocarbons in the vicinity of the Solid Waste Landfill and 300 Area; (5) uranium in the 100-F, 100-H, 200-West, and 300 Areas; and (6) tritium and nitrate across the Site. In addition, several new analytical initiatives were undertaken during this period. These include cyanide speciation in the BY Cribs plume, inductively coupled argon plasma/mass spectrometry (ICP/MS) measurements on a broad selection of samples from the 100, 200, 300, and 600 Areas, and high …
Date: May 1, 1989
Creator: Evans, J.C.; Bryce, R.W. & Sherwood, D.R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library