Models for Type I supernovae (open access)

Models for Type I supernovae

Two rather disjoint scenarios for Type I supernovae are presented. One is based upon mass accretion by a white dwarf in a binary system. The second involves a star having some 8 to 10 times the mass of the sun which may or may not be a solitary star. Despite the apparent dissimilarities in the models it may be that each occurs to some extent in nature for they both share the possibility of producing substantial quantities of /sup 56/Ni and explosions in stars devoid of hydrogen envelopes. These are believed to be two properties that must be shared by any viable Type I model.
Date: June 17, 1980
Creator: Woosley, S. E.; Weaver, T. A. & Taam, R. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Development of Room-temperature CdMnTe Gamma-ray Detectors (open access)

Development of Room-temperature CdMnTe Gamma-ray Detectors

CdMnTe materials have wide bandgap, high resistivity, fair electron-transport properties, and good compositional uniformity. All these features make CdMnTe a good candidate for low cost, high-resolution room-temperature gamma-ray detector. Using several techniques available at BNL, we are characterizing CdMnTe as a material for gamma-ray detectors. The consequent improvements in growth, fabrication, and manufacturing techniques for CdMnTe potentially yield a suitable material for sensing devices with lower production costs. Success of this research has the possibility of generating high impact to nuclear nonproliferation with the goal of offering inexpensive highly sensitive gamma spectrometers.
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Bolotnikov, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel Method for Growing Te-Inclusion-Free CZT (open access)

Novel Method for Growing Te-Inclusion-Free CZT

The authors propose a new method for growth of detector-grade CdZnTe (CZT) with reduced concentration and sizes of Te inclusions. The method is designed to impede the formation of Te-rich inclusions in crystals due to the use of new CZT growth method and a unique ampoule design.
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Bolotnikov, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
New insights into potential functions for the protein 4.1superfamily of proteins in kidney epithelium (open access)

New insights into potential functions for the protein 4.1superfamily of proteins in kidney epithelium

Members of the protein 4.1 family of adapter proteins are expressed in a broad panel of tissues including various epithelia where they likely play an important role in maintenance of cell architecture and polarity and in control of cell proliferation. We have recently characterized the structure and distribution of three members of the protein 4.1 family, 4.1B, 4.1R and 4.1N, in mouse kidney. We describe here binding partners for renal 4.1 proteins, identified through the screening of a rat kidney yeast two-hybrid system cDNA library. The identification of putative protein 4.1-based complexes enables us to envision potential functions for 4.1 proteins in kidney: organization of signaling complexes, response to osmotic stress, protein trafficking, and control of cell proliferation. We discuss the relevance of these protein 4.1-based interactions in kidney physio-pathology in the context of their previously identified functions in other cells and tissues. Specifically, we will focus on renal 4.1 protein interactions with beta amyloid precursor protein (beta-APP), 14-3-3 proteins, and the cell swelling-activated chloride channel pICln. We also discuss the functional relevance of another member of the protein 4.1 superfamily, ezrin, in kidney physiopathology.
Date: June 17, 2005
Creator: Calinisan, Venice; Gravem, Dana; Chen, Ray Ping-Hsu; Brittin,Sachi; Mohandas, Narla; Lecomte, Marie-Christine et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Initial State Radiation Physics at the B Factories (open access)

Initial State Radiation Physics at the B Factories

A mini-review of the recent BaBar and Belle results on the process e{sup +}e{sup -} {yields} hadrons using the initial state radiation (ISR) technique, is presented. ISR studies at the {Upsilon}(4s) resonance (B-Factories) can yield to the same observables as the low energy e{sup +}e{sup -} experiments: Precise cross-section measurements, the R ratio (ratio of cross-sections of hadron production to di-muon production) measurement, form factors measurements (from hadron pair production such as e{sup +}e{sup -} {yields} p{bar p}, {Lambda}{bar {Lambda}}, {Lambda}{bar {Sigma}}, {Sigma}{bar {Sigma}}), as well as J{sup PC} = 1{sup --} hadron spectroscopy that can lead to the discovery of new states.
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Grauges, Eugeni
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optical Beam Timing Monitor Experiments at the Advanced LightSource (open access)

Optical Beam Timing Monitor Experiments at the Advanced LightSource

We present the initial results of an experimental study of abeam timing monitor based on an optoelectronic technique. This techniqueuses the electrical signal from a beam position monitor to modulate theamplitude of a train of laser pulses, converting timing jitter into anamplitude jitter. This modulation is then measured with a photodetectorand sampled by a fast ADC. This approach has already demonstrated sub-100fs resolution and promises even better results. Additionally, we areplanning to use the technique as a way to extract the maximum possiblebandwidth from a BPM, avoiding the dispersion typical of long RF cables.We show our initial results using signals from the Advanced Light Sourcestorage ring.
Date: June 17, 2007
Creator: Byrd, John; De Santis, Stefano; Wilcox, Rusell & Yan, Yin
System: The UNT Digital Library
Breakdown Limits on Gigavolt-per-Meter Electron-Beam-Driven Wakefields in Dielectric Structures (open access)

Breakdown Limits on Gigavolt-per-Meter Electron-Beam-Driven Wakefields in Dielectric Structures

First measurements of the breakdown threshold in a dielectric subjected to GV/m wakefields produced by short (30-330 fs), 28.5 GeV electron bunches have been made. Fused silica tubes of 100 {micro}m inner diameter were exposed to a range of bunch lengths, allowing surface dielectric fields up to 27 GV/m to be generated. The onset of breakdown, detected through light emission from the tube ends, is observed to occur when the peak electric field at the dielectric surface reaches 13.8 {+-} 0.7 GV/m. The correlation of structure damage to beam-induced breakdown is established using an array of postexposure inspection techniques.
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Thompson, M. C.; Badakov, H.; Cook, A. M.; Rosenzweig, J. B.; Tikhoplav, R.; Travish, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal neutron imaging support with other laboratories BL06-IM-TNI (open access)

Thermal neutron imaging support with other laboratories BL06-IM-TNI

The goals of this project are: (1) detect and locate a source of thermal neutrons; (2) distinguish a localized source from uniform background; (3) show shape and size of thermalizing material; (4) test thermal neutron imager in active interrogation environment; and (5) distinguish delayed neutrons from prompt neutrons.
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Vanier, P. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Mechanism of the optogalvanic effect in a hollow-cathode discharge (open access)

Mechanism of the optogalvanic effect in a hollow-cathode discharge

There are two significantly different mechanisms proposed for the origin of the optogalvanic effect in a hollow-cathode discharge: (1) laser excitation of atoms to higher electronic states leads to an increased cross section for electron impact ionization, with the result that the excited atom becomes ionized and the conductivity of the discharge increases; and (2) laser excitation of atoms to higher electronic states perturbs the equilibrium established between the electron temperature and the atomic excitation temperature. Superelastic collisions between the electrons and the laser-excited atoms restore the equilibrium, with the excess energy ending up in an increased electron temperature and therefore an increased conductivity of the discharge. Both mechanisms undoubtedly proceed simultaneously and what needs to be determined is their relative importance at different discharge conditions and different excitation conditions. This is important because laser isotope enrichment schemes have been proposed using selective excitation in a hollow-cathode discharge. In order for these schemes to work, (1) must be the predominant mechanism. We have measured the optogalvanic signal, concentration of uranium atoms, impedance of the discharge, and electron temperature as a function of the discharge current in a neon-filled uranium hollow-cathode discharge. The hollow cathode operating characteristics are used as input …
Date: June 17, 1983
Creator: Keller, Richard A.; Warner, Bruce E.; Zalewski, Edward F.; Dyer, P.; Engleman, Rolf, Jr. & Palmer, Byron A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Leak testing and repair of fusion devices (open access)

Leak testing and repair of fusion devices

The leak testing, reporting and vacuum leak repair techniques of the MFTF yin-yang number one magnet system, the world's largest superconducting magnet system, are discussed. Based on this experience, techniques will be developed for testing and repairing leaks on the 42 MFTF-B magnets. The leak-hunting techniques for the yin-yang magnet systems were applied to two helium circuits (the coil bundle and guard vacuum; both require helium flow for magnet cooldown), their associated piping, liquid nitrogen radiation shields, and piping. Additionally, during MFTF-B operation there will be warm water plasma shields and piping that require leak checking.
Date: June 17, 1983
Creator: Kozman, T. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Heavy wall pressure vessels for energy systems (open access)

Heavy wall pressure vessels for energy systems

Modifications of steels currently accepted in the Code appear to provide improved mechanical properties. These steels may permit the fabrication of larger diameter vessels with thinner section sizes and improved reliability and integrity. Adapting current specifications should expedite Code approval. Finally the challenge of improving welding procedures and adapting processes for field applications will result in higher quality weldments.
Date: June 17, 1980
Creator: Canonico, D.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
REGIONAL-SCALE WIND FIELD CLASSIFICATION EMPLOYING CLUSTER ANALYSIS (open access)

REGIONAL-SCALE WIND FIELD CLASSIFICATION EMPLOYING CLUSTER ANALYSIS

The classification of time-varying multivariate regional-scale wind fields at a specific location can assist event planning as well as consequence and risk analysis. Further, wind field classification involves data transformation and inference techniques that effectively characterize stochastic wind field variation. Such a classification scheme is potentially useful for addressing overall atmospheric transport uncertainty and meteorological parameter sensitivity issues. Different methods to classify wind fields over a location include the principal component analysis of wind data (e.g., Hardy and Walton, 1978) and the use of cluster analysis for wind data (e.g., Green et al., 1992; Kaufmann and Weber, 1996). The goal of this study is to use a clustering method to classify the winds of a gridded data set, i.e, from meteorological simulations generated by a forecast model.
Date: June 17, 2004
Creator: Glascoe, L G; Glaser, R E; Chin, H S & Loosmore, G A
System: The UNT Digital Library
Searches for Light Higgs/Axions at BaBar (open access)

Searches for Light Higgs/Axions at BaBar

None
Date: June 17, 2013
Creator: Gaz, Alessandro
System: The UNT Digital Library
Single-shot measurement of the spectral envelope of broad-bandwidth terahertz pulses from femtosecond electron bunches (open access)

Single-shot measurement of the spectral envelope of broad-bandwidth terahertz pulses from femtosecond electron bunches

We present a new approach (demonstrated experimentally and through modeling) to characterize the spectral envelope of a terahertz (THz) pulse in a single shot. The coherent THz pulse is produced by a femtosecond electron bunch and contains information on the bunch duration. The technique, involving a single low-power laser probe pulse, is an extension of the conventional spectral encoding method (limited in time resolution to hundreds of femtoseconds) into a regime only limited in resolution by the laser pulse length (tens of femtoseconds). While only the bunch duration is retrieved (and not the exact charge profile), such a measurement provides a useful and critical parameter for optimization of the electron accelerator.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: van Tilborg, Jeroen; Toth, Csaba; Matlis, Nicholas; Plateau, Guillaume & Leemans, Wim
System: The UNT Digital Library
Forward Instrumentation for ILC Detectors (open access)

Forward Instrumentation for ILC Detectors

None
Date: June 17, 2013
Creator: Abramowicz, H.; Abusleme, A.; Afanaciev, K.; Aguilar, J.; Ambalathankandy, P.; Bambade, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Femtosecond spectroscopy with vacuum ultraviolet pulse pairs (open access)

Femtosecond spectroscopy with vacuum ultraviolet pulse pairs

We combine different wavelengths from an intense high-order harmonics source with variable delay at the focus of a split-mirror interferometer to conduct pump-probe experiments on gas-phase molecules. We report measurements of the time resolution (< 44fs) and spatial profiles (4 {micro}m x 12 {micro}m) at the focus of the apparatus. We demonstrate the utility of this two-color, high-order-harmonic technique by time resolving molecular hydrogen elimination from C{sub 2} H{sub 4} excited into its absorption band at 161nm.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: Allison, Tom; Wright, Travis; Stooke, Adam; Khurmi, Champak; van Tilborg, Jeroen; Liu, Yanwei et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Terahertz radiation as a bunch diagnostic for laser-wakefield-accelerated electron bunches (open access)

Terahertz radiation as a bunch diagnostic for laser-wakefield-accelerated electron bunches

Experimental results are reported from two measurement techniques (semiconductor switching and electro-optic sampling) that allow temporal characterization of electron bunches produced by a laser-driven plasma-based accelerator. As femtosecond electron bunches exit the plasma-vacuum interface, coherent transition radiation (at THz frequencies) is emitted. Measuring the properties of this radiation allows characterization of the electron bunches. Theoretical work on the emission mechanism is presented, including a model that calculates the THz wave form from a given bunch profile. It is found that the spectrum of the THz pulse is coherent up to the 200 {micro}m thick crystal (ZnTe) detection limit of 4 THz, which corresponds to the production of sub-50 fs (rms) electron bunch structure. The measurements demonstrate both the shot-to-shot stability of bunch parameters that are critical to THz emission (such as total charge and bunch length), as well as femtosecond synchronization among bunch, THz pulse, and laser beam.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: van Tilborg, Jeroen; Schroeder, Carl; Filip, Catalin; Toth, Csaba; Geddes, Cameron; Fubiani, Gwenael et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Results in Charmonium Spectroscopy at B-factories (open access)

Recent Results in Charmonium Spectroscopy at B-factories

None
Date: June 17, 2013
Creator: Biassoni, Pietro & /INFN, Milan /Milan U.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resonant Soft X-ray Scattering Studies of Multiferroic YMn2O5 (open access)

Resonant Soft X-ray Scattering Studies of Multiferroic YMn2O5

We performed soft x-ray resonant scattering at the MnL{sub 2,3}- and OK edges of YMn{sub 2}O{sub 5}. While the resonant intensity at the MnL{sub 2,3} edges represent the magnetic order parameter, the resonant scattering at the OK edge is found to be directly related to the macroscopic ferroelectric polarization. The latter observation reveals the important role of the spin-dependent Mn-O hybridization for the multiferroicity of YMn{sub 2}O{sub 5}. We present details about how to obtain correct energy dependent lineshapes and discuss the origin of the resonant intensity at the OK edge.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: Partzsch, S.; Wilkins, S. B.; Schierle, E.; Soltwisch, V.; Hill, J. P.; Weschke, E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Single-shot spatiotemporal measurements of ultrashort THz waveforms using temporal electric-field cross correlation (open access)

Single-shot spatiotemporal measurements of ultrashort THz waveforms using temporal electric-field cross correlation

A new single-shot technique based on linear spectral interferometry between a temporally short reader pulse and a temporally long probe pulse is demonstrated for measuring the spatiotemporal phase and amplitude of an optical probe for use as an ultrafast diagnostic. The probe spatiotemporal field information is recovered, with a resolution set by the duration of the reader pulse, by applying a single Fourier transform operation to the interferogram image, without need of any reference data. The technique was used in conjunction with electro-optic sampling to measure waveforms of coherent, ultrashort THz pulses emitted by electron bunches from a laser-plasma accelerator with sub-50fs resolution. The presence of strong spatiotemporal coupling in the THz waveforms and of complex temporal electron-bunch structure was determined.
Date: June 17, 2011
Creator: Matlis, Nicholas; Plateau, Guillaume; van Tilborg, Jeroen & Leemans, Wim
System: The UNT Digital Library
New astrophysical opacities and their effects on stellar models (open access)

New astrophysical opacities and their effects on stellar models

Recent advances in astrophysical opacity calculations are discussed. A description and comparison of results from two new independent efforts is given. The large increases in the calculated opacity in the few hundred-thousand degree range have led to improved agreement with a wide range of observations. Some directions for future work are suggested.
Date: June 17, 1994
Creator: Rogers, F. J. & Iglesias, C. A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
VITRIFICATION OF HIGH LEVEL WASTE AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE (open access)

VITRIFICATION OF HIGH LEVEL WASTE AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE

The objective of this study was to experimentally measure the properties and performance of a series of glasses with compositions that could represent high level waste Sludge Batch 5 (SB5) as vitrified at the Savannah River Site Defense Waste Processing Facility. These data were used to guide frit optimization efforts as the SB5 composition was finalized. Glass compositions for this study were developed by combining a series of SB5 composition projections with a group of candidate frits. The study glasses were fabricated using depleted uranium and their chemical compositions, crystalline contents and chemical durabilities were characterized. Trevorite was the only crystalline phase that was identified in a few of the study glasses after slow cooling, and is not of concern as spinels have been shown to have little impact on the durability of high level waste glasses. Chemical durability was quantified using the Product Consistency Test (PCT). All of the glasses had very acceptable durability performance. The results of this study indicate that a frit composition can be identified that will provide a processable and durable glass when combined with SB5.
Date: June 17, 2009
Creator: Fox, K. & Peeler, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy of liquid water: novel instrumentation, high resolution, and the"map" approach (open access)

Resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy of liquid water: novel instrumentation, high resolution, and the"map" approach

Techniques to study the electronic structure of liquids are rare. Most recently, resonant x-ray emission spectroscopy (XES) has been shown to be an extremely versatile spectroscopy to study both occupied and unoccupied electronic states for liquids in thermodynamic equilibrium. However, XES requires high-brilliance soft x-ray synchrotron radiation and poses significant technical challenges to maintain a liquid sample in an ultra-high vacuum environment. Our group has therefore developed and constructed a novel experimental setup for the study of liquids, with the long-term goal of investigating the electronic structure of biological systems in aqueous environments. We have developed a flow-through liquid cell in which the liquid is separated from vacuum by a thin Si3N4 or SiC window and which allows a precise control of temperature. This approach has significant advantages compared to static liquids cells used in the past. Furthermore, we have designed a dedicated high-transmission, high-resolution soft x-ray spectrometer. The high transmission makes it possible to measure complete resonant XES"maps" in less than an hour, giving unprecedented detailed insight into the electronic structure of the investigated sample. Using this new equipment we have investigated the electronic structure of liquid water. Furthermore, our XES spectra and maps give information about ultra-fast dissociation …
Date: June 17, 2008
Creator: Weinhardt, L.; Fuchs, O.; Blum, M.; Bär, M.; Weigand, M.; Denlinger, J.D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
rSUGRA: Putting Nonuniversal Gaugino Masses on the (W)MAP (open access)

rSUGRA: Putting Nonuniversal Gaugino Masses on the (W)MAP

In this talk, we investigate the relic density and direct detection prospects of rSUGRA, a simple paradigm for supersymmetry breaking that allows for nonuniversal gaugino masses. We present updated plots reflecting the latest cosmological measurements from WMAP.
Date: June 17, 2003
Creator: Birkedal-Hansen, Andreas
System: The UNT Digital Library