Search for the neutrinoless muon decay. mu. /sup +/. -->. e/sup +/. gamma (open access)

Search for the neutrinoless muon decay. mu. /sup +/. -->. e/sup +/. gamma

Separate muon, electron, and tau numbers are conserved in the minimal standard model of electroweak interactions with massless neutrinos. However, in many extensions to the standard model, separate lepton numbers are not expected to be conserved quantities. A new search for muon number non-conserving processes has been undertaken at the Los Alamos Meson Physics Facility (LAMPF), specifically to look for three neutrinoless decay modes of the muon. The search for the decay of a muon to an electron and a photon is discussed here. A new detector facility, located in the LAMPF stopped muon channel, was developed for this experiment. This Crystal Box detector consists of a cylindrical drift chamber surrounded by a plastic scintillator hodoscope and a large solid angle, modularized, NaI(Tl) calorimeter. The apparatus measures the trajectories, relative timing, and energies of charged particles and photons from the decays of positive muons stopped in a central target. The assembly and calibration of the detector are described, and the procedure for taking data is discussed. The sample of 1.3 million candidate events, from the first data run of the Crystal Box, was analyzed using a maximum-likelihood method. The upper limit on the branching ratio, relative to normal muon decay, …
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Wilson, S.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electron energy loss spectroscopy of CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/ adsorbed on Ni(100), Ni(111), Cr(100), Cr(111) (open access)

Electron energy loss spectroscopy of CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/ adsorbed on Ni(100), Ni(111), Cr(100), Cr(111)

A study of the adsorption of CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/ on Ni(100), Ni(111), Cr(100), and Cr(111) using high resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy (EELS) is presented. Under approximately the same conditions of coverage, the vibrational spectra of CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/ on these four surfaces are quite distinct from one another, implying that the CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/-substrate interaction is very sensitive to the physical and electronic structure of each surface. In addition to the room temperature studies, the evolution of surface species on the Ni(100) surface in the temperature range 300 to 425 K was studied. Analysis of the Ni(100) spectra indicates that molecular adsorption, probably through the N lone pair, occurs at room temperature. Spectra taken after annealing the CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/-Ni(100) surfaces indicate that CH and CN bond scission occurred at the elevated temperatures. Decomposition of CH/sub 3/N/sub 2/CH/sub 3/ takes place on the Ni(111), Cr(100), and Cr(111) surfaces at room temperature, as evidenced by the intensity of the carbon-metal stretch in the corresponding spectra. Possible identities of coadsorbed dissociation products are considered. The stable coverage of surface species on all four surfaces at 300 K is less than one monolayer. A general description of an …
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Schulz, M.A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck code for stellarator transport (open access)

Bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck code for stellarator transport

A computer code for solving the bounce-averaged Fokker-Planck equation appropriate to stellarator transport has been developed, and its first applications made. The code is much faster than the bounce-averaged Monte-Carlo codes, which up to now have provided the most efficient numerical means for studying stellarator transport. Moreover, because the connection to analytic kinetic theory of the Fokker-Planck approach is more direct than for the Monte-Carlo approach, a comparison of theory and numerical experiment is now possible at a considerably more detailed level than previously.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Mynick, H.E. & Hitchon, W.N.G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structural study of multilayered vanadium/nickel superlattices (open access)

Structural study of multilayered vanadium/nickel superlattices

We have studied the microstructure of V/Ni metallic superlattice, using x-ray and neutron diffraction. We find a sharp and broad rocking curves around the first-order Bragg peak, and attribute them to a columnar structure which gives rise to two modulation structures; one the ordinary layered structure within the columns and the other the averaged modulation structure which produces the sharp rocking peak.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Homma, H.; Lepetre, Y.; Murduck, J.M.; Schuller, I.K. & Majkrzak, C.F.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Validation of KENO V. a. and two cross-section libraries for criticality calculations of low-enriched uranium systems (open access)

Validation of KENO V. a. and two cross-section libraries for criticality calculations of low-enriched uranium systems

The SCALE code system, utilizing the Monte Carlo computer code KENO V.a, was employed to calculate 37 critical experiments. The critical assemblies had /sup 235/U enrichments of 5% or less and cover a variety of geometries and materials. Values of k/sub eff/ were calculated using two different results using either of the cross-section libraries. The 16-energy-group Hansen-Roach and the 27-energy-group ENDF/B-IV cross-section libraries, available in SCALE, were used in this validation study, and both give good results for the experiments considered. It is concluded that the code and cross sections are adequate for low-enriched uranium systems and that reliable criticality safety calculations can be made for such systems provided the limits of validated applicability are not exceeded.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Easter, M.E.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
DOE Site-Specific Threat Assessment (open access)

DOE Site-Specific Threat Assessment

A facility manager faced with the challenges of protecting a nuclear facility against potential threats must consider the likelihood and consequences of such threats, know the capabilities of the facility safeguards and security systems, and make informed decisions about the cost-effectivness of safeguards and security upgrades. To help meet these challenges, the San Francisco Operations Office of the Department of Energy, in conjunction with the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, has developed a site-specific threat assessment approach and a quantitative model to improve the quality and consistency of site-specific threat assessment and resultant security upgrade decisions at sensitive Department of Energy facilities. 5 figs.
Date: July 12, 1985
Creator: West, D. J.; Al-Ayat, R. A. & Judd, B. R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Enloe Dam Passage Project, Volume II, Appendices, 1984 Annual Report. (open access)

Enloe Dam Passage Project, Volume II, Appendices, 1984 Annual Report.

This report contains the following appendices: (1) correspondence and minutes of meetings; (2) Similkameen River system summer creel survey; (3) disease analysis; (4) water quality tables; (5) Boundary Waters Treaty; and (6) other NEPA information. (ACR)
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Fanning, M.L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
ION-1 technical manual (open access)

ION-1 technical manual

The portable gamma-ray and neutron detector electronics (ION-1) gives a digital readout of the current-mode response produced by gamma rays in an ion chamber and of amplification and scaling of pulses received from a neutron detector. The primary application is the measurement of gamma-ray and neutron activity of irradiated reactor fuels stored at a reactor or at a storage pond away from a reactor. ION-1 is the first such instrument to use a design that allows communication of procedures, response, and results between instrument and inspector. It prompts the inspector through procedures, carries out programmed measurement steps, calculates results and error estimates, and performs internal diagnostic checks. This Technical Manual describes adjustment procedures and limited technical information that enable the inspector to troubleshoot at the board level. 5 figs., 10 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Halbig, J. K. & Caine, J. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiative J/psi decays and the pseudoscalar puzzle (open access)

Radiative J/psi decays and the pseudoscalar puzzle

Recent results on radiative decays of the J/PSI, obtained by the SPEAR detectors Mark III and Crystal Ball and the DCI detector DM2 at Orsay, are presented. The status of the glueball candidates theta(1690), iota(1460), and xi(220), and the decays J/PHI ..-->.. ..gamma.. Vector Vector are reviewed. A coupled channel analysis of iota(1460) decays to K anti K..pi.., rho rho, ..omega omega.., and ..gamma..rho is presented which may help to understand the pseudoscalar sector in radiative J/PHI decays. 42 refs., 16 figs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Wermes, N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RECON: a computer program for analyzing repository economics. Documentation and user's manual. Revision 1 (open access)

RECON: a computer program for analyzing repository economics. Documentation and user's manual. Revision 1

From 1981 through 1984 the Pacific Northwest Laboratory has been developing a computer model named RECON to calculate repository costs from parametric data input. The objective of the program has been to develop the capability to evaluate the effect on costs of changes in repository design parameters and operating scenario assumptions. This report documents the development of the model through September of 1984. Included in the report are: (1) descriptions of model development and the underlying equations, assumptions and definitions; (2) descriptions of data input using either card images or an interactive data input program; and (3) detailed listings of the program and definitions of program variables. Cost estimates generated using the model have been verified against independent estimates and good agreement has been obtained. 2 refs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Clark, L. L.; Schutz, M. E. & Luksic, A. T.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Plans for polarized beams at the SLC (open access)

Plans for polarized beams at the SLC

Precision tests of the electroweak interactions will soon be possible at the SLC and LEP. The SLC will be capable of providing longitudinal polarization of one incoming beam, the electrons, for such tests. Plans at the SLC to provide and monitor these beams are described, and some physics objectives are discussed. 5 refs., 10 figs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Prescott, Charles Y.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elastic scattering of polarized protons on helium three at 800 MeV (open access)

Elastic scattering of polarized protons on helium three at 800 MeV

A set of spin dependent parameters and cross sections has been measured for polarized p-/sup 3/He elastic scattering over the range of q .7 to 4.2 fm/sup -1/. The experiment was done at the Los Alamos Meson Physics Facility (LAMPF) using the High Resolution Spectrometer (HRS) with a polarized proton beam at .8 GeV. The focal plane polarimeter of the HRS was used to determine the spin direction of the scattered proton. Since /sup 3/He is one of the simplest nuclei, polarized p-/sup 3/He scattering provides a very sensitive test of multiple scattering theories. The theoretical analysis was done by using two different wave functions for /sup 3/He as input to the multiple scattering theory. The theoretical calculations and experimental data together will give us useful information about nucleon-nucleon amplitudes and also help us to obtain a better understanding of the scattering process. 68 refs., 55 figs., 9 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Azizi, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Geochemistry of Brine in Rock Salt in Temperature Gradients and Gamma-Radiation Fields - a Selective Annotated Bibliography (open access)

Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Geochemistry of Brine in Rock Salt in Temperature Gradients and Gamma-Radiation Fields - a Selective Annotated Bibliography

Evaluation of the extensive research concerning brine geochemistry and transport is critically important to successful exploitation of a salt formation for isolating high-level radioactive waste. This annotated bibliography has been compiled from documents considered to provide classic background material on the interactions between brine and rock salt, as well as the most important results from more recent research. Each summary elucidates the information or data most pertinent to situations encountered in siting, constructing, and operating a mined repository in salt for high-level radioactive waste. The research topics covered include the basic geology, depositional environment, mineralogy, and structure of evaporite and domal salts, as well as fluid inclusions, brine chemistry, thermal and gamma-radiation effects, radionuclide migration, and thermodynamic properties of salts and brines. 4 figs., 6 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Hull, A. B. & Williams, L. B.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimization aspects of the ARAC real-time radiological emergency response system (open access)

Optimization aspects of the ARAC real-time radiological emergency response system

The Atmospheric Release Advisory Capability (ARAC) project at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory responds to radiological emergencies throughout the Continental United States. Using complex three-dimensional dispersion models to account for the effects of complex meteorology and regional terrain, ARAC simulates the release of radioactive materials and provides dispersion, deposition, and dose calculations that are displayed over local geographic features for use by authorities at the accident/release site. ARAC's response is ensured by a software system that (1) makes optimal use of dispersion models, (2) minimizes the time required to provide projections, and (3) maximizes the fault-tolerance of the system. In this paper we describe ARAC's goals and functionality and the costs associated with its development and use. Specifically, we address optimizations in ARAC notifications, meteorological data collection, the determination of site- and problem-specific parameters, the generation of site-specific topography and geography, the running of models, and the distribution of ARAC products. We also discuss the backup features employed to ensure ARAC's ability to respond.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Taylor, S.S. & Sullivan, T.J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
TOPAZ - the transient one-dimensional pipe flow analyzer: user's manual (open access)

TOPAZ - the transient one-dimensional pipe flow analyzer: user's manual

TOPAZ is a ''user friendly'' computer code for modeling the one-dimensional-transient physics of multi-species gas transfer in arbitrary arrangements of pipes, valves, vessels, and flow branches. This document serves as a user's manual for the code, and should provide potential users with enough information to take advantage of many of the code's capabilities. Details regarding equations and numerics, example problems, applications, and modeling assumptions will be discussed in companion documents.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Winters, W.S.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Molecular dynamics simulations (open access)

Molecular dynamics simulations

The molecular dynamics computer simulation discovery of the slow decay of the velocity autocorrelation function in fluids is briefly reviewed in order to contrast that long time tail with those observed for the stress autocorrelation function in fluids and the velocity autocorrelation function in the Lorentz gas. For a non-localized particle in the Lorentz gas it is made plausible that even if it behaved quantum mechanically its long time tail would be the same as the classical one. The generalization of Fick's law for diffusion for the Lorentz gas, necessary to avoid divergences due to the slow decay of correlations, is presented. For fluids, that generalization has not yet been established, but the region of validity of generalized hydrodynamics is discussed. 20 refs., 5 figs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Alder, B. J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Damage-rate gradient effects on radiation-induced segregation and phase stability in irradiated alloys (open access)

Damage-rate gradient effects on radiation-induced segregation and phase stability in irradiated alloys

Recent studies have shown that significant compositional redistribution in irradiated alloys can be induced by the gradients in the atomic displacement rates resulting from nonuniform defect production, in addition to the commonly-observed solute segregation at defect sinks. This process gives rise to complex local phase transformations during light-ion bombardment or irradiation with focused electron beams in the high-voltage electron microscope. Results of our theoretical and experimental investigations of this phenomenon in Ni-Al and Ni-Si are discussed. The implications of the observed effect in a number of areas of materials science are assessed.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Lam, N.Q. & Okamoto, P.R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dissociative recombination of interstellar ions: electronic structure calculations for HCO/sup +/ (open access)

Dissociative recombination of interstellar ions: electronic structure calculations for HCO/sup +/

The present study of the interstellar formyl ion HCO/sup +/ is the first attempt to investigate dissociative recombination for a triatomic molecular ion using an entirely theoretical approach. We describe a number of fairly extensive electronic structure calculations that were performed to determine the reaction mechanism of the e-HCO/sup +/ process. Similar calculations for the isoelectronic ions HOC/sup +/ and HN/sub 2//sup +/ are in progress. 60 refs.
Date: July 2, 1985
Creator: Kraemer, W.P. & Hazi, A.U.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Early history of neutron scattering at Oak Ridge (open access)

Early history of neutron scattering at Oak Ridge

Most of the early development of neutron scattering techniques utilizing reactor neutrons occurred at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory during the years immediately following World War II. C.G. Shull, E.O. Wollan, and their associates systematically established neutron diffraction as a quantitative research tool and then applied this technique to important problems in nuclear physics, chemical crystallography, and magnetism. This article briefly summarizes the very important research at ORNL during this period, which laid the foundation for the establishment of neutron scattering programs throughout the world. 47 refs., 10 figs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Wilkinson, M.K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Three-dimensional stellarator equilibrium as an ohmic steady state (open access)

Three-dimensional stellarator equilibrium as an ohmic steady state

A stable three-dimensional stellarator equilibrium can be obtained numerically by a time-dependent relaxation method using small values of dissipation. The final state is an ohmic steady state which approaches an ohmic equilibrium in the limit of small dissipation coefficients. We describe a method to speed up the relaxation process and a method to implement the B vector . del p = 0 condition. These methods are applied to obtain three-dimensional heliac equilibria using the reduced heliac equations.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Park, W.; Monticello, D.A.; Strauss, H. & Manickam, J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Impedances of the shielded bellows in the SSC and the effects on beam stability (open access)

Impedances of the shielded bellows in the SSC and the effects on beam stability

The 1.08 km of bellows in Design A of the SSC will contribute to single-bunch instabilities: transverse mode-coupling, transverse microwave (for broad band at 13 GHz), and longitudinal microwave. The effectiveness of shielded bellows is considered. (GHT)
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Ng, King-Yuen
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Investigation of the cryogenic mechanical properties of low thermal-expansion superalloys (open access)

Investigation of the cryogenic mechanical properties of low thermal-expansion superalloys

Four Fe-based superalloys, JBK-75, Incoloy 903, Incoloy 905, and Incoloy 909 were evaluated as tube materials for ICCS Nb/sub 3/Sn superconductors. Evaluation consisted of 4-K tensile and elastic-plastic fracture-toughness testing, and a microstructural characterization of unwelded and autogenously gas-tungsten-arc welded sheet given a simulated postweld processing treatment of 15% cold reduction by rolling followed by a Nb/sub 3/Sn-reaction heat treatment of 96 hours at 700/sup 0/C plus 48 hours at 730/sup 0/C. Results indicate that JBK-75 and Incoloy 903 showed satisfactory combinations of strength and toughness for ICCS tube use requiring long Nb/sub 3/Sn-reaction heat treatments. Incoloy 905 welds and 909 showed unacceptable fracture toughness. Results are discussed in terms of microstructural changes caused by the extended Nb/sub 3/Sn-reaction heat treatment.
Date: July 30, 1985
Creator: Summers, L.T. & Dalder, E.N.C.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Rationale and Methodology for Argonne-Conducted Reviews of Site Characterization Programs (open access)

Radioactive Waste Isolation in Salt: Rationale and Methodology for Argonne-Conducted Reviews of Site Characterization Programs

Both regulatory and technical concerns must be addressed in Argonne-conducted peer reviews of site characterization programs for individual sites for a high-level radioactive waste repository in salt. This report describes the regulatory framework within which reviews must be conducted and presents background information on the structure and purpose of site characterization programs as found in US Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) Regulatory Guide 4.17 and Title 10, Part 60, of the Code of Federal Regulations. It also presents a methodology to assist reviewers in addressing technical concerns relating to their respective areas of expertise. The methodology concentrates on elements of prime importance to the US Department of Energy's advocacy of a given salt repository system during the NRC licensing process. Instructions are given for reviewing 12 site characterization program elements, starting with performance objectives, performance issues, and levels of performance of repository subsystem components; progressing through performance assessment; and ending with plans for data acquisition and evaluation. The success of a site characterization program in resolving repository performance issues will be determined by judging the likelihood that the proposed data acquisition activities will reduce uncertainties in the performance predictions. 8 refs., 3 figs., 5 tabs.
Date: July 1, 1985
Creator: Harrison, W.; Ditmars, J. D.; Tisue, M. W.; Hambley, D. F.; Fenster, D. F. & Rote, D. M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
One Dimensional Polaron Effects and Current Inhomogeneities in Sequential Phonon Emission (open access)

One Dimensional Polaron Effects and Current Inhomogeneities in Sequential Phonon Emission

We have constructed a physical model to explain the tunneling current oscillations reported by Hickmott et al., for GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures in high magnetic fields. We propose that the periodic structure observed is due to space charge which builds up in the undepleted layer when electrons enter it with energy just below the phonon emission threshold. Such electrons interact with the lattice to form polarons whose energy is pinned to the phonon energy, and thus has a very small group velocity. The polaron effect is strongly enhanced by the confinement of the electrons by the strong magnetic field. We infer from the current-voltage data that most of the tunneling current flows through a small area of the sample. The combined model gives reasonable quantitative agreement with experiment. 6 refs., 6 figs.
Date: July 1985
Creator: Hellman, E. S.; Harris, J. S.; Hanna, C. & Laughlin, R. B.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library