FCC Record, Volume 17, No. 18, Pages 12450 to 13281, June 28 - July 5, 2002 (open access)

FCC Record, Volume 17, No. 18, Pages 12450 to 13281, June 28 - July 5, 2002

Biweekly, comprehensive compilation of decisions, reports, public notices, and other documents of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
Date: July 2002
Creator: United States. Federal Communications Commission.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FCC Record, Volume 17, No. 19, Pages 13282 to 14153, July 8 - July 19, 2002 (open access)

FCC Record, Volume 17, No. 19, Pages 13282 to 14153, July 8 - July 19, 2002

Biweekly, comprehensive compilation of decisions, reports, public notices, and other documents of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission.
Date: July 2002
Creator: United States. Federal Communications Commission.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Measurement of Simulated Waste Glass Viscosity (open access)

Measurement of Simulated Waste Glass Viscosity

A new high-temperature glass viscometer instrument was established and evaluated using a simulated waste glass in a comparative test with eight other laboratories and viscometers. The unit has distinct advantages in physical size, the amount of glass required for testing, and the simplicity of operation. These advantages can be important for work with radioactive materials. Results from the comparison indicate excellent accuracy and repeatability.
Date: July 10, 2002
Creator: Schumacher, R. F.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Web Services Data Analysis Grid (open access)

A Web Services Data Analysis Grid

The trend in large-scale scientific data analysis is to exploit compute, storage and other resources located at multiple sites, and to make those resources accessible to the scientist as if they were a single, coherent system. Web technologies driven by the huge and rapidly growing electronic commerce industry provide valuable components to speed the deployment of such sophisticated systems. Jefferson Lab, where several hundred terabytes of experimental data are acquired each year, is in the process of developing a web-based distributed system for data analysis and management. The essential aspects of this system are a distributed data grid (site independent access to experiment, simulation and model data) and a distributed batch system, augmented with various supervisory and management capabilities, and integrated using Java and XML-based web services.
Date: July 2002
Creator: Watson, William A., III; Bird, Ian; Chen, Jie; Hess, Bryan; Kowalski, Andy & Chen, Ying
System: The UNT Digital Library
Storage Manager and File Transfer Web Services (open access)

Storage Manager and File Transfer Web Services

Web services are emerging as an interesting mechanism for a wide range of grid services, particularly those focused upon information services and control. When coupled with efficient data transfer services, they provide a powerful mechanism for building a flexible, open, extensible data grid for science applications. In this paper we present our prototype work on a Java Storage Resource Manager (JSRM) web service and a Java Reliable File Transfer (JRFT) web service. A java client (Grid File Manager) on top of JSRM and is developed to demonstrate the capabilities of these web services. The purpose of this work is to show the extent to which SOAP based web services are an appropriate direction for building a grid-wide data management system, and eventually grid-based portals.
Date: July 2002
Creator: Watson, William A., III; Chen, Ying; Chen, Jie & Akers, Walt
System: The UNT Digital Library
Signaling to the P53 Tumor Suppressor Through Pathways Activated by Genotoxic and Non-Genotoxic Stresses. (open access)

Signaling to the P53 Tumor Suppressor Through Pathways Activated by Genotoxic and Non-Genotoxic Stresses.

The p53 tumor suppressor is a tetrameric transcription factor that is post-translational modified at {approx}18 different sites by phosphorylation, acetylation, or sumoylation in response to various cellular stress conditions. Specific posttranslational modifications, or groups of modifications, that result from the activation of different stress-induced signaling pathways are thought to modulate p53 activity to regulate cell fate by inducing cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, or cellular senescence. Here we review the posttranslational modifications to p53 and the pathways that produce them in response to both genotoxic and non-genotoxic stresses.
Date: July 1, 2002
Creator: Anderson, C. W. & Appella, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library