Degree Level

Proton Beam Current Measurement in the Low K.E.V. Range (open access)

Proton Beam Current Measurement in the Low K.E.V. Range

Secondary charge effects from a 10 kilovolt proton beam and their effect upon beam current measurement are investigated. A collector is designed for beam current metering of a 60 kilovolt proton beam by means of charge measurement and energy measurement.
Date: June 5, 1951
Creator: Fairbrother, Forrest, Jr.
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion Exchange Experiments with Polonium (open access)

Ion Exchange Experiments with Polonium

The state of polonium in aqueous solutions was investigated by means of ion exchange equilibrium studies. The distribution of the polonium between the solid and liquid phases was determined for solutions of various compositions using both a cation and an anion exchanges. These studies show that in the absence of a complexing agent polonium is hydrolyzed to such a degree that it forms monovalent cations and anions whose charge was not investigated in this study.
Date: May 11, 1951
Creator: Tompkins, Edward R.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photonuclear Stars in Emulsions (open access)

Photonuclear Stars in Emulsions

Ilford type C-2 nuclear research emulsions were exposed in the x-ray beam from the Berkeley synchrotron at four synchrotron energies. The relative yields of the photo-produced nuclear stars were determined as a function of synchrotron energy and prong number.
Date: January 12, 1951
Creator: Miller, Richard Dean
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Low Voltage Ion Source (open access)

A Low Voltage Ion Source

Describes the investigation of a particular method of extracting ions from an arc. Experimental results of a low extraction voltage ion source are given in some detail.
Date: July 12, 1951
Creator: Foster, J. S., (John Stuart), 1890-1964 & Martina, Eugene F.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of Shielding for Mark II Accelerator (open access)

Calculation of Shielding for Mark II Accelerator

The proper roof thickness to correspond with a given side wall thickness has been estimated fro experience with the 184 feet cyclotron, which has indicated that a roof of about 1 1/2 feet should accompany a wall of 5 feet, and a roof of 4 feet should accompany a wall of 15 feet. For the roof area involved, this should bring about the condition that down-scattered neutrons in the working areas are but a small fraction of the neutrons coming through the side walls.
Date: June 30, 1951
Creator: Moyer, B. J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Complex Ions of Lanthanum in Aqueous Solutions (open access)

Complex Ions of Lanthanum in Aqueous Solutions

The complexing of lanthanum by various anions and weak acids was investigated by observing the light absorption of the complex formed with thenoyltrifluoracetone (TTA). This species showed the properties needed for a satisfactory specgtrophotometric method of analysis.
Date: August 1, 1951
Creator: Mattern, Kenneth Lawrence
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Production of Pi-Mesons in Lead by High Energy Proton Bombardment (open access)

Production of Pi-Mesons in Lead by High Energy Proton Bombardment

Our knowledge of the properties of mesons and their interactions with nuclei has come from two sources. Studies of cosmic ray phenomena provided the earliest information. The discovery that mesons may be produced artificially by bombardment of nuclei with radiations from high energy accelerators has, on the other hand, made it feasible to undertake a wide variety of investigations under more controlled conditions than is possible in cosmic ray experiments. In such experiments mesons have been produced by high-energy protons, alpha-particles and neutrons.
Date: January 10, 1950
Creator: Weissbluth, Mitchel
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Distribution of the Positive-Negative Ratio for Mesons (open access)

The Distribution of the Positive-Negative Ratio for Mesons

Positive and negative mesons produced in a common target in the cyclotron are received in two photographic plates. In the magnetic field of the cyclotron, negatives are deflected to one plate, positives to the other. The mesons must pass through an absorber before entering the plates in order to be observable.
Date: December 14, 1949
Creator: Rankin, Bayard, 1924-
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal Conductivity of Metal Interfaces (open access)

Thermal Conductivity of Metal Interfaces

The coefficients of thermal conductivity of aluminum-bismuth metal-to-metal bonds, and of aluminum and bismuth surfaces in contact under pressure, were measured.
Date: November 30, 1950
Creator: Heckman, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Total Neutron Yield Measurements (open access)

Recent Total Neutron Yield Measurements

The report summarizes results obtained since September, 1951, by total neutron yield experiments using 190 Mev deuterons and the MnSo4 tank method (UCRL-1375 and UCRL-1480). A new method of beam monitoring has resulted in establishing firmly the absolute yield for solid uranium and thorium primary targets backed by a solid uranium secondary. The beam monitoring was done by using a primary target built into a faraday cup. This method circumvents errors caused by recombination in the ionization chambers used previously.
Date: January 21, 1951
Creator: Crandall, W. & Millburn, G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Summary of the Research Progress Meeting (open access)

Summary of the Research Progress Meeting

Technical report includes three reports of research progress: 1)Neutron scattering by A. Bratenahl; 2) Nuclear Cross Sections, Norman Knable.
Date: May 27, 1948
Creator: Wakerling, R. K.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chemistry Division Quarterly Report: September, October, November, 1950 (open access)

Chemistry Division Quarterly Report: September, October, November, 1950

Quarterly progress report on various research projects conducted at the University of California Radiation Laboratory
Date: January 3, 1951
Creator: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Effect of Gases on the Wetting of Steels by Liquid Bismuth (open access)

The Effect of Gases on the Wetting of Steels by Liquid Bismuth

The effect of air, nitrogen, helium, argon, and a mixture of twenty volume percent of hydrogen in argon on the wetting of a stainless steel (Type 446), a two percent chromium-one half percent molybdenum type steel, and a plain carbon type steel by liquid bismuth was investigated
Date: January 17, 1951
Creator: Heckman, R. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Code Listings for the Floss III - Compatible Programs Including Floss Type 3 and Type 12, Nomac, and Dash N (open access)

Code Listings for the Floss III - Compatible Programs Including Floss Type 3 and Type 12, Nomac, and Dash N

FLOSS III is a third-generation version of a digital computer program which solves a one-dimensional difference representation of the momentum, energy, continuity, and state equations for turbulent, compressible gas flow in equivalent hydraulic channels. Extensive use of this program has been employed in the design and performance analyses of Pluto-type nuclear heat exchangers, and in the specific case of the Tory II-A test series, agreement was obtained to better than 5% for all experimentally measured parameters. The NOMAC and DASH-N programs combine the effects of up to thirty varieties of channels with the dependent boundary conditions imposed by a common inlet diffuser and exit nozzle. The resulting calculations yield performance information for blow-down facility and ramjet flight condition application of the heat exchanger.
Date: August 9, 1963
Creator: Mintz, Michael D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Test and Evaluation of Large Magnetic Tape-Wound Cores Used in the Astron Accelerator (open access)

Test and Evaluation of Large Magnetic Tape-Wound Cores Used in the Astron Accelerator

Project Sherwood is a nation-wide attempt to produce a controlled thermo-nuclear fusion reaction. The Astron experiment, conceived by Nicholas Christofilos, will utilize the effects of a cylindrical layer of relativistic electrons to contain and heat the plasma. A high quality, 200-ampere, 5-Me V electron beam is required to form the electron layer. The electron beam is produced by a linear induction electron accelerator. Three hundred and thirty-three toroidal cores of magnetic material surround an evacuated ceramic accelerating column. The electrons are accelerated by the transverse electric field produced by the changing flux. The magnetic cores are tape-wound toroids of .001", 50% Ni - 50% Fe. Two hundred eighty-eight cores are 24" o.d. x 8-1/2" i. d. x 1/2" thick and the remaining forty-five are 33" o. d. x 18" i. d. x 1/2" thick. Each core is required to support 16 kG for 0.4 psec. The choice of magnetic material was made by testing all available material for the required parameters. Results of these tests are presented.
Date: October 15, 1963
Creator: Sewell, Roger L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cosmic Rays From Large Supernovae (open access)

Cosmic Rays From Large Supernovae

The theory of the hydrodynamic origin of cosmic rays proposed by Johnson and the author (Colgate) has developed to the point where the final evolution of a star to the supernova instability and subsequent explosion can be described with sufficient detail such that cosmic rays with appropriate intensity, composition, and spectrum to account for observations are a logical and necessary result. In the first publication it was pointed out that nuclei in the surface of the star may acquire many orders or magnitude more than the average energy per particle released in the explosion because of the large ratio of matter density between the core and the outer mantle. A shock from a sudden pressure increase in the core intensifies as it advances into lower-density material, thereby imparting extreme relativistic energies to the outermost layers. The shock wave was assumed on the basis that the observed explosion occurred in a time short compared to the traversal time of sound across the dimensions of the star. It was argued without proof that an adiabatic process would be inconsistent with the accepted gravitational instability as the trigger mechanism. In an attempt to confirm this supposition we extend the hydrodynamic calculations to describe …
Date: October 21, 1963
Creator: Colgate, S. A. & White, R. H.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Determination of the Nucleon-Nucleon Elastic Scattering Matrix : I. Phase Shift Analysis of Experiments Near 140 MEV (open access)

Determination of the Nucleon-Nucleon Elastic Scattering Matrix : I. Phase Shift Analysis of Experiments Near 140 MEV

A phase shift analysis is an attempt to translate experimental measurements (observables) into well-determined scattering amplitudes, since these are the quantities that can be readily compared with theoretical predictions, In this sense, the phase shift analysis should contain as little theory as possible. The scattering amplitudes (or phase shifts) constitute an experimental statement, and the phase shift analysis should logically be done by the experimental groups who measure the observables.
Date: December 6, 1963
Creator: MacGregor, Malcolm. H. (Malcolm Herbert), 1926-2019; Arndt, R. A. & Dubow, A. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transistorized 10-Mc Decade Scaler (open access)

Transistorized 10-Mc Decade Scaler

This scaler was designed to replace an obsolescent tube design that was in general use at Lawrence Radiation Laboratory in Livermore. The new design, using solid state devices and printed circuit modules, allows two complete scalers in one frame to occupy the same rack space as the tube design. Switches in the input circuits of the new scaler change input impedance and sensitivity for operation with either tube or transistor circuits. The use of transistors has greatly increased reliability, and has also reduced power by a factor of fifteen. Modular construction of all circuits, including the power supply, minimizes down time since all modules are replaceable without removing the scaler from its rack. Reliability, then cost, were the criteria dictating choice of components and circuits in the scaler design.
Date: October 24, 1963
Creator: Van Den Heuvel, C. A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transient Reactor Aerothermodynamics (open access)

Transient Reactor Aerothermodynamics

The transient aerothermodynamic processes in a gas-cooled reactor are described in a simplified manner to illustrate some of the fundamental physical phenomena involved, to provide some approximate but useful methods of analysis, and to aid in the understanding and use of more complex computer solutions. The transient heat balance equation for an element of a single reactor channel is derived in terms of aerothermodynamic time constants, and typical analytic solutions for transients are presented. This equation is used in generating the time-dependent equation for the channel exhaust gas temperature. The single-channel analysis is extended to multiple channels. A method for determining the approximate transient temperature envelopes for various reactor components is presented. The effects of aerodynamic and thermal coupling between different reactor channels are illustrated. Some of the simplifying assumptions are investigated with respect to the conditions under which they are valid.
Date: November 18, 1963
Creator: Rodean, Howard C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preburst Resistance and Temperature of Exploding Wires (open access)

Preburst Resistance and Temperature of Exploding Wires

It has been shown that the time of burst of exploding wires can be predicted from known thermodynamic and electrical properties of the wire materials under some conditions. The mathematical relationships are a set of integrals (transformation time integrals) similar in form to the empirical "action integrals" sometimes used in exploding wire work. This paper discusses the use of the transformation time integrals to calculate the resistance and temperature of a wire as a function of time up to the time of burst and to investigate the effects of environment of the wire on the temperature, resistance, and time of burst.
Date: February 24, 1964
Creator: Maninger, R. C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Excavation Technology (open access)

Nuclear Excavation Technology

Nuclear excavation is the name given to the concept of using large scale nuclear explosion craters for useful projects, such as harbors, canals, and roadway cuts. It is one of the principal applications of the Plowshare Program for industrial, or peaceful, uses of nuclear explosives. Plowshare is sponsored by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission and is under the technical direction of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory at Livermore, California. The purpose of this paper is to describe cratering concepts and the present state of nuclear excavation technology. The general nature of the safety hazards associated with nuclear excavation are also discussed.
Date: February 10, 1964
Creator: Nordyke, Milo D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Class of Shocks With Uniform Pressure (open access)

The Class of Shocks With Uniform Pressure

If a piston with constant velocity moves into a shock tube containing material at rest and at uniform density, the result is well known and trivial. The shock propagates with uniform speed, the state and speed of the material behind the shock is constant. One can ask if similar flows exist for cylindrical of spherical symmetry. Quickly one rules out the possibility of a solution which retains all the properties of this trivial solution. One asks if there are any solutions such that the material behind the shock is not accelerated. Indeed, there are. In the following, it is shown that for a y-law gas, there is a family of densities such that if a piston moves into the material with uniform velocity, the material behind the shock is not accelerated. Further, these are the only densities with this property. In the case of planar symmetry, the trivial case mentioned above is a member of the family, as is to be expected.
Date: December 1963
Creator: Hardy, John W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Contained Nuclear Detonations in Four Media - Geological Factors in Cavity and Chimney Formation (open access)

Contained Nuclear Detonations in Four Media - Geological Factors in Cavity and Chimney Formation

Recent underground nuclear tests conducted by the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission have yielded data on the effects of contained nuclear explosions in four rock mediums: tuff, alluvium, rock salt, and granite. This report presents and compares data obtained primarily through exploratory mining and drilling into the postshot environment of 35 such events.
Date: April 24, 1964
Creator: Boardman, Charles R.; Rabb, David D. & McArthur, Richard D.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Dynamic Method For Mercury Vapor Detector Calibration (open access)

A Dynamic Method For Mercury Vapor Detector Calibration

The calibration of mercury vapor detectors has always posed a problem because of the difficulty of generating known concentrations of mercury vapor in air. The purpose of this study was to design an apparatus that would generate and chemically measure known concentrations of mercury vapor in air for calibration work.
Date: February 21, 1964
Creator: Nelson, Gary O.; Van Sandt, Walter & Barry, Patrick
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library