Resource Type

Hydrogeologic characterization of the cretaceous-tertiary Coastal Plain sequence at the Savannah River Site (open access)

Hydrogeologic characterization of the cretaceous-tertiary Coastal Plain sequence at the Savannah River Site

Several hydrostratigraphic classification schemes have been devised to describe the hydrogeology at the Savannah River Site SRS. Central to these schemes is the one-to-one fixed relationship between the hydrostratigraphic units and the lithostratigraphic units currently favored for the Site. This fixed relationship has proven difficult to apply in studies of widely separated locations at the Site due to the various facies observed in the updip Coastal Plain sequence. A detailed analysis and synthesis of the geophysical, core, and hydrologic data available from more than 164 deep wells from 23 cluster locations both on the Site and in the surrounding region was conducted to provide the basis for a hydrostratigraphic classification scheme which could be applied to the entire SRS region. As a result, an interim hydrostratigraphic classification was developed that defines the regional hydrogeologic characteristics of the aquifers underlying the Site (Aadland et al., 1990). The hydrostratigraphic code accounts for and accommodates the rapid lateral variation in lithofacies observed in the region, and eliminates all formal'' connection between the hydrostratigraphic nomenclature and the lithostratigraphic nomenclature. The code is robust and can be made as detailed as is needed to characterize the aquifer units and aquifer zones described in Site-specific studies. …
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Aadland, R. K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lithological and hydrological characteristics of the tertiary hydrostratigraphic systems of the general separations area at the Savannah River Site (open access)

Lithological and hydrological characteristics of the tertiary hydrostratigraphic systems of the general separations area at the Savannah River Site

The General Separations Area (GSA) is an approximately 15-square-mile area near the geographic center of the Savannah River Site (SRS). The SRS is located in the Upper Atlantic Coastal Plain physiographic province of South Carolina on the Aiken Plateau at an elevation of approximately 300 feet above mean sea level. The sedimentary sequence of the GSA comprises unconsolidated sediments ranging in age from Cretaceous to Holocene with isolated zones of consolidated sediments. The Tertiary sediments are composed of sand, silt, clay, and calcareous materials of varying composition. The alpha-numeric hydrostratigraphic nomenclature proposed by Aadland (1990) is used herein. The Tertiary-age lithostratigraphic sequence at the GSA is composed predominantly of terrigenous clastics interspersed with carbonate-rich clastics and limestones. The calcareous lithologies are discontinuous and divided into a lower and upper zone. 15 refs., 2 figs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Aadland, R.K. (Westinghouse Savannah River Co., Aiken, SC (USA)); Harris, M.K. & Westbrook, T.M. (Dames and Moore, Atlanta, GA (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of intermittency in e sup + e sup minus annihilations at 29 GeV (open access)

Study of intermittency in e sup + e sup minus annihilations at 29 GeV

Charged particle multiplicity distributions from e{sup +}e{sup {minus}} annihilations at 29 GeV have been analyzed in selected rapidity and azimuthal angle intervals. The data were taken with the High Resolution Spectrometer at PEP. The factorial moments of the multiplicity distributions increase as the rapidity interval is decreased, the so-called intermittency phenomenon. These direct measurements of the moments agree with values derived from negative binomial fits to our multiplicity distributions in various central rapidity windows. The factorial moments are also given for the distribution in azimuthal angle around the beam direction and for the two-dimensional distribution in rapidity and azimuthal angle around the jet directions.
Date: June 15, 1990
Creator: Abachi, S.; Derrick, M.; Kooijman, P.; Musgrave, B.; Price, L.; Repond, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Soviet-American gallium experiment at Baksan (open access)

The Soviet-American gallium experiment at Baksan

A gallium solar neutrino detector is sensitive to the full range of the solar neutrino spectrum, including the low-energy neutrinos from the fundamental proton-proton fusion reaction. If neutrino oscillations in the solar interior are responsible for the suppressed {sup 8}B flux measured by the Homestake {sup 37}Cl experiment and the Kamiokande water Cherenkov detector, then a comparison of the gallium, chlorine, and water results may make possible a determination of the neutrino mass difference and mixing angle. A 30-ton gallium detector is currently operating in the Baksan laboratory in the Soviet Union, with a ratio of expected solar signal to measured background (during the first one to two {sup 71}Ge half lives) of approximately one. 28 refs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Abazov, A. I.; Abdurashitov, D. N.; Anosov, O. L.; Danshin, S. N.; Eroshkina, L. A.; Faizov, E. L. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
First Results From the Soviet-American Gallium Experiment (open access)

First Results From the Soviet-American Gallium Experiment

The Soviet-American Gallium Experiment is the first experiment able to measure the dominant flux of low energy p-p solar neutrinos. Four extractions made during January to May 1990 from 30 tons of gallium have been counted and indicate that the flux is consistent with 0 SNU and is less than 72 SNU (68% CL) and less than 138 SNU (95% CL). This is to be compared with the flux of 132 SNU predicted by the Standard Solar Model. 10 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Abazov, A. I.; Abdurashitov, D. N.; Anosov, O. L.; Eroshkina, L. A.; Faizov, E. L.; Gavrin, V. N. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experience with certifying borated stainless steel as a shipping cask basket material (open access)

Experience with certifying borated stainless steel as a shipping cask basket material

The original cask designs for a cask demonstration project featured fuel baskets constructed of borated stainless steel (bss) as a structural material. The project is intended to demonstrate casks that can be used for both shipping and storing spent nuclear fuel assemblies. The baskets were intended to maintain the fuel assemblies in a subcritical array for both normal and accident conditions. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission, however, judged bss to be unacceptable as a structural material. The cask designs were subsequently modified. The knowledge gained during this cask demonstration project may be applicable to development of bss as a basket material in future cask design. 6 refs., 2 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Abbott, D.G. (EG and G Idaho, Inc., Idaho Falls, ID (USA)) & Nickell, R.E. (Applied Science and Technology, Inc., Poway, CA (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Electrostatic design of the barrel CRID (Cherenkov Ring Imaging Detector) and associated measurements (open access)

Electrostatic design of the barrel CRID (Cherenkov Ring Imaging Detector) and associated measurements

We report on the electrostatic design and related measurements of the barrel Cherenkov Ring Imaging Detector for the Stanford Large Detector experiment at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Linear Collider. We include test results of photon feedback in TMAE-laden gas, distortion measurements in the drift boxes and corona measurements. 13 refs., 21 figs.
Date: April 1, 1990
Creator: Abe, K.; Hasegawa, K.; Suekane, F.; Yuta, H. (Tohoku Univ., Sendai (Japan). Dept. of Physics); Antilogus, P.; Aston, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Elucidation of fundamental properties of helium in metals by nuclear magnetic resonance techniques (open access)

Elucidation of fundamental properties of helium in metals by nuclear magnetic resonance techniques

The nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) properties of very high density {sup 3}He in metals are discussed in the context of the corresponding properties in relatively high density bulk {sup 3}He. In particular, the effects of the {sup 3}He diffusion on the contribution of the {sup 3}He-{sup 3}He dipolar interaction to the lineshape and to the spin-lattice relaxation parameter (T{sub 1}) are described. It is shown that the temperature dependence of the lineshape and of T{sub 1} are independent sources of information about helium density and also about helium diffusivity. Moreover, T{sub 1} is shown to be a sensitive indicator of melting transitions in bulk {sup 3}He. Palladium tritide is presented as a model system for NMR studies of {sup 3}He in metals. Experimental NMR studies of this system reveal behavior analogous to what has been observed for bulk helium. Evidence for a {sup 3}He phase transition near 250 K is provided by the temperature dependence of T{sub 1}. Assuming this to be a melting transition, a density is obtained from the bulk helium EOS that is in good agreement with theory and with swelling measurements on related metal tritides. {sup 3}He NMR measurements have also provided information about the density …
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Abell, G.C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Geochemistry of Salado Formation brines recovered from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) repository (open access)

Geochemistry of Salado Formation brines recovered from the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) repository

Intergranular brines recovered from the repository horizon of the Waste Isolation Pilot Plant (WIPP) have major- and trace-element compositions that reflect seawater evaporation and diagenetic processes. Brines obtained from repository drill holes are heterogenous with respect to composition, but their compositional fields are distinct from those obtained from fluid inclusions in WIPP halite. The heterogeneity of brine compositions within the drill-hole population indicates a lack of mixing and fluid homogenization within the salt at the repository level. Compositional differences between intergranular (drill hole) and intragranular (fluid inclusions) brines is attributed to isolation of the latter from diagenetic fluids that were produced from dehydration reactions involving gypsum and clay minerals. Modeling of brine-rock equilibria indicates that equilibration with evaporite minerals controls the concentrations of major elements in the brine. Drill-hole brines are in equilibrium with the observed repository minerals halite, anhydrite, magnesite, polyhalite and quartz. The equilibrium model supports the derivation of drill-hole brines from near-field fluid, rather than large-scale vertical migration of fluids from the overlying Rustler or underlying Castile Formations. 13 refs., 6 figs., 6 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Abitz, R.; Myers, J.; Drez, P. & Deal, D.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrogeochemical investigations in support of well logging operations at the Zunil geothermal field, Guatemala (open access)

Hydrogeochemical investigations in support of well logging operations at the Zunil geothermal field, Guatemala

A suite of 41 thermal and nonthermal waters in the Zunil-Quetzaltenango region, Guatemala, were collected as part of a well logging operation conducted by the Instituto Nacional de Electrificacion (INDE) and Los Alamos National Laboratory. Both in situ and weirbox samples were collected in the Zunil geothermal field. The various data suggest that the reservoir at Zunil is geochemically inhomogeneous. Stable isotope data suggest recharge to the field comes primarily from the north and east whereas tritium data indicate that the reservoir waters may be 500 to 7500 years old. 14 refs., 4 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Adams, A.; Golf, F.; Trujillo, P. E., Jr.; Counce, D.; Archuleta, J.; Dennis, B. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)) et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of plasma shield technology to the reduction, treatment, and disposal of hazardous organic and/or mixed wastes with actinide recovery (open access)

Application of plasma shield technology to the reduction, treatment, and disposal of hazardous organic and/or mixed wastes with actinide recovery

Los Alamos research activities are currently directed at the application of the shielded hydrogen plasma torch to the direct production of actinide metals from a UF{sub 6} feedstock. Two broad classes of thermal plasma reactors are currently in widespread use: the direct current (dc) arc jet system and the radio frequency (rf) inductively coupled system. Los Alamos has improved upon the basic rf plasma tube design using the concept of a transformer. The unique feature of the Los Alamos tube is a segmented, cooled, internal radiation shield. The Los Alamos shielded plasma torch routinely achieves temperatures exceeding 10,000 K and electron densities of 10{sup 16}/cm{sup 3} when operated continuously at one atmosphere of argon. These highly energetic conditions are sufficient to dissociate most chemical compounds into their constituent atoms. Based upon these characteristics, Los Alamos is currently investigating the application of the shielded plasma torch technology to the destruction of organic and mixed hazardous wastes, as well as the direct production of actinide metals from the halides and oxides, without the cogeneration of contaminated wastes. 5 refs., 4 figs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Adams, B. Todd; Vaughan, Larry L.; Joyce, Edward L., Jr. & Bieniewski, Thomas M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Procurement of a fully licensed radioisotope thermoelectric generator transportation system (open access)

Procurement of a fully licensed radioisotope thermoelectric generator transportation system

A fully licensed transportation system for Radioisotope Thermoelectric Generators and Light-Weight Radioisotope Heater Units is currently being designed and built. The system will comply with all applicable US Department of Transportation regulations without the use of a DOE Alternative.'' The US Department of Transportation has special double containment'' requirements for plutonium. The system packaging uses a doubly contained bell jar'' concept. A refrigerated trailer is used for cooling the high-heat payloads. The same packaging is used for both high- and low-heat payloads. The system is scheduled to be available for use by mid-1992. 4 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.
Date: October 1, 1990
Creator: Adkins, H. E. & Bearden, T. E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Application of neural nets to system identification and bifurcation analysis of real world experimental data (open access)

Application of neural nets to system identification and bifurcation analysis of real world experimental data

We report results on the use of neural nets, and the closely related radial basis nets'', to analyze experimental time series from electro-chemical systems. We show how the nets may be used to derive a map that describes the nonlinear system, and how reserving an extra input line'' of the network allows one to learn the system behavior dependent on a control variable. Pruning'' of the network after training appears to result in elimination of spurious connection weights and enhanced predictive accuracy. Subsequent analysis of the learned map using techniques of bifurcation theory allows both nonlinear system identification and accurate and efficient predictions of long-term system behavior. The electrochemical system that was used involved the electrodissolution of copper in phosphoric acid. This system exhibits interesting low dimensional dynamics such transitions from steady state to oscillatory behavior and from period-one to period-two oscillations. This analysis provides an example of methodology that can be fruitful in understanding systems for which no adequate phenomenological model exists, or for which predictions of system behavior given a large scale, complicated model is inherently impractical. 17 refs., 2 figs.
Date: February 1, 1990
Creator: Adomaitis, R.A.; Kevrekidis, I.G. (Princeton Univ., NJ (USA). Dept. of Chemical Engineering); Farber, R.M.; Lapedes, A.S. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)); Hudson, J.L. & Kube, M. (Virginia Univ., Charlottesville, VA (USA). Dept. of Chemical Engineering)
System: The UNT Digital Library
A pipelined IC architecture for radon transform computations in a multiprocessor array (open access)

A pipelined IC architecture for radon transform computations in a multiprocessor array

The amount of data generated by CT scanners is enormous, making the reconstruction operation slow, especially for 3-D and limited-data scans requiring iterative algorithms. The Radon transform and its inverse, commonly used for CT image reconstruction from projections, are computationally burdensome for today's single-processor computer architectures. If the processing times for the forward and inverse Radon transforms were comparatively small, a large set of new CT algorithms would become feasible, especially those for 3-D and iterative tomographic image reconstructions. In addition to image reconstruction, a fast Radon Transform Computer'' could be naturally applied in other areas of multidimensional signal processing including 2-D power spectrum estimation, modeling of human perception, Hough transforms, image representation, synthetic aperture radar processing, and others. A high speed processor for this operation is likely to motivate new algorithms for general multidimensional signal processing using the Radon transform. In the proposed workshop paper, we will first describe interpolation schemes useful in computation of the discrete Radon transform and backprojection and compare their errors and hardware complexities. We then will evaluate through statistical means the fixed-point number system required to accept and generate 12-bit input and output data with acceptable error using the linear interpolation scheme selected. These …
Date: May 25, 1990
Creator: Agi, I.; Hurst, P.J. & Current, K.W. (California Univ., Davis, CA (USA). Dept. of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radiative heat transfer in PC (pulverized coal) furnaces burning deeply cleaned coals (open access)

Radiative heat transfer in PC (pulverized coal) furnaces burning deeply cleaned coals

A three-dimensional spectral radiation transport model has been developed for assessing the impact of burning deeply cleaned coals on heat absorption patterns in pulverized coal (PC) furnaces. Spectroscopic data are used for calculating the absorption coefficients of participating gases. Mie theory is invoked for determining the extinction and scattering efficiencies of combustion particulates. The optical constants of char, ash and soot are obtained from dispersion relations derived from reflectivity, transmissivity and extinction measurements. 8 refs., 2 figs., 3 tabs.
Date: May 1, 1990
Creator: Ahluwalia, R. K. & Im, K. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Nuclear Spectroscopy With Si PIN Diode Detectors at Room Temperature (open access)

Nuclear Spectroscopy With Si PIN Diode Detectors at Room Temperature

The characteristics of PIN diodes have been determined. These diodes have lower leakage currents and noise than other types of Si radiation detectors. The energy resolutions (FWHM) of a 1 cm{sup 2} {times} 0.5 mm PIN diode measured with a pulser, 122.0 keV gamma rays, 193 keV electrons, and 5.5-MeV alpha particles were 2.6, 2.8, 2.9, and 11.0 keV, respectively. For a 6 mm {times} 6 mm {times} 0.2 mm PIN diode, the resolutions (FWHM) for a pulser, 60 keV {gamma}-rays, 193 keV electrons, and 5.5-MeV, {alpha}-particles were 2.1, 2.2, 2.4, and 10.8 keV, respectively. 11 refs., 5 figs., 1 tab.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Ahmad, I.; Betts, R. R.; Happ, T.; Henderson, D. J.; Wolfs, F. L. H. & Wuosmaa, A. H.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Single particle states in the heaviest known nuclei (open access)

Single particle states in the heaviest known nuclei

Neutron single-particle states above the N=152 subshell have been studied by high-resolution (d,p) reaction on a {sup 250}Cf target. All of the orbitals between N=152 and N=164 subshells have been identified. A tentative assignment has been made for the 1/2-(750) Nilsson state. 10 refs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Ahmad, I.; Chasman, R.R.; Friedman, A.M. (Argonne National Lab., IL (USA)) & Yates, S.W. (Kentucky Univ., Lexington, KY (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal-hydraulic model of a solid-oxide fuel cell. [17. 5 watts] (open access)

Thermal-hydraulic model of a solid-oxide fuel cell. [17. 5 watts]

A mathematical model has been developed to simulate the electrochemistry and thermal hydraulics in a monolithic solid oxide fuel cell (MSOFC). Dividing a single cell layer into a number of nodes, the model sets up the steady-state heat and mass transfer equations for each node in a cell layer. Based on the average thermal and compositional conditions at each node and a specified cell voltage, the model calculates the Nernst potential and the resultant current, heat generation, and heat removal rates at each node. These calculations yield the temperature and the fuel and oxidant compositions and partial pressure matrices for the entire cell. The simulation also provides related performance data for the fuel cell stack, such as energy efficiency, fuel utilization, and power density. The model can be used to simulate operation with different fuel gases, such as hydrogen, coal gas, and methanol reformate. A mathematical model such as this can be used to examine the effects of changing one or more of the various design variables and to evaluate the effectiveness of fabrication improvements in technology development. In the design phase, the model can be used to determine the size of the stack that will be required for a …
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Ahmed, S. & Kumar, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Preliminary results from E665 on cross-section ratios at low x sub bj using H sub 2 , D sub 2 and Xe targets (open access)

Preliminary results from E665 on cross-section ratios at low x sub bj using H sub 2 , D sub 2 and Xe targets

Fermilab experiment 665 has taken deep-inelastic muon scattering data at a beam energy of 490 GeV/c, on H{sub 2}, D{sub 2} and Xe targets. Two triggers have been used: a large scattering-angle trigger (LAT), sensitive to a minimum scattering angle of 3 mrad, and a small scattering-angle trigger which can accept a scattering angle down to 0.5 mrad. The neutron to proton ratio is reported for x{sub bj} above 0.002, and it shows consistency with 1 as x{sub bj} goes to 0. The Xe to D{sub 3} cross-section ratio is reported for x{sub bj} above 0.001 and it shows evidence of shadowing. 5 refs., 5 figs.
Date: June 1, 1990
Creator: Aied, S. (Maryland Univ., College Park, MD (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library
Performance of the D0 end calorimeter electromagnetic module (open access)

Performance of the D0 end calorimeter electromagnetic module

We have constructed a uranium liquid argon calorimeter which serves as the end calorimeter electromagnetic module for the DO experiment at Fermilab. We present details of the construction and the results of the tests made using electron beams ranging from 10 GeV to 150 GeV. We find the energy resolution is 15.5%/{radical}E(GeV) with a small constant term of {approximately}0.5% and the response is linear to better than {plus minus}0.5%. 5 refs., 7 figs.
Date: October 1, 1990
Creator: Aihara, Hiroaki.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Noninvasive studies of human visual cortex using neuromagnetic techniques (open access)

Noninvasive studies of human visual cortex using neuromagnetic techniques

The major goals of noninvasive studies of the human visual cortex are: to increase knowledge of the functional organization of cortical visual pathways; and to develop noninvasive clinical tests for the assessment of cortical function. Noninvasive techniques suitable for studies of the structure and function of human visual cortex include magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), positron emission tomography (PET), single photon emission tomography (SPECT), scalp recorded event-related potentials (ERPs), and event-related magnetic fields (ERFs). The primary challenge faced by noninvasive functional measures is to optimize the spatial and temporal resolution of the measurement and analytic techniques in order to effectively characterize the spatial and temporal variations in patterns of neuronal activity. In this paper we review the use of neuromagnetic techniques for this purpose. 8 refs., 3 figs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Aine, C. J.; George, J. S.; Supek, S. (Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)) & Maclin, E. L. (Veterans Administration Medical Center, Albuquerque, NM (USA). Center for Magnetoencephalography)
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flaw Assessment Procedure for High Temperature Reactor Components (open access)

Flaw Assessment Procedure for High Temperature Reactor Components

An interim high-temperature flaw assessment procedure is described. This is a result of a collaborative effort between Electric Power Research Institute in the USA, Central Research Institute of Electric Power Industry in Japan, and Nuclear Electric plc in the UK. The procedure addresses preexisting defects subject to creep-fatigue loading conditions. Laws employed to calculate the crack growth per cycle are defined in terms of fracture mechanics parameters and constants related to the component material. The crack growth laws may be integrated to calculate the remaining life of a component or to predict the amount of crack extension in a given period. Fatigue and creep crack growth per cycle are calculated separately, and the total crack extension is taken as the simple sum of the two contributions. An interaction between the two propagation modes is accounted for in the material properties in the separate calculations. In producing the procedure, limitations of the approach have been identified. Some of these limitations are to be addressed in an extension of the current collaborative program. 20 refs.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Ainsworth, R. A.; Ruggles, M. B. & Takahashi, Y.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The role of soft (metallic) film in tribological behavior of ceramic materials (open access)

The role of soft (metallic) film in tribological behavior of ceramic materials

The friction coefficient and wear rate in structural ceramic materials are often too high to make them attractive for applications requiring dry sliding. The role of a thin soft silver film in improving the tribological characteristics of silicon nitride materials is investigated in this study. In a pin-on-disc contact configuration in reciprocating motion, the friction coefficient was reduced by about 50% and the wear rate by one to two orders of magnitude. The friction reduction is thought to be due to the reduction of the contact interface shear strength by the presence of the soft film. The wear rate reduction is likely due to modification of the contact stresses by the film. Combined, these two factors lead to a decrease in the magnitude of the damaging tensile stresses. The durability and thus the effectiveness of the film is very dependent on the bond strength (i.e., adhesion strength) between the film and the substrate. 21 refs., 4 figs., 1 tab.
Date: January 1, 1990
Creator: Ajayi, O.O.; Erdemir, A.; Erck, R.A.; Fenske, G.R. & Nichols, F.A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
ASSESS (Analytic System and Software for Evaluating Safeguards and Security) update: Current status and future developments (open access)

ASSESS (Analytic System and Software for Evaluating Safeguards and Security) update: Current status and future developments

The Analytic System and Software for Evaluating Safeguards and Security (ASSESS) has been released for use by DOE field offices and their contractors. In October, 1989, we offered a prototype workshop to selected representatives of the DOE community. Based on the prototype results, we held the first training workshop at the Central Training Academy in January, 1990. Four additional workshops are scheduled for FY 1990. ASSESS is a state-of-the-art analytical tool for management to conduct integrated evaluation of safeguards systems at facilities handling facilities. Currently, ASSESS focuses on the threat of theft/diversion of special nuclear material by insiders, outsiders, and a special form of insider/outsider collusion. ASSESS also includes a neutralization module. Development of the tool is continuing. Plans are underway to expand the capabilities of ASSESS to evaluate against violent insiders, to validate the databases, to expand the neutralization module, and to assist in demonstrating compliance with DOE Material Control and Accountability (MC A) Order 5633.3. These new capabilities include the ability to: compute a weighted average for performance capability against a spectrum of insider adversaries; conduct defense-in-depth analyses; and analyze against protracted theft scenarios. As they become available, these capabilities will be incorporated in our training program. ASSESS …
Date: July 15, 1990
Creator: Al-Ayat, R.A. (Lawrence Livermore National Lab., CA (USA)); Cousins, T.D. (USDOE, Washington, DC (USA)) & Hoover, E.R. (Sandia National Labs., Albuquerque, NM (USA))
System: The UNT Digital Library