Texas Attorney General Opinion: GA-0382 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: GA-0382

Document issued by the Office of the Attorney General of Texas in Austin, Texas, providing an interpretation of Texas law. It provides the opinion of the Texas Attorney General, Greg Abbott, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Standards applicable to the State Committee of Examiners in the Fitting and Dispensing of Hearing Instruments in conducting examniations (RQ-0353-GA)
Date: December 3, 2005
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
A20 BRAC Analyst Input Red River Army Depot, TX (open access)

A20 BRAC Analyst Input Red River Army Depot, TX

A20 BRAC Analyst Input Red River Army Depot, TX.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Abstract Proceedings Signal and Image Sciences Workshop 2005 (open access)

Abstract Proceedings Signal and Image Sciences Workshop 2005

None
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Azevedo, S G
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Active Military Sonar and Marine Mammals: Events and References (open access)

Active Military Sonar and Marine Mammals: Events and References

The deployment of active sonar by the U.S. Navy and its potential impacts on marine mammals has been an ongoing issue of intense debate; regulatory, legislative, and judicial activity; and international concern. This report summarizes legal and political events related to active sonar and marine mammals since 1994. This report summarizes some of the more significant recent events pertaining to active military sonar, in particular.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Buck, Eugene H. & Calvert, Kori
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Adaptive Urban Dispersion Integrated Model (open access)

Adaptive Urban Dispersion Integrated Model

Numerical simulations represent a unique predictive tool for understanding the three-dimensional flow fields and associated concentration distributions from contaminant releases in complex urban settings (Britter and Hanna 2003). Utilization of the most accurate urban models, based on fully three-dimensional computational fluid dynamics (CFD) that solve the Navier-Stokes equations with incorporated turbulence models, presents many challenges. We address two in this work; first, a fast but accurate way to incorporate the complex urban terrain, buildings, and other structures to enforce proper boundary conditions in the flow solution; second, ways to achieve a level of computational efficiency that allows the models to be run in an automated fashion such that they may be used for emergency response and event reconstruction applications. We have developed a new integrated urban dispersion modeling capability based on FEM3MP (Gresho and Chan 1998, Chan and Stevens 2000), a CFD model from Lawrence Livermore National Lab. The integrated capability incorporates fast embedded boundary mesh generation for geometrically complex problems and full three-dimensional Cartesian adaptive mesh refinement (AMR). Parallel AMR and embedded boundary gridding support are provided through the SAMRAI library (Wissink et al. 2001, Hornung and Kohn 2002). Embedded boundary mesh generation has been demonstrated to be an …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Wissink, A; Chand, K; Kosovic, B; Chan, S; Berger, M & Chow, F K
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
BRAC Early Bird, November 3, 2005 (open access)

BRAC Early Bird, November 3, 2005

Collection of BRAC related news articles and clippings. Produced for Commission staff review.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Dynamic Response of the Suspension Spans of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (open access)

Dynamic Response of the Suspension Spans of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge

The dynamic response of the suspension spans of the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge (SFOBB) have been numerically modeled in a case-study to investigate the effects of long-period, near-field ground motions on flexible suspension bridges. The structural simulation model used in the study was developed as a special purpose computer program tailored to efficiently simulate the nonlinear response of cable supported bridges. The simulation model includes a number of special element technologies and solution algorithms that enable efficient nonlinear analysis of suspension bridges. The ground motions used in the study were site specific synthetic records for a Mw=7.25 earthquake along the Hayward fault at 12-15 km distant, and actual measured near-field records from the Izmit Turkey (1999) and Chi-Chi Taiwan (1999) earthquakes. These records include near- and far-field broad-band motions for three components. The results of the numerical simulations indicate that low frequency waveforms associated with near-field motions can place a significant demand on the structural systems of suspension bridges, and must be accounted for in suspension bridge analysis and design.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: McCallen, D.; Astaneh-Asl, A.; Larsen, S. & Hutchings, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energetic Consequences of nitrite stress in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, inferred from global transcriptional analysis (open access)

Energetic Consequences of nitrite stress in Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough, inferred from global transcriptional analysis

Many of the proteins that are candidates for bioenergetic pathways involved with sulfate respiration in Desulfovibrio spp. have been studied, but complete pathways and overall cell physiology remain to be resolved for many environmentally relevant conditions. In order to understand the metabolism of these microorganisms under adverse environmental conditions for improved bioremediation efforts, Desulfovibrio vulgaris Hildenborough was used as a model organism to study stress response to nitrite, an important intermediate in the nitrogen cycle. Previous physiological studies demonstrated that growth was inhibited by nitrite and that nitrite reduction was observed to be the primary mechanism of detoxification. Global transcriptional profiling with whole-genome microarrays revealed coordinated cascades of responses to nitrite in pathways of energy metabolism, nitrogen metabolism, oxidative stress response, and iron homeostasis. In agreement with previous observations, nitrite-stressed cells showed a decrease in the expression of genes encoding sulfate reduction functions in addition to respiratory oxidative phosphorylation and ATP synthase activity. Consequently, the stressed cells had decreased expression of the genes encoding ATP-dependent amino acid transporters and proteins involved in translation. Other genes up-regulated in response to nitrite include the genes in the Fur regulon, which is suggested to be involved in iron homeostasis, and genes in the …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: He, Qiang; Huang, Katherine H.; He, Zhili; Alm, Eric J.; Fields, Matthew W.; Hazen, Terry C. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Energy and visual comfort performance of electrochromic windowswith overhangs (open access)

Energy and visual comfort performance of electrochromic windowswith overhangs

DOE-2 building energy simulations were conducted to determine if there were practical architectural and control strategy solutions that would enable electrochromic (EC) windows to significantly improve visual comfort without eroding energy-efficiency benefits. EC windows were combined with overhangs since opaque overhangs provide protection from direct sun which EC windows are unable to do alone. The window wall was divided into an upper and lower aperture so that various combinations of overhang position and control strategies could be considered. The overhang was positioned either at the top of the upper window aperture or between the upper and lower apertures. Overhang depth was varied. EC control strategies were fully bleached at all times, modulated based on incident vertical solar radiation limits, or modulated to meet the design work plane illuminance with daylight. The EC performance was compared to a state-of-the-art spectrally selective low-e window with the same divided window wall, window size, and overhang as the EC configuration. The reference window was also combined with an interior shade which was manually deployed to control glare and direct sun. Both systems had the same daylighting control system to dim the electric lighting. Results were given for south-facing private offices in a typical commercial …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Lee, E.S. & Tavil, A.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Event Reconstruction for Atmospheric Releases Employing Urban Puff Model UDM with Stochastic Inversion Methodology (open access)

Event Reconstruction for Atmospheric Releases Employing Urban Puff Model UDM with Stochastic Inversion Methodology

The rapid identification of contaminant plume sources and their characteristics in urban environments can greatly enhance emergency response efforts. Source identification based on downwind concentration measurements is complicated by the presence of building obstacles that can cause flow diversion and entrainment. While high-resolution computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulations are available for predicting plume evolution in complex urban geometries, such simulations require large computational effort. We make use of an urban puff model, the Defence Science Technology Laboratory's (Dstl) Urban Dispersion Model (UDM), which employs empirically based puff splitting techniques. UDM enables rapid urban dispersion simulations by combining traditional Gaussian puff modeling with empirically deduced mixing and entrainment approximations. Here we demonstrate the preliminary reconstruction of an atmospheric release event using stochastic sampling algorithms and Bayesian inference together with the rapid UDM urban puff model based on point measurements of concentration. We consider source inversions for both a prototype isolated building and for observations and flow conditions taken during the Joint URBAN 2003 field campaign at Oklahoma City. The Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) stochastic sampling method is used to determine likely source term parameters and considers both measurement and forward model errors. It should be noted that the stochastic methodology …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Neuman, S; Glascoe, L; Kosovic, B; Dyer, K; Hanley, W; Nitao, J et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Experimental and Modeling Characterization of PETN Mobilization Mechanisms During Recrystallization at Ambient Conditions (open access)

Experimental and Modeling Characterization of PETN Mobilization Mechanisms During Recrystallization at Ambient Conditions

Experimental measurements suggest that pentaerythritoltetranitrate (PETN) undergoes changes at the molecular level that cause macroscopic changes in the overall PETN powder characteristics over time. These changes have been attributed to the high molecular mobility of PETN, but the underlying mechanism(s) responsible for this redistribution are still uncertain. Two basic approaches have been implemented in the past year to provide insight into the nature of these underlying mechanisms. The first approach is of an experimental nature, utilizing both AFM and evaporation measurements, which address both surface mobility and evaporation. These data include AFM measurements performed at LLNL and evaporation rate measurements performed at Texas Tech. These results are compared to earlier vapor pressure measurements performed at SNL, and estimates of recrystallization time frames are given. The second approach utilizes first-principle calculations and simulations that will be used to compare directly to those experimental quantities measured. We are developing an accurate intermolecular potential for PETN, which via kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulations would mimic real crystallite shapes. Once the basic theory is in place for the growth of single crystallites, we will be in a position to investigate realistic grain coarsening phenomena in multi-crystallite simulations. This will also enable us to study …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Burnham, A. K.; Gee, R.; Maiti, A.; Qiu, R.; Rajasekar, P.; Weeks, B. et al.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Financial Institutions: Issues Regarding the Tax-Exempt Status of Credit Unions (open access)

Financial Institutions: Issues Regarding the Tax-Exempt Status of Credit Unions

Testimony issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Unlike other depository institutions, credit unions are exempt from federal corporate income taxes. Recent legislative and regulatory changes to credit union membership restrictions and allowable products and services have blurred some of the historical distinctions between credit unions and other depository institutions. As a result, some observers have raised questions about whether tax exemption provides credit unions with an advantage over other depository institutions and whether the original basis for tax exemption is still valid. As part of its continuing oversight of the tax-exempt sector, the House Committee on Ways and Means asked GAO to address (1) the historical basis for the tax-exempt status of credit unions; (2) the arguments for and against taxation, including estimates of potential revenue from eliminating the exemption; (3) the extent to which credit unions offer services distinct from those offered by banks of comparable size, and serve low-and moderate-income individuals; and (4) the extent to which credit unions are required to report information on executive compensation and assessments of their internal controls."
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Government Accountability Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Formation of spinel-, hibonite-rich inclusions found in CM2 carbonaceous chrondrites (open access)

Formation of spinel-, hibonite-rich inclusions found in CM2 carbonaceous chrondrites

We report petrography, mineral chemistry, bulk chemistry, and bulk isotopic compositions of a suite of 40 spinel-rich inclusions from the Murchison (CM2) carbonaceous chondrite. Seven types of inclusions are identified based on mineralogy: spinel-hibonite-perovskite; spinel-perovskite-pyroxene; spinel-perovskite-melilite; spinel-hibonite-perovskite-melilite; spinel-hibonite; spinel-pyroxene; and spinel-melilite-anorthite. Hibonite-bearing inclusions have Ti-poor spinel compared to the hibonite-free ones, and spinel-hibonite-perovskite inclusions have the highest average bulk TiO{sub 2} contents (7.8 wt%). The bulk CaO/Al{sub 2}O{sub 3} ratios of the inclusions range from 0.005-0.21, well below the solar value of 0.79. Hibonite-, spinel-rich inclusions consist of phases that are not predicted by condensation calculations to coexist; in the equilibrium sequence, hibonite is followed by melilite, which is followed by spinel. Therefore, hibonite-melilite or melilite-spinel inclusions should be dominant instead. One explanation for the 'missing melilite' is that it condensed as expected but was lost due to evaporation of Mg and Ca during heating and melting of spherule precursors. If this theory were correct, melilite-poor spherules would have isotopically heavy Mg and Ca. Except for one inclusion with F{sub Mg} = 4.3 {+-} 2.6{per_thousand}/amu and another with isotopically light Ca (F{sub Ca} = 3.4 {+-} 2.0{per_thousand}/amu), however, all the inclusions we analyzed have normal isotopic compositions within their 2{sigma} …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Simon, S B; Grossman, L; Hutcheon, I D; Phinney, D L; Weber, P K & Fallon, S J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Genome-wide de Novo Prediction of Proximal and Distal Tissue-Specific Enhancers (open access)

Genome-wide de Novo Prediction of Proximal and Distal Tissue-Specific Enhancers

Determining how transcriptional regulatory networks are encoded in the human genome is essential for understanding how cellular processes are directed. Here, we present a novel approach for systematically predicting tissue specific regulatory elements (REs) that blends genome-wide expression profiling, vertebrate genome comparisons, and pattern analysis of transcription factor binding sites. This analysis yields 4,670 candidate REs in the human genome with distinct tissue specificities, the majority of which reside far away from transcription start sites. We identify key transcription factors (TFs) for 34 distinct tissues and demonstrate that tissue-specific gene expression relies on multiple regulatory pathways employing similar, but different cohorts of interacting TFs. The methods and results we describe provide a global view of tissue specific gene regulation in humans, and propose a strategy for deciphering the transcriptional regulatory code in eukaryotes.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Loots, G G & Ovcharenko, I V
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Global Fund and PEPFAR in U.S. International AIDS Policy (open access)

The Global Fund and PEPFAR in U.S. International AIDS Policy

The international HIV/AIDS pandemic continues to deepen. According to UNAIDS, the Joint United Nations Program on HIV/AIDS, an estimated 39.4 million people were living with HIV in 2004, including 4.9 million who were newly infected during the year. This report discusses the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which includes bilateral programs and contributions to the multilateral Global Fund for AIDS, Tuberculosis, and Malaria.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Copson, Raymond W.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Medicare: Enrollment in Medicare Drug Plans (open access)

Medicare: Enrollment in Medicare Drug Plans

None
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: O'Sullivan, Jennifer
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Methane Hydrate Formation and Dissociation in a PartiallySaturated Core-Scale Sand Sample (open access)

Methane Hydrate Formation and Dissociation in a PartiallySaturated Core-Scale Sand Sample

We performed a sequence of tests on a partiallywater-saturated sand sample contained in an x-ray transparent aluminumpressure vessel that is conducive to x-ray computed tomography (CT)observation. These tests were performed to gather data for estimation ofthermal properties of the sand/water/gas system and thesand/hydrate/water/gas systems, as well as data to evaluate the kineticnature of hydrate dissociation. The tests included mild thermalperturbations for the estimation of the thermal properties of thesand/water/gas system, hydrate formation, thermal perturbations withhydrate in the stability zone, hydrate dissociation through thermalstimulation, additional hydrate formation, and hydrate dissociationthrough depressurization with thermal stimulation. Density changesthroughout the sample were observed as a result of hydrate formation anddissociation, and these processes induced capillary pressure changes thataltered local water saturation.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Kneafsey, Timothy J.; Tomutsa, Liviu; Moridis, George J.; Seol,Yongkoo; Freifeld, Barry M.; Taylor, Charles E. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Organic Agriculture in the United States: Program and Policy Issues (open access)

Organic Agriculture in the United States: Program and Policy Issues

None
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Rawson, Jean M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Photon Collider Physics with Real Photon Beams (open access)

Photon Collider Physics with Real Photon Beams

Photon-photon interactions have been an important probe into fundamental particle physics. Until recently, the only way to produce photon-photon collisions was parasitically in the collision of charged particles. Recent advances in short-pulse laser technology have made it possible to consider producing high intensity, tightly focused beams of real photons through Compton scattering. A linear e{sup +}e{sup -} collider could thus be transformed into a photon-photon collider with the addition of high power lasers. In this paper they show that it is possible to make a competitive photon-photon collider experiment using the currently mothballed Stanford Linear Collider. This would produce photon-photon collisions in the GeV energy range which would allow the discovery and study of exotic heavy mesons with spin states of zero and two.
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Gronberg, J & Asztalos, S
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Private Pensions: Information on Cash Balance Pension Plans (open access)

Private Pensions: Information on Cash Balance Pension Plans

A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "The nation's private defined benefit (DB) pension system, a key contributor to the financial security of millions of Americans, is in long-term decline. Since 1980, the number of active participants in Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) insured single employer DB plans has dropped from 27.3 percent of all national private wage and salary workers in 1980, to about 15 percent in 2002, and more recently the PBGC has assumed billions of dollars in unfunded benefit obligations from bankrupt plan sponsors. Some analysts have identified hybrid DB plans like cash balance (CB) plans as a possible means to revitalize this declining system. However, conversions from traditional DB plans to CB plans have sometimes been controversial because of the effect conversions may have on the benefits of workers of different ages. As House and Senate committees consider comprehensive pension reform legislation that includes efforts to resolve uncertainties about CB plans, GAO was asked to (1) review current research about the implications of CB conversions for employee benefits, (2) describe the prevalence and type of transition provisions used to protect workers' benefits in past CB conversions, and (3) estimate …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Government Accountability Office.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Probing the Structure-Function Relationships of Microbial Systems (open access)

Probing the Structure-Function Relationships of Microbial Systems

The elucidation of microbial surface architecture and function is critical to determining mechanisms of pathogenesis, immune response, physicochemical properties, environmental resistance and development of countermeasures against bioterrorist agents. We have utilized high-resolution in vitro AFM for studies of structure, assembly, function and environmental dynamics of several microbial systems including bacteria and bacterial spores. Lateral resolutions of {approx}2.0 nm were achieved on pathogens, in vitro. We have demonstrated, using various species of Bacillus and Clostridium bacterial spores, that in vitro AFM can address spatially explicit spore coat protein interactions, structural dynamics in response to environmental changes, and the life cycle of pathogens at near-molecular resolution under physiological conditions. We found that strikingly different species-dependent crystalline structures of the spore coat appear to be a consequence of nucleation and crystallization mechanisms that regulate the assembly of the outer spore coat, and we proposed a unifying mechanism for outer spore coat self-assembly. Furthermore, we revealed molecular-scale transformations of the spore coat during the germination process, which include profound, previously unrecognized changes of the spore coat. We will present data on the direct visualization of stress-induced environmental response of metal-resistant Arthrobacter oxydans bacteria to Cr (VI) exposure, resulting in the formation of a supramolecular …
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: Plomp, M; Leighton, T J; Holman, H & Malkin, A J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
RH1 Regional Hearing Book June 15, 2005 - Fairbanks, AK (open access)

RH1 Regional Hearing Book June 15, 2005 - Fairbanks, AK

RH1 Regional Hearing Book June 15, 2005 - Fairbanks, AK
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission.
Object Type: Legal Document
System: The UNT Digital Library
S&S JCSG 01 Minutes 28 Mar 03 (open access)

S&S JCSG 01 Minutes 28 Mar 03

Supply and Storage Joint Cross-Service Group Meeting Minutes of March 28, 2003
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Department of Defense.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
S&S JCSG 03 Minutes 30 Jun 03 (open access)

S&S JCSG 03 Minutes 30 Jun 03

Supply and Storage Joint Cross-Service Group Meeting Minutes of June 30, 2003
Date: November 3, 2005
Creator: United States. Department of Defense.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library