120-Channel, Chronically Implantable, Wireless, Polymer Neural Interface (open access)

120-Channel, Chronically Implantable, Wireless, Polymer Neural Interface

None
Date: May 9, 2012
Creator: Tooker, A; Shah, K; Tolosa, V; Sheth, H; Felix, S; Delima, T et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
2011 Raditation & Climate Gordon Research Conference (July 10-15 2011- Colby College, Waterville, Maine) (open access)

2011 Raditation & Climate Gordon Research Conference (July 10-15 2011- Colby College, Waterville, Maine)

The 2011 Gordon Research Conference on Radiation and Climate will present cutting-edge research on outstanding issues in climate change, particularly those in which the interactions between clouds, aerosols, and precipitation play a major role. The Conference will feature a broad range of topics, including grand challenges in atmospheric radiation and climate, cloud and water vapor feedbacks, aerosol-cloud-precipitation-climate interactions across scales, new approaches for remote sensing and in-situ observations of clouds, aerosols and precipitation, and multi-scale modeling challenges. The invited speakers will present the most important recent advances and future challenges in these areas. The Conference will bring together a collection of leading investigators who are at the forefront of their field, and will provide opportunities for scientists, especially junior scientists and graduate students, to present their work in poster format and exchange ideas with leaders in the field. The collegial atmosphere of this Conference, with programmed discussion sessions as well as opportunities for informal gatherings in the afternoons and evenings, provides an avenue for scientists from different disciplines to brainstorm and promotes cross-disciplinary collaborations in the various research areas represented.
Date: February 9, 2012
Creator: Hoggblom, Prof. Max
System: The UNT Digital Library
2012 BATTERIES GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, MARCH 4-9, 2012 (open access)

2012 BATTERIES GORDON RESEARCH CONFERENCE, MARCH 4-9, 2012

The Gordon Research Conference on BATTERIES was held at Four Points Sheraton / Holiday Inn Express, Ventura, California, March 4-9, 2012. The Conference was well-attended with 176 participants. Gordon Research Conferences does not permit publication of meeting proceedings.
Date: March 9, 2012
Creator: Harris, Stephen
System: The UNT Digital Library
Acceptance of Classified Excess Components for Disposal at Area 5 (open access)

Acceptance of Classified Excess Components for Disposal at Area 5

This slide-show discusses weapons dismantlement and disposal, issues related to classified waste and their solutions.
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Poling, Jeanne & Saad, Max
System: The UNT Digital Library
B+ and D(S)+ Decay Constants from Belle and BaBar (open access)

B+ and D(S)+ Decay Constants from Belle and BaBar

The Belle and Babar experiments have measured the branching fractions for B{sup +} {yields} {tau}{sup +}{nu} and D{sub s}{sup +} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{nu} decays. From these measurements one can extract the B{sup +} and D{sub s}{sup +} decay constants, which can be compared to lattice QCD calculations. For the D{sub s}{sup +} decay constant, there is currently a 2.1 {sigma} difference between the calculated value and the measured value.
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Schwartz, A.J. & U., /Cincinnati
System: The UNT Digital Library
Beam Measurements at LCLS (open access)

Beam Measurements at LCLS

None
Date: May 9, 2012
Creator: Frisch, J.; Akre, R.; Decker, F. J.; Ding, Y.; Dowell, D.; Emma, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Cavity Beam Position Monitor System for ATF2 (open access)

Cavity Beam Position Monitor System for ATF2

The Accelerator Test Facility 2 (ATF2) in KEK, Japan, is a prototype scaled demonstrator system for the final focus required for a future high energy lepton linear collider. The ATF2 beam-line is instrumented with a total of 38 C and S band resonant cavity beam position monitors (CBPM) with associated mixer electronics and digitizers. The current status of the BPM system is described, with a focus on operational techniques and performance. The ATF2 C-band system is performing well, with individual CBPM resolution approaching or at the design resolution of 50 nm. The changes in the CBPM calibration observed over three weeks can probably be attributed to thermal effects on the mixer electronics systems. The CW calibration tone power will be upgraded to monitor changes in the electronics gain and phase. The four S-band CBPMs are still to be investigated, the main problem associated with these cavities is a large cross coupling between the x and y ports. This combined with the large design dispersion in that degion makes the digital signal processing difficult, although various techniques exist to determine the cavity parameters and use these coupled signals for beam position determination.
Date: July 9, 2012
Creator: Boogert, Stewart; /Oxford U., JAI; Boorman, Gary; /Oxford U., JAI; Swinson, Christina; /Oxford U., JAI et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Characterization of Slow Orbit Motion in the SPEAR3 (open access)

Characterization of Slow Orbit Motion in the SPEAR3

SPEAR3 is a third-generation synchrotron light source storage ring. The beam stability requirements are {approx}10% of the beam size, which is about 1 micron in the vertical plane. Hydrostatic level system (HLS) measurements show that the height of the SPEAR3 tunnel floor varies by tens of microns daily. We present analysis of the HLS data, including accounting for common-mode tidal motion. We discuss the results of experiments done to determine the primary driving source of ground motion. We painted the accelerator tunnel walls white; we temporarily installed Mylar over the asphalt in the center of the accelerator; and we put Mylar over a section of the tunnel walls.
Date: July 9, 2012
Creator: Sunilkumar, Nikita; Gassner, Georg; Safranek, James & Yan, Yiton
System: The UNT Digital Library
CW Room Temperature Re-Buncher for the Project X Front End (open access)

CW Room Temperature Re-Buncher for the Project X Front End

At Fermilab there is a plan to construct the Project X Injector Experiment (PXIE) facility - a prototype of the front end of the Project X, a multi-MW proton source based on superconducting linac. The construction and successful operations of this facility will validate the concept for the Project X front end, thereby minimizing the primary technical risk element within the Project. The room temperature front end of the linac contains an ion source, an RFQ accelerator and a Medium Energy Beam Transport (MEBT) section comprising a high bandwidth bunch selective chopper. The MEBT length is about 10 m, so three re-bunching CW cavities are used to support the beam longitudinal dynamics. The paper reports a RF design of the re-bunchers along with preliminary beam dynamic and thermal analysis of the cavities.
Date: May 9, 2012
Creator: Romanov, Gennady; Awida, Mohamed H.; Chen, Meiyu; Gonin, Ivan V.; Kazakov, Sergey; Kostin, Roman et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DETERMINATION OF THE DISTRIBUTION AND INVENTORY OF RADIONUCLIDES WITHIN A SAVANNAH RIVER SITE WATERWAY (open access)

DETERMINATION OF THE DISTRIBUTION AND INVENTORY OF RADIONUCLIDES WITHIN A SAVANNAH RIVER SITE WATERWAY

An investigation was conducted to evaluate the radionuclide inventory within the Lower Three Runs (LTR) Integrator Operable Unit (IOU) at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Savannah River Site (SRS). The scope of this effort included the analysis of previously existing sampling and analysis data as well as additional streambed and floodplain sampling and analysis data acquired to delineate horizontal and vertical distributions of the radionuclide as part of the ongoing SRS environmental restoration program, and specifically for the LTR IOU program. While cesium-137 (Cs-137) is the most significant and abundant radionuclide associated with the LTR IOU it is not the only radionuclide, hence the scope included evaluating all radionuclides present and includes an evaluation of inventory uncertainty for use in sensitivity and uncertainty analyses. The scope involved evaluation of the radionuclide inventory in the P-Reactor and RReactor cooling water effluent canal systems, PAR Pond (including Pond C) and the floodplain and stream sediment sections of LTR between the PAR Pond Dam and the Savannah River. The approach taken was to examine all of the available Sediment and Sediment/Soil analysis data available along the P- and R-Reactor cooling water re-circulation canal system, the ponds situated along those canal reaches and …
Date: November 9, 2012
Creator: Hiergesell, R. & Phifer, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Developing of superconducting RF guns at BNL (open access)

Developing of superconducting RF guns at BNL

N/A
Date: September 9, 2012
Creator: Belomestnykh, S.; Altinbas, Z.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan; Boulware, C. H.; Brutus, J. C.; Burrill, A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Efficient Laser-Induced 6 - 8 KeV X-Ray Production From Iron Oxide Aerogel and Foil-Lined Cavity Targets (open access)

Efficient Laser-Induced 6 - 8 KeV X-Ray Production From Iron Oxide Aerogel and Foil-Lined Cavity Targets

None
Date: May 9, 2012
Creator: Perez, F.; Kay, J. J.; Patterson, R.; Kane, J.; Villette, B.; Girard, F. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Evidence for an excess of B to D(*) Tau Nu decays (open access)

Evidence for an excess of B to D(*) Tau Nu decays

Based on the full BABAR data sample, we report improved measurements of the ratios R(D{sup (*)}) = {Beta}({bar B} {yields} D{sup (*)} {tau}{sup -}{bar {nu}}{sub {tau}})/{Beta}({bar B} {yields} D{sup (*)} {ell}{sup -}{bar {nu}}{sub {ell}}), where {ell} is either e or {mu}. These ratios are sensitive to new physics contributions in the form of a charged Higgs boson. We measure R(D) = 0.440 {+-} 0.058 {+-} 0.042 and R(D*) = 0.332 {+-} 0.024 {+-} 0.018, which exceed the Standard Model expectations by 2.0{sigma} and 2.7{sigma}, respectively. Taken together, our results disagree with these expectations at the 3.4{sigma} level. This excess cannot be explained by a charged Higgs boson in the type II two-Higgs-doublet model. We also report the observation of the decay {bar B} {yields} D{tau}{sup -} {bar {nu}}{sub {tau}}, with a significance of 6.8{sigma}.
Date: October 9, 2012
Creator: Lees, J. P.; Poireau, V.; Tisserand, V.; /Annecy, LAPP; Garra Tico, J.; Grauges, E. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
FROM CONCEPT TO REALITY, IN-SITU DECOMMISSIONING OF THE P AND R REACTORS AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE (open access)

FROM CONCEPT TO REALITY, IN-SITU DECOMMISSIONING OF THE P AND R REACTORS AT THE SAVANNAH RIVER SITE

SRS recently completed an approximately three year effort to decommission two SRS reactors: P-Reactor (Building 105-P) and R-Reactor (Building 105-R). Completed in December 2011, the concurrent decommissionings marked the completion of two relatively complex and difficult facility disposition projects at the SRS. Buildings 105-P and 105-R began operating as production reactors in the early 1950s with the mission of producing weapons material (e.g., tritium and plutonium-239). The 'P' Reactor and was shutdown in 1991 while the 'R' Reactor and was shutdown in 1964. In the intervening period between shutdown and deactivation & decommissioning (D&D), Buildings 105-P and 105-R saw limited use (e.g., storage of excess heavy water and depleted uranium oxide). For Building 105-P, deactivation was initiated in April 2007 and was essentially complete by June 2010. For Building 105-R, deactivation was initiated in August 2008 and was essentially complete by September 2010. For both buildings, the primary objective of deactivation was to remove/mitigate hazards associated with the remaining hazardous materials, and thus prepare the buildings for in-situ decommissioning. Deactivation removed the following hazardous materials to the extent practical: combustibles/flammables, residual heavy water, acids, friable asbestos (as needed to protect workers performing deactivation and decommissioning), miscellaneous chemicals, lead/brass components, Freon(reg …
Date: January 9, 2012
Creator: Musall, J.; Blankenship, J. & Griffin, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Future Synchrotron Light Sources Based on Ultimate Storage Rings (open access)

Future Synchrotron Light Sources Based on Ultimate Storage Rings

The main purpose of this talk is to describe how far one might push the state of the art in storage ring design. The talk will start with an overview of the latest developments and advances in the design of synchrotron light sources based on the concept of an 'ultimate' storage ring. The review will establish how bright a ring based light source might be, where the frontier of technological challenges are, and what the limits of accelerator physics are. Emphasis will be given to possible improvements in accelerator design and developments in technology toward the goal of achieving an ultimate storage ring. An ultimate storage ring (USR), defined as an electron ring-based light source having an emittance in both transverse planes at the diffraction limit for the range of X-ray wavelengths of interest for a scientific community, would provide very high brightness photons having high transverse coherence that would extend the capabilities of X-ray imaging and probe techniques beyond today's performance. It would be a cost-effective, high-coherence 4th generation light source, competitive with one based on energy recovery linac (ERL) technology, serving a large number of users studying material, chemical, and biological sciences. Furthermore, because of the experience accumulated …
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Cai, Yunhai
System: The UNT Digital Library
The high-current ERL at BNL (open access)

The high-current ERL at BNL

N/A
Date: September 9, 2012
Creator: Ben-Zvi, Ilan
System: The UNT Digital Library
High Energy Electron Signals from Dark Matter Annihilation in the Sun (open access)

High Energy Electron Signals from Dark Matter Annihilation in the Sun

In this paper we discuss two mechanisms by which high energy electrons resulting from dark matter annihilations in or near the Sun can arrive at the Earth. Specifically, electrons can escape the sun if DM annihilates into long-lived states, or if dark matter scatters inelastically, which would leave a halo of dark matter outside of the sun. Such a localized source of electrons may affect the spectra observed by experiments with narrower fields of view oriented towards the sun, such as ATIC, differently from those with larger fields of view such as Fermi. We suggest a simple test of these possibilities with existing Fermi data that is more sensitive than limits from final state radiation. If observed, such a signal will constitute an unequivocal signature of dark matter.
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Schuster, Philip; Toro, Natalia; Weiner, Neal & Yavin, Itay
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hybrid Monte-Carlo Method for Simulating Neutron and Photon Radiography (open access)

Hybrid Monte-Carlo Method for Simulating Neutron and Photon Radiography

None
Date: October 9, 2012
Creator: Wang, H & Tang, V
System: The UNT Digital Library
Improvements at the BNL 200 MeV LINAC (open access)

Improvements at the BNL 200 MeV LINAC

N/A
Date: September 9, 2012
Creator: Raparia, D.; Alessi, J.; Briscoe, B.; Fite, J.; Gould, O.; LoDestro, V. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
INTERCOMPARISON OF 14C ANALYSIS OF CARBONACEOUS AEROSOLS: EXERCISE 2009 (open access)

INTERCOMPARISON OF 14C ANALYSIS OF CARBONACEOUS AEROSOLS: EXERCISE 2009

None
Date: November 9, 2012
Creator: Bench, G
System: The UNT Digital Library
Laser-induced gas plasma etching of fused silica under ambient conditions (open access)

Laser-induced gas plasma etching of fused silica under ambient conditions

None
Date: November 9, 2012
Creator: Elhadj, S.; Guss, G.; Matthews, M. & Bass, I.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lepton-Flavor-Violating Tau Decays at BaBar (open access)

Lepton-Flavor-Violating Tau Decays at BaBar

We present the most recent searches for lepton-flavor-violating (LFV) {tau} decays in BABAR. We find no evidence of {tau} decaying to three charged leptons or to a charged lepton and a neutral meson (K{sub S}{sup 0}, {rho}, {phi}, K*{sup 0}, {bar K}*{sup 0}), and set upper limits on the corresponding branching fractions (BF) between 1.8 and 19 x 10{sup -8} at 90% confidence level (CL).
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Marchiori, G. & /Paris, LPTHE
System: The UNT Digital Library
Model-Independent Results for the Decay B \to L Nu(L) Gamma at BaBar (open access)

Model-Independent Results for the Decay B \to L Nu(L) Gamma at BaBar

We present a search for the radiative leptonic decays B{sub +} {yields} e{sup +} {nu}{sub e}{gamma} and B{sup +} {yields} {mu}{sup +}{nu}{sub {mu}}{gamma} using data collected by the BABAR detector at the PEP-II B factory. We fully reconstruct the hadronic decay of one of the B mesons in {Upsilon}(4S) {yields} B{sup +}B{sup -} and then search for evidence of the signal decay within the rest of the event. This method provides clean kinematic information on the signal's missing energy and high momentum photon and lepton, and allows for a model-independent analysis of this decay. Using a data sample of 465 million B-meson pairs, we obtain sensitivity to branching fractions of the same order as predicted by the Standard Model. We report a model-independent branching fraction upper limit of {Beta}(B{sup +} {yields} {ell}{sup +}{nu}{sub {ell}}{gamma}) < 15.6 x 10{sup -6} ({ell} = e or {mu}) at the 90% confidence level.
Date: April 9, 2012
Creator: Lindemann, D. M.
System: The UNT Digital Library