Multi-Channel Time-Reversal Communications in a Highly Reverberative, Environment (open access)

Multi-Channel Time-Reversal Communications in a Highly Reverberative, Environment

None
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Candy, J V; Guidry, B L; Poggio, A J; Robbins, C & Kent, C
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
An Evaluation of the Difference Formulation for Photon Transport in a Two Level System (open access)

An Evaluation of the Difference Formulation for Photon Transport in a Two Level System

In this paper we extend the difference formulation for radiation transport to the case of a single atomic line. We examine the accuracy, performance and stability of the difference formulation within the framework of the Symbolic Implicit Monte Carlo method. The difference formulation, introduced for thermal radiation by some of the authors, has the unique property that the transport equation is written in terms that become small for thick systems. We find that the difference formulation has a significant advantage over the standard formulation for a thick system. The correct treatment of the line profile, however, requires that the difference formulation in the core of the line be mixed with the standard formulation in the wings and this may limit the advantage of the method. We bypass this problem by using the gray approximation. We develop three Monte Carlo solution methods based on different degrees of implicitness for the treatment of the source terms, and we find only conditional stability unless the source terms are treated fully implicitly.
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Daffin, F D; McKinley, M S; Brooks, E D & Szoke, A
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effects of Heavy, Tracked-Vehicle Disturbance on Forest Soil Properties at Fort Benning, Georgia (open access)

Effects of Heavy, Tracked-Vehicle Disturbance on Forest Soil Properties at Fort Benning, Georgia

The purpose of this report is to describe the effects of heavy, tracked-vehicle disturbance on various measures of soil quality in training compartment K-11 at Fort Benning, Georgia. Predisturbance soil sampling in April and October of 2002 indicated statistically significant differences in soil properties between upland and riparian sites. Soil density was less at riparian sites, but riparian soils had significantly greater C and N concentrations and stocks than upland soils. Most of the C stock in riparian soils was associated with mineral-associated organic matter (i.e., the silt + clay fraction physically separated from whole mineral soil). Topographic differences in soil N availability were highly dependent on the time of sampling. Riparian soils had higher concentrations of extractable inorganic N than upland soils and also exhibited significantly greater soil N availability during the spring sampling. The disturbance experiment was performed in May 2003 by driving a D7 bulldozer through the mixed pine/hardwood forest. Post-disturbance sampling was limited to upland sites because training with heavy, tracked vehicles at Fort Benning is generally confined to upland soils. Soil sampling approximately one month after the experiment indicated that effects of the bulldozer were limited primarily to the forest floor (O-horizon) and the surface …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Garten, C. T. Jr.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recombination and propagation of quasiparticles in cuprate superconductors (open access)

Recombination and propagation of quasiparticles in cuprate superconductors

Rapid developments in time-resolved optical spectroscopy have led to renewed interest in the nonequilibrium state of superconductors and other highly correlated electron materials. In these experiments, the nonequilibrium state is prepared by the absorption of short (less than 100 fs) laser pulses, typically in the near-infrared, that perturb the density and energy distribution of quasiparticles. The evolution of the nonequilibrium state is probed by time resolving the changes in the optical response functions of the medium that take place after photoexcitation. Ultimately, the goal of such experiments is to understand not only the nonequilibrium state, but to shed light on the still poorly understood equilibrium properties of these materials. We report nonequilibrium experiments that have revealed aspects of the cup rates that have been inaccessible by other techniques. Namely, the diffusion and recombination coefficients of quasiparticles have been measured in both YBa{sub 2}Cu{sub 3}O{sub 6.5} and Bi{sub 2}Sr{sub 2}CaCu{sub 2}O{sub 8+x} using time-resolved optical spectroscopy. Dependence of these measurements on doping, temperature and laser intensity is also obtained. To study the recombination of quasiparticles, we measure the change in reflectivity {Delta}R which is directly proportional to the nonequilibrium quasiparticle density created by the laser. From the intensity dependence, we estimate …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Gedik, Nuh
Object Type: Thesis or Dissertation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Sorption and Transport of Iodine Species in Sediments from the Savannah River and Hanford Sites (open access)

Sorption and Transport of Iodine Species in Sediments from the Savannah River and Hanford Sites

Iodine is an important element in studies of environmental protection and human health, global-scale hydrologic processes and nuclear nonproliferation. Biogeochemical cycling of iodine is complex, because iodine occurs in multiple oxidation states and as inorganic and organic species that may be hydrophilic, atmophilic, and biophilic. In this study, we focused on the sorption and transport behavior of iodine species (iodide, iodate, and 4-iodoaniline) in sediments collected at the Savannah River and Hanford Sites, where anthropogenic {sup 129}I from prior nuclear fuel processing activities poses an environmental risk. We conducted both column and batch experiments to investigate the sorption and transport behavior of iodine, and the sediments we examined exhibit a wide range in organic matter, clay mineralogy, soil pH, and texture. The results of our experiments illustrate complex behavior with various processes occurring, including iodate reduction, irreversible retention or mass loss of iodide, and rate-limited and nonlinear sorption. There was an appreciable iodate reduction to iodide, presumably mediated by the structural Fe(II) in some clay minerals; therefore, careful attention must be given to potential interconversion among species when interpreting the biogeochemical behavior of iodine in the environment. The different iodine species exhibited dramatically different sorption and transport behavior in three …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Hu, Q; Zhao, P; Moran, J & Seaman, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Structural Characterization and Lifetime Stability of Mo/Y Extreme Ultraviolet Multilayer Mirrors (open access)

Structural Characterization and Lifetime Stability of Mo/Y Extreme Ultraviolet Multilayer Mirrors

We observe a dramatic dependence of the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) reflectivity of Mo/Y multilayers on the oxygen content of yttrium. This is explained by a change in microstructure, increase in roughness of the Y layers and not by an increase in absorption due to oxygen in Y layers. We find best reflectivity of 38.4% is achieved with an oxygen content of 25%, which reduces to 32.6% and 29.6% for multilayers manufactured from oxygen free yttrium and 39%-oxygen yttrium, respectively. These results highlight the importance of experimentally determined optical constants as well as interface roughness in multilayer calculations. In addition, lifetime stability of Mo/Y multilayers with different capping layers was monitored for one year. The molybdenum- and palladium-capped samples exhibited low surface roughness and about 4% relative reflectivity loss in one year. The relative reflectivity loss on yttrium-capped sample (yttrium with 39% oxygen) was about 8%. However, the reflectivity loss in all three capping layers occurred within the first 100 days after the deposition and the reflectivity remained stable afterwards.
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Kjornrattanawanich, B & Bajt, S
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The SNM Scanner: A Non-invasive Protocol for Effective Monitoring of Special Nuclear Material Inventories (open access)

The SNM Scanner: A Non-invasive Protocol for Effective Monitoring of Special Nuclear Material Inventories

None
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Lanier, R G; Dauffy, L S & Hodge, A M
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
When a Rose Is Not a Rose: A Review of Recent Estimates of Congestion Costs (open access)

When a Rose Is Not a Rose: A Review of Recent Estimates of Congestion Costs

None
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Lesieutre, Bernard C. & Eto, Joseph H.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Liquid Water from First Principles: Validation of Different Sampling Approaches (open access)

Liquid Water from First Principles: Validation of Different Sampling Approaches

A series of first principles molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo simulations were carried out for liquid water to assess the validity and reproducibility of different sampling approaches. These simulations include Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations using the program CPMD with different values of the fictitious electron mass in the microcanonical and canonical ensembles, Born-Oppenheimer molecular dynamics using the programs CPMD and CP2K in the microcanonical ensemble, and Metropolis Monte Carlo using CP2K in the canonical ensemble. With the exception of one simulation for 128 water molecules, all other simulations were carried out for systems consisting of 64 molecules. It is found that the structural and thermodynamic properties of these simulations are in excellent agreement with each other as long as adiabatic sampling is maintained in the Car-Parrinello molecular dynamics simulations either by choosing a sufficiently small fictitious mass in the microcanonical ensemble or by Nos{acute e}-Hoover thermostats in the canonical ensemble. Using the Becke-Lee-Yang-Parr exchange and correlation energy functionals and norm-conserving Troullier-Martins or Goedecker-Teter-Hutter pseudopotentials, simulations at a fixed density of 1.0 g/cm{sup 3} and a temperature close to 315 K yield a height of the first peak in the oxygen-oxygen radial distribution function of about 3.0, a classical constant-volume heat …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Mundy, Christopher J.; Kuo, Will; Siepmann, J.; McGrath, M. J.; Vondevondele, J.; Sprik, M. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Physics of Fusion Energy: Why We (Probably) Can't Make a Reactor on the Head of a Pin (open access)

The Physics of Fusion Energy: Why We (Probably) Can't Make a Reactor on the Head of a Pin

None
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Perkins, L J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library

Nondestructive Evaluation of Multilayered Structures using Horizontal Shear Modes Generated by an Electromagnetic Acoustic Array Transducer

None
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Quarry, Michael J.
Object Type: Presentation
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulation of Chamber Transport for Heavy-Ion Fusion Drivers (open access)

Simulation of Chamber Transport for Heavy-Ion Fusion Drivers

The heavy-ion fusion (HIF) community recently developed a power-plant design that meets the various requirements of accelerators, final focus, chamber transport, and targets. The point design is intended to minimize physics risk and is certainly not optimal for the cost of electricity. Recent chamber-transport simulations, however, indicate that changes in the beam ion species, the convergence angle, and the emittance might allow more-economical designs.
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Sharp, W. M.; Callahan, D. A.; Tabak, M.; Yu, S. S.; Peterson, P. F.; Rose, D. V. et al.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Possible Connection Between Thermal Comfort and Health (open access)

A Possible Connection Between Thermal Comfort and Health

It is a well-established fact that cardiovascular health requires periodic exercise during which the human body often experiences significant physical discomfort. It is not obvious to the exerciser that the short-term pain and discomfort has a long-term positive health impact. Many cultures have well-established practices that involve exposing the body to periodic thermal discomfort. Scandinavian saunas and American Indian sweat lodges are two examples. Both are believed to promote health and well-being. Vacations often intentionally include significant thermal discomfort as part of the experience (e.g., sunbathing, and downhill skiing). So people often intentionally make themselves thermally uncomfortable yet the entire foundation of providing the thermal environment in our buildings is done to minimize the percentage of people thermally dissatisfied. We must provide an environment that does not negatively impact short-term health and we need to consider productivity but are our current thermal comfort standards too narrowly defined and do these standards actually contribute to longer-term negative health impacts? This paper examines the possibility that the human body thermoregulatory system has a corollary relationship to the cardiovascular system. It explores the possibility that we have an inherent need to exercise our thermoregulatory system. Potential, physiological, sociological and energy ramifications of these …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Stoops, John L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Vacuum Drying of Actual Transuranic Waste from Hanford Tanks (open access)

Vacuum Drying of Actual Transuranic Waste from Hanford Tanks

Composites of sludge from Tanks 241-B-203, 241-T-203, 241 T 204, and 241-T-110 at the Hanford Site were prepared at the Hanford 222-S Laboratory from core samples retrieved from these tanks. These tank composites may not be representative of the entire contents of the tank but provide some indication of the properties of the waste within these underground storage tanks. The composite samples were diluted with water at the Radiochemical Processing Laboratory at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory to represent the slurries that are expected to be received from tank retrieval operations and processed to produce a final waste stream. The dilutions were vacuum dried at 60 C and 26 in. of mercury ({approx} 100 torr). Semi-quantitative measurements of stickiness and cohesive strength were made on these dilutions as a function of drying time. Mass loss as a function of drying time and total solids concentration of the initial dilution and at the conclusion of drying were also measured. Visual observations of the sludge were recorded throughout the drying process.
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Tingey, Joel M.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Putting downward pressure on natural gas prices: The impact of renewable energy and energy efficiency (open access)

Putting downward pressure on natural gas prices: The impact of renewable energy and energy efficiency

Increased deployment of renewable energy (RE) and energy efficiency (EE) is expected to reduce natural gas demand and in turn place downward pressure on gas prices. A number of recent modeling studies include an evaluation of this effect. Based on data compiled from those studies summarized in this paper, each 1% reduction in national natural gas demand appears likely to lead to a long-term average wellhead gas price reduction of 0.75% to 2.5%, with some studies predicting even more sizable reductions. Reductions in wellhead prices will reduce wholesale and retail electricity rates, and will also reduce residential, commercial, and industrial gas bills. We further find that many of these studies appear to represent the potential impact of RE and EE on natural gas prices within the bounds of current knowledge, but that current knowledge of how to estimate this effect is extremely limited. While more research is therefore needed, existing studies suggest that it is not unreasonable to expect that any increase in consumer electricity costs attributable to RE and/or EE deployment may be substantially offset by the corresponding reduction in delivered natural gas prices. This effect represents a wealth transfer (from natural gas producers to consumers) rather than a …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Wiser, Ryan; Bolinger, Mark & St. Clair, Matthew
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Subcellular Proteomic Analysis of Host-Pathogen Interactions Using Human Monocytes Exposed to Yersinia Pestis and Yersinia Pseudotuberculosis (open access)

Subcellular Proteomic Analysis of Host-Pathogen Interactions Using Human Monocytes Exposed to Yersinia Pestis and Yersinia Pseudotuberculosis

Yersinia pestis, the etiological agent of plague, is of concern to human health both from an infectious disease and a civilian biodefense perspective. While Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis share more than 90% DNA homology, they have significantly different clinical manifestations. Plague is often fatal if untreated, yet Y. pseudotuberculosis causes severe intestinal distress and is rarely fatal. A better understanding of host response to these closely related pathogens may help explain the different mechanisms of virulence and pathogenesis that result in such different clinical outcomes. The aim of this study was to characterize host protein expression changes in human monocyte-like U937 cells after exposure to Y. pestis and Y. pseudotuberculosis. In order to gain global proteomic coverage of host response, proteins from cytoplasmic, nuclear and membrane fractions of host cells were studied by 2-dimensional differential gel electrophoresis (2-D DIGE) and relative protein expression differences were quantitated. Differentially expressed proteins, with at least 1.5 fold expression changes and p values of 0.01 or less, were identified by MALDI-MS or LC/MS/MS. With these criteria, differential expression was detected in 16 human proteins after Y. pestis exposure and 13 human proteins after Y. pseudotuberculosis exposure, of which only two of the differentially …
Date: May 20, 2004
Creator: Zhang, C. G.; Gonzales, A. D.; Choi, M. W.; Chromy, B. A.; Fitch, J. P. & McCutchen-Maloney, S. L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library