States

Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad, 1798-1993 (open access)

Instances of Use of United States Forces Abroad, 1798-1993

This report lists 234 instances in which the United States has used its armed forces abroad in situations of conflict or potential conflict or for other than normal peacetime purposes. It brings up to date a 1989 list that was compiled in part from various older lists and is intended primarily to provide a rough sketch survey of past U.S. military ventures abroad. A detailed description and analysis are not undertaken here.
Date: October 7, 1993
Creator: Collier, Ellen C.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Alcohol Fuels Tax Incentives and the EPA Renewable Oxygenate Requirement (open access)

Alcohol Fuels Tax Incentives and the EPA Renewable Oxygenate Requirement

This report examines the current alcohol fuels Federal tax incentives. Part I describes the statutory provisions of each of the five incentives. Part II examines the major public policy and economic issues of concern to policymakers: potential revenue effects, effectiveness, and economic efficiency.
Date: October 7, 1994
Creator: Lazzari, Salvatore
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Texas Register, Volume 19, Number 75, Pages 7953-8078, October 7, 1994 (open access)

Texas Register, Volume 19, Number 75, Pages 7953-8078, October 7, 1994

A weekly publication, the Texas Register serves as the journal of state agency rulemaking for Texas. Information published in the Texas Register includes proposed, adopted, withdrawn and emergency rule actions, notices of state agency review of agency rules, governor's appointments, attorney general opinions, and miscellaneous documents such as requests for proposals. After adoption, these rulemaking actions are codified into the Texas Administrative Code.
Date: October 7, 1994
Creator: Texas. Secretary of State.
Object Type: Journal/Magazine/Newsletter
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: DM-259 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: DM-259

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, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification; Whether a member of an appraisal review board may appear before the board either in a capacity as a court-appointed receiver or a registered property tax consultant without violating conflict-of-interest laws and related questions (RQ-507, ID# 18811)
Date: October 7, 1993
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-122 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-122

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, John Cornyn, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Whether a purchase from jail-commissary proceeds is subject to statutory competitive procurement requirements.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-123 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-123

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, John Cornyn, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Whether a county officer may be credited or compensated for unused vacation time he earned while a county employee.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-124 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: JC-124

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, John Cornyn, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Whether Texas Department of Transportation may restrict material specifications to products of only one vendor if other vendors have similar products of equal quality, and related questions.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO92-062 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO92-062

Letter opinion 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, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Kinds of evidence a notary public may accept for the purpose of acknowledging a written instrument (ID# 16743)
Date: October 7, 1992
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO92-063 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO92-063

Letter opinion 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, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Whether a physician who monitors the treatment of a patient in an ambulance by telemetry “attends” that patient for purposes of section 6 of article 49.25 of the Code of Criminal Procedure (ID# 16514)
Date: October 7, 1992
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO93-088 (open access)

Texas Attorney General Opinion: LO93-088

Letter opinion 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, Dan Morales, regarding a legal question submitted for clarification: Removal of criminal record subject to expunction order from agency files (ID# 18550)
Date: October 7, 1993
Creator: Texas. Attorney-General's Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The Portal to Texas History
U.S. Customs Service: Update on the Merchandise Processing Fee (open access)

U.S. Customs Service: Update on the Merchandise Processing Fee

Correspondence issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Pursuant to a congressional request, GAO provided information on Custom Service's Merchandise Processing Fee (MPF) that is charged on certain imports, focusing on the relationship between the fee and the cost of services provided."
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: United States. General Accounting Office.
Object Type: Text
System: The UNT Digital Library
Detection of explosive events by monitoring acoustically-induced geomagnetic perturbations (open access)

Detection of explosive events by monitoring acoustically-induced geomagnetic perturbations

The Black Thunder Coal Mine (BTCM) near Gillette, Wyoming was used as a test bed to determine the feasibility of detecting explosion-induced geomagnetic disturbances with ground-based induction magnetometers. Two magnetic observatories were fielded at distances of 50 km and 64 km geomagnetically north from the northernmost edge of BTCM. Each observatory consisted of three separate but mutually orthogonal magnetometers, Global Positioning System (GPS) timing, battery and solar power, a data acquisition and storage system, and a three-axis seismometer. Explosions with yields of 1 to 3 kT of TNT equivalent occur approximately every three weeks at BTCM. We hypothesize that explosion-induced acoustic waves propagate upward and interact collisionally with the ionosphere to produce ionospheric electron density (and concomitant current density) perturbations which act as sources for geomagnetic disturbances. These disturbances propagate through an ionospheric Alfven waveguide that we postulate to be leaky (due to the imperfectly conducting lower ionospheric boundary). Consequently, wave energy may be observed on the ground. We observed transient pulses, known as Q-bursts, with pulse widths about 0.5 s and with spectral energy dominated by the Schumann resonances. These resonances appear to be excited in the earth-ionosphere cavity by Alfven solitons that may have been generated by the …
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Lewis, J P; Rock, D R; Shaeffer, D L & Warshaw, S I
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Transuranic separation using organophophorus extractants adsorbed onto superparamagnetic carriers. (open access)

Transuranic separation using organophophorus extractants adsorbed onto superparamagnetic carriers.

Polymeric coated ferromagnetic carriers with an absorbed layer of octyl(phenyl)-N,N-diisobutylcarbamoylmethylphosphine oxide (CMPO) diluted by tributyl phosphate (TBP) are being evaluated for application in the separation and the recovery of low concentrations of americium, plutonium, and uranium from nuclear waste solutions. Due to their chemical nature, these extractants selectively complex americium and plutonium contaminants onto the particles and the complexed particles can be recovered from the solution using a magnet. Physical and chemical characterization of the extractant-absorbed particles were performed by gamma and liquid scintillation counting, scanning electron microscopic (SEM) micrograph, and other physical measurements. Plutonium, americium, and uranium separations have been performed at various HNO{sub 3} and HCl concentrations. Parameters were studied to determine the limitations and capacity of the process. The status of the chemistry and application of the process to Department of Energy (DOE) remediation efforts for actinide decontamination are discussed.
Date: October 7, 1998
Creator: Nunez, L.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Advanced Drilling through Diagnostics-White-Drilling (open access)

Advanced Drilling through Diagnostics-White-Drilling

A high-speed data link that would provide dramatically faster communication from downhole instruments to the surface and back again has the potential to revolutionize deep drilling for geothermal resources through Diagnostics-While-Drilling (DWD). Many aspects of the drilling process would significantly improve if downhole and surface data were acquired and processed in real-time at the surface, and used to guide the drilling operation. Such a closed-loop, driller-in-the-loop DWD system, would complete the loop between information and control, and greatly improve the performance of drilling systems. The main focus of this program is to demonstrate the value of real-time data for improving drilling. While high-rate transfer of down-hole data to the surface has been accomplished before, insufficient emphasis has been placed on utilization of the data to tune the drilling process to demonstrate the true merit of the concept. Consequently, there has been a lack of incentive on the part of industry to develop a simple, low-cost, effective high-speed data link. Demonstration of the benefits of DWD based on a high-speed data link will convince the drilling industry and stimulate the flow of private resources into the development of an economical high-speed data link for geothermal drilling applications. Such a downhole communication …
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Finger, John T.; Glowka, David Anthony; Livesay, Billy Joe; Mansure, Arthur J. & Prairie, Michael R.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Top quark physics at the Tevatron (open access)

Top quark physics at the Tevatron

The authors present the recent results and future prospects on top quark physics at the Tevatron. They describe the measurements of the top quark mass and the search for single top quark production in 1.8-TeV p{bar p} collisions. The CDF and D0 combined results yield a top quark mass of 174.3 {+-} 5.1 GeV/c{sup 2}. The upper limit at 95% C.L. of the single top production cross section is found to be 16.0 pb and 15.6 pb for the W-gluon fusion process and s-channel W* process, respectively.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Kim, S.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Radon Emanation from NORM-Contaminated Pipe Scale, Soil, and Sediment at Petroleum Industry Sites (open access)

Radon Emanation from NORM-Contaminated Pipe Scale, Soil, and Sediment at Petroleum Industry Sites

This report describes a study of radon (Rn) emanation from pipe scale and soil samples contaminated with naturally occurring radioactive material (NORM). Samples were collected at petroleum production sites in Oklahoma, Michigan, Kentucky, and Illinois. For comparison, data are also presented from preliminary studies conducted at sites in Texas and Wyoming. All samples collected were analyzed for their Rn emanation fraction, defined as the fraction of 222Rn produced that enters the interconnected pore space within a medium contaminated with 226Ra before the 222Rn undergoes radioactive decay. This measure represents one of the important parameters that determine the overall Rn activity flux from any solid medium. The goal of this project was to determine whether Rn emanation from pipe scale and soil is similar to emanation from uranium mill tailings.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Rood, A.S. & White, G.J.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Hydrological Methods can Separate Cesium from Nuclear Waste Saltcake (open access)

Hydrological Methods can Separate Cesium from Nuclear Waste Saltcake

Interstitial Fluid Displacement (IFD) is a new and novel method for separating cesium from saltcake waste. Hydrologic modeling of liquid flow through porous saltcake suggests that the cesium, potassium and sodium hydroxide can be separated at high recovery and low volume using IFD.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Brooke, J.N.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ten years of sourcery at CAMS/LLNL - evolution of a Cs ion source (open access)

Ten years of sourcery at CAMS/LLNL - evolution of a Cs ion source

The present performance and status of the LLNL AMS ion source and the rationale for the series of changes which led to the present design are discussed.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Roberts, M & Southon, J
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Imprinted spiral structures as neutron polarizers. (open access)

Imprinted spiral structures as neutron polarizers.

Neutron diffraction from magnetic spiral structures is governed by strong selection rules for the polarization of the outgoing beam. When the sample is entirely of one chirality--for instance a right handed spiral--the neutrons diffracted by some Bragg reflections are fully polarized. While the scattering theory has been formulated long ago, attempts to controllably modify the population of left handed and right handed spiral domains in natural magnetic structures (which for instance occur in some rare earth metals) have been largely unsuccessful. In contrast, we have been able to imprint helical magnetic structures in La/Fe multilayers (each layer approximately 30 {angstrom} thick) simply by rotating the growing sample in a weak external field (30e). A first estimate is given of the efficiency of these multilayers as polarizers of neutron beams.
Date: October 7, 1998
Creator: Lohstroh, W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Physical effects of infrared quark eigenmodes in LQCD (open access)

Physical effects of infrared quark eigenmodes in LQCD

A truncated determinant algorithm is used to study the physical effects of the quark eigenmodes associated with eigenvalues below 300 MeV. This initial study focuses on coarse lattices (with O(a{sup 2}) improved gauge action), light internal quark masses and large physical volumes. Four bellweather full QCD processes are discussed: topological charge distributions, the eta prime propagator, string breaking as observed in the static energy and the rho decay into two pions.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: A. Duncan, E. Eichten and H. Thacker
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Addendum to the RCRA Assessment Report for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area S-SX at the Hanford Site (open access)

Addendum to the RCRA Assessment Report for Single-Shell Tank Waste Management Area S-SX at the Hanford Site

The initial Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) groundwater quality assessment report for Waste Management Area S-SX (PNNL-11810) was issued in January 1998. The report stated a plan for conducting continued assessment would be developed after addressing Washington State Department of Ecology (Ecology) comments on initial findings in PNNL-11810. Comments from Ecology were received by US Department of Energy, Richland Operations Office (DOE-RL) on September 24, 1998. Shortly thereafter, Ecology and DOE began dispute resolution and related negotiations about tank farm vadose issues. This led to proposed new Tri-Party Agreement milestones covering a RCRA Facility Investigation-Corrective Measures Study (RFI/CMS) of the four single-shell tank farm waste management areas that were in assessment status (Waste Management Areas B-BX-BY, S-SX, T and TX-TY). The RCRA Facility Investigation includes both subsurface (vadose zone and groundwater) and surface (waste handling facilities and grounds) characterization. Many of the Ecology comments on PNNL-11810 are more appropriate for, and in many cases are superseded by, the RFI/CMS at Waste Management Area S-SX. The proposed Tri-Party Agreement milestone changes that specify the scope and schedule for the RFI/CMS work plans (Tri-Party Agreement change number M-45-98-0) were issued for public comment in February 1999. The Tri-Party Agreement narrative indicates …
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Chou, C. J. & Johnson, V. G.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Scale 4.4 Validation for the DFS System at SRS (open access)

Scale 4.4 Validation for the DFS System at SRS

The document is a compilation of the work to date dealing with the validation of the CSAS25 sequence in SCALE 4.4. using the 27-group ENDF/B-IV and the 238-group ENDF/B-V cross section libraries, executed on the Digital Equipment Alpha Processors workstation cluster at WSMS. Revisions to this document will be made as new validation information is generated; therefore, this document should be used as the reference point for bias and bias uncertainties for SCALE 4.4-related work. This initial issue of the report (Revision 0) contains bias and bias uncertainty for plutonium and highly enriched uranium solutions and metal systems, including MTR type fuel.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: Blanchard, A.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Aerogel commercialization: Technology, markets and costs (open access)

Aerogel commercialization: Technology, markets and costs

Commercialization of aerogels has been slow due to several factors including cost and manufacturability issues. The technology itself is well enough developed as a result of work over the past decade by an international-community of researchers. Several extensive substantial markets appear to exist for aerogels as thermal and sound insulators, if production costs can keep prices in line with competing established materials. The authors discuss here the elements which they have identified as key cost drivers, and they give a prognosis for the evolution of the technology leading to reduced cost aerogel production.
Date: October 7, 1994
Creator: Carlson, G.; Lewis, D.; McKinley, K.; Richardson, J. & Tillotson, T.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
A Summary of the Fatigue Properties of Wind Turbine Materials (open access)

A Summary of the Fatigue Properties of Wind Turbine Materials

Modern wind turbines are fatigue critical machines that are typically used to produce electrical power from the wind. The materials used to construct these machines are subjected to a unique loading spectrum that contains several orders of magnitude more cycles than other fatigue critical structures, e.g., an airplane. To facilitate fatigue designs, a large database of material properties has been generated over the past several years that is specialized to materials typically used in wind turbines. In this paper, I review these fatigue data. Major sections are devoted to the properties developed for wood, metals (primarily aluminum) and fiberglass. Special emphasis is placed on the fiberglass discussion because this material is current the material of choice for wind turbine blades. The paper focuses on the data developed in the U.S., but cites European references that provide important insights.
Date: October 7, 1999
Creator: SUTHERLAND, HERBERT J.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library