120 research outputs found
Delayed Fast Neutron as an Indicator of Burn-Up for Nuclear Fuel Elements
Feasibility study of burn-up analysis and monitoring using delayed fast neutrons was investigated at Missouri University of Science and Technology Reactor (MSTR). Burnt and fresh fuel elements were used to collect delayed fast neutron data for different power levels. Total reactivity varied depending on the burn-up rate of fuel elements for each core configuration. The regulating rod worth was 2.07E-04 Δk/k/in and 1.95E-04 Δk/k/in for T121 and T122 core configurations at 11 inch, respectively. Delayed fast neutron spectrum of F1 (burnt) and F16 (fresh) fuel elements were analyzed further, and a strong correlation was observed between delayed fast neutron emission and burn-up. According to the analyzed peaks in burnt and fresh fuels, reactor power dependency was observed and it was determined that delayed neutron provided more reliable results at reactor powers of 50 kW and above
Experimental Evaluation of the Deadtime Phenomenon for GM Detector: Deadtime Dependence on Operating Voltages
A detailed analysis of Geiger Mueller counter deadtime dependence on operating voltage is presented in the manuscript using four pairs of radiation sources. Based on two-source method, detector deadtime is calculated for a wide range of operating voltages which revealed a peculiar relationship between the operating voltage and the detector deadtime. In the low voltage range, a distinct drop in deadtime was observed where deadtime reached a value as low as a few microseconds (22 µs for 204Tl, 26 µs for 137Cs, 9 µs for 22Na). This sharp drop in the deadtime is possibly due to reduced recombination with increasing voltage. After the lowest point, the deadtime generally increased rapidly to reach a maximum (292 µs for 204Tl, 277 µs for 137Cs, 258 µs for 22Na). This rapid increase in the deadtime is mainly due to the on-set of charge multiplication. After the maximum deadtime values, there was an exponential decrease in the deadtime reaching an asymptotic low where the manufacturer recommended voltage for operation falls. This pattern of deadtime voltage dependence was repeated for all sources tested with the exception of 54Mn. Low count rates leading to a negative deadtime suggested poor statistical nature of the data collected for 54Mn and the data while being presented here is not used for any inference
Simultaneous Experimental Evaluation of Pulse Shape and Deadtime Phenomenon of GM Detector
Analysis of several pulse shape properties generated by a Geiger Mueller (GM) detector and its dependence on applied voltage was performed. The two-source method was utilized to measure deadtime while simultaneously capturing pulse shape parameters on an oscilloscope. A wide range of operating voltages (600-1200 V) beyond the recommended operating voltage of 900 V was investigated using three radioactive sources (204Tl, 137Cs, 22Na). This study investigates the relationship between operating voltage, pulse shape properties, and deadtime of the detector. Based on the data, it is found that deadtime decreases with increasing voltage from 600 to 650 V. At these low voltages (600–650 V), the collection time was long, allowing sufficient time for some recombination to take place. Increasing the voltage in this range decreased the collection time, and hence deadtime decreased. It is also observed that rise and fall time were at their highest at these applied voltages. Increasing the voltage further would result in gas multiplication, where deadtime and pulse width are observed to be increasing. After reaching the maximum point of deadtime (~ 250 µs at ~ 700 V), deadtime started to exponentially decrease until a plateau was reached. In this region, it is observed that detector deadtime and operating voltage show a strong correlation with positive pulse width, rise and fall time, cycle mean, and area. Therefore, this study confirms a correlation between detector deadtime, operating voltage, and pulse shape properties. The results will validate our hypothesis that deadtime phenomena at different operating voltages are phenomenologically different
Upstream structural management measures for an urban area flooding in Turkey
In recent years, flooding has become an increasing concern across many parts
of the world of both the general public and their governments. The climate
change inducing more intense rainfall events occurring in short period of
time lead flooding in rural and urban areas. In this study the flood
modelling in an urbanized area, namely Samsun-Terme in Blacksea region of
Turkey is performed. MIKE21 with flexible grid is used in 2-dimensional
shallow water flow modelling. 1 × 1000−1 scaled maps with the buildings for the
urbanized area and 1 × 5000−1 scaled maps for the rural parts are used to obtain
DTM needed in the flood modelling. The bathymetry of the river is obtained
from additional surveys. The main river passing through the urbanized area
has a capacity of 500 m3 s−1 according to the design discharge obtained
by simple ungauged discharge estimation depending on catchment area only.
The upstream structural base precautions against flooding are modelled. The
effect of four main upstream catchments on the flooding in the downstream
urban area are modelled as different scenarios. It is observed that if the
flow from the upstream catchments can be retarded through a detention pond
constructed in one of the upstream catchments, estimated Q100 flood can
be conveyed by the river without overtopping from the river channel. The
operation of the upstream detention ponds and the scenarios to convey
Q500 without causing flooding are also presented. Structural management
measures to address changes in flood characteristics in water management
planning are discussed
Target Cueing Provides Support for Target- and Resource-Based Models of the Attentional Blink
The attentional blink (AB) describes a time-based deficit in processing the second of two masked targets. The AB is attenuated if successive targets appear between the first and final target, or if a cueing target is positioned before the final target. Using various speeds of stimulus presentation, the current study employed successive targets and cueing targets to confirm and extend an understanding of target-target cueing in the AB. In Experiment 1, three targets were presented sequentially at rates of 30 msec/item or 90 msec/item. Successive targets presented at 90 msec improved performance compared with non-successive targets. However, accuracy was equivalently high for successive and non-successive targets presented at 30 msec/item, suggesting that–regardless of whether they occurred consecutively–those items fell within the temporally defined attentional window initiated by the first target. Using four different presentation speeds, Experiment 2 confirmed the time-based definition of the AB and the success of target-cueing at 30 msec/item. This experiment additionally revealed that cueing was most effective when resources were not devoted to the cue, thereby implicating capacity limitations in the AB. Across both experiments, a novel order-error measure suggested that errors tend to decrease with an increasing duration between the targets, but also revealed that certain stimulus conditions result in stable order accuracy. Overall, the results are best encapsulated by target-based and resource-sharing theories of the AB, which collectively value the contributions of capacity limitations and optimizing transient attention in time
E3 Ligase Activity of XIAP RING Domain Is Required for XIAP-Mediated Cancer Cell Migration, but Not for Its RhoGDI Binding Activity
Although an increased expression level of XIAP is associated with cancer cell metastasis, the underlying molecular mechanisms remain largely unexplored. To verify the specific structural basis of XIAP for regulation of cancer cell migration, we introduced different XIAP domains into XIAP−/− HCT116 cells, and found that reconstitutive expression of full length HA-XIAP and HA-XIAP ΔBIR, both of which have intact RING domain, restored β-Actin expression, actin polymerization and cancer cell motility. Whereas introduction of HA-XIAP ΔRING or H467A mutant, which abolished its E3 ligase function, did not show obvious restoration, demonstrating that E3 ligase activity of XIAP RING domain played a crucial role of XIAP in regulation of cancer cell motility. Moreover, RING domain rather than BIR domain was required for interaction with RhoGDI independent on its E3 ligase activity. To sum up, our present studies found that role of XIAP in regulating cellular motility was uncoupled from its caspase-inhibitory properties, but related to physical interaction between RhoGDI and its RING domain. Although E3 ligase activity of RING domain contributed to cell migration, it was not involved in RhoGDI binding nor its ubiquitinational modification
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Short-term memory and the attentional blink: capacity versus content
When people monitor the rapid serial visual presentation (RSVP) of stimuli for two targets (T1 and T2), they often miss T2 if it falls into a time window of about half a second after T1 onset, a phenomenon known as the attentional blink (AB). We found that overall performance in an RSVP task was impaired by a concurrent short-term memory (STM) task and, furthermore, that this effect increased when STM load was higher and when its content was more task relevant. Loading visually defined stimuli and adding articulatory suppression further impaired performance on the RSVP task, but the size of the AB over time (i.e., T1-T2 lag) remained unaffected by load or content. This suggested that at least part of the performance in an RSVP task reflects interference between competing codes within STM, as interference models have held, whereas the AB proper reflects capacity limitations in the transfer to STM, as consolidation models have claimed
Three-Dimensional Spatial-Spectral Filtering Based Feature Extraction for Hyperspectral Image Classification
Hyperspectral pixels which have high spectral resolution are used to predict decomposition of material
types on area of obtained image. Due to its multidimensional form, hyperspectral image classification
is a challenging task. Hyperspectral images are also affected by radiometric noise. In order to improve
the classification accuracy, many researchers are focusing on the improvement of filtering, feature
extraction and classification methods. In the context of hyperspectral image classification, spatial
information is as important as spectral information. In this study, a three-dimensional spatial-spectral
filtering based feature extraction method is presented. It consists of three main steps. The first is
a pre-processing step which include spatial-spectral information filtering in three-dimensional space.
The second comprises extract functional features of filtered data. The last one is combining extracted
features by serial feature fusion strategy and using to classify hyperspectral image pixels. Experiments
were conducted on two popular public hyperspectral remote sensing image, 1%, 5%, 10% and 15% of samples
of each classes used as training set, the remaining is used as test set. The proposed method compared
with well-known methods. Experimental results show that the proposed method achieved outstanding
performance than compared methods in hyperspectral image classification task
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