1,531 research outputs found
Uranium Mill Trailings Geotechnical Investigations - A Case History
Uranium mill tailings at Union Carbide Corporation\u27s mining and mill complex at Uravan, Colorado, are deposited in two tailings piles along a steep hillside. The tailings are deposited in slurry form, allowed to decant, and the decant liquid removed for recycling in the milling operation. The impoundment dikes are raised using the coarser portion of the tailings in an upstream method of construction. At the time of the study, the height of the tailings piles was in excess of 100 feet. Continued use of these piles necessitated a detailed geotechnical stability evaluation and design of stabilizing measures in order to maintain safety factors and meet regulatory requirements. Any failure of these slopes could have serious consequences. This paper discusses the geotechnical evaluation of the tailings piles, design and construction of the stabilizing measures, and the performance of the tailings pile slopes. The work was performed to meet the requirements set by the Colorado Department of Health, a State of Colorado agency, and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission of the United States, which acted as consultant and reviewer to the Department of Health. These regulatory agencies conducted a detailed review of the design and construction activities. Since the construction of the stabilizing berms, a regular monitoring program has been in effect. The data collected to date indicate that the performance of the slopes has been satisfactory
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Multi-purpose neutron radiography system
A conceptual design is given for a low cost, multipurpose radiography system suited for the needs of the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). The proposed neutron source is californium-252. One purpose is to provide an in-house capability for occasional, reactor quality, neutron radiography thus replacing the recently closed Omega-West Reactor. A second purpose is to provide a highly reliable standby transportable neutron radiography system. A third purpose is to provide for transportable neutron probe gamma spectroscopy techniques. The cost is minimized by shared use of an existing x-ray facility, and by use of an existing transport cask. The achievable neutron radiography and radioscopy performance characteristics have been verified. The demonstrated image qualities range from high resolution gadolinium - SR film, with L:D = 100:1, to radioscopy using a LIXI image with L:D = 30:1 and neutron fluence 3.4 x 10{sup 5} n/cm{sup 2}
Orbiting Resonances and Bound States in Molecular Scattering
A family of orbiting resonances in molecular scattering is globally described
by using a single pole moving in the complex angular momentum plane. The
extrapolation of this pole at negative energies gives the location of the bound
states. Then a single pole trajectory, that connects a rotational band of bound
states and orbiting resonances, is obtained. These complex angular momentum
singularities are derived through a geometrical theory of the orbiting. The
downward crossing of the phase-shifts through pi/2, due to the repulsive region
of the molecular potential, is estimated by using a simple hard-core model.
Some remarks about the difference between diffracted rays and orbiting are also
given.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, to appear in Physical Review
Decay of the Sinai Well in D dimensions
We study the decay law of the Sinai Well in dimensions and relate the
behavior of the decay law to internal distributions that characterize the
dynamics of the system. We show that the long time tail of the decay is
algebraic (), irrespective of the dimension .Comment: 14 pages, Figures available under request. Revtex. Submitted to Phys.
Rev. E.,e-mail: [email protected]
Fluctuation, time-correlation function and geometric Phase
We establish a fluctuation-correlation theorem by relating the quantum
fluctuations in the generator of the parameter change to the time integral of
the quantum correlation function between the projection operator and force
operator of the ``fast'' system. By taking a cue from linear response theory we
relate the quantum fluctuation in the generator to the generalised
susceptibility. Relation between the open-path geometric phase, diagonal
elements of the quantum metric tensor and the force-force correlation function
is provided and the classical limit of the fluctuation-correlation theorem is
also discussed.Comment: Latex, 12 pages, no figures, submitted to J. Phys. A: Math & Ge
Connecting Berry's phase and the pumped charge in a Cooper pair pump
The properties of the tunnelling-charging Hamiltonian of a Cooper pair pump
are well understood in the regime of weak and intermediate Josephson coupling,
i.e. when . It is also known that
Berry's phase is related to the pumped charge induced by the adiabatical
variation of the eigenstates. We show explicitly that pumped charge in Cooper
pair pump can be understood as a partial derivative of Berry's phase with
respect to the phase difference across the array. The phase fluctuations
always present in real experiments can also be taken into account, although
only approximately. Thus the measurement of the pumped current gives reliable,
yet indirect, information on Berry's phase. As closing remarks, we give the
differential relation between Berry's phase and the pumped charge, and state
that the mathematical results are valid for any observable expressible as a
partial derivative of the Hamiltonian.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, RevTeX, Presentation has been clarifie
Zeta Function Zeros, Powers of Primes, and Quantum Chaos
We present a numerical study of Riemann's formula for the oscillating part of
the density of the primes and their powers. The formula is comprised of an
infinite series of oscillatory terms, one for each zero of the zeta function on
the critical line and was derived by Riemann in his paper on primes assuming
the Riemann hypothesis. We show that high resolution spectral lines can be
generated by the truncated series at all powers of primes and demonstrate
explicitly that the relative line intensities are correct. We then derive a
Gaussian sum rule for Riemann's formula. This is used to analyze the numerical
convergence of the truncated series. The connections to quantum chaos and
semiclassical physics are discussed
The Approach to Ergodicity in Monte Carlo Simulations
The approach to the ergodic limit in Monte Carlo simulations is studied using
both analytic and numerical methods. With the help of a stochastic model, a
metric is defined that enables the examination of a simulation in both the
ergodic and non-ergodic regimes. In the non-ergodic regime, the model implies
how the simulation is expected to approach ergodic behavior analytically, and
the analytically inferred decay law of the metric allows the monitoring of the
onset of ergodic behavior. The metric is related to previously defined measures
developed for molecular dynamics simulations, and the metric enables the
comparison of the relative efficiencies of different Monte Carlo schemes.
Applications to Lennard-Jones 13-particle clusters are shown to match the model
for Metropolis, J-walking and parallel tempering based approaches. The relative
efficiencies of these three Monte Carlo approaches are compared, and the decay
law is shown to be useful in determining needed high temperature parameters in
parallel tempering and J-walking studies of atomic clusters.Comment: 17 Pages, 7 Figure
Fredholm methods for billiard eigenfunctions in the coherent state representation
We obtain a semiclassical expression for the projector onto eigenfunctions by
means of the Fredholm theory. We express the projector in the coherent state
basis, thus obtaining the semiclassical Husimi representation of the stadium
eigenfunctions, which is written in terms of classical invariants: periodic
points, their monodromy matrices and Maslov indices.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to Phys. Rev. E. Comments or
questions to [email protected]
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