436 research outputs found
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US DOE-AECL cooperative program for development of high-level radioactive waste container fabrication, closure, and inspection techniques
The US Department of Energy (DOE) and Atomic Energy of Canada Limited (AECL) plan to initiate a cooperative research program on development of manufacturing processes for high-level radioactive waste containers. This joint program will benefit both countries in the development of processes for the fabrication, final closure in a hot-cell, and certification of the containers. Program activity objectives can be summarized as follows: to support the selection of suitable container fabrication, final closure, and inspection techniques for the candidate materials and container designs that are under development or are being considered in the US and Canadian repository programs; and to investigate these techniques for alternate materials and/or container designs, to be determined in future optimization studies relating to long-term performance of the waste packages. The program participants will carry out this work in a conditional phased approach, and the scope of work for subsequent years will evolve subject to developments in earlier years. The overall term of this cooperative program is planned to run roughly three years. 5 refs., 2 tabs
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Containment barrier metals for high-level waste packages in a Tuff repository
The Nevada Nuclear Waste Storage Investigations (NNWSI) Waste Package project is part of the US Department of Energy`s Civilian Radioactive Waste Management (CRWM) Program. The NNWSI project is working towards the development of multibarriered packages for the disposal of spent fuel and high-level waste in tuff in the unsaturated zone at Yucca Mountain at the Nevada Test Site (NTS). The final engineered barrier system design may be composed of a waste form, canister, overpack, borehole liner, packing, and the near field host rock, or some combination thereof. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory`s (LLNL) role is to design, model, and test the waste package subsystem for the tuff repository. At the present stage of development of the nuclear waste management program at LLNL, the detailed requirements for the waste package design are not yet firmly established. In spite of these uncertainties as to the detailed package requirements, we have begun the conceptual design stage. By conceptual design, we mean design based on our best assessment of present and future regulatory requirements. We anticipate that changes will occur as the detailed requirements for waste package design are finalized. 17 references, 4 figures, 10 tables
Dark Matter and Pseudo-flat Directions in Weakly Coupled SUSY Breaking Sectors
We consider candidates for dark matter in models of gauge mediated
supersymmetry breaking, in which the supersymmetry breaking sector is weakly
coupled and calculable. Such models typically contain classically flat
directions, that receive one-loop masses of a few TeV. These pseudo-flat
directions provide a new mechanism to account for the cold dark matter relic
abundance. We discuss also the possibility of heavy gravitino dark matter in
such models.Comment: 16 pages, 2 figures. v2: comments, refs adde
Residual cognitive deficits 50 years after lead poisoning during childhood
The long term neurobehavioural consequences of childhood lead poisoning are not known. In this study adult subjects with a documented history of lead poisoning before age 4 and matched controls were examined with an abbreviated battery of neuropsychological tests including measures of attention, reasoning, memory, motor speed, and current mood. The subjects exposed to lead were inferior to controls on almost all of the cognitive tasks. This pattern of widespread deficits resembles that found in children evaluated at the time of acute exposure to lead rather than the more circumscribed pattern typically seen in adults exposed to lead. Despite having completed as many years of schooling as controls, the subjects exposed to lead were lower in lifetime occupational status. Within the exposed group, performance on the neuropsychological battery and occupational status were related, consistent with the presumed impact of limitations in neuropsychological functioning on everyday life. The results suggest that many subjects exposed to lead suffered acute encephalopathy in childhood which resolved into a chronic subclinical encephalopathy with associated cognitive dysfunction still evident in adulthood. These findings lend support to efforts to limit exposure to lead in childhood
Dark Matter Assimilation into the Baryon Asymmetry
Pure singlets are typically disfavored as dark matter candidates, since they
generically have a thermal relic abundance larger than the observed value. In
this paper, we propose a new dark matter mechanism called "assimilation", which
takes advantage of the baryon asymmetry of the universe to generate the correct
relic abundance of singlet dark matter. Through assimilation, dark matter
itself is efficiently destroyed, but dark matter number is stored in new
quasi-stable heavy states which carry the baryon asymmetry. The subsequent
annihilation and late-time decay of these heavy states yields (symmetric) dark
matter as well as (asymmetric) standard model baryons. We study in detail the
case of pure bino dark matter by augmenting the minimal supersymmetric standard
model with vector-like chiral multiplets. In the parameter range where this
mechanism is effective, the LHC can discover long-lived charged particles which
were responsible for assimilating dark matter.Comment: 27 pages, 9 figures, 4 tables; v2, references added, switched to JCAP
format; v3, references added, version published in JCA
Making things happen : a model of proactive motivation
Being proactive is about making things happen, anticipating and preventing problems, and seizing opportunities. It involves self-initiated efforts to bring about change in the work environment and/or oneself to achieve a different future. The authors develop existing perspectives on this topic by identifying proactivity as a goal-driven process involving both the setting of a proactive goal (proactive goal generation) and striving to achieve that proactive goal (proactive goal striving). The authors identify a range of proactive goals that individuals can pursue in organizations. These vary on two dimensions: the future they aim to bring about (achieving a better personal fit within one’s work environment, improving the organization’s internal functioning, or enhancing the organization’s strategic fit with its environment) and whether the self or situation is being changed. The authors then identify “can do,” “reason to,” and “energized to” motivational states that prompt proactive goal generation and sustain goal striving. Can do motivation arises from perceptions of self-efficacy, control, and (low) cost. Reason to motivation relates to why someone is proactive, including reasons flowing from intrinsic, integrated, and identified motivation. Energized to motivation refers to activated positive affective states that prompt proactive goal processes. The authors suggest more distal antecedents, including individual differences (e.g., personality, values, knowledge and ability) as well as contextual variations in leadership, work design, and interpersonal climate, that influence the proactive motivational states and thereby boost or inhibit proactive goal processes. Finally, the authors summarize priorities for future researc
Measurement of the Charged Multiplicities in b, c and Light Quark Events from Z0 Decays
Average charged multiplicities have been measured separately in , and
light quark () events from decays measured in the SLD experiment.
Impact parameters of charged tracks were used to select enriched samples of
and light quark events, and reconstructed charmed mesons were used to select
quark events. We measured the charged multiplicities:
,
, from
which we derived the differences between the total average charged
multiplicities of or quark events and light quark events: and . We compared
these measurements with those at lower center-of-mass energies and with
perturbative QCD predictions. These combined results are in agreement with the
QCD expectations and disfavor the hypothesis of flavor-independent
fragmentation.Comment: 19 pages LaTex, 4 EPS figures, to appear in Physics Letters
Genetic Influences on Patient-Oriented Outcomes in Traumatic Brain Injury: A Living Systematic Review of Non-Apolipoprotein E Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms
There is a growing literature on the impact of genetic variation on outcome in traumatic brain injury (TBI). Whereas a
substantial proportion of these publications have focused on the apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene, several have explored the
influence of other polymorphisms.We undertook a systematic review of the impact of single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)
in non–apolipoprotein E (non-APOE) genes associated with patient outcomes in adult TBI). We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, CINAHL, and gray literature from inception to the beginning of August 2017 for studies of genetic variance in relation to
patient outcomes in adult TBI. Sixty-eight articles were deemed eligible for inclusion into the systematic review. The SNPs
described were in the following categories: neurotransmitter (NT) in 23, cytokine in nine, brain-derived neurotrophic factor
(BDNF) in 12, mitochondrial genes in three, and miscellaneous SNPs in 21. All studies were based on small patient cohorts
and suffered from potential bias. A range of SNPs associated with genes coding for monoamine NTs, BDNF, cytokines, and
mitochondrial proteins have been reported to be associated with variation in global, neuropsychiatric, and behavioral outcomes.
An analysis of the tissue, cellular, and subcellular location of the genes that harbored the SNPs studied showed that they could be
clustered into blood–brain barrier associated, neuroprotective/regulatory, and neuropsychiatric/degenerative groups. Several
small studies report that various NT, cytokine, and BDNF-related SNPs are associated with variations in global outcome at 6–12
months post-TBI. The association of these SNPs with neuropsychiatric and behavioral outcomes is less clear. A definitiv
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