977 research outputs found

    Sedimentation survey of Lake Vermilion, Vermilion County, Illinois

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    "Prepared for the Consumers Illinois Water Company.

    PS2 Transfer Lines

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    Within the scope of the LHC injector upgrade it has been proposed to replace the present injector chain by new accelerators, LINAC4, SPL and PS2, for which new transfer lines will be required. In this report the beam line properties and requirements are summarized. Then the initial optics of these beam lines and their geometry are discussed. Particular attention is given to the injection and extraction regions where several beam lines have to intersect, imposing challenging constraints on the layout. Directions for optimisation are suggested

    Beam Line Design for the CERN Hiradmat Test Facility

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    The LHC phase II collimation project requires beam shock and impact tests of materials used for beam intercepting devices. Similar tests are also of great interest for other accelerator components such as beam entrance/exit windows and protection devices. For this purpose a dedicated High Radiation Material test facility (HiRadMat) is under study. This facility may be installed at CERN at the location of a former beam line. This paper describes the associated beam line which is foreseen to deliver a 450 GeV proton beam from the SPS with an intensity of up to 3×10**13 protons per shot. Different beam line designs will be compared and the choice of the beam steering and diagnostic elements will be discussed, as well as operational issues

    The 4 GeV H- Beam Transfer Line from the SPL to the PS2

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    The proposed new CERN injector chain LINAC4, SPL, PS2 will require the construction of new beam transfer lines. A preliminary design has been performed for the 4 GeV SPL to PS2 H- transfer line. The constraints, beam parameters and geometry requirements are summarised and a possible layout proposed, together with the magnet specifications. First considerations on longitudinal beam dynamics and on beam loss limitations from H- lifetime are presented

    Comparison of subjective and objective evaluation of screen-film systems for chest radiography

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    A subjective and an objective comparison of six screen-film systems is reported. Among the objective parameters which characterise image quality, resolution appeared to be the most critical one when compared with the averaged ranking produced by the radiologists. The results have shown that a relationship between dose and image quality can be established for most of screen-film systems tested. The problem which remains in the optimisation procedure of chest imaging, is the definition of the level of image quality requirements

    European Survey of Image Quality Assessment Methods Used in Mammography

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    The definition of reference dose levels has to be linked with the definition of image quality. Unfortunately, there is still no general agreement on the definition of image quality in mammography, and most of the protocols used are based on the detectability of objects having various shapes and contrasts. To facilitate the task of assessing image quality, scoring methods are often used to produce a single number representative of the imaging chain performance. The goal of this study is to present a comparison between different ways of assessing image quality commonly used in Europe. A set of five mammograms, having different image quality levels, has been obtained with several test objects and compared. The results show large sensitivity variations among the different methods. Concerted work between radiologists and physicists is still required to define the radiological tasks and develop objective ways to measure image quality in mammography

    Evaluating changeability to improve fruit and vegetable intake among school aged children

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    BACKGROUND: The purposes of this paper are two fold. First, to describe an approach used to identify fruits and vegetables to target for a child focused dietary change intervention. Second, to evaluate the concept of fruit and vegetable changeability and feasibility of applying it in a community setting. METHODS: Steps for identifying changeable fruits and vegetables include (1) identifying a dietary database (2) defining geographic and (3) personal demographics that characterize the food environment and (4) determining which fruits and vegetables are likely to improve during an intervention. The validity of these methods are evaluated for credibility using data collected from quasi-experimental, controlled design among 7–9 year old children (n = 304) participating in a tutoring or mentoring program in St. Louis, MO. Using a 28-item food frequency questionnaire, parents were asked to recall for their child how often foods were eaten the past 7 days. This questionnaire was repeated eight months later (response rate 84%). T-test analyses are used to determine mean serving differences from baseline to post test. RESULTS: The mean serving differences from baseline to post test were significant for moderately eaten fruits (p < .001), however, not for vegetables (p = .312). Among the intervention group, significantly more children ate grapes (p < .001), peaches (p = .022), cantaloupe (p < .001), and spinach (p = .044) at post testing – all identified as changeable with information tailored to participants. CONCLUSION: Data driven, food focused interventions directed at a priority population are feasible and practical. An empirical evaluation of the assumptions associated with these methods supports this novel approach. However, results may indicate that these methods may be more relevant to fruits than vegetables. This process can be applied to diverse populations for many dietary outcomes. Intervention strategies that target only those changeable fruits and vegetables are innovative and warrant further study

    Sedimentation survey of the Morton Arboretum lakes, DuPage County, Illinois

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    "Prepared for Harza Engineering Company, the Morton Arboretum and Illinois Environmental Protection Agency.
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