406 research outputs found
Feasibility of a nuclear gauge for fuel quantity measurement aboard aircraft
Capacitance fuel gauges have served as the basis for fuel quantity indicating systems in aircraft for several decades. However, there have been persistent reports by the airlines that these gauges often give faulty indications due to microbial growth and other contaminants in the fuel tanks. This report describes the results of a feasibility study of using gamma ray attenuation as the basis for measuring fuel quantity in the tanks. Studies with a weak Am-241 59.5-keV radiation source indicate that it is possible to continuously monitor the fuel quantity in the tanks to an accuracy of better than 1 percent. These measurements also indicate that there are easily measurable differences in the physical properties and resultant attenuation characteristics of JP-4, JP-5, and Jet A fuels. The experimental results, along with a suggested source-detector geometrical configuration are described
Resonant Excitation of Graphene K-Phonon and Intra-Landau-Level Excitons in Magneto-Optical Spectroscopy
Precise infrared magnetotransmission experiments have been performed in
magnetic fields up to 32 T on a series of multilayer epitaxial graphene
samples. We observe changes in the spectral features and broadening of the main
cyclotron transition when the incoming photon energy is in resonance with the
lowest Landau level separation and the energy of a K point optical phonon. We
have developed a theory that explains and quantitatively reproduces the
frequency and magnetic field dependence of the phenomenon as the absorption of
a photon together with the simultaneous creation of an intervalley,
intra-Landau-level exciton, and a K phonon.Comment: Main manuscript (5 pages); Supplementary Material (18 pages
Magneto-transmission of multi-layer epitaxial graphene and bulk graphite: A comparison
Magneto-transmission of a thin layer of bulk graphite is compared with
spectra taken on multilayer epitaxial graphene prepared by thermal
decomposition of a SiC crystal. We focus on the spectral features evolving as
\sqrt{B}, which are evidence for the presence of Dirac fermions in both
materials. Whereas the results on multi-layer epitaxial graphene can be
interpreted within the model of 2D Dirac fermions, the data obtained on bulk
graphite can only be explained taking into account the 3D nature of graphite,
e.g. by using the standard Slonczewski-Weiss-McClure model.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure
Bilayer graphene inclusions in rotational-stacked multilayer epitaxial graphene
Additional component in multi-layer epitaxial graphene grown on the
C-terminated surface of SiC, which exhibits the characteristic electronic
properties of a AB-stacked graphene bilayer, is identified in magneto-optical
response of this material. We show that these inclusions represent a
well-defined platform for accurate magneto-spectroscopy of unperturbed graphene
bilayers.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
GMF: A Model Migration Case for the Transformation Tool Contest
Using a real-life evolution taken from the Graphical Modeling Framework, we
invite submissions to explore ways in which model transformation and migration
tools can be used to migrate models in response to metamodel adaptation.Comment: In Proceedings TTC 2011, arXiv:1111.440
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Peak fitting applied to low-resolution enrichment measurements
Materials accounting at bulk processing facilities that handle low enriched uranium consists primarily of weight and uranium enrichment measurements. Most low enriched uranium processing facilities draw separate materials balances for each enrichment handled at the facility. The enrichment measurement determines the isotopic abundance of the {sup 235}U, thereby determining the proper strata for the item, while the weight measurement generates the primary accounting value for the item. Enrichment measurements using the passive gamma radiation from uranium were developed for use in US facilities a few decades ago. In the US, the use of low-resolution detectors was favored because they cost less, are lighter and more robust, and don`t require the use of liquid nitrogen. When these techniques were exported to Europe, however, difficulties were encountered. Two of the possible root causes were discovered to be inaccurate knowledge of the container wall thickness and higher levels of minor isotopes of uranium introduced by the use of reactor returns in the enrichment plants. the minor isotopes cause an increase in the Compton continuum under the 185.7 keV assay peak and the observance of interfering 238.6 keV gamma rays. The solution selected to address these problems was to rely on the slower, more costly, high-resolution gamma ray detectors when the low-resolution method failed. Recently, these gamma ray based enrichment measurement techniques have been applied to Russian origin material. The presence of interfering gamma radiation from minor isotopes was confirmed. However, with the advent of fast portable computers, it is now possible to apply more sophisticated analysis techniques to the low-resolution data in the field. Explicit corrections for Compton background, gamma rays from {sup 236}U daughters, and the attenuation caused by thick containers can be part of the least squares fitting routine. Preliminary results from field measurements in Kazakhstan will be discussed
Localization of Dirac electrons by Moire patterns in graphene bilayers
We study the electronic structure of two Dirac electron gazes coupled by a
periodic Hamiltonian such as it appears in rotated graphene bilayers. Ab initio
and tight-binding approaches are combined and show that the spatially periodic
coupling between the two Dirac electron gazes can renormalize strongly their
velocity. We investigate in particular small angles of rotation and show that
the velocity tends to zero in this limit. The localization is confirmed by an
analysis of the eigenstates which are localized essentially in the AA zones of
the Moire patterns.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
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Hybrid instrument development for an analytical laboratory
The authors have been developing a hybrid densitometer for general laboratory application. This type of densitometer can be applied to concentration determinations of thorium, uranium, neptunium, plutonium, and americium. It can also be used to determine the ratios of any combination of these nuclear materials. This report describes the hardware and analysis approach. They will also describe some laboratory tests performed with the densitometer and present actual in-plant application results
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