WorldWideScience
 
 
1

NASA Nebula in Action: Cloud Computing Case Examples  

Science.gov (United States)

NASA Nebula in Action: Cloud Computing Case Examples. James Williams, NASA Ames Research Center, james.f.williams@nasa.gov. Abstract In 2009 ...

2

Molecular phylogenetics and molecular dating of the New Zealand Gleicheniaceae  

Science.gov (United States)

... Symonds, G. J. Wilson, and H. Zhu. 1997. Seismic stratigraphy and structural history of the Reinga Basin and ... ...

3

Recursive AR Spectral Estimation.  

Science.gov (United States)

... ENGINEERING. Personal Author(s) : Ogino,Koji ; Cadzow,James A. Report Date : 1980. Pagination or Media Count : 18. ...

4

Removing tachyons by compactification  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

It is shown that tachyons in the recently discovered ten-dimensional non-supersymmetric heterotic string models can be removed by compactifying on tori in the presence of large Wilson lines.

1987-01-29

5

Removing tachyons by compactification  

International Nuclear Information System (INIS)

It is shown that tachyons in the recently discovered ten-dimensional non-supersymmetric heterotic string models can be removed by compactifying on tori in the presence of large Wilson lines. (orig.).

6

NWRC Weekly Highlights 8/14/2008  

Science.gov (United States)

vetted educational resources. (Gregory Smith, Lafayette, La., 337-266-8501) Award for DARPA Competition: Scott Wilson, spatial analysis branch chief at the USGS National Wetlands...

2011-08-27

7

T - Stardust | JPL | NASA  

Science.gov (United States)

Jul 16, 2001... HAROLD DAVID TASKIS KIRIL TASKOV STEVEN P. TASLER F. .... SHEILA THACKERAY JAMES S. THACKRAY KEITH THACKREY JUDE ...

8

NASA - IT Summit 2011 Speaker Bios  

Science.gov (United States)

Aug 1, 2011 ... James holds a Bachelor of Science degree in Computer Science and certifications as CISSP, CCNA, and CCDA. show hide. Phillip A. Newman ...

9

Inverse Scattering and Applications. Proceedings of ...  

Science.gov (United States)

... Richrd Bals andLina PrissJames Lepowsky and Mirko Primc Richard Beaals, and Linda Preiss Rothschild, Editors 47 Linear algebra and its role in ...

2011-05-14

11

An ecological analysis of knowing by wielding.  

UK PubMed Central (United Kingdom)

The ecological approach to perception, as developed by James Gibson, is described and applied to how one knows, by means of the haptic perceptual system, various properties of hand-held objects. Four...Full Text Available

1989-11-01

12

Adaptive ARMA Spectral Estimation,  

Science.gov (United States)

... ENGINEERING. Personal Author(s) : Cadzow,James A. ; Ogino,Koji. Report Date : 1981. Pagination or Media Count : 7. Abstract ...

13

APOD: 2005 November 25 - Moon Over Antarctica  

Science.gov (United States)

on the picture will download the highest resolution version available. Moon Over Antarctica Credit & Copyright: James Behrens (IGPP, Scripps Institution of Oceanography)...

2011-10-14

14

A Call for an Official Naval Doctrine  

Science.gov (United States)

... 1. Major Grover E. Myers, Aerospace Power: The Case for Indivisible ... 19. Admiral James D. Watkins, The Maritime Strategy (Annapolis: US Naval ...

1992-02-13

15

Pubs.GISS: Wilson 1977: Diagrammatic ... - Publications - NASA  

Science.gov (United States)

By forming [2/1] Pad? approximants to the constants we obtain: re = 1.125 $Aring $ (1.128 $Aring$), Be = 1.943 cm-1 (1.9312 cm-1), ?eB = 0.0156 cm-1 (0.0175 ...

16

October 2010 Notes - Earth Science Data Systems Working Groups - NASA  

Science.gov (United States)

Federated Search (openSearch) (C. Lynnes); Infusion Process (S. Olding) Metrics Planning & Reporting (R. Ramapriyan); Service & Event Casting (B. Wilson) ...

17

GNF - Wilson Inlet  

Wastenet

... The costal plain still supports Jarrah (Eucalyptus marginata ) forest, dense woodlands, coastal heath and diverse swamplands. Many species of plants are endemic. 20 species of mammals and 12 species of introduced mammals including with feral pigs, rabbits and foxes of particular concern....

18

APOD: 2002 July 11 - M51: X Rays from the Whirlpool  

Science.gov (United States)

picture will download the highest resolution version available. M51: X-Rays from the Whirlpool Credit: A. Wilson (UMD) et al., CXC, NASA Explanation: Fresh from yesterday's...

2011-10-07

19

AEROSPACE MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY - NASA Technical Reports Server  

Science.gov (United States)

Learning curve models have gained widespread acceptance as a technique for analyzing and ...... flight segment in F4 pilots p 163 A91-30966. WILSON, JOHN W . ...

20

Wilson loops in warped resolved deformed conifolds  

CERN Document Server

We calculate quark-antiquark potentials using the relationship between the expectation value of the Wilson loop and the action of a probe string in the string dual. We review and categorize the possible forms of the dependence of the energy on the separation between the quarks. In particular, we examine the possibility of there being a minimum separation for probe strings which do not penetrate close to the origin of the bulk space, and derive a condition which determines whether this is the case. We then apply these considerations to the flavoured resolved deformed conifold background of Gaillard et al. We suggest that the unusual behaviour we observe in this solution is likely to be related to the IR singularity which is not present in the unflavoured case.

2011-01-01

 
 
 
 
21

NAME=\\  

Wastenet

...Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Browser does not support script. Home ...Wilson Group plc »Projects »Buildings & Infrastructure »Industrial & Distribution »Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Project Introduction Scott Wilson was ...Robin Hood Airport Robin Hood Airport Doncaster Sheffield Rolls Royce Production Plant, Goodwood Rolls-Royce plc Rolls-Royce plc, New Manufacturing Facility Royal Arsenal Development ...

22

Use of Microelectrode Arrays to Directly Measure Diffusion of ...  

Science.gov (United States)

... F.; Murray, R. W. J. Am. Chem. ... 14. Thackeray, J. W.; White, H. S.; Wrighton, M. SJ Phys. ... Dr. James S. Murday (1) Dr. Harold H. Singerman (i) ...

1990-05-16

23

Seal is successful at Italys largest pumped storage plant  

British Library Electronic Table of Contents (United Kingdom)

A HydroSele S seal from James Walker has provided more than two years maintenance-free service at the large Entracque pumped-storage hydroelectric scheme in Italy.

2008-01-01

24

IDEAS: Agricultural Systems, Elsevier  

Wastenet

... (restricted)] 256-264 Influence of likelihood function choice for estimating crop model parameters using the generalized likelihood uncertainty estimation method by He, Jianqiang & Jones, James W. & Graham, Wendy D. & Dukes, Michael D. [Downloadable! (restricted)]...

25

1 Transcript of Presidential Meeting in the ... - NASA History Office  

Science.gov (United States)

increased knowledge as result of about a year's work, has led us first to ...... James Webb: And the advanced technology on which military power is going to be ..... on the road and I've been with the real big dogs and I know the deal ...

26

No Generalized TMD-Factorization in Hadro-Production of High Transverse Momentum Hadrons  

CERN Document Server

It has by now been established that standard QCD factorization using transverse momentum dependent parton distribution functions fails in hadro-production of nearly back-to-back hadrons with high transverse momentum. The essential problem is that gauge invariant transverse momentum dependent parton distribution functions cannot be defined with process-independent Wilson line operators, thus implying a breakdown of universality. This has led naturally to proposals that a correct approach is to instead use a type of "generalized" transverse momentum dependent factorization in which the basic factorized structure is assumed to remain valid, but with transverse momentum dependent parton distribution functions that contain non-standard, process dependent Wilson line structures. In other words, to recover a factorization formula, it has become common to assume that it is sufficient to simply modify the Wilson lines in the parton ...

2010-01-01

27

Large cardinals with few measures  

CERN Document Server

We show, assuming the consistency of one measurable cardinal, that it is consistent for there to be exactly kappa+ many normal measures on the least measurable cardinal kappa. This answers a question of Stewart Baldwin. The methods generalize to higher cardinals, showing that the number of lambda strong compactness or lambda supercompactness measures on P_kappa(lambda) can be exactly lambda+, if lambda>kappa is a regular cardinal. We conclude with a list of open questions. Our proofs use a critical observation due to James Cummings.

2006-01-01

28

Complete electroweak matching for radiative B decays  

CERN Document Server

We compute the complete two-loop O(alpha) Wilson coefficients relevant for radiative decays of the B meson in the SM. This is a necessary step in the calculation of the O(alpha alpha_s^n ln^n m_b/M_W) corrections and improves on our previous analysis of electroweak effects in B -> X_s gamma. We describe in detail several interesting technical aspects of the calculation and include all dominant QED matrix elements. In our final result, we neglect only terms originated from the unknown O(alpha alpha_s) evolution of the Wilson coefficients and some suppressed two-loop matrix elements. Due to the compensation among different effects, we find that non-trivial electroweak corrections decrease the branching ratio by about 3.8% for a light Higgs boson, in agreement with our previous analysis. As in [1], the corresponding SM prediction for the branching ratio with E_gamma > 1.6 GeV is (3.60 +- 0.30) x 10^-4.

2001-01-01

29

Orbit of the double-mode cepheid Y Carinae  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

The double-mode cepheid Y Car has been found to have a variable centre-of-mass velocity. Though the observations did not cover a cycle, an orbital period of about 400-600 days was estimated. Radial-velocity observations of this star have now been continued in order to derive the orbital elements. Observations were made with the photoelectric radial-velocity spectrophotometer at the coude focus of the 1.88-m reflector at Sutherland. The velocity system was standardized by frequent nightly observations of stars in the Mount Wilson catalogue with 'a'-quality radial velocities.

1983-06-01

30

Non-Abelian duality, parafermions, and supersymmetry  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

Non-Abelian duality in relation to supersymmetry is examined. When the action of the isometry group on the complex structures is nontrivial, extended supersymmetry is realized nonlocally after duality, using path-ordered Wilson lines. Prototype examples considered in detail are, hyper-Kahler metrics with SO(3) isometry and supersymmetric WZW models. For the latter, the natural objects in the nonlocal realizations of supersymmetry arising after duality are the classical non-Abelian parafermions. The canonical equivalence of WZW models and their non-Abelian duals with respect to a vector subgroup is also established. {copyright} {ital 1996 The American Physical Society.}

1996-07-01

31

IDEAS: European Union Politics,  

Wastenet

...] 2010, Volume 11, Issue 1 3-27 The European Economic and Monetary Union and Labour Market Reform by Elzbieta Bednarek-Sekunda & Richard Jong-A-Pin & Jakob de Haan [Downloadable!] 29-59 Educational Inequality in the EU: The Effectiveness of the National Education Policy by Raphaela Schlicht & Isabelle Stadelmann-Steffen & Markus Freitag [Downloadable!] 61-87 Opinion Polarization and Inter-Party Competition on Europe by Ian Down & Carole J. Wilson [Downloadable!] 89-117 EU Issue Voting: Asset or Liability?: How European Integration Affects Parties' Electoral Fortunes ...

32

Film condensation of HCFC-22 on horizontal enhanced tubes  

Science.gov (United States)

Experiments were conducted to study the condensation heat transfer characteristics of horizontal enhanced tubes. In the current experiment, six different enhanced tubes, including 26, 40 fpi low fin tubes and four three-dimensional-fin tubes, were tested. The working fluid used in the experiment was HCFC-22. Data were presented in the form of overall heat transfer coefficient at three working pressures, namely 1.32, 1.47 and 1.62 Mpa. In addition, the condensing heat transfer coefficients for the test tubes were obtained from the Wilson plot technique.

1996-01-01

33

D-brane probe and closed string tachyons  

International Nuclear Information System (INIS)

We consider a D-brane probe in the unstable string background associated with flux branes. The twist in the spacetime metric reponsible for supersymmetry breaking is shown to manifest itself in the mixing of open Wilson lines with the phases of some adjoint matter fields, resulting in a nonlocal and nonsupersymmetric form of Yang-Mills theory as the probe dynamics. This provides a setup where one can study the fate of a large class of unstable closed string theories that includes as a limit type 0 theories and various orbifolds of type II and type 0 theories. We discuss the limit of C/Z_n orbifold in some detail and speculate on the couplings with closed string tachyons.

2002-04-15

34

The arts of indigenous online dissent: Negotiating technology, indigeneity, and activism in the Cordillera  

British Library Electronic Table of Contents (United Kingdom)

The online communicative environment is expected to revolutionize political discourse as it expands to cover underrepresented groups and ideas. In this platform, marginalized groups such as indigenous communities from the developing world can articulate claims, strategically mobilize and participate in the forms of meaning-making that constitute them. However, there is skepticism on the actual value of online spaces in effecting agency in an internet-mediated environment. Using James Scott's notion of 'hidden transcripts' and Andrew Feenberg's 'democratic rationalization of technology', the paper explores strategic approaches and historical, social, and political conditions embedded in the construction, negotiation, and transformation of indigenous online activist media. In-depth interview...

2012-01-01

35

IDEAS: Networks and Spatial Economics, Springer  

Wastenet

... (restricted)] 255-269 Inefficiency of Logit-Based Stochastic User Equilibrium in a Traffic Network Under ATIS by Hai-Jun Huang & Tian-Liang Liu & Xiaolei ...Hub-catchment Areas, Existing Hubs, and Simulation: A Case Study of Serbian Intermodal Terminals by Milorad Vidovic & Slobodan Zecevic & Milorad Kilibarda ... (restricted)] 389-410 Stochastic Location-assignment on an Interval with Sequential Arrivals by Kannan Viswanath & James Ward [Downloadable! (restricted)] ... (restricted)] 193-208 Solving Stochastic Transportation Network Protection Problems Using the Progressive Hedging-based Method by Yueyue Fan & Changzheng Liu [Downloadable! (...

36

Large (≥2cm) non-hypervascular nodules depicted on MRI in the cirrhotic liver: fate and implications  

British Library Electronic Table of Contents (United Kingdom)

Aim To determine the fate and clinical implication of large (?2cm), non-hypervascular nodules depicted on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the cirrhotic liver. Materials and methods In 21 patients with cirrhosis (14 hepatitis B, two ethanol abuse, four cryptogenic, one Wilson's disease), 25 large (?2cm in the longest dimension) non-hypervascular nodules were identified on dynamic MRI. The implications for diagnosis of the initial size, contour, and signal characteristics on MRI in addition to patients' age and cause of cirrhosis were assessed in our analysis. Results Twelve (75%) out of 16 lesions were malignant or potentially-malignant from 14 hepatitis B patients, while seven (78%) of the nine lesions from other patients were benign (p=0.016). The mean age of the patients who ha...

2008-01-01

37

W.E.B. Du Bois  

British Library Electronic Table of Contents (United Kingdom)

Abstract This article introduces some of the key philosophical contributions of W. E. B. Du Bois. Du Bois studied with Santayana and William James (among others), but chose social science, social theory, journalism, and activism over academic philosophy. Despite this detour, the philosophic depth of his work has won the attention of scholars in fields such as history, English, post colonial theory, African American Studies, American philosophy, and Africana philosophy, and it has belatedly begun to attract the interest of philosophers more generally. This brief overview will explore the philosophical dimensions of some of Du Bois s best known positions his claims about the color line and the Talented Tenth, his argument with Booker T. Washington, and his account of double consciousness. Th...

2010-01-01

38

Nuclear War. The moral dimension  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

U.S. nuclear policy has become the target of increasing criticism during the past decade. Critics often argue that the use of nuclear weapons would be irrational, would destroy humankind, and thus could not serve any rational policy goal. Other critics point to the immortality of the use of nuclear weapons. Both groups condemn U.S. military policy. In Nuclear War, James Child considers and rejects both these lines of criticism. He argues that a policy of deterrence can be both rational and moral; that U.S. nuclear policy is, on balance, based on rational and moral foundations. Child examines near-term consequences of a nuclear war and finds them ghastly but not unthinkable or incomparable to the havoc produced by previous wars. He also analyzes long-term consequences, such as those proposed by the ''nuclear winter'' theory, and finds the fear of total annihilation of humankind to be unfounded.

1985-01-01

39

Meeting report: A celebration of the work of Professor Tony Hart, Liverpool, United Kingdom, 7 March 2009  

British Library Electronic Table of Contents (United Kingdom)

Over 300 delegates participated in this scientific meeting to celebrate the career of the late Professor Tony Hart, who was Head of Department of Medical Microbiology, University of Liverpool, from 1986 until his death in September 2007. The meeting, which was opened by Professor James Stewart (Head, School of Infection and Host Defence, University of Liverpool) and closed by Professor Bernard Brabin (Head of the Child Health Group, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine), captured some of the major elements that distinguished Tony Harts remarkable career. These included: broad research interests spanning both human and veterinary medicine; the ability to conduct both clinical and basic science research with equal skill and vigour; and his phenomenal mentorship of postgraduate students. Eac...

2010-01-01

40

Renormalization-group theory of structural phase transitions in A-15 compounds  

Science.gov (United States)

Hamiltonians of Landau-Ginzburg-Wilson type are constructed for order parameters which are bases for certain high-dimensional irreducible or physically irreducible representations in A-15 structure. These are all the representations with wave vectors ?, X, and R and encompass cases of dimension 1, 2, 3, 4, and 6. A renormalization-group analysis was performed on each new distinct Hamiltonian using the Wilson-Fisher "? expansion" method to order ?, in order to determine fixed points and stability, and critical exponents. For representations of R wave-vector symmetry, only the two-dimensional R(1) has a stable fixed point and may produce a second-order phase transition; for all other R wave vector representations, fluctuations prevent second-order transition. No X point representation gives a second-order transition. Representations at ? which are permitted to be second order by "Landau theory" remain so in this analysis. Generally, if the ...

1978-06-01

 
 
 
 
41

Rayleigh Laser Guide Star Systems UnISIS Bow Tie Shutter and CCD39 Wavefront Camera  

CERN Document Server

Laser guide star systems based on Rayleigh scattering require some means to deal with the flash of low altitude laser light that follows immediately after each laser pulse. These systems also need a fast shutter to isolate the high altitude portion of the focused laser beam to make it appear star-like to the wavefront sensor. We describe how these tasks are accomplished with UnISIS, the Rayleigh laser guided adaptive optics system at the Mt. Wilson Observatory 2.5-m telescope. We use several methods: a 10,000 RPM rotating disk, dichroics, a fast sweep and clear mode of the CCD readout electronics on a 10 $\\mu$s timescale, and a Pockel's cell shutter system. The Pockel's cell shutter would be conventional in design if the laser light were naturally polarized, but the UnISIS 351 nm laser is unpolarized. So we have designed and put into operation a dual Pockel's cell shutter in a unique bow tie arrangement.

2002-01-01

42

Patterns of photometric and chromospheric variation among Sun-like stars: A 20-year perspective  

CERN Document Server

We examine patterns of variation of 32 primarily main sequence stars, extending our previous 7-12 year time series to 13-20 years by combining b, y data from Lowell Observatory with similar data from Fairborn Observatory. Parallel chromospheric Ca II H and K emission data from the Mount Wilson Observatory span the entire interval. The extended data strengthen the relationship between chromospheric and photometric variation derived previously. Twenty-seven stars are deemed variable. On a year-to-year timescale young active stars become fainter when their Ca II emission increases while older less active stars such as the Sun become brighter when their Ca II emission increases. The Sun's total irradiance variation, scaled to the b and y filter photometry, still appears to be somewhat smaller than stars in our limited sample with similar mean chromospheric activity, but we now regard this discrepancy as probably due mainly to our limited stellar sample

2007-01-01

43

Observing Evolution in the Supergranular Length Scale During Periods of Low Solar Activity  

CERN Document Server

We present the initial results of an observational study into the variation of the dominant length-scale of quiet solar emission: supergranulation. This length-scale reflects the radiative energy in the plasma of the upper solar chromosphere and transition region at the magnetic network boundaries forming as a result of the relentless interaction of magnetic fields and convective motions of the Sun's interior. We demonstrate that a net difference of ~0.5Mm in the supergranular emission length-scale occurs when comparing observations cycle 22/23 and cycle 23/24 minima. This variation in scale is reproduced in the datasets of multiple space- and ground-based instruments and using different diagnostic measures. By means of extension, we consider the variation of the supergranular length-scale over multiple solar minima by analyzing a subset of the Mt Wilson Solar Observatory (MWO) Ca II K image record. The observations and analysis presented provide a tantalizing look ...

2011-01-01

44

Theoretical nuclear physics. Final report  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

As the three-year period FY93-FY96 ended, there were six senior investigators on the grant full-time: Bulgac, Henley, Miller, Savage, van Kolck and Wilets. This represents an increase of two members from the previous three-year period, achieved with only a two percent increase over the budget for FY90-FY93. In addition, the permanent staff of the Institute for Nuclear Theory (George Bertsch, Wick Haxton, and David Kaplan) continued to be intimately associated with our physics research efforts. Aurel Bulgac joined the Group in September, 1993 as an assistant professor, with promotion requested by the Department and College of Arts and Sciences by September, 1997. Martin Savage, who was at Carnegie-Mellon University, jointed the Physics Department in September, 1996. U. van Kolck continued as research assistant professor, and we were supporting one postdoctoral research associate, Vesteinn Thorssen, who joined us in September, 1995. Seven graduate students were being supported by the ...

1997-05-01

45

The Local Environment of the FUor-like Objects AR 6A and 6B  

CERN Document Server

We present new 12CO J=3-2 and HCN J=3-2 molecular line maps of the region surrounding the young star AR 6 using the 15 metre James Clerk Maxwell Telescope. AR 6 was previously found to be a double source with both components exhibiting several characteristics of FU Orionis (FUor) eruptive variable stars. Our data indicates that AR 6, like FU Orionis itself, does not possess a CO outflow and likewise, does not show evidence for large amounts of molecular g as in its circumstellar environment. We conclude that from the near-IR to the sub-mm, AR 6 is similar to FU Orionis in several respects. We interpret the lack of significant dust and molecular gas in the circumstellar environment of AR 6, together with the large near-IR thermal excess, as evidence that the sources have exhausted their natal envelopes, that they have at least small hot circumstellar disks, and that they are more evolved than Class I protostars. This, in itself, suggests that, since FUor eruptions ...

2008-01-01

46

Alternative methods to determine headwater benefits  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

In 1992, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) began using a Flow Duration Analysis (FDA) methodology to assess headwater benefits in river basins where use of the Headwater Benefits Energy Gains (HWBEG) model may not result in significant improvements in modeling accuracy. The purpose of this study is to validate the accuracy and appropriateness of the FDA method for determining energy gains in less complex basins. This report presents the results of Oak Ridge National Laboratory`s (ORNL`s) validation of the FDA method. The validation is based on a comparison of energy gains using the FDA method with energy gains calculated using the MWBEG model. Comparisons of energy gains are made on a daily and monthly basis for a complex river basin (the Alabama River Basin) and a basin that is considered relatively simple hydrologically (the Stanislaus River Basin). In addition to validating the FDA method, ORNL was asked to suggest refinements and improvements to the FDA method. ...

1997-11-10

47

The Euro-Quebec Hydro-Hydrogen Pilot Project (EQHHPP). Rationale, concept, realisation  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

Back in 1985 it was the European Commission's intention to demonstrate on rather large scale the provision of clean and renewable energy with hydrogen as energy vector and fuel. The cheapest and technologically available form of renewable electricity, the primary energy for electrolytic hydrogen, is hydropower. Most of the hydroenergy sources are oversea's. The World's topologically and technically exploitable hydroenergy potential is estimated to be in the order of 20.10{sup 3} TWh/y, i.e. 0.0057% of the hydraulic cycle energy. Today's hydroelectricity generation is {approx}2500 TWh/y i.e. {approx}21% of the World's electricity generation. Quebec's installed hydroelectricity is 33.5 GW, its residual potential is 50 GW or 190 TWh/y and 285 TWh/y, respectively (load factor 0.65). The construction of hydropower installation is rather clean. The construction of La Grande at James Bay with an installed rating of ...

1998-07-01

48

LOOP Inc. (Louisiana Offshore Oil Port Inc. ) to start onshore construction this year  

Science.gov (United States)

A discussion covers the LOOP project to construct an offshore pipeline system, which will connect with onshore facilities at Fourchon, La., and two onshore pipelines (26 mi 48 in. Clovelly line and 53 mi 48 in. LOCAP line) connecting Fourchon with the existing Capline system at St. James, La.; the three-phase construction schedule, the first phase due to begin in the third quarter of 1978 with, e.g., onshore pipeline and salt dome storage facility construction which will yield an expected initial throughput of 1.4 million bbl/day; the marine terminal complex, consisting of control and pumping platforms, and three 7000 hp pumps to operate the system at 45,000-100,000 bbl/hr; the offshore lines, including lines between single-point mooring units and the pumping platform, the 21 mi 48 in. pipe to Fourchon, and corrosion protection of lines by an asphalt-sand mixture or a semiplasticized coal-tar enamel; the onshore system, including the Fourchon booster station, ...

1978-06-01

49

International Safeguards Technology and Policy Education and Training Pilot Programs  

Energy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)

A major focus of the National Nuclear Security Administration-led Next Generation Safeguards Initiative (NGSI) is the development of human capital to meet present and future challenges to the safeguards regime. An effective university-level education in safeguards and related disciplines is an essential element in a layered strategy to rebuild the safeguards human resource capacity. NNSA launched two pilot programs in 2008 to develop university level courses and internships in association with James, Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) at the Monterey Institute of International Studies (MIIS) and Texas A&M University (TAMU). These pilot efforts involved 44 students in total and were closely linked to hands-on internships at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL). The Safeguards and Nuclear Material Management pilot program was a collaboration between TAMU, LANL, and LLNL. The LANL-based ...

2009-06-16

50

Monthly report of activities: APRIL 1, 1969  

Science.gov (United States)

This is the first of a series of monthly reports summarizing the status of the work of the National Accelerator Laboratory. This first report will cover developments since the publication of the Design Report in January. Authorization hearings were held before the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy on February 21, 1968. Dr. Wilson described the plans and designs of the Laboratory. The present plan of the Laboratory is that the Village of Weston will be utilized for office, laboratory, and shop space during construction. The Laboratory business office is already occupying several houses. The linac section is occupying three houses for offices and construction of an 8,000 sq ft laboratory building for linac work is almost complete. Another house is being used and a 4,500 sq ft inflatable building is being constructed for model-magnet and vacuum testing. Other temporary buildings will be constructed for use by other sections. We plan to move into the village as rapidly ...

1968-04-01