scholarly journals Ultra-High Resolution ARP Spectrometer System for NSLS Undulator Beamline U13. Final Report, August 15, 1996 - August 31, 2000j

2001 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric Jensen
Author(s):  
Wolfgang-M. Boerner ◽  
Hans Brand ◽  
Leonard A. Cram ◽  
Dag T. Gjessing ◽  
Arthur K. Jordan ◽  
...  

1984 ◽  
Vol 86 ◽  
pp. 265-265
Author(s):  
C.L. Cromer ◽  
J.M. Bridges ◽  
T.B. Lucatorto ◽  
J.R. Roberts

We demonstrate a new high resolution grazing incidence spectrometer system for spectroscopic applications in the range 50 to 400 Å. The instrument is comprised of a laser-plasma VUV continuum source, a 1.5 m grazing incidence spectrometer, and a 1024-channel VUV optical multichannel analyzer (VUV-OMA). The VUV-OMA is of new design, featuring a special resolution-enhanced channel electron multiplier array in an overall configuration chosen to optimize the spatial resolution of the detector while maintaining single-photoelectron sensitivity. The instrument has the capability of bringing the advantages of linear response and parallel spectral detection to general VUV photoabsorption studies of atoms, ions, molecules, and thin solid samples, as well as studies involving laboratory plasmas. The instrument has the additional special capability of performing time resolved absorption spectroscopy of transient species. The characteristics of the source and detector, along with various applications of the instrument to atomic physics will be discussed.


Author(s):  
Kevin W. Ferguson

With the age of the original Panhandle Eastern Pipeline (PEPL) Company pipelines, it’s not a matter of if anomalies will be found when an ILI tool is run, it’s a matter of how many and how severe. When a final report is received from an ILI vendor, burst pressures are typically calculated using Modified B31G, 0.85dL. The results can seem unmanageable, but success has been had doing further assessments on some anomalies without excavating them all. This assessment has been developed and performed by PEPL on three sets of Tuboscope ILI data and one set of Baker Hughes CPIG data. The method to be discussed was first employed in 2002. It provides a more accurate characterization of the defect and provides the company the ability to more effectively allocate resources. Efforts have been made to review the color scan of a vendor’s raw High Resolution Magnetic Flux Leakage (HRMFL) data, and perform an assessment using Effective Area Analysis without excavating hundreds of anomalies that prove no threat to the pipeline. This assessment is done by hand on the computer and in many cases returns a burst pressure higher than that calculated using Modified B31G, 0.85dL. The following is a case study that shows how multiple defects have been assessed prior to excavation in an attempt to more accurately characterize the defect, and allow for a better allocation of resources. Digs have been performed to validate the process, and the results will be discussed.


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