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AbstractAbstract
[en] We present in this Special Issue of Physics of Plasmas the review, tutorial, and invited papers of the 2010 Annual Meeting of the American Physical Society's (APS) Division of Plasma Physics. This was the 52nd year of this meeting, and it was held in Chicago, Illinois on 8-12 November 2010. The meeting program was made up of over 100 review, tutorial, and invited oral presentations, and a significant fraction of these speakers prepared manuscripts which were peer-reviewed and are contained in this Special Issue.
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(c) 2011 American Institute of Physics; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Competition is not new in the electric power industry. At one time, the city administration of Chicago had granted three city-wide franchises and over 40 partial concessions. The resulting supply chaos led to a proposal that utilities be given a monopoly status in return for which they would submit to regulation of tariffs by a regulatory body. Most utility managers of the present generation have grown up within this model. (author)
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Institution of Electrical Engineers, London (United Kingdom); IEE Conference Publication, no. 385; 211 p; ISBN 0 85296 605 9; ; 1993; p. 95-99; Institution of Electrical Engineers; London (United Kingdom); International conference on renewable energy: clean power 2001; London (United Kingdom); 17-19 Nov 1993
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AbstractAbstract
[en] The background of the superconducting Chacago cyclotron magnet is given. Stability considerations are presented with parameters itemized. Magnet testing and comparisons to calculations are described with figures showing testing data. Thermometry, LHe Consumption Rate and cryogenic system performance are presented with illustrative tables. Conclusions are listed, including comments concerning the economics involved. Substantial savings can be realized by conversion projects of this type. CCM will save 99% of the electrical power required to run the conventional magnet and about, $200,000 for each year of continuous operation
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1981 cryogenic engineering conference; San Diego, CA (USA); 10-14 Aug 1981; CONF-810835--
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Advances in Cryogenic Engineering; ISSN 0065-2482; ; v. 27 p. 135-142
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Anderson, H.L.
Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)1989
Los Alamos National Lab., NM (USA)1989
AbstractAbstract
[en] This story is about two cyclotrons. The first was the one I helped build when I was a graduate student at Columbia; the second, I built with John Marshall at the University of Chicago after World War II. This is also a story about a graduate student who happened to be in the right place at the right time. In that sense it is an example of the opportunity that every graduate student can look forward to as a result of doing research on the frontiers of science, where the possibilities are endless. My own story had that kind of excitement. 9 refs., 21 figs
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Aug 1989; 21 p; CONTRACT W-7405-ENG-48; Available from NTIS, PC A03/MF A01 as DE90000157; OSTI; INIS; US Govt. Printing Office Dep
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Elastic scattering, when particles appear to 'bounce' off each other, and the related phenomena of diffractive scattering are currently less fashionable than the study of hard scattering processes. However this could change rapidly if unexpected results from the UA4 experiment at the CERN Collider are confirmed and their implications tested. These questions were highlighted at the third 'Blois Workshop' on Elastic and Diffractive Scattering, held early in May on the Evanston campus of Northwestern University, near Chicago
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INIS-XC-J--15P0422; Also available on-line: http://cds.cern.ch/record/1731699/files/vol29-issue7-p018b-e.pdf; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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McPherson, E.G.; Nowak, D.J.; Rowntree, R.A.
Forest Service, Delaware, OH (United States). Northeastern Forest Experiment Station1994
Forest Service, Delaware, OH (United States). Northeastern Forest Experiment Station1994
AbstractAbstract
[en] Results of the 3-year Chicago Urban Forest Climate Project indicate that there are an estimated 50.8 million trees in the Chicago area of Cook and DuPage Counties; 66 percent of these trees rated in good or excellent condition. During 1991, trees in the Chicago area removed an estimated 6,145 tons of air pollutants, providing air cleansing valued at $9.2 million dollars. These trees also sequester approximately 155,000 tons of carbon per year, and provide residential heating and cooling energy savings that, in turn, reduce carbon emissions from power plants by about 12,600 tons annually. Shade, lower summer air temperatures, and a reduction in windspeed associated with increasing tree cover by 10 percent can lower total heating and cooling energy use by 5 to 10 percent annually ($50 to $90 per dwelling unit). The projected net present value of investment in planting and care of 95,000 trees in Chicago is $38 million ($402 per planted tree), indicating that the long-term benefits of trees are more than twice their costs
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Jun 1994; 209 p; FSGTR-NE--186; Also available from NTIS Prices: PC A10/MF A03
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Despite their apparently very different objectives, astrophysics - the study of the largest structures in the Universe - and particle physics - the study of the smallest - have always had common ground. On 23 February 1987 a supernova explosion provided additional impetus to reinforce these links. In this article, David Schramm of the University of Chicago and the NASA/Fermilab Astrophysics Center, explains why
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INIS-XC--15A0522; Also available on-line: http://cds.cern.ch/record/1731753/files/vol30-issue3-p001-e.pdf; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Stead, M.E.
Energy in the urban environment. Proceedings of the 22. annual Illinois energy conference1994
Energy in the urban environment. Proceedings of the 22. annual Illinois energy conference1994
AbstractAbstract
[en] The Illinois Department of Transportation (IDOT), in cooperation with Amtrak, undertook the Chicago-St. Louis High Speed Rail Financial and Implementation Plan study in order to develop a realistic and achievable blueprint for implementation of high speed rail in the Chicago-St. Louis corridor. This report presents a summary of the Price Waterhouse Project Team's analysis and the Financial and Implementation Plan for implementing high speed rail service in the Chicago-St. Louis corridor
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Illinois Univ., Chicago, IL (United States). Energy Resources Center; 283 p; 1994; p. 211-236; 22. annual Illinois energy conference: energy in the urban environment; Chicago, IL (United States); 16-17 Nov 1994; Also available from OSTI as DE96001827; NTIS; US Govt. Printing Office Dep
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Plummer, A.V.
Energy in the urban environment. Proceedings of the 22. annual Illinois energy conference1994
Energy in the urban environment. Proceedings of the 22. annual Illinois energy conference1994
AbstractAbstract
[en] In this paper the author presents some of his thoughts on the relationship between transportation and how Chicago used its land. He has chosen to do this by looking at the question from a historical perspective. He attempts to do this by tracking the link between transportation and the use of land. This linkage actually involves only a few simple human factors such as a desire to pay the least amount for land, getting from place to place as swiftly as possible, being paid the most for work done and living in a country-like setting with all of the serenity that image conjures. The author argues these factors are what brought Chicago to where it is, and makes no attempt to judge this as good or bad. The author argues that energy consumption or scarcity, like railroad or transit strikes, have had little long-term effect on how people travel and therefore how they use land. The notion that resources were inexhaustible permeated Chicago's early history. Human factors appear to the author to have had and probably will continue to have a more profound effect on transportation than anything else. He does not believe society knows what individuals will pay in energy costs to maintain their real or perceived mobility. The real cost of fuel and vehicles is much higher (and so is transit usage) in Europe, but VMT and vehicle ownership still are growing at an astounding rate. Mobility is perceived as good, not bad. How does one convince people to limit their mobility when it is good?
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Illinois Univ., Chicago, IL (United States). Energy Resources Center; 283 p; 1994; p. 83-97; 22. annual Illinois energy conference: energy in the urban environment; Chicago, IL (United States); 16-17 Nov 1994; Also available from OSTI as DE96001827; NTIS; US Govt. Printing Office Dep
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Effective June 1, 1985, licensing and charging of oil exports ended. The Board now issues export orders specifying neither volumes nor prices and covering an exportation period of up to 1 year for light crude oil and up to 2 years for heavy crude oil, available on request to both Canadian and foreign companies. The Board has assumed a monitoring role, and export prices and volumes are reported monthly by exporters. This annual report provides a review of the volumes and prices associated with the supply and disposition of Canadian crude oil during 1988. Highlights are given with detailed information on prices, both internationally, in Canada, and the Chicago posted price by light or heavy crude, and on volumes including capacity and disposition in both domestic and export markets. A short description of the import market is included. Comparisons are made with the previous year. Export volumes of light crude oil in 1988 increased by 13% to average 50,200 m3/d. Export volumes of heavy crude also increased by ca 13% to 62,600 m3/d. 15 figs., 2 tabs
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Jun 1989; 25 p; MICROLOG--93-03515; ISBN 0-662-17151-9; ; PC National Energy Board, 311 - 6th Avenue S.W., Calgary, AB, CAN T2P 3H2; MF CANMET/TID, Energy, Mines and Resources Canada, 555 Booth St., Ottawa, Ont., Canada K1A 0G1 PC N/C; MF $10 CAN
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