Gallagher, J.J.
Maryland Univ., College Park (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy1974
Maryland Univ., College Park (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy1974
AbstractAbstract
[en] A model is developed which incorporates to first order the direct effects of the time dependent diffusive propagation of interstellar cosmic rays in a slowly changing interplanetary medium. The model provides a physical explanation for observed rigidity-dependent phase lags in modulated spectra (cosmic ray hysteresis). The average distance to the modulating boundary during the last solar cycle is estimated. (STAR)
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Jun 1974; 42 p; NASA-CR--141146; TR--74-114
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[en] The Federal Water Pollution Control Act as amended by the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 provides criminal penalties in oil spills that result from criminal activity, gross negligence or wilful misconduct on the part of the spiller. Nevertheless, the Department of Justice has seen fit to reach into unrelated legislation to potentially apply strict criminal liability to any oil spill regardless of intent. Strict criminalization of accidental oil spills is demonstrably counterproductive to effective protection of the environment from the effect of spills since it poses a serious impediment to cooperation and coordination by and between those charged by law to respond to them. This impediment is particularly dangerous since it threatens the proper functioning of the inherently sensitive ''troika'' Unified Command Structure that has evolved in spill response management in response to OPA-90 management requirements. Introduction of strict criminal liability for accidental spills is also particularly troublesome in that it must enlist unrelated law to influence an area that has been addressed specifically by legislation designed for that purpose; legislation that has worked well in the past 30 years to both regulate the target activities while successfully achieving the objective of protecting and improving environment quality. (author)
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Gallagher, J.J.; Hovestadt, D.; Klecker, B.; Gloeckler, G.; Fan, C.Y.
Maryland Univ., College Park (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy1976
Maryland Univ., College Park (USA). Dept. of Physics and Astronomy1976
AbstractAbstract
[en] The intensity--time behavior for protons and helium, as well as for carbon, oxygen, and iron ions, was measured following the 1974 September 19 solar flare for energies between 0.5 and approximately 5 MeV per nucleon. The profiles displayed a time dispersion which is inversely proportional to velocity for each individual species. In addition, at a given velocity the time dispersion also depended on the charge to mass ratio of the ion. On the basis of this latter dependence, it was concluded that, while carbon and oxygen are essentially fully stripped, iron nuclei are not, having an effective charge Q = 10 +- 5. The observed dispersion cannot be explained by purely rigidity-dependent diffusive propagation
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May 1976; 15 p; NASA-CR--148143; Available from NTIS. $3.50
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O'Brien, J.L.; Gallagher, J.J.
1993 International oil spill conference: Prevention, preparedness, response1993
1993 International oil spill conference: Prevention, preparedness, response1993
AbstractAbstract
[en] The Gulf War (Operation Desert Storm) produced some of the largest oil spills of all time when Saddam Hussein released millions of barrels of oil from the Mina al Ahmadi terminal in Kuwait into the Arabian Gulf. The resulting massive spill descended on the Saudi Arabian coastline threatening its industrial and environmental resources, as well as the desalination plant intakes that provide fresh water for most of the eastern provinces of the country. A fortuitous combination of geographical features, natural phenomena, and defensive preparations by Saudi Arabia averted a catastrophe of substantial proportions as the open-quotes mother of all oil spillsclose quotes impacted that country
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Anon; 931 p; 1993; p. 193-199; American Petroleum Institute; Washington, DC (United States); 13. biennial international conference on the prevention, behavior, control and cleanup of oil spills; Tampa, FL (United States); 29 Mar - 1 Apr 1993; American Petroleum Institute, 1220 L Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20005 (United States)
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Physics Letters. A; v. 44(5); p. 305-306
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ALKALI METAL COMPOUNDS, ANGULAR MOMENTUM, ENERGY LEVELS, EXCITED STATES, FLUORIDES, FLUORINE COMPOUNDS, FLUORINE ISOTOPES, HALIDES, HALOGEN COMPOUNDS, ISOTOPES, LIGHT NUCLEI, LITHIUM COMPOUNDS, MATHEMATICAL OPERATORS, NUCLEI, ODD-EVEN NUCLEI, PARTICLE PROPERTIES, QUANTUM OPERATORS, SPECTRA, STABLE ISOTOPES
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