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Latest News
Tenn. legislature funds monument for Oak Ridge civil rights pioneers
In a historic photo, students gather at the Oak Ridge high school in Tennessee. (Photo: DOE)
The Tennessee legislature has approved a $3.2 million proposal to fund a monument that will honor a group of 85 black former students known as the Scarboro–Oak Ridge 85 who, with support from the Atomic Energy Commission, became the first students to enter a previously white-only public school in the southeastern United States.
"We want to make sure that Oak Ridge and the Scarboro 85 get their rightful place in the civil rights history timeline; we do not want to be left out," said John Spratling, chair of the Scarboro 85 Monument Committee.
ANS recognition: The American Nuclear Society officially recognized and honored the Scarboro 85 in 2021 by awarding the group with the inaugural Social Responsibility in the Nuclear Community Award at that year’s Annual Winter Meeting.
D. M. France, T. Ginsberg
Nuclear Science and Engineering | Volume 51 | Number 1 | May 1973 | Pages 41-51
Technical Paper | doi.org/10.13182/NSE73-A23256
Articles are hosted by Taylor and Francis Online.
An analytical study was performed to investigate the utility and accuracy of the lumped parameter approach to heat transfer analysis in a nuclear reactor subassembly. It is shown that the lumped parameter approach is a useful mathematical method if the appropriate heat transfer length scales associated with diffusion heat transfer are employed. Important results of this study supporting the utility of the lumped parameter approach indicate that in the parameter range of interest the length scales are geometry-dependent only. They are shown to be independent of radial power distribution across the subassembly, and asymptotic values which are equal to length scales corresponding to the thermally fully developed condition may be used in the thermally developing entry region which encompasses the entire axial length of typical nuclear reactor subassemblies. Two characteristic length scales are presented and may be easily applied in lumped parameter steady-state heat transfer calculations in spacer-free triangular arrays of nuclear fuel elements within the range of parameters of interest for nuclear reactor applications. These length scales apply to fuel rods adjacent and nonadjacent to subassembly walls, respectively.