3,101 research outputs found

    The organization and management of the Virtual Astronomical Observatory

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    The U.S. Virtual Astronomical Observatory (VAO; http://www.us-vao.org/) has been in operation since May 2010. Its goal is to enable new science through efficient integration of distributed multi-wavelength data. This paper describes the management and organization of the VAO, and emphasizes the techniques used to ensure efficiency in a distributed organization. Management methods include using an annual program plan as the basis for establishing contracts with member organizations, regular communication, and monitoring of processes.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures. SPIE Conference 8449: Modeling, Systems Engineering, and Project Management for Astronomy

    Technique for the Measurement of the In-Situ Development Rate

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    In the past, a Perkin Elmer Development Rate Monitor (DRM) has been used to measure the development rate of photoresist. However, due to several limitations of the DRM, the development rates measured therein, are not truly representative of the resist processing on a production lire. Subtleties in the development system are not obtained through the DRM and hence an in-situ development rate is required. Using a Site Services Development Spray Monitor (DSM 100) and a post processing algorithm. the in-situ measured development rates were obtained. The interference signals for eight different wavelengths were simultaneously monitored on a pattemed wafer as it spun on the development module of a wafer track. Since the interference signal is generated from a circularly polarized light source, the DSM 100 has demonstrated robustness to the red cloud effect, developer spray, bubbles in the developer, and ambient light.\u27 Two algorithms for the calculation of the in-situ development rate are proposed. After collecting the eight interference curves, these post processing algorithms used the Marquardt Levenberg non-linear regression algorithm and a linear regression approach to find the development rate as a function of development time. Although the standing wave effect was visible in the plots of development rate versus time using both techniques, the first approach generated the better curve. A plot of development rate versus depth was generated via numerical integration of the plot of development rate versus time. Since the only equation used in the post processing algorithm is the interference relationship, this technique is equally well suited for other types of exposure and resist chemistries. Possession of the in-situ development rate could provide further insight into resist development mechanisms, the development of better models, and the extraction of photolithography model parameters that are specific to the production process

    Freezing by Monte Carlo Phase-Switch

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    We describe a Monte Carlo procedure which allows sampling of the disjoint configuration spaces associated with crystalline and fluid phases, within a single simulation. The method utilises biased sampling techniques to enhance the probabilities of gateway states (in each phase) which are such that a global switch (to the other phase) can be implemented. Equilibrium freezing-point parameters can be determined directly; statistical uncertainties prescribed transparently; and finite-size effects quantified systematically. The method is potentially quite general; we apply it to the freezing of hard spheres.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure

    Observations of Sunspot Oscillations in G band and Ca II H line with Solar Optical Telescope on Hinode

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    Exploiting high-resolution observations made by the Solar Optical Telescope onboard Hinode, we investigate the spatial distribution of power spectral density of oscillatory signal in and around NOAA active region 10935. The G-band data show that in the umbra the oscillatory power is suppressed in all frequency ranges. On the other hand, in Ca II H intensity maps oscillations in the umbra, so-called umbral flashes, are clearly seen with the power peaking around 5.5 mHz. The Ca II H power distribution shows the enhanced elements with the spatial scale of the umbral flashes over most of the umbra but there is a region with suppressed power at the center of the umbra. The origin and property of this node-like feature remain unexplained.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ (Hinode Special Issue

    Photolithography Process Characterization and 3D Simulation Using Track-Mounted Development Rate Monitor Data

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    A track-mounted, in-situ Dissolution Rate Monitor (DRM) is used to study the impact of exposure variations on g-line, i-line and DUV positive chemically-amplified resists. In the i-line case, a comparative study between constant spray and a spray/puddle process was undertaken. In all cases, modeling parameters were extracted from the track-mounted DRM data and entered into 2D and 3D simulators using an experimentally-generated Development Rate vs. PAC concentration table. Simulated profiles were compared with actual SEM cross-sections. Whenever possible, DRM traces were used to analyze standing waves, surface inhibition effects and quantify resist performance by calculating contrast. For the g-line case, the impact of PEB temperature upon the standing wave effects, as quantified by the in-situ DRM data, was studied

    Rational design of a three-heptad coiled-coil protein and comparison by molecular dynamics simulation with the GCN4 coiled coil: Presence of interior three-center hydrogen bonds

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    alpha-Helical coiled coils have a 7-residue repeating pattern (abcdefg) where a and d are usually hydrophobic. We have designed a 2-stranded 44-residue coiled-coil protein (P44) consisting of 2 22-residue alpha-helices linked by 2 terminal disulfide groups to test whether the disulfide bridges could stabilize a 3-heptad coiled coil. P44 should be stabilized by intrahelical hydrogen bonds, interhelical disulfide and salt bridges, and interior hydrophobic interactions. A computer model of P44 was built and its stability was studied by molecular dynamics simulation with explicit water. This doubly crosslinked 3-heptad coiled coil did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation with explicit water. This doubly crosslinked 3-heptad coiled coil did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation. But reduced P44 with 4 thiol groups did unfold. For comparison, the 62-residue crystal structure of the 4-heptad coiled coil of transcription activator GCN4 did not unfold during a 300-ps simulation. Thus P44 may be a stable folded protein in aqueous solution. These simulations revealed the presence of 2 local hydrogen bond networks involving intra-helical 3-center hydrogen bonds in the hydrophobic interior of the coiled coils of GCN4 and P44. The NH hydrogen at d makes a 3-center hydrogen bond whose major component is to the i - 4 C = O oxygen at g and minor component is to the solvent-inaccessible i - 3 C = O oxygen at a. Likewise, the NH hydrogen at g makes a 3-center hydrogen bond with the i - 4 C = O oxygen at c and the buried i - 3 C = O oxygen at d

    3-D Flash Lidar Performance in Flight Testing on the Morpheus Autonomous, Rocket-Propelled Lander to a Lunar-Like Hazard Field

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    For the first time, a 3-D imaging Flash Lidar instrument has been used in flight to scan a lunar-like hazard field, build a 3-D Digital Elevation Map (DEM), identify a safe landing site, and, in concert with an experimental Guidance, Navigation, and Control (GN&C) system, help to guide the Morpheus autonomous, rocket-propelled, free-flying lander to that safe site on the hazard field. The flight tests served as the TRL 6 demo of the Autonomous Precision Landing and Hazard Detection and Avoidance Technology (ALHAT) system and included launch from NASA-Kennedy, a lunar-like descent trajectory from an altitude of 250m, and landing on a lunar-like hazard field of rocks, craters, hazardous slopes, and safe sites 400m down-range. The ALHAT project developed a system capable of enabling safe, precise crewed or robotic landings in challenging terrain on planetary bodies under any ambient lighting conditions. The Flash Lidar is a second generation, compact, real-time, air-cooled instrument. Based upon extensive on-ground characterization at flight ranges, the Flash Lidar was shown to be capable of imaging hazards from a slant range of 1 km with an 8 cm range precision and a range accuracy better than 35 cm, both at 1-delta. The Flash Lidar identified landing hazards as small as 30 cm from the maximum slant range which Morpheus could achieve (450 m); however, under certain wind conditions it was susceptible to scintillation arising from air heated by the rocket engine and to pre-triggering on a dust cloud created during launch and transported down-range by wind
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