15,974 research outputs found
Thin conformal antenna array for microwave power conversions
A structure of a circularly polarized, thin conformal, antenna array which may be mounted integrally with the skin of an aircraft employs microstrip elliptical elements and interconnecting feed lines spaced from a circuit ground plane by a thin dielectric layer. The feed lines are impedance matched to the elliptical antenna elements by selecting a proper feedpoint inside the periphery of the elliptical antenna elements. Diodes connected between the feed lines and the ground plane rectify the microwave power, and microstrip filters (low pass) connected in series with the feed lines provide dc current to a microstrip bus. Low impedance matching strips are included between the elliptical elements and the rectifying and filtering elements
RF beam center location method and apparatus for power transmission system
The receiving element in wireless power transmission systems intercepts the greatest possible portion of the transmitted energy beam. Summing the output energy of all receivers in a planar array makes it possible to determine the location of the center of energy of the incident beam on a receiving array of antenna elements so that the incident beam is in the microwave region
Cost effectiveness of spacecraft pointing antennas
Comparative cost analysis of spacecraft pointing antennas and RF tracking antenna
Large spacecraft antenna study, analytical pattern subtask
Calculation techniques to determine circularly polarized patterns of erectable spacecraft high gain antenna
Rotary antenna attenuator
Radio frequency attenuator, having negligible insertion loss at minimum attenuation, can be used for making precise antenna gain measurements. It is small in size compared to a rotary-vane attenuator
What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution?
This is something of an unusual paper. It serves as both the reason for and the result of a small number of leading academics in the field, coming together to focus on the question that serves as the title to this paper: What is the problem to which interactive multimedia is the solution? Each of the authors addresses this question from their own viewpoint, offering informed insights into the development, implementation and evaluation of multimedia. The result of their collective work was also the focus of a Western Australian Institute of Educational Research seminar, convened at Edith Cowan University on 18 October, 1994.
The question posed is deliberately rhetorical - it is asked to allow those represented here to consider what they think are the significant issues in the fast-growing field of multimedia. More directly, the question is also asked here because nobody else has considered it worth asking: for many multimedia is done because it is technically possible, not because it offers anything that is of value or provides the solution to a particular problem.
The question, then, is answered in various ways by each of the authors involved and each, in their own way, consider a range of fundamental issues concerning the nature, place and use of multimedia - both in education and in society generally. By way of an introduction, the following provides a unifying context for the various contributions made here
Radiated microwave power transmission system efficiency measurements
The measured and calculated results from determining the operating efficiencies of a laboratory version of a system for transporting electric power from one point to another via a wireless free space radiated microwave beam are reported. The system's overall end-to-end efficiency as well as intermediated conversion efficiencies were measured. The maximum achieved end-to-end dc-to-ac system efficiency was 54.18% with a probable error of + or - 0.94%. The dc-to-RF conversion efficiency was measured to be 68.87% + or - 1.0% and the RF-to-dc conversion efficiency was 78.67 + or - 1.1%. Under these conditions a dc power of 495.62 + or - 3.57 W was received with a free space transmitter antenna receiver antenna separation of 170.2 cm (67 in)
EVOLUTION OF IR-SELECTED GALAXIES IN Z~0.4 CLUSTERS
Wide-field optical and near--IR () imaging is presented for two rich
galaxy clusters: Abell~370 at and Abell~851 (Cl0939+47) at .
Galaxy catalogs selected from the near--IR images are 90\% complete to
approximately 1.5 mag below resulting in samples with 100
probable member galaxies per cluster in the central 2 Mpc. Comparison
with WFPC images yields subsamples of 70 galaxies in each cluster
with morphological types. Analysis of the complete samples and the
subsamples shows that the E/S0s are bluer than those in the Bower
et al.\ (1992) Coma sample in the optical color by ~mag for Abell~370
and by ~mag for Abell~851. If real, the bluing of the E/S0 populations at
moderate redshift is consistent with that calculated from the Bruzual and
Charlot (1993) models of passive elliptical galaxy evolution. In both clusters
the intrinsic scatter of the known E/S0s about their optical color--mag
relation is small ( mag) and not significantly different from that
of Coma E/S0s as given by Bower et al.\ (1992), indicating that the galaxies
within each cluster formed at the same time at an early epoch.Comment: uuencoded gzipped tar file containing latex files of manuscript (42
pages) plus tables (9 pages); figures available by anonymous ftp at
ftp://ipac.caltech.edu//pub/pickup/sed ; accepted for publication in the Ap
- …