859 research outputs found
Robotic and automatic welding development at the Marshall Space Flight Center
Welding automation is the key to two major development programs to improve quality and reduce the cost of manufacturing space hardware currently undertaken by the Materials and Processes Laboratory of the NASA Marshall Space Flight Center. Variable polarity plasma arc welding has demonstrated its effectiveness on class 1 aluminum welding in external tank production. More than three miles of welds were completed without an internal defect. Much of this success can be credited to automation developments which stabilize the process. Robotic manipulation technology is under development for automation of welds on the Space Shuttle's main engines utilizing pathfinder systems in development of tooling and sensors for the production applications. The overall approach to welding automation development undertaken is outlined. Advanced sensors and control systems methodologies are described that combine to make aerospace quality welds with a minimum of dependence on operator skill
Immigration Enforcement and Fairness to Would-Be Immigrants
This chapter argues that governments have a duty to take reasonably effective and humane steps to minimize the occurrence of unauthorized migration and stay. While the effects of unauthorized migration on a country’s citizens and institutions have been vigorously debated, the literature has largely ignored duties of fairness to would-be immigrants. It is argued here that failing to take reasonable steps to prevent unauthorized migration and stay is deeply unfair to would-be immigrants who are not in a position to bypass visa regulations. Importantly, the argument here is orthogonal to the debate as to how much and what kinds of immigration ought to be allowed
Protective adaptation of low serum triiodothyronine in patients with chronic renal failure
Protective adaptation of low serum triiodothyronine in patients with chronic renal failure. Low serum triiodothyronine (T3) concentration is frequently found in patients with chronic renal failure (CRF). To test the hypothesis that this may serve to minimize protein catabolism in these patients, we measured nitrogen balance (Nb) in seven CRF and four control subjects in the basal state and when serum T3 concentration was elevated by L-triiodothyronine (LT3) and suppressed by sodium ipodate administration. In the basal state, both the controls and the CRF patients were in positive Nb, 0.02 ± 0.51 and 0.58 ± 0.34 g/day, respectively. During LT3 administration, Nb decreased to -0.80 ± 0.39 g/day in the CRF patients (P < 0.01), but remained positive, 0.22 ± 0.67 g/day, in the controls. There was a significant negative correlation between serum T3 concentration and Nb in the CRF patients (r = -0.63, P < 0.005), but not in the controls. Furthermore, urea nitrogen generation rate, calculated from urea kinetics, increased from a baseline of 4.6 ± 0.55 to 6.0 ± 0.50 mg/min during LT3 administration in the CRF patients (P < 0.01). Sodium ipodate, which significantly lowered serum T3 concentrations, had little effect on nitrogen metabolism in the controls and the CRF patients. These data support the concept that low serum T3 concentrations may confer a protective effect on CRF patients regarding protein-nitrogen conservation and provide a rationale for not correcting such deficiency
A Titanium Nitride Absorber for Controlling Optical Crosstalk in Horn-Coupled Aluminum LEKID Arrays for Millimeter Wavelengths
We discuss the design and measured performance of a titanium nitride (TiN)
mesh absorber we are developing for controlling optical crosstalk in
horn-coupled lumped-element kinetic inductance detector arrays for
millimeter-wavelengths. This absorber was added to the fused silica
anti-reflection coating attached to previously-characterized, 20-element
prototype arrays of LEKIDs fabricated from thin-film aluminum on silicon
substrates. To test the TiN crosstalk absorber, we compared the measured
response and noise properties of LEKID arrays with and without the TiN mesh.
For this test, the LEKIDs were illuminated with an adjustable, incoherent
electronic millimeter-wave source. Our measurements show that the optical
crosstalk in the LEKID array with the TiN absorber is reduced by 66\% on
average, so the approach is effective and a viable candidate for future
kilo-pixel arrays.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Journal of Low
Temperature Physic
Horn-Coupled, Commercially-Fabricated Aluminum Lumped-Element Kinetic Inductance Detectors for Millimeter Wavelengths
We discuss the design, fabrication, and testing of prototype horn-coupled,
lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) designed for cosmic
microwave background (CMB) studies. The LEKIDs are made from a thin aluminum
film deposited on a silicon wafer and patterned using standard
photolithographic techniques at STAR Cryoelectronics, a commercial device
foundry. We fabricated twenty-element arrays, optimized for a spectral band
centered on 150 GHz, to test the sensitivity and yield of the devices as well
as the multiplexing scheme. We characterized the detectors in two
configurations. First, the detectors were tested in a dark environment with the
horn apertures covered, and second, the horn apertures were pointed towards a
beam-filling cryogenic blackbody load. These tests show that the multiplexing
scheme is robust and scalable, the yield across multiple LEKID arrays is 91%,
and the noise-equivalent temperatures (NET) for a 4 K optical load are in the
range 26\thinspace\pm6 \thinspace \mu \mbox{K} \sqrt{\mbox{s}}
Ultra High Energy Cosmology with POLARBEAR
Observations of the temperature anisotropy of the Cosmic Microwave Background
(CMB) lend support to an inflationary origin of the universe, yet no direct
evidence verifying inflation exists. Many current experiments are focussing on
the CMB's polarization anisotropy, specifically its curl component (called
"B-mode" polarization), which remains undetected. The inflationary paradigm
predicts the existence of a primordial gravitational wave background that
imprints a unique B-mode signature on the CMB's polarization at large angular
scales. The CMB B-mode signal also encodes gravitational lensing information at
smaller angular scales, bearing the imprint of cosmological large scale
structures (LSS) which in turn may elucidate the properties of cosmological
neutrinos. The quest for detection of these signals; each of which is orders of
magnitude smaller than the CMB temperature anisotropy signal, has motivated the
development of background-limited detectors with precise control of systematic
effects. The POLARBEAR experiment is designed to perform a deep search for the
signature of gravitational waves from inflation and to characterize lensing of
the CMB by LSS. POLARBEAR is a 3.5 meter ground-based telescope with 3.8
arcminute angular resolution at 150 GHz. At the heart of the POLARBEAR receiver
is an array featuring 1274 antenna-coupled superconducting transition edge
sensor (TES) bolometers cooled to 0.25 Kelvin. POLARBEAR is designed to reach a
tensor-to-scalar ratio of 0.025 after two years of observation -- more than an
order of magnitude improvement over the current best results, which would test
physics at energies near the GUT scale. POLARBEAR had an engineering run in the
Inyo Mountains of Eastern California in 2010 and will begin observations in the
Atacama Desert in Chile in 2011.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, DPF 2011 conference proceeding
The Green Bank Northern Celestial Cap Pulsar Survey - I: Survey Description, Data Analysis, and Initial Results
We describe an ongoing search for pulsars and dispersed pulses of radio
emission, such as those from rotating radio transients (RRATs) and fast radio
bursts (FRBs), at 350 MHz using the Green Bank Telescope. With the Green Bank
Ultimate Pulsar Processing Instrument, we record 100 MHz of bandwidth divided
into 4,096 channels every 81.92 . This survey will cover the entire sky
visible to the Green Bank Telescope (, or 82% of the sky)
and outside of the Galactic Plane will be sensitive enough to detect slow
pulsars and low dispersion measure (30 ) millisecond
pulsars (MSPs) with a 0.08 duty cycle down to 1.1 mJy. For pulsars with a
spectral index of 1.6, we will be 2.5 times more sensitive than previous and
ongoing surveys over much of our survey region. Here we describe the survey,
the data analysis pipeline, initial discovery parameters for 62 pulsars, and
timing solutions for 5 new pulsars. PSR J02145222 is an MSP in a long-period
(512 days) orbit and has an optical counterpart identified in archival data.
PSR J06365129 is an MSP in a very short-period (96 minutes) orbit with a
very low mass companion (8 ). PSR J06455158 is an isolated MSP
with a timing residual RMS of 500 ns and has been added to pulsar timing array
experiments. PSR J14347257 is an isolated, intermediate-period pulsar that
has been partially recycled. PSR J18164510 is an eclipsing MSP in a
short-period orbit (8.7 hours) and may have recently completed its spin-up
phase.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, 5 tables, accepted by Ap
The new generation CMB B-mode polarization experiment: POLARBEAR
We describe the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) polarization experiment
called Polarbear. This experiment will use the dedicated Huan Tran Telescope
equipped with a powerful 1,200-bolometer array receiver to map the CMB
polarization with unprecedented accuracy. We summarize the experiment, its
goals, and current status
A LEKID-based CMB instrument design for large-scale observations in Greenland
We present the results of a feasibility study, which examined deployment of a
ground-based millimeter-wave polarimeter, tailored for observing the cosmic
microwave background (CMB), to Isi Station in Greenland. The instrument for
this study is based on lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs) and
an F/2.4 catoptric, crossed-Dragone telescope with a 500 mm aperture. The
telescope is mounted inside the receiver and cooled to K by a
closed-cycle He refrigerator to reduce background loading on the detectors.
Linearly polarized signals from the sky are modulated with a metal-mesh
half-wave plate that is rotated at the aperture stop of the telescope with a
hollow-shaft motor based on a superconducting magnetic bearing. The modular
detector array design includes at least 2300 LEKIDs, and it can be configured
for spectral bands centered on 150~GHz or greater. Our study considered
configurations for observing in spectral bands centered on 150, 210 and
267~GHz. The entire polarimeter is mounted on a commercial precision rotary air
bearing, which allows fast azimuth scan speeds with negligible vibration and
mechanical wear over time. A slip ring provides power to the instrument,
enabling circular scans (360 degrees of continuous rotation). This mount, when
combined with sky rotation and the latitude of the observation site, produces a
hypotrochoid scan pattern, which yields excellent cross-linking and enables
34\% of the sky to be observed using a range of constant elevation scans. This
scan pattern and sky coverage combined with the beam size (15~arcmin at
150~GHz) makes the instrument sensitive to in the angular
power spectra
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