5,288 research outputs found
Position location and data collection system and method Patent
Development of telemetry system for position location and data acquisitio
The analysis of reactively loaded microstrip antennas by finite difference time domain modelling
In recent years, much interest has been shown in the use of printed circuit antennas in mobile satellite and communications terminals at microwave frequencies. Although such antennas have many advantages in weight and profile size over more conventional reflector/horn configurations, they do, however, suffer from an inherently narrow bandwidth. A way of optimizing the bandwidth of such antennas by an electronic tuning technique using a loaded probe mounted within the antenna structure is examined, and the resulting far-field radiation patterns are shown. Simulation results from a 2D finite difference time domain (FDTD) model for a rectangular microstrip antenna loaded with shorting pins are given and compared to results obtained with an actual antenna. It is hoped that this work will result in a design package for the analysis of microstrip patch antenna elements
Remote detection of aerosol pollution by ERTS
Photogrammetric and densitometric examination of ERTS-1 MSS imagery of Eastern Virginia coupled with extensive ground truth air quality and meteorological data has shown that the identification and surveying of fixed particulate emitters (smoke plumes) is feasible. A description of the ground truth network is included. The quantitative monitoring of smoke stacks from orbital altitudes over state size regions appears possible when tied to realistic plume models and minimal ground truth. Contrast reductions over urban areas can possibly be utilized to produce isopleths of particulates when supplemented by local measurements
Time-division SQUID multiplexers with reduced sensitivity to external magnetic fields
Time-division SQUID multiplexers are used in many applications that require
exquisite control of systematic error. One potential source of systematic error
is the pickup of external magnetic fields in the multiplexer. We present
measurements of the field sensitivity figure of merit, effective area, for both
the first stage and second stage SQUID amplifiers in three NIST SQUID
multiplexer designs. These designs include a new variety with improved
gradiometry that significantly reduces the effective area of both the first and
second stage SQUID amplifiers.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures. Submitted for publication in the IEEE
Transactions on Applied Superconductivity, August 201
Optimal General Matchings
Given a graph and for each vertex a subset of the
set , where denotes the degree of vertex
in the graph , a -factor of is any set such that
for each vertex , where denotes the number of
edges of incident to . The general factor problem asks the existence of
a -factor in a given graph. A set is said to have a {\em gap of
length} if there exists a natural number such that and . Without any restrictions the
general factor problem is NP-complete. However, if no set contains a gap
of length greater than , then the problem can be solved in polynomial time
and Cornuejols \cite{Cor} presented an algorithm for finding a -factor, if
it exists. In this paper we consider a weighted version of the general factor
problem, in which each edge has a nonnegative weight and we are interested in
finding a -factor of maximum (or minimum) weight. In particular, this
version comprises the minimum/maximum cardinality variant of the general factor
problem, where we want to find a -factor having a minimum/maximum number of
edges.
We present an algorithm for the maximum/minimum weight -factor for the
case when no set contains a gap of length greater than . This also
yields the first polynomial time algorithm for the maximum/minimum cardinality
-factor for this case
Comparison of Zn_{1-x}Mn_xTe/ZnTe multiple-quantum wells and quantum dots by below-bandgap photomodulated reflectivity
Large-area high density patterns of quantum dots with a diameter of 200 nm
have been prepared from a series of four Zn_{0.93}Mn_{0.07}Te/ZnTe multiple
quantum well structures of different well width (4 nm, 6 nm, 8 nm and 10 nm) by
electron beam lithography followed by Ar+ ion beam etching. Below-bandgap
photomodulated reflectivity spectra of the quantum dot samples and the parent
heterostructures were then recorded at 10 K and the spectra were fitted to
extract the linewidths and the energy positions of the excitonic transitions in
each sample. The fitted results are compared to calculations of the transition
energies in which the different strain states in the samples are taken into
account. We show that the main effect of the nanofabrication process is a
change in the strain state of the quantum dot samples compared to the parent
heterostructures. The quantum dot pillars turn out to be freestanding, whereas
the heterostructures are in a good approximation strained to the ZnTe lattice
constant. The lateral size of the dots is such that extra confinement effects
are not expected or observed.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX2e (amsmath, epsfig), 7 EPS figure
- …