9,097 research outputs found

    Apollo PLSS: Environmental control of the smallest manned space vehicle

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    The production of a portable life support system (PLSS) and associated backup equipment for supporting an astronaut working outside of the lunar module (LM) either in space or on the lunar surface is reported. Described are the system, the philosophy behind its design, basic requirements imposed on the system, and some of the evolutionary processes that led to the present configuration

    Calculation of laminar boundary layer-shock wave interaction on cooled walls by the method of integral relations

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    Calculation of laminar boundary layer shock wave interaction on cooled walls by method of integral relatio

    Extending the memory times of trapped-ion qubits with error correction and global entangling operations

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    The technical demands to perform quantum error correction are considerable. The task requires the preparation of a many-body entangled state, together with the ability to make parity measurements over subsets of the physical qubits of the system to detect errors. Here we propose two trapped-ion experiments to realise error-correcting codes of variable size to protect a single encoded qubit from dephasing errors. Novel to our schemes is the use of a global entangling phase gate, which could be implemented in both Penning traps and Paul traps. We make use of this entangling operation to significantly reduce the experimental complexity of state preparation and syndrome measurements. We also show, in our second scheme, that storage times can be increased further by repeatedly teleporting the logical information between two codes supported by the same ion Coulomb crystal to learn information about the locations of errors. We estimate that a logical qubit encoded in such a crystal will maintain high coherence for times more than an order of magnitude longer than each physical qubit would.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures. The authors list has changed since the first version of this draf

    Spaceborne CO2 laser communications systems

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    Projections of the growth of earth-sensing systems for the latter half of the 1980's show a data transmission requirement of 300 Mbps and above. Mission constraints and objectives lead to the conclusion that the most efficient technique to return the data from the sensing satellite to a ground station is through a geosynchronous data relay satellite. Of the two links that are involved (sensing satellite to relay satellite and relay satellite to ground), a laser system is most attractive for the space-to-space link. The development of CO2 laser systems for space-to-space applications is discussed with the completion of a 300 Mpbs data relay receiver and its modification into a transceiver. The technology and state-of-the-art of such systems are described in detail

    Calculation of the longitudinal aerodynamic characteristics of wing-flap configurations with externally blown flaps

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    A theoretical investigation was carried out to extend and improve an existing method for predicting the longitudinal characteristics of wing flap configurations with externally blown flaps (EBF). Two potential flow models were incorporated into the prediction method: a wing and flap lifting-surface model and a turbofan engine wake model. The wing-flap model uses a vortex-lattice approach to represent the wing and flaps. The jet wake model consists of a series of closely spaced vortex rings normal to a centerline which may have vertical and lateral curvature to conform to the local flow field beneath the wing and flaps. Comparisons of measured and predicted pressure distributions, span load distributions on each lifting surface, and total lift and pitching moment coefficients on swept and unswept EBF configurations are included. A wide range of thrust coefficients and flap deflection angles is considered at angles of attack up to the onset of stall. Results indicate that overall lift and pitching-moment coefficients are predicted reasonably well over the entire range. The predicted detailed load distributions are qualitatively correct and show the peaked loads at the jet impingement points, but the widths and heights of the load peaks are not consistently predicted

    Experiment definition phase shuttle laboratory, LDRL-10.6 experiment. Shuttle sortie to ground receiver terminal

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    System development and technology are described for a carbon dioxide laser data transmitter capable of transmitting 400 Mbps over a shuttle to ground station link

    A short response-time atomic source for trapped ion experiments

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    Ion traps are often loaded from atomic beams produced by resistively heated ovens. We demonstrate an atomic oven which has been designed for fast control of the atomic flux density and reproducible construction. We study the limiting time constants of the system and, in tests with 40Ca^{40}\textrm{Ca}, show we can reach the desired level of flux in 12s, with no overshoot. Our results indicate that it may be possible to achieve an even faster response by applying an appropriate one-off heat treatment to the oven before it is used.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figure

    Experiment definition phase shuttle laboratory (LDRL-10.6 experiment): Shuttle sortie to elliptical orbit satellite

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    The following topics were reviewed: (1) design options for shuttle terminal, (2) elliptical orbit satellite design options, (3) shuttle terminal details, (4) technology status and development requirements, (5) transmitter technology, and (6) carbon dioxide laser life studies

    Trapped-ion quantum error-correcting protocols using only global operations

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    Quantum error-correcting codes are many-body entangled states that are prepared and measured using complex sequences of entangling operations. Each element of such an entangling sequence introduces noise to delicate quantum information during the encoding or reading out of the code. It is important therefore to find efficient entangling protocols to avoid the loss of information. Here we propose an experiment that uses only global entangling operations to encode an arbitrary logical qubit to either the five-qubit repetition code or the five-qubit code, with a six-ion Coulomb crystal architecture in a Penning trap. We show that the use of global operations enables us to prepare and read out these codes using only six and ten global entangling pulses, respectively. The proposed experiment also allows the acquisition of syndrome information during readout. We provide a noise analysis for the presented protocols, estimating that we can achieve a six-fold improvement in coherence time with noise as high as ∼1%\sim 1\% on each entangling operation.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, published version, comments are welcom

    Policies to Protect Food Safety and Animal Health

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    Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety, Livestock Production/Industries, Q16, Q17, Q18,
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