24,476 research outputs found

    Improved method of optical design

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    Optical system designed by third order aberration theory is significantly improved by placing it into a ray deviation design program composed of two distinct computer programs. Tests were conducted on telescope systems, an ultraviolet relay lens, and a four lens corrector system

    General optics evaluation program (GENOPTICS)

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    Program prints and plots results of computations such as ray traces, radial energy distributions, and designs of two-mirror telescopes

    Microstrip antennas

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    It is possible to design and construct simple, efficient microwave antenna, either linearly or circularly polarized, which should be useful in phased arrays. Mounted on thin dielectric substrate, it extends slightly above ground plane. Space behind ground plane is required for feed line and mounting hardware

    Ray tracing program with options for diffraction gratings

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    Diffraction theory, developed in vectorial form and coded into ray tracing routines, permits tracing rays of any wavelength through surfaces that are plane, spherical, conical, or aspheric polynomial. Ruled diffraction gratings may run in either X-direction or Y-direction, where Z is optical axis

    A Healthy Community Builds on Acceptance

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    Jesuits Elect a Venezuelan as the New General

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    Device for directionally controlling electromagnetic radiation Patent

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    Concentrator device for controlling direction of solar energy onto energy converter

    Directional control of radiant heat

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    Surface with grooves having flat bases gives directional emissivities and absorptivities that can be made to approximate a perfect directional surface. Radiant energy can then be transferred in desired directions

    Experimental Violation of Two-Party Leggett-Garg Inequalities with Semi-weak Measurements

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    We generalize the derivation of Leggett-Garg inequalities to systematically treat a larger class of experimental situations by allowing multi-particle correlations, invasive detection, and ambiguous detector results. Furthermore, we show how many such inequalities may be tested simultaneously with a single setup. As a proof of principle, we violate several such two-particle inequalities with data obtained from a polarization-entangled biphoton state and a semi-weak polarization measurement based on Fresnel reflection. We also point out a non- trivial connection between specific two-party Leggett-Garg inequality violations and convex sums of strange weak values.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure

    On the evolution of non-axisymmetric viscous fibres with surface tension, inertia and gravity

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    We consider the free boundary problem for the evolution of a nearly straight slender fibre of viscous fluid. The motion is driven by prescribing the velocity of the ends of the fibre, and the free surface evolves under the action of surface tension, inertia and gravity. The three-dimensional Navier-Stokes equations and free-surface boundary conditions are analysed asymptotically, using the fact that the inverse aspect ratio, defined to be the ratio between a typical fibre radius and the initial fibre length, is small. This first part of the paper follows earlier work on the stretching of a slender viscous fibre with negligible surface tension effects. The inclusion of surface tension seriously complicates the problem for the evolution of the shape of the cross-section. We adapt ideas applied previously to two-dimensional Stokes flow to show that the shape of the cross-section can be described by means of a conformal map which depends on time and distance along the fibre axis. We give some examples of suitable relevant maps and present numerical solutions of the resulting equations. We also use analytic methods to examine the coupling between stretching and the evolution of the cross-section shape
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