18,555 research outputs found

    Balloon-borne infrared coronagraph

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    The use of balloon vehicles to observe the solar corona with an infrared coronagraph is reviewed. The scientific results and the instruments employed are discussed. A parallel is drawn between the required functions of a coronagraph and of a far-infrared cold telescope

    Stirring apparatus for plural test tubes Patent

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    Design of mechanical device for stirring several test tubes simultaneousl

    Altitude characteristics of selected air quality analyzers

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    The effects of altitude (pressure) on the operation and sensitivity of various air quality analyzers frequently flown on aircraft were analyzed. Two ozone analyzers were studied at altitudes from 600 to 7500 m and a nitrogen oxides chemiluminescence detector and a sulfur dioxide flame photometric detector were studied at altitudes from 600 to 3000 m. Calibration curves for altitude corrections to the sensitivity of the instruments are presented along with discussion of observed instrument behavior

    Balloon telescope studies of Venus

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    Determination of ice clouds and water vapor in Venus atmosphere from balloon observation

    Comparison of phase-coherent and non-phase- coherent coded communications

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    Word-error probability versus signal-to-noise ratio evaluation for five communications system

    Preparation, analysis and release of simulated interplanetary grains into low Earth orbit

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    Astronomical observations which reflect the optical and dynamical properties of interstellar and interplanetary grains are the primary means of identifying the shape, size, and the chemistry of extraterrestrial grain materials. Except for recent samplings of extraterrestrial particles in near-Earth orbit and in the stratosphere observations were the only method of deducing the properties of extraterrestrial particles. In order to elucidate the detailed characteristics of observed dust, the observations must be compared with theoretical studies, some of which are discussed in this volume, or compared with terrestrial laboratory experiments. The formation and optical characterization of simulated interstellar and interplanetary dust with particular emphasis on studying the properties on irregularly shaped particles were discussed. Efforts to develop the techniques to allow dust experiments to be carried out in low-Earth orbit were discussed, thus extending the conditions under which dust experiments may be performed

    Frequency-Tunable Josephson Junction Resonator for Quantum Computing

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    We have fabricated and measured a high-Q Josephson junction resonator with a tunable resonance frequency. A dc magnetic flux allows the resonance frequency to be changed by over 10 %. Weak coupling to the environment allows a quality factor of \thicksim7000 when on average less than one photon is stored in the resonator. At large photon numbers, the nonlinearity of the Josephson junction creates two stable oscillation states. This resonator can be used as a tool for investigating the quality of Josephson junctions in qubits below the single photon limit, and can be used as a microwave qubit readout at high photon numbers.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figure

    Deexcitation nuclear gamma-ray line emission from low-energy cosmic rays in the inner Galaxy

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    Recent observations of high ionization rates of molecular hydrogen in diffuse interstellar clouds point to a distinct low-energy cosmic-ray component. Supposing that this component is made of nuclei, two models for the origin of such particles are explored and low-energy cosmic-ray spectra are calculated which, added to the standard cosmic ray spectra, produce the observed ionization rates. The clearest evidence of the presence of such low-energy nuclei between a few MeV per nucleon and several hundred MeV per nucleon in the interstellar medium would be a detection of nuclear \gamma-ray line emission in the range E_ 0.1 - 10 MeV, which is strongly produced in their collisions with the interstellar gas and dust. Using a recent \gamma-ray cross section compilation for nuclear collisions, \gamma-ray line emission spectra are calculated alongside with the high-energy \gamma-ray emission due to {\pi} 0 decay, the latter providing normalization of the absolute fluxes by comparison with Fermi-LAT observations of the diffuse emission above E \gamma = 0.1 GeV. Our predicted fluxes of strong nuclear \gamma-ray lines from the inner Galaxy are well below the detection sensitivies of INTEGRAL, but a detection, especially of the 4.4-MeV line, seems possible with new-generation \gamma-ray telescopes based on available technology. We predict also strong \gamma-ray continuum emission in the 1-8 MeV range, which in a large part of our model space for low-energy cosmic rays exceeds considerably estimated instrument sensitivities of future telescopes.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ; figures 6 and 7 replace
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