423 research outputs found
Fabrication and Electrical Characterization of Fully CMOS Si Single Electron Devices
We present electrical data of silicon single electron devices fabricated with
CMOS techniques and protocols. The easily tuned devices show clean Coulomb
diamonds at T = 30 mK and charge offset drift of 0.01 e over eight days. In
addition, the devices exhibit robust transistor characteristics including
uniformity within about 0.5 V in the threshold voltage, gate resistances
greater than 10 G{\Omega}, and immunity to dielectric breakdown in electric
fields as high as 4 MV/cm. These results highlight the benefits in device
performance of a fully CMOS process for single electron device fabrication.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
Shaped Pupil Lyot Coronagraphs: High-Contrast Solutions for Restricted Focal Planes
Coronagraphs of the apodized pupil and shaped pupil varieties use the
Fraunhofer diffraction properties of amplitude masks to create regions of high
contrast in the vicinity of a target star. Here we present a hybrid coronagraph
architecture in which a binary, hard-edged shaped pupil mask replaces the gray,
smooth apodizer of the apodized pupil Lyot coronagraph (APLC). For any contrast
and bandwidth goal in this configuration, as long as the prescribed region of
contrast is restricted to a finite area in the image, a shaped pupil is the
apodizer with the highest transmission. We relate the starlight cancellation
mechanism to that of the conventional APLC. We introduce a new class of
solutions in which the amplitude profile of the Lyot stop, instead of being
fixed as a padded replica of the telescope aperture, is jointly optimized with
the apodizer. Finally, we describe shaped pupil Lyot coronagraph (SPLC) designs
for the baseline architecture of the Wide-Field Infrared Survey
Telescope-Astrophysics Focused Telescope Assets (WFIRST-AFTA) coronagraph.
These SPLCs help to enable two scientific objectives of the WFIRST-AFTA
mission: (1) broadband spectroscopy to characterize exoplanet atmospheres in
reflected starlight and (2) debris disk imaging.Comment: 41 pages, 15 figures; published in the JATIS special section on
WFIRST-AFTA coronagraph
Engineering Controls for Bioaerosols in Non-Industrial/Non-Healthcare Settings
The list of disease pathogens that can be transmitted in the air is extensive. This list includes the common cold, SARS, measles, Hansen’s disease (leprosy), polio, influenza, Legionella (Legionnaires’ disease and Pontiac fever), and tuberculosis (TB). TB, SARS-CoV-1, avian influenza, varicella, and now SARS-CoV-2 all have received public notice due not only to their known or assumed ability to be transmitted in the air rapidly from one individual to another, but also for their virulence. Other bioaerosols that can be transmitted through the air include bacteria, fungal spores and fragments, dust mites, and pollen. This document was developed to address control of bioaerosols transmission, primarily through ventilation and other engineering controls. This monograph will focus on engineering controls in non-industrial/ non-healthcare facilities such as office buildings, schools, public assembly, theaters, and governmental buildings. It does not, however, address ventilation in residences, either single or multi-family
Simulating the WFIRST coronagraph Integral Field Spectrograph
A primary goal of direct imaging techniques is to spectrally characterize the
atmospheres of planets around other stars at extremely high contrast levels. To
achieve this goal, coronagraphic instruments have favored integral field
spectrographs (IFS) as the science cameras to disperse the entire search area
at once and obtain spectra at each location, since the planet position is not
known a priori. These spectrographs are useful against confusion from speckles
and background objects, and can also help in the speckle subtraction and
wavefront control stages of the coronagraphic observation. We present a
software package, the Coronagraph and Rapid Imaging Spectrograph in Python
(crispy) to simulate the IFS of the WFIRST Coronagraph Instrument (CGI). The
software propagates input science cubes using spatially and spectrally resolved
coronagraphic focal plane cubes, transforms them into IFS detector maps and
ultimately reconstructs the spatio-spectral input scene as a 3D datacube.
Simulated IFS cubes can be used to test data extraction techniques, refine
sensitivity analyses and carry out design trade studies of the flight CGI-IFS
instrument. crispy is a publicly available Python package and can be adapted to
other IFS designs.Comment: 15 page
Finding the Needles in the Haystacks: High-Fidelity Models of the Modern and Archean Solar System for Simulating Exoplanet Observations
We present two state-of-the-art models of the solar system, one corresponding
to the present day and one to the Archean Eon 3.5 billion years ago. Each model
contains spatial and spectral information for the star, the planets, and the
interplanetary dust, extending to 50 AU from the sun and covering the
wavelength range 0.3 to 2.5 micron. In addition, we created a spectral image
cube representative of the astronomical backgrounds that will be seen behind
deep observations of extrasolar planetary systems, including galaxies and Milky
Way stars. These models are intended as inputs to high-fidelity simulations of
direct observations of exoplanetary systems using telescopes equipped with
high-contrast capability. They will help improve the realism of observation and
instrument parameters that are required inputs to statistical observatory yield
calculations, as well as guide development of post-processing algorithms for
telescopes capable of directly imaging Earth-like planets.Comment: Accepted for publication in PAS
Heavy Metals in Soil and Salad in the Proximity of Historical Ferroalloy Emission
Emissions of manganese (Mn), lead (Pb), iron (Fe), zinc (Zn), copper (Cu) from ferro-alloy operations has taken place in Valcamonica, a pre-Alp valley in the province of Brescia, Italy, for about a century until 2001. Metal concentrations were measured in the soil of local home gardens and in the cultivated vegetables. Soil analysis was carried out using a portable X-Ray Fluorescence (XRF) spectrometer in both surface soil and at 10 cm depth. A subset of soil samples (n = 23) additionally was analysed using the modified BCR sequential extraction method and ICP-OES for intercalibration with XRF (XRF Mn = 1.33 * total OES Mn – 71.8; R = 0.830, p < 0.0001). Samples of salads (Lactuca sativa and Chichorium spp.) were analyzed with a Total Reflection X-Ray Fluorescence (TXRF) technique. Vegetable and soil metal measurements were performed in 59 home gardens of Valcamonica, and compared with 23 gardens from the Garda Lake reference area. Results indicate significantly higher levels of soil Mn (median 986 ppm vs 416 ppm), Pb (median 46.1 ppm vs 30.2 ppm), Fe (median 19,800 ppm vs 13,100 ppm) in the Valcamonica compared to the reference area. Surface soil levels of all metals were significantly higher in surface soil compared to deeper soil, consistent with atmospheric deposition. Significantly higher levels of metals were shown also in lettuce from Valcamonica for Mn (median 53.6 ppm vs 30.2) and Fe (median 153 vs 118). Metals in Chichorium spp. did not differ between the two areas. Surface soil metal levels declined with increasing distance from the closest ferroalloy plant, consistent with plant emis- sions as the source of elevated soil metal levels. A correlation between Mn concentrations in soil and lettuce was also observed. These data show that historic ferroalloy plant activity, which ended nearly a decade before this study, has contributed to the persistence of increased Mn levels in locally grown vegetables. Further research is needed to assess whether this increase can lead to adverse effects in humans and plants especially for Mn, an essential element that can be toxic in humans when exceeding the homeostatic ranges
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