18,183 research outputs found

    Black body cavity radiometer Patent

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    Black body radiometer having isothermally surrounded cavity for ultraviolet, visible, and infrared radiatio

    Method of forming frozen spheres in a force-free drop tower

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    Hollow glass spheres are shaped by the effects of surface tension acting on bubbles of glass in its molten state. A downwardly flowing stream of air accelerated at a one-G rate of acceleration is established through a drop bubbles on molten glass are introduced into the stream of air and frozen and as they are accelerated at a one-G rate of acceleration

    Remote sensing of the Chesapeake Bay plume salinity via microwave radiometry

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    The NASA-Langley-developed L-Band microwave radiometer was used to remotely measure sea surface salinity during the Chesapeake Bay plume studies. Obtained measurements of microwave brightness temperatures of the sea surface were combined with measurements of sea surface temperature obtained with an infrared radiometer and inverted to produce corresponding values of sea surface salinity. Results from the plume measurements, which indicate the southward extent of the plume along the Virginia-North Carolina coast, are presented and discussed. Additional measurements obtained for the Delaware Bay Mouth flight, and the James River-Shelf flight, are also discussed

    The non-neutral ionized chemical equilibrium subroutine

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    Non-neutral ionized chemical equilibrium subroutine for use with general viscous shock layer progra

    Primary absolute cavity radiometer

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    Absolute cavity radiometer with equal sensitivity to ultraviolet, visible, and infrared radiatio

    Radiometer for accurate (+ or - 1%) measurement of solar irradiance equal to 10,000 solar constants

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    The 10,000 solar constant radiometer was developed for the accurate (+ or - 1%) measurement of the irradiance produced in the image formed by a parabolic reflector or by a multiple mirror solar installation. This radiometer is water cooled, weighs about 1 kg, and is 5 cm (2 in.) in diameter by 10 cm (4 in.) long. A sting is provided for mounting the radiometer in the solar installation capable of measuring irradiances as high as 20,000 solar constants, the instrument is self calibrating. Its accuracy depends on the accurate determination of the cavity aperture, and absorptivity of the cavity, and accurate electrical measurements. The spectral response is flat over the entire spectrum from far UV to far IR. The radiometer responds to a measurement within 99.7% of the final value within 8 s. During a measurement of the 10,000 solar constant irradiance, the temperature rise of the water is about 20 C. The radiometer has perfect cosine response up to 60 deg off the radiometer axis

    Estimating anisotropy parameters and traveltimes in the tau-p domain

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    The presence of anisotropy influences many aspects of seismic wave propagation and has therefore implications for conventional processing schemes. To estimate the anisotropy, we need both forward modelling and inversion tools. Exact forward modelling in anisotropic media is generally done by raytracing. However, we present a new and fast method, using the tau-p transform, to calculate exact P and SV reflection moveout curves in stratified, laterally homogeneous, anisotropic media which requires no ray tracing. Results are exact even if the SV-waves display cusps. In addition, we show how the same method can be used for parameter estimation. Since inversion for anisotropic parameters is very nonunique, we develop expressions requiring only a reduced number of parameters. Nevertheless, predictions using these expressions are more accurate than Taylor series expansions and are also able to handle cusps in the SV traveltime curves. In addition, layer stripping is a linear process. Therefore, both effective (average) and local (interval) estimates can be obtained

    The JPL standard total-radiation absolute radiometer

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    Standard total-radiation absolute radiometer with improved accuracy for calibrating radiometers for simulated solar radiation measuremen

    Fluorescence antibunching microscopy

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    Breaking the diffraction limit in microscopy by utilizing quantum properties of light has been the goal of intense research in the recent years. We propose a quantum superresolution technique based on non-classical emission statistics of fluorescent markers, routinely used as contrast labels for bio-imaging. The technique can be readily implemented using standard fluorescence microscopy equipment
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