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  • General Chemistry  (378)
  • Instrumentation and Photography  (367)
  • Cell & Developmental Biology
  • Life and Medical Sciences
  • Limnology
  • 2000-2004  (746)
  • 1945-1949
  • 2001  (202)
  • 2000  (544)
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  • 2000-2004  (746)
  • 1945-1949
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  • 1
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    In:  J. Geophys. Res., New York, Allerton Press, vol. 106, no. B2, pp. 2221-2234, pp. L13315, (ISSN: 1340-4202)
    Publication Date: 2001
    Keywords: Seismicity ; Geol. aspects ; Israel ; Jordan ; Arabia ; 1035 ; Geochemistry ; (new ; field, ; replaces ; Rock ; Chemistry) ; Geochronology ; 1734 ; History ; of ; geophysics ; Seismology ; 4239 ; Oceanography: ; general ; Limnology ; 7221 ; Paleoseismology ; JGR
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The main source of error in retrieving aerosol optical thicknesses using sun photometry comes from the determination of the TOA voltages. The degradation of interference filters is the most important source of the long-term changes in the cross-calibrations. Although major improvements have been made in the design of the filters (interference filters fabricated using ion-assisted deposition), the filters remain the principal factor limiting performance of the sun photometers. Degradation of filters necessitates frequent calibration of sun photometers and frequent measurements of the filter transmission or the relative system response. The degradation of the filters mounted on the CIMEL sun photometers have been monitored since 1993 by the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) project. The decay reported by Holben et al. for the first two years of a CIMEL#s operation is between 1 and 5%. Nevertheless, the filters mounted on CIMEL instruments are regularly replaced after two years of use. The cross-calibration technique consists of taking measurements concurrently with the uncalibrated and the reference sun photometers. While analyzing measurements, the quality of the calibration has to be checked, using the following considerations: (1) any cirrus clouds suspected to be masking the sun, during the calibration period, need to be reported and the corresponding data set removed; and (2) the stability of the day needs to be checked. This chapter will describe calibration techniques, facilities, and protocols used for calibrating sun photometers and sky radiometers.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: In Situ Aerosol Optical Thinkness Collected by the SIMBIOS Program (1997-2000): Protocols, and and Data QC and Analysis; 11-21; NASA/TM-2001-209982
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-09-13
    Description: Future NASA satellite detector systems must be cooled to the 0.1 K temperature range to meet the stringent energy resolution and sensitivity requirements demanded by mid-term astronomy missions. The development of adiabatic demagnetization refrigeration (ADR) materials that can efficiently cool from the passive radiative cooling limit of approx. 30 K down to sub-Kelvin under low magnetic fields (H less than or equal to 3 T) would represent a significant improvement in space-based cooling technology. Governed by these engineering goals, our efforts have focused on quantifying the change in magnetic entropy of rare-earth garnets and perovskites. Various compositions within the gadolinium gallium iron garnet solid solution series (GGIG, Gd3Ga(5-x)Fe(x)O12, 0.00 less than or equal to X less than or equal to 5.00) and gadolinium aluminum perovskite (GAP, GdAlO3) have been synthesized via an organometallic complex approach and confirmed with powder x-ray diffraction. The magnetization of the GGIG and GAP materials has been measured as a function of composition (0.00 less than or equal to X less than or equal to 5.00), temperature (2 K less than or equal to T less than or equal to 30 K) and applied magnetic field (0 T less than or equal to H less than or equal to 3 T). The magnetic entropy change (DeltaS(sub mag)) between 0 T and 3 T was determined from the magnetization data. In the GGIG system, DeltaS(sub mag) was compositionally dependent; Fe(sup 3+) additions up to X less than or equal to 2.44 increased DeltaS(sub mag) at T 〉 5 K. For GAP, DeltaS(sub mag) was similar to that of GGIG, X = 0.00, both in terms of magnitude and temperature dependence at T 〉 10 K. However, the DeltaS(sub mag) of GAP at T 〈 10 K was less than the endmember GGIG composition, X = 0.00, and exhibited maximum approx. 5 K.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2009-05-20
    Description: The interaction of sunlight with atmospheric gases, aerosols and clouds is fundamental to the understanding of climate and its variation. Several studies questioned our understanding of atmospheric absorption of sunlight in cloudy or in cloud free atmospheres. Uncertainty in instruments' accuracy and in the analysis methods makes this problem difficult to resolve. Here we use several years of measurements of sky and sun spectral brightness by selected instruments of the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET), that have known and high measurement accuracy. The measurements taken in several locations around the world show that in the atmospheric windows 0.44, 0.06, 0.86 and 1.02 microns the only significant absorbers in cloud free atmosphere is aerosol and ozone. This conclusions is reached using a method developed to distinguish between absorption associated with the presence of aerosol and absorption that is not related to the presence of aerosol. Non-aerosol absorption, defined as spectrally independent or smoothly variable, was found to have an optical thickness smaller than 0.002 corresponding to absorption of sunlight less than 1W/sq m, or essentially zero.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2009-05-19
    Description: Five Microtops II sun photometers were studied in detail at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) to determine their performance in measuring aerosol optical thickness (AOT or Tau(sub alphalambda) and precipitable column water vapor (W). Each derives Tau(sub alphalambda) from measured signals at four wavelengths lambda (340, 440, 675, and 870 nm), and W from the 936 nm signal measurements. Accuracy of Tau(sub alphalambda) and W determination depends on the reliability of the relevant channel calibration coefficient (V(sub 0)). Relative calibration by transfer of parameters from a more accurate sun photometer (such as the Mauna-Loa-calibrated AERONET master sun photometer at GSFC) is more reliable than Langley calibration performed at GSFC. It was found that the factory-determined value of the instrument constant for the 936 nm filter (k= 0.7847) used in the Microtops' internal algorithm is unrealistic, causing large errors in V(sub 0(936)), Tau(sub alpha936), and W. Thus, when applied for transfer calibration at GSFC, whereas the random variation of V(aub 0) at 340 to 870 nm is quite small, with coefficients of variation (CV) in the range of 0 to 2.4%, at 936 nm the CV goes up to 19%. Also, the systematic temporal variation of V(sub 0) at 340 to 870 nm is very slow, while at 936 nm it is large and exhibits a very high dependence on W. The algorithm also computes Tau(sub alpha936) as 0.91Tau(sub alpha870), which is highly simplistic. Therefore, it is recommended to determine Tau(sub alpha936) by logarithmic extrapolation from Tau(sub alpha675) and Tau(sub alpha 870. From the operational standpoint of the Microtops, apart from errors that may result from unperceived cloud contamination, the main sources of error include inaccurate pointing to the Sun, neglecting to clean the front quartz window, and neglecting to calibrate correctly. If these three issues are adequately taken care of, the Microtops can be quite accurate and stable, with root mean square (rms) differences between corresponding retrievals from clean calibrated Microtops and the AERONET sun photometer being about +/-0.02 at 340 nm, decreasing down to about +/-0.01 at 870 nm.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: Scale is an 'innate' concept in geographical information systems (GIS). It is recognized as something that is intrinsic to the capture, storage, manipulation, analysis, modelling, and output of space and time data within a GIS purview, yet the relative meaning and ramifications of scaling spatial and temporal data from this perspective remain enigmatic. As GIS becomes more sophisticated as a product of more robust software and more powerful computer systems, there is an urgent need to examine the issue of scale, and its relationship to the whole body of spatiotemporal data, as imparted in GIS. Scale is fundamental to the characterization of geo-spatial data as represented in GIS, but we have relatively little insight on how to measure the effects of scale in representing data that are acquired in different formats and exist in varying spatial, temporal and radiometric configurations. Moreover, the complexities associated with the integration of multi-scaled data sets in a multitude of formats are exacerbated by the confusion of what the term 'scale' means from a multidisciplinary perspective. 'Scale' takes on significantly different meanings depending upon one's disciplinary background and spatial perspective, which can lead to substantial confusion in the input, manipulation, analysis, and output operations. Hence, we must begin to look at the universality of scale and begin to develop the theory, methods and techniques necessary to advance knowledge on the 'Science of scale' across all disciplines that use GIS.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Modeling Scale in Geographical Information Science; Chapter 1; 13-34
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: Multispectral, and ultimately hyperspectral, focal plane arrays (FPAs) represent the logical extension of two-color FPA technology, which has already shown its utility in military applications. Incorporating the spectral discrimination function directly in the FPA would offer the potential for orders-of-magnitude increase in remote sensor system performance. It would allow reduction or even elimination of optical components currently required to provide spectral discrimination in atmospheric remote sensors. The result would be smaller, simpler instruments with higher performance than exist today.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Hyperspectral Remote Sensing of the Land and Atmosphere; Volume 4151; 60-67
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-23
    Description: A Geostationary Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (GIFTS) has been selected for the NASA New Millennium Program (NMP) Earth Observing-3 (EO-3) mission. Our paper will discuss one of the key GIFTS measurement requirements, Field of View (FOV) stability, and its impact on required system performance. The GIFTS NMP mission is designed to demonstrate new and emerging sensor and data processing technologies with the goal of making revolutionary improvements in meteorological observational capability and forecasting accuracy. The GIFTS payload is a versatile imaging FTS with programmable spectral resolution and spatial scene selection that allows radiometric accuracy and atmospheric sounding precision to be traded in near real time for area coverage. The GIFTS sensor combines high sensitivity with a massively parallel spatial data collection scheme to allow high spatial resolution measurement of the Earth's atmosphere and rapid broad area coverage. An objective of the GIFTS mission is to demonstrate the advantages of high spatial resolution (4 km ground sample distance - gsd) on temperature and water vapor retrieval by allowing sampling in broken cloud regions. This small gsd, combined with the relatively long scan time required (approximately 10 s) to collect high resolution spectra from geostationary (GEO) orbit, may require extremely good pointing control. This paper discusses the analysis of this requirement.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Hyperspectral Remote Sensing of the Land and Atmosphere; Volume 4151; 11-20
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Thin-film membrane structures are under consideration for use in many future gossamer spacecraft systems. Examples include sunshields for large aperture telescopes, solar sails, and membrane optics. The development of capabilities for testing and analyzing pre-tensioned, thin film membrane structures is an important and challenging aspect of gossamer spacecraft technology development. This paper presents results from experimental and computational studies performed to characterize the wrinkling behavior of thin-fi[m membranes under mechanical loading. The test article is a 500 mm square membrane subjected to symmetric comer loads. Data is presented for loads ranging from 0.49 N to 4.91 N. The experimental results show that as the load increases the number of wrinkles increases, while the wrinkle amplitude decreases. The computational model uses a finite element implementation of Stein-Hedgepeth membrane wrinkling theory to predict the behavior of the membrane. Comparisons were made with experimental results for the wrinkle angle and wrinkled region. There was reasonably good agreement between the measured wrinkle angle and the predicted directions of the major principle stresses. The shape of the wrinkle region predicted by the finite element model matches that observed in the experiments; however, the size of the predicted region is smaller than that determined in the experiments.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 10
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: The goal of 'Estimate' is to take advantage of attitude information to produce better pose while staying flexible and robust. Currently there are several instruments that are used for attitude: gyros, inclinometers, and compasses. However, precise and useful attitude information cannot come from one instrument. Integration of rotational rates, from gyro data for example, would result in drift. Therefore, although gyros are accurate in the short-term, accuracy in the long term is unlikely. Using absolute instruments such as compasses and inclinometers can result in an accurate measurement of attitude in the long term. However, in the short term, the physical nature of compasses and inclinometers, and the dynamic nature of a mobile platform result in highly volatile and therefore useless data. The solution then is to use both absolute and relative data. Kalman Filtering is known to be able to combine gyro and compass/inclinometer data to produce stable and accurate attitude information. Since the model of motion is linear and the data comes in as discrete samples, a Discrete Kalman Filter was selected as the core of the new estimator. Therefore, 'Estimate' can be divided into two parts: the Discrete Kalman Filter and the code framework.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 11
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: The new Cloud Physics Lidar (CPL) has been built for use on the NASA ER-2 high altitude aircraft. The purpose of the CPL is to provide multi-wavelength measurements of cirrus, subvisual cirrus, and aerosols with high temporal and spatial resolution. The CPL utilizes state-of-the-art technology with a high repetition rate, a low pulse energy laser, and photon-counting detection. The first deployment for the CPL was the SAFARI-2000 field campaign during August-September 2000. We provide here an overview of the instrument and initial data results to illustrate the measurement capability of the CPL.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 12
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: We decided to duplicate Eratosthenes' measurement of the size of the Earth. Here we relate our experience the second time we did the project in 1998. This year was unique in that we were funded by a NASA IDEAS (Initiative to Develop Education through Astronomy and Space Science) grant to support curriculum development and a teachers' workshop.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: The Universe in the Classroom; Unknown
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  • 13
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: In a previous paper we described a system which recursively recovers a super-resolved three dimensional surface model from a set of images of the surface. In that paper we assumed that the camera calibration for each image was known. In this paper we solve two problems. Firstly, if an estimate of the surface is already known, the problem is to calibrate a new image relative to the existing surface model. Secondly, if no surface estimate is available, the relative camera calibration between the images in the set must be estimated. This will allow an initial surface model to be estimated. Results of both types of estimation are given.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 14
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: Extremely high sensitivity detectors, such as silicon bolometers are required in many NASA missions for detection of photons from the x-ray to the far infrared regions. Typically, these detectors are cooled to well below the liquid helium (LHe) temperature (4.2 K) to achieve the maximum detection performance. As photoconductors, they are generally operated with a load resistor and a pre-set bias voltage, which is then coupled to the input gate of a source-follower Field Effect Transistor (FET) circuit. It is imperative that the detector system signal to noise performance be limited by the noise of the detector and not by the noise of the external components. The load resistor value is selected to optimize the detector performance. These two criteria tend to be contradictory in that these detectors require load resistors in the hundreds of megaohms, which leads to a higher Johnson noise. Additionally, the physical size of the resistor must be small for device integration as required by such missions as the NASA High Resolution Airborne Wide-Band Camera (HAWC) instrument and the Submillimeter High Angular Resolution Camera (SHARC) for the Caltech Submillimeter Observatory (CSO). We have designed, fabricated and characterized thin film resistors using a CrSi/TiW/Al metal system on optical quality quartz substrates. The resistor values range from 100 megaohms to over 650 megaohms and are Johnson noise limited at LHe temperatures. The resistor film is sputtered with a sheet resistance ranging from 300 ohms to 1600 ohms and the processing sequence developed for these devices allows for chemically fine tuning the sheet resistance in-situ. The wafer fabrication process was of sufficiently high yield (〉80%) providing clusters of good resistors for integrated multiple detector channels, a very important feature in the assembly of these two instruments.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 15
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: A multiwavelength pyrometer was developed for applications unique to aerospace environments. It was shown to be a useful and versatile technique for measuring temperature, even when the emissivity is unknown. It has also been used to measure the surface temperatures of ceramic zircomia thermal barrier coatings and alumina. The close agreement between pyrometer and thin film thermocouple temperatures provided an independent check. Other applications of the multiwavelength pyrometer are simultaneous surface and bulk temperature measurements of a transparent material, and combustion gas temperature measurement using a special probe interfaced to the multiwavelength pyrometer via an optical fiber. The multiwavelength pyrometer determined temperature by transforming the radiation spectrum in a broad wavelength region to produce a straight line (in a certain spectral region), whose intercept in the vertical axis gives the temperature. Implicit in a two-color pyrometer is the assumption of wavelength independent emissivity. Though the two data points of a two-color pyrometer similarly processed would result immediately in a similar straight line to give the unknown temperature, the two-color pyrometer lacks the greater data redundancy of the multiwavelength pyrometer, which enables it to do so with improved accuracy. It also confirms that emissivity is indeed wavelength independent, as evidenced by a multitude of the data lying on a simple straight line. The multiwavelength pyrometer was also used to study the optical transmission properties of a nanostructured material from which a quadratic exponential functional frequency dependence of its spectral transmission was determined. Finally, by operating the multiwavelength pyrometer in a very wide field of view mode, the surface temperature distribution of a large hot surface was obtained through measurement of just a single radiation spectrum.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Review of Scientific Instruments; Volume 2; No. 2; 1522-1530
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  • 16
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: Contents include the following: (1) Introduction: Chandra X-ray observatory. Advanced CCD imaging spectrometer. (2) LEO and transfer orbit analyses: Geometric modeling in TSS w/specularity. Low earth orbital heating calculations. (3) Thermal testing and LMAC. (4) Problem solving. (5) VDA overcoat analyses. (6) VDA overcoat testing and MSFC. (7) Post-MSFC test evaluation.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: The Tenth Thermal and Fluids Analysis Workshop; NASA/CP-2001-211141
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  • 17
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: Spacecraft reaction wheel maneuvers are limited by the maximum torque and/or angular momentum which the wheels can provide. For an n-wheel configuration, the torque or momentum envelope can be obtained by projecting the n-dimensional hypercube, representing the domain boundary of individual wheel torques or momenta, into three dimensional space via the 3xn matrix of wheel axes. In this paper, the properties of the projected hypercube are discussed, and algorithms are proposed for determining this maximal torque or momentum envelope for general wheel configurations. Practical implementation strategies for specific wheel configurations are also considered.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 Flight Mechanics Symposium; 327-334; NASA/CP-2001-209986
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  • 18
    Publication Date: 2017-09-27
    Description: A nonlinear control scheme for attitude control of a spacecraft is combined with a nonlinear gyro bias observer for the case of constant gyro bias, in the presence of gyro noise. The observer bias estimates converge exponentially to a mean square bound determined by the standard deviation of the gyro noise. The resulting coupled, closed loop dynamics are proven to be globally stable, with asymptotic tracking which is also mean square bounded. A simulation of the proposed observer-controller design is given for a rigid spacecraft tracking a specified, time-varying attitude sequence to illustrate the theoretical claims.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 Flight Mechanics Symposium; 249-257; NASA/CP-2001-209986
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  • 19
    Publication Date: 2017-09-27
    Description: This work presents a new approach to gyro calibration where, in addition to being used for computing attitude that is needed in the calibration process, the gyro outputs are also used as measurements in a Kalman filter. This work also presents an algorithm for calibrating a quadruplet rather than the customary triad gyro set. In particular, a new misalignment error model is derived for this case. The new calibration algorithm is applied to the EOS-AQUA satellite gyros. The effectiveness of the new algorithm is demonstrated through simulations.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 Flight Mechanics Symposium; 229-247; NASA/CP-2001-209986
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  • 20
    Publication Date: 2017-09-27
    Description: Astronauts who spend months and years traveling long distances in spacecraft and working on other planets will be subjected to high energy radiation of galactic and solar origin without the protection of the Earth's thick (one writer has called it buff) atmosphere and magnetic field. The lack of natural protection will allow high energy cosmic ray particles and solar protons to crash directly into relatively thin spacecraft walls and planetary atmospheres producing energetic secondary particles in these collisions. A substantial fraction of these secondaries will be neutrons that carry no electric charge and, consequently, are difficult to detect. At sea level on Earth the remaining neutrons are the result of many generations (approximately 10) of collisions, have very low energies (scientists call them thermal neutrons), and do not penetrate deeply into the human body. They do contribute to the natural background radiation seen by humans on Earth, but much of the dose is only at the surface or skin of the body. In the International Space Station or on the surface of Mars, the secondary neutrons will be the result of only one or two generations of interaction due to the thinner (about a factor of 20 compared to the Earth's atmosphere) walls or atmosphere, have considerably more energy and penetrate deeply into the human body. In addition, neutrons are substantially moderated by hydrogenous material such as water. A significant fraction of the water exists in the astronaut's body. Therefore, the neutron can not only penetrate more deeply into the body, but also be stopped there and deposit all or most of its radiation dose in organs such as the liver, spleen, kidney, etc. We hypothesize that the risk of serious cancers will be increased for the exposed humans. The portable, real time neutron spectrometer being developed by our team will monitor the environment inside spacecraft structures and on planetary surfaces. Activities supported by this grant will evaluate the neutron environment inside several candidate spacecraft materials at accelerator facilities. These experiments will enable engineers to choose the structure materials that minimize the production of secondary neutrons. With the information that the neutron energy spectrometer produces, scientists and doctors will be able to assess the increased risk of cancer and develop countermeasures. The instrument itself will include an alarm system to warn astronauts when high radiation fluxes are occurring so that they can seek shelter immediately.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Microgravity Materials Science Conference 2000; Volume 2; 419-421; NASA/CP-2000-210827/VOL2
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  • 21
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optics Letters
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  • 22
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: This paper discusses future phase modulations with independent cavity-phase control in laser cooled clocks in space.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Frequency Control Symposium; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 23
    Publication Date: 2018-06-11
    Description: Many papers have been published concerning the analysis of visual texture and yet, very few application domains use texture for image classification. A possible reason for this low transfer of the technology is the lack of experience and testing in real-world imagery. In this paper, we assess the performance of texture-based classification methods on a number of real-world images relevant to autonomous navigation on cross-country terrain and to autonomous geology. Texture analysis will form part of the closed loop that allows a robotic system to navigate autonomously. We have implemented two different classifiers on features extracted by Gabor filter banks. The first classifier models feature distributions for each texture class using a mixture of Gaussians. Classification is performed using Maximum Likelihood. The second classifier represents local statistics using marginal histograms of the features over a region centered on the pixel to be classified. We measure system performance by comparison to ground truth image labels.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Third Workshop on Empirical Evaluation Methods in Computer Vision, Kauai, Hawaii, December 10, 2001; Kauai, HI; United States
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  • 24
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We report on the design and evaluation of a convenient Digital Signal Processor-based(DSP)controller for a dc Superconducting QUantum Interference Device(SQUID).
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Review of scientific instruments; Volume 72; no. 4; 2203-2206
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  • 25
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: A series of dynamic flow-field pressure probes were developed for use in large-scale supersonic wind tunnels at the NASA Glenn Research Center. These flow-field probes include pitot and static pressure probes that can capture fast-acting flow-field pressure transients occurring on a millisecond timescale. The pitot and static probes can be used to determine local Mach number time histories during a transient event. The flow-field pressure probe contains four major components: 1) Static pressure aerodynamic tip; 2) Pressure-sensing cartridge assembly; 3) Pitot pressure aerodynamic tip; 4) Mounting stem. This modular design allows for a variety of probe tips to be used for a specific application. Here, the focus is on flow-field pressure measurements in supersonic flows, so we developed a cone-cylinder static pressure tip and a pitot pressure tip. Alternatively, probe tips optimized for subsonic and transonic flows could be used with this design. The pressure-sensing cartridge assembly allows the simultaneous measurement of steady-state and transient pressure which allows continuous calibration of the dynamic pressure transducer.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 26
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: Fiber optic sensors are being developed for health monitoring of future aircraft. Aircraft health monitoring involves the use of strain, temperature, vibration and chemical sensors. These sensors will measure load and vibration signatures that will be used to infer structural integrity. Sine the aircraft morphing program assumes that future aircraft will be aerodynamically reconfigurable there is also a requirement for pressure, flow and shape sensors. In some cases a single fiber may be used for measuring several different parameters. The objective of the current program is to develop techniques for using optical fibers to monitor composite cure in real time during manufacture and to monitor in-service structural integrity of the composite structure. Graphite-epoxy panels were fabricated with integrated optical fibers of various types. The panels were mechanically and thermally tested to evaluate composite strength and sensor durability. Finally the performance of the fiber optic sensors was determined. Experimental results are presented evaluating the performance of embedded and surface mounted optical fibers for measuring strain, temperature and chemical composition. The performance of the fiber optic sensors was determined by direct comparison with results from more conventional instrumentation. The facilities for fabricating optical fiber and associated sensors and methods of demodulating Bragg gratings for strain measurement will be described.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 27
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    In:  CASI
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: An orbiting spacecraft needs to be able to accurately locate the position of the Sun so that the solar arrays can be pointed toward the Sun. This not only maximizes the production of power, but it also helps the arrays find their orientation in space so that they can accurately point antennae at ground stations. As part of the work on the (now postponed) Mars-2001 Surveyor Lander, NASA Glenn Research Center engineers developed a new Sun sensor that is far lighter and simpler than earlier designs. This sensor uses the technology of a linear photodiode array to find the position of the Sun in one axis. Two of these sensors, used together, can locate the x and y coordinates of the Sun relative to the spacecraft. These sensors have a mass of only 18 g each, nearly an order of magnitude lighter than earlier designs. (This mass does not include the electronic circuit to read the photodiode output, which is on the experiment microcontroller.) Near the center of the field of view, the Sun position can be found to 0.15
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 28
    Publication Date: 2018-06-02
    Description: Hardware testing frequently involves the acquisition of waveform and instrumentation signals, which are often recorded on waveform recorders, oscillographs, and video recorders. Years ago, the waveforms were viewed as analog records, as drawn by a paper strip chart pen or electron beam on a cathode ray tube screen. One of the problems in the past was that the analog electronics may not have been able to accurately display the full amplitude of a signal if the real-time signals exceeded the frequency response bandwidth of the recording device. The advent of digital oscilloscopes, waveform recorders, and video frame-grabbers solved many of the frequency response problems, though not all. A restriction on digital waveform acquisition is well known by people in the instrumentation field. Put simply, the sampling frequency must be at least twice the frequency of any signal to be sampled, or vice versa; the signals must be filtered so that none of the signal frequencies are higher than one-half the sample rate (the Nyquist Limit). Then, per Shannon's Sampling Theorem (1949, ref. 1), any sampled signal can be reconstructed for viewing on a display device. If any signals exceed the Nyquist frequency limit, error signals called aliases occur in the output display.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 29
    Publication Date: 2018-06-02
    Description: Mars' dust-filled atmosphere could be a significant problem for photovoltaic array operation during long missions on the surface of Mars. Measurements made by Pathfinder showed a 0.3-percent loss of solar array performance per day due to dust obscuration. Thus, dust deposition is the limiting factor in the lifetime of solar arrays for Martian power systems, and developing design tools to mitigate this deposition is important for long missions.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 30
    Publication Date: 2017-09-27
    Description: SHIVA (Spaceflight Holography Investigation in a Virtual Apparatus) will expand our understanding of the fundamental physics of particle movement in fluids by exploiting the power of holography in a spaceflight experiment'. In addition, the study will exploit the movement of particles in fluids to observe and quantify microgravity phenomena that are extremely important in materials sciences with applications both in space and on earth. The regime under scrutiny is the low Reynolds number, Stokes regime or creeping flow, which covers particles and bubbles moving at very low velocity. The equations describing this important regime have been under development and investigation for over 100 years and yet a complete analytical solution of the general equation had remained elusive yielding only approximations and numerical solutions. In the course of the ongoing NASA NRA, the first analytical solution of the general equation was produced by members of the investigator team using the mathematics of fractional derivatives. This opened the way to an even more insightful and important investigation of the phenomena in microgravity.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Microgravity Materials Science Conference 2000; Volume 3; 599-607
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  • 31
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: This paper describes Instrument Control Electronics (ICE) for the Space Technology Three mission. This mission is a dual-spacecraft formation-flying Michelson interferometer designed to perform the first long-baseline optical interferometry in space.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: IEEE 2001 Aerospace Conference; Big Sky, MT; United States
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  • 32
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: This paper shows a complete model of the FIT pointing system.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: IEEE Aerospace Conference; Big Sky, MT; United States
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  • 33
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: In this paper, the metrology pointing sensor of the Starlight ground instrument prototype is characterized and a siderostat pointing control loop is closed between two optical benches with a 10 meter separation.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: IEEE Aerospace Conference; Big Sky, MT; United States
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  • 34
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: JPL/Caltech Gravitational Wave Research Group; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 35
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 OSA Annual Meeting/ILS-XVII
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  • 36
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: American Society of Precision Engineering Annual Meeting; Arlington, VA; United States
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  • 37
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 6th Symposium on Frequency Standards and Metrology; St. Andrews, Scotland; United Kingdom
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  • 38
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Network for the Detection of Stratospheric Change (NDSC) 2001 Symposium; Arcachon; France
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  • 39
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We discuss and compare different methods to reduce periodic nonlinear error and improve thermal stability. Experimental results will be presented and discussed.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optoelectronic Distance/Displacement Measurements and Applications; Pavia; Italy
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  • 40
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 6th Symposium on Frequency Standards and Metrology; St. Andrews, Scotland; United Kingdom
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  • 41
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: We describe the Metrology System for NASA's StarLight mission, a space-based separated-spacecraft stellar interferometer.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optoelectronic Distance/Displacement Measurements and Applications; Pavia; Italy
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  • 42
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optoelectronic Distance/Displacement Measurements and Applications; Pavia; Italy
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  • 43
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: From Optical to Millimetric Interferometry: Scientific and Technological Challenges; Liege; Belgium
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  • 44
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Description: The Spatially Modulated Prism Interferometer (SMPI) is a new type of imaging interferometer that has double the efficiency of conventional interferometers and only a fraction of the mass and volume.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Infrared Physics and Technology
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  • 45
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optical Society of America Annual Meeting
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  • 46
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001: DAMOP/DAMOP- Division of Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics Annual Meeting; London; Canada
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  • 47
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 Asia-Pacific Radio Science Conference; Tokyo; Japan
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  • 48
    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: American Society of Precision Engineering Annual Meeting; Arlington, VA; United States
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  • 49
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    Publication Date: 2018-06-08
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: GPS III Federal Lab Days; Los Angeles, CA; United States
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  • 50
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: The NASA Glenn Research Center is developing microscale sensors to characterize atmospheric-borne particulates. The devices are fabricated using MEMS (microelectromechanical systems) technologies. These technologies are derived from those originally developed in support of the semiconductor processing industry. The resulting microsensors can characterize a wide range of particles and are, therefore, suitable to a broad range of applications. This project is supported under a collaborative program called the Glennan Microsystems Initiative. The initiative comprises members of NASA Glenn Research Center, various university affiliates from the State of Ohio, and a number of participating industrial partners. Funding is jointly provided by NASA, the State of Ohio, and industrial members. The work described here is a collaborative arrangement between researchers at Glenn, the University of Minnesota, The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), and the Cleveland State University. Actual device fabrication is conducted at Glenn and at the laboratories of Case Western Reserve University. Case Western is also located in Cleveland, Ohio, and is a participating member of the initiative. The principal investigator for this project is Paul S. Greenberg of Glenn. Two basic types of devices are being developed, and target different ranges of particle sizes. The first class of devices, which is used to measure nanoparticles (i.e., particles in the range of 0.002 to 1 mm), is based on the technique of Electrical Mobility Classification. This technique also affords the valuable ability of measuring the electrical charge state of the particles. Such information is important in the understanding of agglomeration mechanisms and is useful in the development of methods for particle repulsion. The second type of device being developed, which utilizes optical scattering, is suitable for particles larger than 1 mm. This technique also provides information on particle shape and composition. Applications for these sensors include fundamental planetary climatology, monitoring and filtration in spacecraft, human habitation modules and related systems, characterization of particulate emissions from propulsion and power systems, and as early warning sensors for both space-based and ter-restrial fire detection. These devices are also suitable for characterizing biological compounds such as allergens, infectious agents, and biotoxic agents.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 51
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: A system was developed at the NASA Glenn Research Center for continually monitoring, in real time, the in-plane strain tensor in opaque solids during high-temperature, long-term mechanical testing. The simple, noncontacting, strain-sensing methodology should also be suitable for measurement in hostile environments. This procedure has obvious advantages over traditional, mechanical, contacting techniques, and it is easier to interpret than moir and speckle interferometric approaches. A two-dimensional metallic grid of micrometer dimensions is applied to a metallographically prepared gauge section on the surface of a tensile test specimen by a standard photolithographic process. The grid on the fixtured specimen is interrogated by an He-Ne laser, and the resulting diffraction pattern is projected backwards onto a translucent screen. A charge-coupled device (CCD) camera is used to image the first-order diffraction peaks from the translucent screen. A schematic representation of the system is shown in the figure.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Research and Technology 2000; NASA/TM-2001-210605
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  • 52
    Publication Date: 2018-06-05
    Description: The theory, methods, and applications of the videogrammetric model deformation (VMD) measurement technique used at NASA for wind tunnel testing are presented. The VMD technique, based on non-topographic photogrammetry, can determine static and dynamic aeroelastic deformation and attitude of a wind-tunnel model. Hardware of the system includes a video-rate CCD camera, a computer with an image acquisition frame grabber board, illumination lights, and retroreflective or painted targets on a wind tunnel model. Custom software includes routines for image acquisition, target-tracking/identification, target centroid calculation, camera calibration, and deformation calculations. Applications of the VMD technique at five large NASA wind tunnels are discussed.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 53
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The Stellar Imager (SI) is envisioned as a space-based, UV-optical interferometer composed of 10 or more one-meter class elements distributed with a maximum baseline of approx. 0.5 km. It will image stars and binaries with one hundred to one thousand resolution elements on their surface and enable long-term studies of stellar magnetic activity patterns and their evolution with time, for comparison with those on the sun. It will also sound their interiors through asteroseismology to image internal structure, differential rotation, and large-scale circulations. SI will enable us to understand the various effects of magnetic fields of stars, the dynamos that generate them, and the internal structure and dynamics of the stars in which they exist. The ultimate goal is to achieve the best-possible forecasting of solar activity on time scales ranging up to decades, and an understanding of the impact of stellar magnetic activity on astrobiology and life in the Universe. The road to that goal will revolutionize our understanding of stars and stellar systems, the building blocks of the Universe. Fitting naturally within the NASA and ESA long-term time lines, SI complements defined missions, and with them will show us entire other solar systems, from the central star to their orbiting planets. In this paper we will describe the scientific goals of the mission, the performance requirements needed to address those goals, and the design concepts now under study.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: AAS Conference; Nov 12, 2001 - Nov 14, 2001; Pasadena, CA; United States
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  • 54
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The compound CZT offers great promise for space applications with applications in such areas as radiation monitoring, planetary investigations and astrophysics. As crystal quality improves, the challenge for imaging array development is to derive electrode geometries and readout electronics to satisfy particular applications and to understand how the material will perform in the space environment. An overview of present and future detector requirements will be given together with the status of current array developments.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 12th International Workshop on Room-Temperature Semiconductor X and Gamma Ray Detectors; Nov 05, 2001 - Nov 10, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 55
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The research to design a Fabry-Perot electrooptic modulator with an intracavity electrooptically active organic material is based on the initial results of Wang et. al. [1] using poled polymer thin films. The main feature of the proposed device is the observation that in traditional electrooptic modulators like a Pockels cell, it requires few kilovolts of driving voltage to cause a 3 dB modulation even in high figure-of-merit electrooptic. materials like LiNbO3. The driving voltage for the modulator can be reduced to as low as 10 volts by introducing the electrooptic material inside the resonant cavity of a Fabry-Perot modulator. This is because the transmission of the Fabry-Perot cavity varies nonlinearly with the change of refractive index or phase of light due to applied electric field. We describe in this report the progress made so far in the design and fabrication of the proposed device.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Alliance for NonLinear Optics Conference; Nov 02, 2001; El Paso, TX; United States
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  • 56
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: We conducted ground-based measurements with the Ames Airborne Tracking 6-channel Sunphotometer (AATS-6) during the 3rd Water Vapor IOP (WVIOP3), September 18 - October 8, 2000 at the SGP ARM site. For this deployment our primary result was columnar water vapor (CWV) obtained from continuous solar transmittance measurements in the 0.94-micron band. In addition, we simultaneously measured aerosol optical depth (AOD) at 380, 450, 525, 864 and 1020 nm. During the IOP, preliminary results of CWV and AOD were displayed in real-time. The result files were made available to other investigators by noon of the next day. During WVIOP3 those data were shown on the daily intercomparison plots on the IOP web-site. Our preliminary results for CWV fell within the spread of values obtained from other techniques. After conclusion of WVIOP3, AATS-6 was shipped directly to Mauna Loa, Hawaii for post-mission calibration. The updated calibration, a cloud screening technique for AOD, along with other mostly cosmetic changes were applied to the WVIOP3 data set and released as version 0.1. The resulting changes in CWV are small, the changes in AOD and Angstrom parameter are more noticeable. Data version 0.1 was successfully submitted to the ARM External Data Center. In the poster we will show data examples for both CWV and AOD. We will also compare our CWV results with those obtained from a GPS (Global Positioning System) slant path method.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: ARM Science Team Meeting; Mar 19, 2001 - Mar 23, 2001; Atlanta, GA; United States
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  • 57
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) balloon borne ionization calorimeter is well suited to record and identify high energy cosmic ray electrons, and at very high energies gamma-ray photons as well. We have simulated the performance of the instrument, and compare the simulations with actual high energy electron exposures at the CERN accelerator. Simulations and measurements do not compare exactly, in detail, but overall the simulations have predicted actual measured behavior quite well. ATIC has had its first 16 day balloon flight at the turn of the year over Antarctica, and first results obtained using the analysis methods derived from simulations and calibrations will be reported.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 58
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Estimates were made for the proposed geometry of the Gamma Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) Burst Monitor for sensitivity and number of sources detectable using the BATSE-developed Earth Occultation Technique.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: GLAST Science Working Group Meeting; Apr 03, 2001; Baltimore, MD; United States
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  • 59
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Testing of the chilled mirror sensor was initiated at Wallops Island in 1997. The chilled mirror dew point system is integrated with the Sippican, Inc., MK2 radiosonde providing a relatively inexpensive instrument. Early tests suggested that better stratospheric humidity measurements might be available. But, recent tests with different configurations of the mirror's cooler indicated that the systems capability to cool to the very low dew point temperatures required in the stratosphere were not being met with the present system. Nonetheless, the present mirror technology, while still undergoing development gives better humidity information between 400 and 100 hPa than the current routine radiosonde sensor. Comparisons are given of the chilled mirror and the typical operational humidity sensors.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 11th Symposium on Meteorological Observations and Instrumentation; Jan 14, 2001 - Jan 19, 2001; Albuquerque, NM; United States
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  • 60
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This paper will describe the scientific objectives of the MSFC SUMI project and the optical components that have been developed to meet those objectives. In order to test the scientific feasibility of measuring magnetic fields in the UV, a sounding rocket payload is being developed, This paper will describe the optical measurements that have been made on the SUMI telescope mirrors and polarization optics.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: UV/EUV and Visible Space Instrumentation for Astronomy and Solar Physics; Jul 29, 2001 - Aug 03, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 61
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This paper will describe the polarizing optics that are being developed for an ultraviolet magnetograph (SUMI) which will be flown on a sounding rocket payload. With a limited observing program, the polarizing optics were optimized to make simultaneous observation at two magnetic lines CIV (155nm) and MgII (280). This paper will give a brief overview of the SUMI instrument, will describe the polarimeter that will be used in the sounding rocket program and will present some of the measurements that have been made on the (SUMI) polarization optics.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Polarization Analysis and Measurement Analysis IV; Jul 29, 2001 - Aug 03, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 62
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This paper will describe the Experimental Vector Magnetograph that has been developed at the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC). This instrument was designed to improve linear polarization measurements by replacing electro-optic and rotating waveplate modulators with a rotating linear analyzer. Our paper will describe the motivation for developing this magnetograph, compare this instrument with traditional magnetograph designs, and present a comparison of the data acquired by this instrument and original MSFC vector magnetograph.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Polarization and Remote Sensing IV; Jul 29, 2001 - Aug 03, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 63
    Publication Date: 2019-07-20
    Description: This Monthly Progress Report covers the reporting period July 2001 of the Detailed Design and Development through Launch plus Thirty Days, Phase C/D, for selected components and subsystems of the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) instrument, hereafter referred to as EIS Instrument Components. This document contains the program status through the reporting period and forecasts the status for the upcoming reporting period.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 64
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: We have designed, built, and flight-tested a new star camera for daytime guiding of pointed balloon-borne experiments at altitudes around 40km. The camera and lens are commercially available, off-the-shelf components, but require a custom-built baffle to reduce stray light, especially near the sunlit limb of the balloon. This new camera, which operates in the 600-1000 nm region of the spectrum, successfully provided daytime aspect information of approximately 10 arcsecond resolution for two distinct star fields near the galactic plane. The detected scattered-light backgrounds show good agreement with the Air Force MODTRAN models, but the daytime stellar magnitude limit was lower than expected due to dispersion of red light by the lens. Replacing the commercial lens with a custom-built lens should allow the system to track stars in any arbitrary area of the sky during the daytime.
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  • 65
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: This presentation will review the aerial photography collected by the NASA ER-2 aircraft during the SAFARI (Southern African Regional Science Initiative) year 2000 campaign. It will include specifications on the camera and film, and will show examples of the imagery. It will also detail the extent of coverage, and the procedures to obtain film products from the South African government. Also included will be some sample applications of aerial photography for various environmental applications, and its use in augmenting other SAFARI data sets.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: SAFARI 2000 First Data Workshop; Aug 28, 2001 - Aug 31, 2001; Siavonga; Zambia
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  • 66
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Uncooled infrared microbolometer array detectors have application for space borne spectral imaging radiometer of several types to lower size, power and cost and provide improved performance. Other advantages of eliminating cooling requirement are simplified systems, simplified satellite integration and improved reliability. A prototype microbolometer instrument for cloud observations was flown on the STS-85 space shuttle mission. Extensive data were acquired at_km resolution at four thermal infrared wavelength bands. From the 320x280 detector array both spectral and angular information can be used to advantage in cloud retrievals and has been demonstrated. An engineering model Compact Visible and Infrared Imaging Radiometer (COVIR) for small satellite missions has been developed. Application of advanced microbolometer array detectors for three axis stabilized GOES thermal imagers has been studied.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 11th Conference on Satellite Meteorology and Oceanography; Oct 15, 2001 - Oct 18, 2001; Madison, WI; United States
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  • 67
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: GSFC is in the process of assembling an Extreme-Ultraviolet Normal Incidence Spectrometer called EUNIS, to be flown as a sounding rocket payload. The instrument builds on the many technical innovations pioneered by our highly successful SERTS experiment, which has now flown a total of ten times, most recently last summer. The new design will have somewhat improved spatial and spectral resolutions, as well as two orders of magnitude greater sensitivity, permitting high signal/noise EUV spectroscopy with a temporal resolution near 1 second for the first time ever. In order to achieve such high time cadence, a novel detector system is being developed, based on Active-Pixel-Sensor electronics, a key component of our design.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 2001 Spring Meeting; Greenbelt, MD; United States
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  • 68
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Procedure and characterization result for two vibration insensitive phase shifting interferometers will be presented. Typical applications of the vibration insensitive interferometers include the testing of large astronomical primary mirrors with long radii of curvature in a severe vibration environment. The procedure list the steps for characterizing the two interferometers. The characterization compares the two interferometers and compares to its own specification.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: MSFC Technology Days; May 09, 2001 - May 10, 2001; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 69
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This paper reviews the design and fabrication of a vibration compensated polarization Twyman-Green interferometer. Initial results are described.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: MSFC Technology Days; May 09, 2001 - May 10, 2001; Huntsville, AL; United States
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  • 70
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: This project is a continuation of work begun under NASA Grant NAG5-8005 with the PI (Ruf) at the Pennsylvania State University. The PI left Penn State to join the faculty at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor in July 2000. The bulk of funds originally obligated to Penn State for this work have been transferred to NASA Grant NAG5-9762 with U-M ('Design Study of a Synthetic Aperture Precipitation Radiometer', Project period 01/01/01-07/31/02), which is ongoing. A small portion of the original NAG5-8005 funds were retained at Penn State to settle outstanding obligations and then transferred to U-M as NAG5-9967.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 71
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: The purpose of this paper is to describe a new method for thermal nondestructive evaluation. This method uses a synchronized electronic shutter system (SESS) to remove the heat lamp's influence on the thermal data during and after flash heating. There are two main concerns when using flash heating. The first concern is during the flash when the photons are reflected back into the camera. This tends to saturate the detectors and potentially introduces unknown and uncorrectable errors when curve fitting the data to a model. To address this, an electronically controlled shutter was placed over the infrared camera lens. Before firing the flash lamps, the shutter is opened to acquire the necessary background data for offset calibration. During flash heating, the shutter is closed to prevent the photons from the high intensity flash from saturating the camera's detectors. The second concern is after the flash heating where the lamps radiate heat after firing. This residual cooling introduces an unwanted transient thermal response into the data. To remove this residual effect, a shutter was placed over the flash lamps to block the infrared heat radiating from the flash head after heating. This helped to remove the transient contribution of the flash. The flash lamp shutters were synchronized electronically with the camera shutter. Results are given comparing the use of the thermal inspection with and without the shutter system.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: SPIE Thermosense; Apr 16, 2001; Orlando, FL; United States|Proceedings of SPIE; 4360; 616-623
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  • 72
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Transducers used at KSC (Kennedy Space Center), in support of processing and launch of flight vehicles and payloads, are designed and tested to meet specific program requirements. Any equipment, transducer or support instrumentation in direct contact or in support to flight vehicle operations is considered ground support equipment (GSE) and required to meet strict program requirements (i.e. Space Shuttle Program, Space Station Program, Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicles, etc.) Transducers used in KSC applications are based on commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) transducers and sensors. In order to fully meet KSC requirements, these transducers evolve from standard COTS to modified COTS. The Transducer and Data Acquisition Group of the Instrumentation Branch at Kennedy Space Center is responsible for providing the technical expertise as well as qualification-testing capability to transform these COTS transducers in modified COTS suitable for use around flight hardware.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: IEEE Sensors 2002; Jun 12, 2002 - Jun 14, 2002; Orlando, FL; United States
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  • 73
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The poster summarizes theoretical and experimental concepts used in the development of the proposed NASA flight experiment SHIVA (Spaceflight Holography in a Virtual Apparatus). SHIVA exploits a unique holography-based, diagnostics tools to understand the behavior of small particles subjected to transient accelerations. Flight experiment protocols and apparatus will test model equations, characterize the acceleration environment and other microgravity phenomena. The primary objective of SHIVA is to enhance the current understanding of complex dynamics of small particles subjected to transient microgravity conditions. Existing theory did not fully describe the movement of particles in fluids in the microgravity environment. Results from recent ground-based experiments and comparison with the model recently developed by Rangel and Coimbra are presented.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Gordon Research Conference; Jul 08, 2001 - Jul 13, 2001; New London, NH; United States
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  • 74
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The ATIC (Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter) balloon-borne ionization calorimeter is well suited to record and identify high energy cosmic ray electrons. The instrument was exposed to high-energy beams at CERN H2 bean-dine in September of 1999. We have simulated the performance of the instrument, and compare the simulations with actual high energy electron exposures at the CERN accelerator. Simulations and measurements do not compare exactly, in detail, but overall the simulations have predicted actual measured behavior quite well.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: ICRC 2001 Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 75
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: A method by which to calibrate a spectral radiometer using the sun as the illumination source is discussed. Solar-based calibrations eliminate several uncertainties associated with applying a lamp-based calibration to field measurements. The procedure requires only a calibrated reflectance panel, relatively low aerosol optical depth, and measurements of atmospheric transmittance. Further, a solar-reflectance-based calibration (SRBC), by eliminating the need for extraterrestrial irradiance spectra, reduces calibration uncertainty to approximately 2.2% across the solar-reflective spectrum, significantly reducing uncertainty in measurements used to deduce the optical properties of a system illuminated by the sun (e.g., sky radiance). The procedure is very suitable for on-site calibration of long-term field instruments, thereby reducing the logistics and costs associated with transporting a radiometer to a calibration facility.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Semi-Annual Report for July - December, 2001; 3
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  • 76
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The long trace profiler (LTP) is the instrument of a choice for the surface figure measurement of grazing incidence mirrors. The modification of conventional LTP, the vertical-scan LTP, capable of measuring the surface figure of replicated shell mirrors is now in operation at Marshall Space Flight Center. Sources of systematic error for vertical-scan LTP are discussed. Calibration method using a test flat mirror and results of measurements are presented.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 4th SPIE Conference on Instruments, Methods and Missions for Astrobiology; Jul 29, 2001 - Aug 03, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 77
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: A mission concept study to define the "Advanced Cosmic-ray Composition Experiment for Space Station (ACCESS)" was sponsored by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). The ACCESS instrument complement contains a transition radiation detector and an ionization calorimeter to measure tile spectrum of protons, helium, and heavier nuclei up to approximately 10(exp 15) eV to search for the limit of S/N shock wave acceleration, or evidence for other explanations of the spectra. Several calorimeter configurations have been studied, including the "baseline" totally active bismuth germanate instrument and sampling calorimeters utilizing various detectors. The Imaging Calorimeter for ACCESS (ICA) concept comprises a carbon target and a calorimeter using a high atomic number absorber sampled approximately each radiation length (rl) by thin scintillating fiber (SCIFI) detectors. The main features and options of the ICA instrument configuration are described in this paper. Since direct calibration is not possible over most of the energy range, the best approach must be decided from simulations of calorimeter performance extrapolated from CERN calibrations at 0.375 TeV. This paper presents results from the ICA simulations study.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 27th International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 08, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 78
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The preliminary design of an optical/acoustical instrument is described for making highly accurate real-time determinations of the location of cloud-to-ground (CG) lightning. The instrument, named the Lightning Optical Camera And ThundEr (LOCATE) sensor, will also image the clear and cloud-obscured lightning channel produced from CGs and cloud flashes, and will record the transient optical waveforms produced from these discharges. The LOCATE sensor will consist of a full (360 degrees) field-of-view optical camera for obtaining CG channel image and azimuth, a sensitive thunder microphone for obtaining CG range, and a fast photodiode system for time-resolving the lightning optical waveform. The optical waveform data will be used to discriminate CGs from cloud flashes. Together, the optical azimuth and thunder range is used to locate CGs and it is anticipated that a network of LOCATE sensors would determine CG source location to well within 100 meters. All of this would be accomplished for a relatively inexpensive cost compared to present RF lightning location technologies, but of course the range detection is limited and will be quantified in the future. The LOCATE sensor technology would have practical applications for electric power utility companies, government (e.g. NASA Kennedy Space Center lightning safety and warning), golf resort lightning safety, telecommunications, and other industries.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: AGU Meeting; Dec 10, 2001 - Dec 14, 2001; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 79
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) Balloon Experiment had its first flight from Mcmurdo, Antarctica 28/12/2000 to 13/01/2001, local time, recording over 360 hours of data. The design goal of ATIC was to measure the Cosmic Ray composition and energy spectra from approximately 50 GeV to near 100 TeV utilizing a Si-matrix detector, a scintillator hodoscope, carbon targets and a calorimeter consisting of a stack of BGO scintillator crystals. The design, the operations and in-flight performance of the scintillator hodoscope and the BGO calorimeter are described.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 27th ICRC 2001 Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 80
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) uses a silicon matrix detector in conjunction with a scintillator hodoscope to determine the incident cosmic ray's charge. Cosmic rays that interact in a carbon target have their energy determined from the shower that develops within a fully active calorimeter composed of a stack of scintillating BGO crystals. The silicon matrix consists of 4480 individual silicon pads, each capable of measuring the signal from cosmic rays with atomic numbers from I to 26. Preliminary results will be presented describing the performance of the silicon matrix during the 16-day maiden flight of ATIC around Antarctica.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: ICRC 2001 Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 81
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) is designed to measure individual elemental spectra from protons to Fe for energies from 10 GeV to near 100 TeV. Preliminary results are presented for Z between 8 and 26 spectra from the maiden flight of ATIC in Antarctica that acquired 360 hours of data.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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  • 82
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: The Imaging Calorimeter for ACCESS (ICA) utilizes a thin sampling calorimeter concept for direct measurements of high-energy cosmic rays. The ICA design uses arrays of small scintillating fibers to measure the energy and trajectory of the produced cascades. A test instrument has been developed to study the performance of this concept at accelerator energies and for comparison with simulations. Two test exposures have been completed using a CERN test beam. Some results from the accelerator tests are presented.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 16, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 83
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Lidar remote sensing instruments can make a significant contribution to satisfying many of the required measurements of atmospheric and surface parameters for future spaceborne platforms, including topographic altimeters, atmospheric profiles of, wind, humidity, temperature, trace molecules, aerosols, and clouds. It is highly desirable to have wide measurement swaths for rapid coverage rather than just the narrow ribbon of data that is obtained with a nadir only observation. For most applications global coverage is required, and for wind measurements scanning or pointing is required in order to retrieve the full 3-D wind vector from multiple line-of-sight Doppler measurements. Conventional lidar receivers make up a substantial portion of the instrument's size and weight. Wide angle scanning typically requires a large scanning mirror in front of the receiver telescope, or pointing the entire telescope and aft optics assembly, Either of these methods entails the use of large bearings, motors, gearing and their associated electronics. Spaceborne instruments also need reaction wheels to counter the torque applied to the spacecraft by these motions. NASA has developed simplified conical scanning telescopes using Holographic Optical Elements (HOEs) to reduce the size, mass, angular momentum, and cost of scanning lidar systems. NASA has developed two operating lidar systems based on 40 cm diameter HOEs. The first such system, named Prototype Holographic Atmospheric Scanner for Environmental Remote Sensing (PHASERS) was a joint development between NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) and the University of Maryland College Park. PHASERS is based on a reflection HOE for use at the doubled Nd:YAG laser wavelength of 532 nm and has recently undergone a number of design changes in a collaborative effort between GSFC and Saint Anselm College in New Hampshire. The next step was to develop IR transmission HOEs for use with the Nd:YAG fundamental in the Holographic Airborne Rotating Lidar Instrument Experiment (HARLIE). The HOE spins like a compact disk in a large ring ball bearing. In an aircraft the HOE faces down, looking out through a window at an angle of 45 degrees off-nadir. The HOE diffracts 85% of the incident 532 nm light into a 160 micron spot at a focal length of 1 meter. HARLIE is a field deployable lidar measuring aerosol, cloud, and boundary layer backscatter for atmospheric research. It has flown several times and is also used from a ground-based trailer in an upward-looking mode. The HOE generates a 45 degree conical scan pattern by rotating at speeds up to 30 rpm. Like PHASERS, the HOE in HARLIE serves both as the laser collimating lens as well as the receiver telescope primary optic. The telescope is coupled to the receiver package via fiber optic. The transmitter is a diode pumped Nd:YAG laser operating at 1064 nm, delivering 1 mJ pulses at a 5 KHz rep-rate. The receiver has a 200 microradian field-of-view and a 0.5 nm optical bandpass. The photon counting data system utilizes a single Geiger-mode silicon avalanche photodiode detector, This new technology has also presented us with new data visualization challenges as well as new measurement techniques. The backscatter data obtained from a stationary (i.e. ground-based) scanning HOE lidar is on the surface of a cone, which when viewed over many consecutive scans can reveal atmospheric motions on this surface over time as the atmosphere advects over the site. In a moving platform such as an airplane or satellite, the data from consecutive scans cover different areas under the flight path, revealing atmospheric structure in 3-dimensions. An example of a visualization of HARLIE ground-based data is presented, showing aerosol backscatter on a 90 degree conical surface generated from one 360 degree scan of the lidar during the HOLO-1 field campaign on the afternoon of 10 March 1999. Higher backscatter levels are rendered as lighter signal against a dark background. Breaking Kelvin-Helmholtz waves are evident on the north side of the scan at an altitude of 10-11 km. Time series of successive scans made at regular intervals render unique views of atmospheric motions, from which vertical profiles of atmospheric wind vectors can be obtained using a unique data analysis approach. Wind vectors obtained from the lidar were compared with co-located radiosonde wind profiles during an intensive operating period in September-October 2000 at the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Program's Southern Great Plains Central Facility.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: IEEE IGARSS 2001 Meeting; Jul 09, 2001 - Jul 13, 2001; Sydney; Australia
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  • 84
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Silicon array readouts for microchannel plate intensifiers offer several attractive features. In this class of detector, the electron cloud output of the MCP intensifier is converted to visible light by a phosphor; that light is then fiber-optically coupled to the silicon array. In photon-counting mode, the resulting light splashes on the silicon array are recognized and centroided to fractional pixel accuracy by off-chip electronics. This process can result in very high (MCP-limited) spatial resolution for the readout while operating at a modest MCP gain (desirable for dynamic range and long term stability). The principal limitation of intensified CCD systems of this type is their severely limited local dynamic range, as accurate photon counting is achieved only if there are not overlapping event splashes within the frame time of the device. This problem can be ameliorated somewhat by processing events only in pre-selected windows of interest or by using an addressable charge injection device (CID) for the readout array. We are currently pursuing the development of an intriguing alternative readout concept based on using an event-driven CMOS Active Pixel Sensor. APS technology permits the incorporation of discriminator circuitry within each pixel. When coupled with suitable CMOS logic outside the array area, the discriminator circuitry can be used to trigger the readout of small sub-array windows only when and where an event splash has been detected, completely eliminating the local dynamic range problem, while achieving a high global count rate capability and maintaining high spatial resolution. We elaborate on this concept and present our progress toward implementing an event-driven APS readout.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 199th American Astronomical Society Meeting; Jan 06, 2002 - Jan 10, 2002; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 85
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    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The first flight of the Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) experiment from McMurdo, Antarctica lasted for 16 days, starting in December, 2000. The ATIC instrument consists of a fully active 320-crystal, 960-channel Bismuth Germanate (BGO) calorimeter, 202 scintillator strips in 3 hodoscopes interleaved with a graphite target, and a 4480-pixel silicon matrix charge detector. We have developed an Object Oriented data processing package based on ROOT. In this paper, we will describe the data processing scheme used in handling the accumulated 45 GB of flight data. We will also discuss trigger issues by comparing the measured energy-dependent trigger efficiency with its simulation and calibration issues by considering the time-dependence of housekeeping information, etc.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 86
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Marshall Space Flight Center's (MSFC) solar group announces the successful upgrade of our tower vector magnetograph. In operation since 1973, the last major alterations to the system (which includes telescope, filter, polarizing optics, camera, and data acquisition computer) were made in 1982, when we upgraded from an SEC Vidicon camera to a CCD. In 1985, other changes were made which increased the field-of-view from 5 x 5 arc min (2.4 arc sec per pixel) to 6 x 6 arc min with a resolution of 2.81 arc sec. In 1989, the Apollo Telescope Mount H-alpha telescope was coaligned with the optics of the magnetograph. The most recent upgrades (year 2000), funded to support the High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (HESSI) mission, have resulted in a pixel size of 0.64 arc sec over a 7 x 5.2 arc min field-of-view (binning 1x1). This poster describes the physical characteristics of the new system and compares spatial resolution, timing, and versatility with the old system. Finally, we provide a description of our Internet web site, which includes images of our most recent observations, and links to our data archives, as well as the history of magnetography at MSFC and education outreach pages.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Solar Physics Division Meeting; May 31, 2001; Boston, MA; United States
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  • 87
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The research to design a Fabry-Perot electrooptic modulator with an intracavity electrooptically active organic material is based on the initial results of Wang et. al. using poled polymer thin films. The main feature of the proposed device is the observation that in traditional electrooptic modulators like a Pockels cell, it requires few kilovolts of driving voltage to cause a 3 dB modulation even in high figure-of-merit electrooptic materials like LiNbO3. The driving voltage for the modulator can be reduced to as low as 10 volts by introducing the electrooptic material inside the resonant cavity of a Fabry-Perot modulator. This is because the transmission of the Fabry-Perot cavity varies nonlinearly with the change of refractive index or phase of light due to applied electric field. We describe in this report the progress made so far in the design and fabrication of the proposed device.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 13th Semi-Annual Project Review Meeting; Feb 23, 2001; Atlanta, GA; United States
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  • 88
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) was sent into orbit on the Earth Observing System (EOS) Terra spacecraft in December 1999. The MODIS began taking observations on February 24, 2000. Instrument checkout and characterization progressed to the point in the Fall of 2000 along with the checkout of algorithms so that approximately 40 products for land, ocean and atmosphere studies on global and regional scales were and are now being produced systematically. These products are now designated "beta", products indicating that they are still being examined and validated, but in most cases are amenable to examination by the scientific and applications community to further assess their utility and provide feedback to the validation process and the MODIS Science Team. It is expected that many products will progress to "provisionally useful" or fully "validated" status by mid-year 2001. one goal is to produce a systematically processed data set by the end of 2001 from MODIS extends from November 2000 through October 2001. Overall the MODIS instrument and the associated data processing systems are performing well. The many examples of MODIS observations indicate that the prospect for highly useful and exciting studies of the Earth-atmosphere system using MODIS data looks very good.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: ASPRS Conference; Apr 23, 2001 - Apr 26, 2001; Saint Louis, MO; United States
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  • 89
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Holography has been used in several past space missions. One popular experimental mode deals with study of fluid refractive properties in the crystal growth cell. The perceived advantage of holography is that it stores and reconstructs wavefronts so that a complete information is available later on ground. That means the wavefront can be analyzed not only by traditional holographic interferometry but other means as well. We have successfully demonstrated two such means being described here. One is deflectometry using a Ronchi grating and the other confocal optical processing. These results, using holograms from Spacelab-III mission dealing with triglycine sulfate crystal growth clearly demonstrate that a single hardware (holography) can do the task of several fluid experimental systems. Finally, not experimentally demonstrated, the possibility of some other analysis modes like speckle techniques and video holography using the reconstructed wavefronts have been described. Since only traditional holographic interferometry has been used in the past leading to the argument that non-holographic interferometry hardware in space could do the job, the present study firmly establishes advantage of holography.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: SPIE Conference; Jul 30, 2001; San Diego, CA; United States
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  • 90
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The reliability of the Electrochemical Concentration Cell (ECC) ozonesonde depends on the care exercised in preparing the instrument for use. Although the ECC can be quickly prepared and flown, generally within less then one day if necessary, it is best to prepare the instrument at least one week prior to use, and as our tests have confirmed even 2-3 weeks prior to use may actually be better. There are a number of factors that must be considered when preparing an ECC. These basically are the pump efficiency, volumetric flow rate, temperature of the air entering the pump, and the background current. Also of importance is the concentration of the potassium iodide solution. Tests conducted at Wallops Island (38 N) has enabled us to identify potential problem areas and ways to avoid them. The calibration and pre-flight preparation methods will be discussed. The method of calibrating the ECC also is used at Ascension Island (8 S) and Natal, Brazil (5 S). Comparisons between vertical profiles of the ECC instrument and satellites will be reviewed as well as comparison with ground based instruments, such as, the Dobson Spectrophotometer and hand held Microtops photometers.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: 11th Symposium on Meteorological Observations and Instrumentation; Jan 14, 2001 - Jan 19, 2001; Albuquerque, NM; United States
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  • 91
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: With advances in lasers and electro-optic technology, lidar is becoming an established technique for remote sensing of the Earth and planets from space. Some of the earliest space-based lidar measurements were made in the early 1970s from lunar orbit using the laser altimeter on the Apollo 15 mission. Space lidar instruments in active use today include the MOLA instrument aboard the Mars Global Surveyor mission and the Near Laser Rangefinder on the Near Earth Asteroid Rendezvous (NEAR) Mission. This talk will review laser remote sensing techniques, critical technologies, and some results from past and present NASA missions. It will also review near term plans for NASA's ICESat and Picasso missions and summarize some concepts for lidar on future missions.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Optical Society of America Annual Meeting; Oct 24, 2000; Providence, RI; United States
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  • 92
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: In-flight measurement of spatial resolution were conducted as part of the ASA Scientific Data Purchase (SDP) Validation and Verification (V&V) process. Characterization included remote sensing systems with ground sample distance (GSD) of 1 meter or less, such as the panchromatic imager on-board the ICONOS satellite and the airborne ADAR System 5500 multispectral instrument. Final image products were used to evaluate the effect of both the image acquisition system (e.g., optics, electronics, motion, jitter, atmosphere) and image post-processing (e.g., resampling, modulation trasfer function (MTF) compensator). Spatial resolution was characterized by full width at half maximum (FWHM) of an edge response-derived line spread function. This was found to be a more robust measure of spatial resolution than the value of NTF at Nyquist frequency The edge responses were analysed using the tilted-edge technique that ovecomes the spatial sampling limitations of the digital imaging systems. As an enhancement to existing algorithms, the slope of the edge response and the orientation of the edge target were determined by a single computational process. Adjacent black and white square panels, either painted on a flat surface or deployed as traps, formed the ground-based edge targets used in the tests. Orientation of the deployable tarps was optimized beforehand, based on simulations of the imaging system. Numerous edge target images were analyzed for each of the tested sensors. The effect of such factors as acquisition geometry, temporal variability, MTF compensation, and GSD on spatial resolution were investigated.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: SE-2001-11-00066-SSC , International Society of Optical Engineering (SPIE) Conference; Jul 07, 2002 - Jul 11, 2002; Seattle, WA; United States
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  • 93
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Data fusion and sensor management approaches have largely been implemented with centralized and hierarchical architectures. Numerical and statistical methods are the most common data fusion methods found in these systems. Given the proliferation and low cost of processing power, there is now an emphasis on designing distributed and decentralized systems. These systems use analytical/quantitative techniques or qualitative reasoning methods for date fusion.Based on other work by the author, a sensor may be treated as a highly autonomous (decentralized) unit. Each highly autonomous sensor (HAS) is capable of extracting qualitative behaviours from its data. For example, it detects spikes, disturbances, noise levels, off-limit excursions, step changes, drift, and other typical measured trends. In this context, this paper describes a distributed sensor fusion paradigm and theory where each sensor in the system is a HAS. Hence, given the reach qualitative information from each HAS, a paradigm and formal definitions are given so that sensors and processes can reason and make decisions at the qualitative level. This approach to sensor fusion makes it possible the implementation of intuitive (effective) methods to monitor, diagnose, and compensate processes/systems and their sensors. This paradigm facilitates a balanced distribution of intelligence (code and/or hardware) to the sensor level, the process/system level, and a higher controller level. The primary application of interest is in intelligent health management of rocket engine test stands.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: NASA/SE-2000-12-00026-SSC , 37th AIAA/ASME/SAE/ASEE Joint propulsion Conference and Exhibit; Jul 08, 2001 - Jul 11, 2001; Salt Lake City, UT; United States
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  • 94
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: Mercury is the closest planet to the Sun and because it is so close, it is difficult to study from Earth-based observatories. Its proximity to the Sun has also limited the number of spacecraft to visit this tiny planet to just one, Mariner 10, which flew by Mercury twice in 1974 and once in 1975. Mariner 10 provided a wealth of new information about Mercury, yet much still remains unknown about Mercury's geologic history and the processes that led to its formation. The origin of Mercury's metal-rich composition is just one area of investigation awaiting more and improved data to sort between competing hypotheses. Mercury plays an important role in comparative planetology, and many of the processes that were important during its formation are relevant to the Earth's early history. MESSENGER (Mercury Surface, Space Environment, Geochemistry, and Ranging) is a Discovery mission that has been designed to fly by and orbit Mercury. It will launch in March 2004, flyby Mercury in 2007 and 2008 and enter an elliptical orbit in April 2009. During the one-year orbital phase, a suite of instruments on board the MESSENGER spacecraft will study the exosphere, magnetosphere, surface, and interior of Mercury. One of these instruments will be an X-Ray Spectrometer (XRS) that will measure surface elemental abundances. Remote X-ray spectroscopy has been accomplished before on the Apollo 15 and 16 missions, and more recently on NEAR Shoemaker. The MESSENGER XRS will measure characteristic X-ray emissions induced in the surface of Mercury by the incident solar flux. The Ka lines for the elements Mg, Al, Si, S, Ca, Ti, and Fe will be detected with spatial resolution on the order of 40 km when counting statistics are not a limiting factor. These measurements can be used to obtain quantitative information on elemental composition.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Mercury: Space Environment, and Surface and Interior; 102-103; LPI-Contrib-1097
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  • 95
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: Our group at GSFC began experimental and theoretical work on microcalorimetry almost twenty years ago, in August of 1982. Over the next 10 months, we completed the initial demonstration of a Si impurity thermometer-based calorimeter as an X-ray spectrometer. This successful demonstration resulted in the development by many investigators of scientific applications for microcalorimeters, ranging from optical spectroscopy to dark matter detection to particle physics applications. Many new technical approaches for cryogenic detectors were proposed by investigators and have been developed. In this presentation, I will describe the early development of microcalorimeters at GSFC and University of Wisconsin and the subsequent rapid growth of this work around the world The key milestones in the early development were the initial spectroscopy demonstrations and the selection of XRS, our microlcalorimeter-based instrument for the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility (AXAF) and ultimately for ASTRO-E. An additional key event was the development of the direct detection of dark matter experiment and the formation of the Center for Particle Astrophysics. Both of these programs provided long term support for this technology in its precarious early days. A major additional technical step in the development of detectors was the demonstration of devices based on superconducting transition edge sensors (TES). These detectors promised (and have delivered) improved energy resolution and higher event rate capabilities. They couple naturally to SQUIDS, which operate well at the low temperatures where the detectors must operate. The past two decades have taken microcalorimeters from their infancy to applications in real experiments. I will provide an overview of the early development of the devices and review the breadth of the present technology and applications.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: Calorimetry 2001 Conference; Jan 01, 2001; Colorado Springs, CO; United States
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  • 96
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) is designed to measure individual spectra from protons to Fe for energies from 10 GeV to near 100 Tev. Preliminary results will be presented 8 less than Z less than or equal to 26 spectra from the maiden flight of ATIC in Antarctica that acquired 360 hours of data.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 97
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) uses a silicon matrix detector to determine charge in conjunction with a scintillator hodoscope that measures charge and trajectory. Cosmic rays that interact in a carbon target have their energy determined from the shower that develops within a fully active calorimeter composed of a stack of scintillating BGO crystals. The silicon matrix consists of 4480 individual silicon pads, each capable of measuring the signal from cosmic rays with atomic numbers from 1 to 26. Preliminary results will be presented describing the performance of the silicon matrix during the 16-day maiden flight of ATIC around Antarctica.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: International Cosmic Ray Conference; Aug 07, 2001 - Aug 15, 2001; Hamburg; Germany
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  • 98
    facet.materialart.
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-17
    Description: The ECCO instrument is one of two instruments which comprise the HNX mission. The principal goal of ECCO (the Extremely-heavy Cosmic-ray Composition Observer) is to measure the age of galactic cosmic ray nuclei using the actinides (Th, U Pu, Cm) as clocks. As a bonus, ECCO will search with unprecedented sensitivity for long-lived elements in the superheavy island of stability. ECCO is an enormous array (23 m*'~2) of BP-1 glass track-etch detectors, and is based on the successful flight heritage of the Trek detector which was deployed externally on Mir. We present a description of the instrument, estimates of expected performance, and recent calibrations which demonstrate that the actinides can be resolved from each other with good charge resolution.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Type: American Physical Society Meeting; Apr 28, 2001 - May 01, 2001; Washington, DC; United States
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  • 99
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: Chemical sensors for detecting analytes in fluids comprise first and second conductive elements (e.g., electrical leads) electrically coupled to and separated by a chemically sensitive resistor which provides an electrical path between the conductive elements. The resistor comprises a plurality of alternating nonconductive regions (comprising a nonconductive organic polymer) and conductive regions (comprising a conductive material) transverse to the electrical path. The resistor provides a difference in resistance between the conductive elements when contacted with a fluid comprising a chemical analyte at a first concentration, than when contacted with a fluid comprising the chemical analyte at a second different concentration. Arrays of such sensors are constructed with at least two sensors having different chemically sensitive resistors providing dissimilar such differences in resistance. Variability in chemical sensitivity from sensor to sensor is provided by qualitatively or quantitatively varying the composition of the conductive and/or nonconductive regions. An electronic nose for detecting an analyte in a fluid may be constructed by using such arrays in conjunction with an electrical measuring device electrically connected to the conductive elements of each sensor.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 100
    Publication Date: 2019-08-17
    Description: The back surface of a thinned charged-coupled device (CCD) is treated to eliminate the backside potential well that appears in a conventional thinned CCD during backside illumination. The backside of the CCD includes a delta layer of high-concentration dopant confined to less than one monolayer of the crystal semiconductor. The thinned, delta-doped CCD is used to determine the energy of a very low-energy particle that penetrates less than 1.0 nm into the CCD, such as a proton having energy less than 10 keV.
    Keywords: Instrumentation and Photography
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