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Search Publications

NIST Authors in Bold

Displaying 16551 - 16575 of 73888

Thermal characteristics of temperature-controlled electrochemical microdevices

March 31, 2016
Author(s)
Nicholas M. Contento, Stephen Semancik
The development of novel, miniaturized sensing systems is driven by the demand for better and faster chemical measurements with lower power consumption and smaller sample sizes. Emerging miniature sensors, or microsensors, also offer rapid thermal and

Towards Establishing Compact Imaging Spectrometer Standards

March 31, 2016
Author(s)
David W. Allen, Elmer T. Slonecker, Ronald G. Resmini
Remote sensing science is currently undergoing a tremendous expansion in the area of hyperspectral imaging (HSI) technology. Spurred largely by the explosive growth of Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV), sometimes called Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS), or

Using a Capability Oriented Methodology to Build Your Cloud Ecosystem

March 31, 2016
Author(s)
Michaela Iorga, Karen Scarfone
Organizations often struggle to capture the necessary functional capabilities for each cloud-based solution adopted for their information systems. Identifying, defining, selecting, and prioritizing these functional capabilities and the security components

Probing beyond the laser coherence time in optical clock comparisons

March 30, 2016
Author(s)
David B. Hume, David R. Leibrandt
We develop protocols that circumvent the laser noise limit in optical clock comparisons by synchronous probing of two clocks using phase-locked local oscillators. This allows for probe times longer than the laser coherence time, avoids the Dick effect, and

Vision experiment ii on white light chromaticity for lighting

March 30, 2016
Author(s)
Yoshihiro Ohno, Semin Oh
In response to a published discussion (Wei & Houser, 2015) on the 2013 NIST experiment on white light chromaticity for lighting (Ohno & Fein, 2013), the second experiment was conducted at NIST to determine the white light chromaticity perceived most

NIST Weather Station for Photovoltaic and Building System Research

March 29, 2016
Author(s)
Matthew Boyd
A weather station has been constructed on the Gaithersburg, Maryland campus of the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) as part of a research effort to assess performance of photovoltaic and building systems. This weather station includes

Athermal avalanche in bilayer superconducting nanowire single-photon detectors

March 28, 2016
Author(s)
Varun B. Verma, Martin J. Stevens, Richard P. Mirin, Sae Woo Nam
We demonstrate that two superconducting nanowires separated by a thin insulating barrier can undergo a thermal avalanche process. In this process, Joule heating caused by a photodetection event in one nanowire and the associated production of athermal

Design and synthesis of a minimal bacterial genome

March 25, 2016
Author(s)
Elizabeth A. Strychalski, Clyde A. Hutchinson III, Ray-Yuan Chuang, Vladimir Noskov, Nacyra Assad-Garcia, Tom J. Deerinck, Mark H. Ellisman, John Gill, Krishna Kannan, Bogumil J. Karas, Li Ma, James F. Pelletier, Zhi-Qing Qi, Alexander Richter, Lijie Sun, Yo Suzuki, Billyana Tsvetanova, Kim S. Wise, Hamilton O. Smith, John I. Glass, Chuck Merryman, Daniel G. Gibson, J. C. Venter
We used whole-genome design and complete chemical synthesis to minimize the 1079–kilobase pair synthetic genome of Mycoplasma mycoides JCVI-syn1.0. An initial design, based on collective knowledge of molecular biology combined with limited transposon

EUV-induced oxidation of carbon on TiO2

March 25, 2016
Author(s)
Nadir S. Faradzhev, Shannon B. Hill
Previously we reported on the etch rates of C on TiO2 by oxidizers including NO, O3 and H2O2 when irradiated by extreme ultraviolet (EUV) radiation at 13.5 nm [Faradzhev et al., J.Phys. Chem. C, 117 (2013) 23072-23081]. We demonstrated that the intensity

Laser Trackers for Large Scale Dimensional Metrology: A Review

March 25, 2016
Author(s)
Balasubramanian Muralikrishnan, Steven D. Phillips, Daniel S. Sawyer
Thirty years since their invention, laser trackers are now recognized as the measurement tool of choice in the manufacture and assembly of large components. While their general design, i.e., a ranging unit on a two-axis gimbal, has not changed

Multispectrum analysis of the Oxygen A-band

March 25, 2016
Author(s)
Joseph T. Hodges, Brian J. Drouin, D C. Benner, L.R. Brown, Matthew J. Cich, Timothy Crawford, Malathy Devi, Alexandre Guillaume, Eli Mlawer, D J. Robichaud, Oyafuso Fabiano, Keeyon Sung, Wishnow Edward, Shanshan Yu
Retrievals of atmospheric composition from near-infrared measurements require measurements of airmass to better than the desired precision of the composition. The oxygen bands are obvious choices to quantify airmass since the mixing ratio of oxygen is

Reproducibility in density functional theory calculations of solids

March 25, 2016
Author(s)
Francesca Tavazza, Kurt Lejaeghere, Stefaan Cottenier, Gustav Bihlmayer
Density functional theory (DFT) is now routinely used for simulating material properties. Many software packages are available, which makes it challenging to know which are the best to use for a specific calculation. Lejaeghere et al. compared the

Bright focused ion beam sources based on laser-cooled atoms

March 24, 2016
Author(s)
Jabez J. McClelland, Adam V. Steele, Brenton J. Knuffman, Kevin A. Twedt, Andrew D. Schwarzkopf, Truman M. Wilson
Nanoscale focused ion beams (FIBs) represent one of the most useful tools in nanotechnology, enabling nanofabrication via milling and gas-assisted deposition, microscopy and microanalysis, and selective, spatially resolved doping of materials. Recently, a
Displaying 16551 - 16575 of 73888
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