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NIST Authors in Bold

Displaying 6076 - 6100 of 7113

p-Wave Cold Collisions in an Optical Lattice Clock

September 2, 2011
Author(s)
Nathan D. Lemke, Andrew D. Ludlow, J. von Stecher, Jeffrey A. Sherman, A.M. Rey, Christopher W. Oates
State-of-the-art optical clocks with neutral atoms employ an optical lattice to tightly confine the atoms, enabling high-resolution spectroscopy and the potential for high-accuracy timekeeping. Interrogating many atoms simultaneously facilitates high

Limited Live-time Measurements of Frequency Spectra

July 31, 2011
Author(s)
David A. Howe, Neil Ashby, Danielle G. Lirette, Archita Hati, Craig W. Nelson
Frequency-difference-of-arrival (FDOA) can be used to monitor and track an emitter’s location by observing Doppler frequency shifts of the carrier during short pulsed transmissions. This specific application needs to consider two frequency-stability levels

Understanding the Hazards of Grouped Electrical Cables

August 8, 2010
Author(s)
Kevin B. McGrattan, Andrew J. Lock, Nathan D. Marsh, Marc R. Nyden, Jason Dreisbach, David Stroup
CHRISTIFIRE (Cable Heat Release, Ignition, and Spread in Tray Installations during FIRE) is a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of Research program to quantify the mass and energy released from burning electrical cables. This type of quantitative

A Flame Model for Melting and Dripping Polymers

July 5, 2010
Author(s)
Kathryn M. Butler, Sergio R. Idelsohn, Julio M. Marti, Eugenio Onate, Riccardo Rossi
The versatility of polymeric materials, as demonstrated in such features as high strength, low weight, ease of processing, and capability to form into complex shapes, have led to their widespread industrial application in aircraft structures

Understanding the Hazards of Grouped Electrical Cables

June 7, 2010
Author(s)
Kevin B. McGrattan, Andrew J. Lock, Marc R. Nyden, Jason Dreisbach, Nathan D. Marsh, David Stroup
CHRISTIFIRE (Cable Heat Release, Ignition, and Spread in Tray Installations during FIRE) is a U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission Office of Research program to quantify the mass and energy released from burning electrical cables. This type of quantitative

Full-Scale Residential Smoke Alarm Performance

September 8, 2009
Author(s)
Thomas G. Cleary
A series of 24 full-scale experiments were conducted in a multi-room structure to examine the effects of alarm type (photoelectric, ionization, and dual sensor), alarm location, fabric type (100 % cotton and 100 % polyester), polyurethane foam density

Uncertainty Analysis of a Simple Fringe Projection System

July 1, 2009
Author(s)
Shawn P. Moylan, Gregory W. Vogl
Fringe projection is an optical method of measuring the surface profile of a part. Most basic fringe projection processes require an initial calibration step to determine components of coordinate transformation matrices before the surface point coordinates

Uncertainties in Scaling Factors for ab Initio Vibrational Zero-Point Energies

March 21, 2009
Author(s)
Karl K. Irikura, Russell D. Johnson III, Raghu N. Kacker, Ruediger Kessel
Vibrational zero-point energies (ZPEs) determined from ab initio calculations are often scaled by empirical factors. An empirical scaling factor partially compensates for the effects arising from vibrational anharmonicity and incomplete treatment of

A reversible structural transition in MIL-53 with large temperature hysteresis

August 12, 2008
Author(s)
Yun Liu, Jae-Hyuk Her, Anne Dailly, A. Ramirez-Cuesta, Dan A. Neumann, Craig Brown
The metal-organic framework, MIL-53, can have a structural transition from an open-pored to a closed-pored structure by adsorbing different guest molecules. The aid of guest molecules is believed to be necessary to initiate this "breathing" effect. Using

Recent Developments of the HLPR Chair

June 15, 2007
Author(s)
Roger V. Bostelman, James S. Albus, Tommy Chang
The Home Lift, Position and Rehabilitation (HLPR) Chair, developed at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) within the Intelligent Systems Division (ISD) from 2005 to 2006, is currently being evaluated for static stability using

SIM Time and Frequency Comparison Network in Near Real Time

October 25, 2006
Author(s)
Jose M. Lopez, Michael A. Lombardi, Andrew N. Novick, Jean-Simon Boulanger, Raymond Pelletier, Carlos Donado
A network for time and frequency comparisons within the Inter-American Metrology System (SIM) has been developed. The SIM time and frequency network uses the common-view Global Positioning System (GPS) method to compare frequency and time standards

Comparison of MPEG-2 and AVC Coding on Synthetic Test Materials

August 30, 2006
Author(s)
Charles D. Fenimore, John W. Roberts
The available resources for evaluation of moving imagery coding include a variety of subjective and objective methods for quality measurement. These are applied to a variety of imagery, ranging from synthetically-generated to live capture. NIST has created

Dissipation of Oxygen From Outward Leak of Closed Circuit Breathing Device

October 18, 2005
Author(s)
Kathryn M. Butler, Rodney A. Bryant, J G. Kovac
Closed circuit breathing devices recycle exhaled air after scrubbing carbon dioxide and adding make-up oxygen from a tank of pure oxygen. Use of this equipment allows first responders to work for up to four hours without swapping out cylinders

Experiments and Modeling of Structural Steel Elements Exposed to Fire. Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster (NIST NCSTAR 1-5B)

September 1, 2005
Author(s)
Anthony P. Hamins, Alexander Maranghides, Kevin B. McGrattan, Erik L. Johnsson, Thomas J. Ohlemiller, Michelle K. Donnelly, Jiann C. Yang, George W. Mulholland, Kuldeep R. Prasad, S R. Kukuck, Robert Anleitner, Therese P. McAllister
Reconstructing the fires and their impact on structural components in the World Trade Center (WTC) buildings on September 11, 2001, requires extensive use of computational models. For the use of such models to be a viable investigative tool, it is
Displaying 6076 - 6100 of 7113
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