707 results on '"Kelley, Richard"'
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2. Gulf war illness: a tale of two genomes
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Golomb, Beatrice A., Kelley, Richard I., Han, Jun Hee, Miller, Bruce, and Bui, Leeann
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- 2024
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3. The Athena X-ray Integral Field Unit: a consolidated design for the system requirement review of the preliminary definition phase
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Barret, Didier, Albouys, Vincent, Herder, Jan-Willem den, Piro, Luigi, Cappi, Massimo, Huovelin, Juhani, Kelley, Richard, Mas-Hesse, J. Miguel, Paltani, Stéphane, Rauw, Gregor, Rozanska, Agata, Svoboda, Jiri, Wilms, Joern, Yamasaki, Noriko, Audard, Marc, Bandler, Simon, Barbera, Marco, Barcons, Xavier, Bozzo, Enrico, Ceballos, Maria Teresa, Charles, Ivan, Costantini, Elisa, Dauser, Thomas, Decourchelle, Anne, Duband, Lionel, Duval, Jean-Marc, Fiore, Fabrizio, Gatti, Flavio, Goldwurm, Andrea, Hartog, Roland den, Jackson, Brian, Jonker, Peter, Kilbourne, Caroline, Korpela, Seppo, Macculi, Claudio, Mendez, Mariano, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, Molendi, Silvano, Pajot, François, Pointecouteau, Etienne, Porter, Frederick, Pratt, Gabriel W., Prêle, Damien, Ravera, Laurent, Sato, Kosuke, Schaye, Joop, Shinozaki, Keisuke, Skup, Konrad, Soucek, Jan, Thibert, Tanguy, Vink, Jacco, Webb, Natalie, Chaoul, Laurence, Raulin, Desi, Simionescu, Aurora, Torrejon, Jose Miguel, Acero, Fabio, Branduardi-Raymont, Graziella, Ettori, Stefano, Finoguenov, Alexis, Grosso, Nicolas, Kaastra, Jelle, Mazzotta, Pasquale, Miller, Jon, Miniutti, Giovanni, Nicastro, Fabrizio, Sciortino, Salvatore, Yamaguchi, Hiroya, Beaumont, Sophie, Cucchetti, Edoardo, D’Andrea, Matteo, Eckart, Megan, Ferrando, Philippe, Kammoun, Elias, Lotti, Simone, Mesnager, Jean-Michel, Natalucci, Lorenzo, Peille, Philippe, de Plaa, Jelle, Ardellier, Florence, Argan, Andrea, Bellouard, Elise, Carron, Jérôme, Cavazzuti, Elisabetta, Fiorini, Mauro, Khosropanah, Pourya, Martin, Sylvain, Perry, James, Pinsard, Frederic, Pradines, Alice, Rigano, Manuela, Roelfsema, Peter, Schwander, Denis, Torrioli, Guido, Ullom, Joel, Vera, Isabel, Villegas, Eduardo Medinaceli, Zuchniak, Monika, Brachet, Frank, Cicero, Ugo Lo, Doriese, William, Durkin, Malcom, Fioretti, Valentina, Geoffray, Hervé, Jacques, Lionel, Kirsch, Christian, Smith, Stephen, Adams, Joseph, Gloaguen, Emilie, Hoogeveen, Ruud, van der Hulst, Paul, Kiviranta, Mikko, van der Kuur, Jan, Ledot, Aurélien, van Leeuwen, Bert-Joost, van Loon, Dennis, Lyautey, Bertrand, Parot, Yann, Sakai, Kazuhiro, van Weers, Henk, Abdoelkariem, Shariefa, Adam, Thomas, Adami, Christophe, Aicardi, Corinne, Akamatsu, Hiroki, Alonso, Pablo Eleazar Merino, Amato, Roberta, André, Jérôme, Angelinelli, Matteo, Anon-Cancela, Manuel, Anvar, Shebli, Atienza, Ricardo, Attard, Anthony, Auricchio, Natalia, Balado, Ana, Bancel, Florian, Barusso, Lorenzo Ferrari, Bascuñan, Arturo, Bernard, Vivian, Berrocal, Alicia, Blin, Sylvie, Bonino, Donata, Bonnet, François, Bonny, Patrick, Boorman, Peter, Boreux, Charles, Bounab, Ayoub, Boutelier, Martin, Boyce, Kevin, Brienza, Daniele, Bruijn, Marcel, Bulgarelli, Andrea, Calarco, Simona, Callanan, Paul, Campello, Alberto Prada, Camus, Thierry, Canourgues, Florent, Capobianco, Vito, Cardiel, Nicolas, Castellani, Florent, Cheatom, Oscar, Chervenak, James, Chiarello, Fabio, Clerc, Laurent, Clerc, Nicolas, Cobo, Beatriz, Coeur-Joly, Odile, Coleiro, Alexis, Colonges, Stéphane, Corcione, Leonardo, Coriat, Mickael, Coynel, Alexandre, Cuttaia, Francesco, D’Ai, Antonino, D’anca, Fabio, Dadina, Mauro, Daniel, Christophe, Dauner, Lea, DeNigris, Natalie, Dercksen, Johannes, DiPirro, Michael, Doumayrou, Eric, Dubbeldam, Luc, Dupieux, Michel, Dupourqué, Simon, Durand, Jean Louis, Eckert, Dominique, Eiriz, Valvanera, Ercolani, Eric, Etcheverry, Christophe, Finkbeiner, Fred, Fiocchi, Mariateresa, Fossecave, Hervé, Franssen, Philippe, Frericks, Martin, Gabici, Stefano, Gant, Florent, Gao, Jian-Rong, Gastaldello, Fabio, Genolet, Ludovic, Ghizzardi, Simona, Gil, Ma Angeles Alcacera, Giovannini, Elisa, Godet, Olivier, Gomez-Elvira, Javier, Gonzalez, Raoul, Gonzalez, Manuel, Gottardi, Luciano, Granat, Dolorès, Gros, Michel, Guignard, Nicolas, Hieltjes, Paul, Hurtado, Adolfo Jesús, Irwin, Kent, Jacquey, Christian, Janiuk, Agnieszka, Jaubert, Jean, Jiménez, Maria, Jolly, Antoine, Jourdan, Thierry, Julien, Sabine, Kedziora, Bartosz, Korb, Andrew, Kreykenbohm, Ingo, König, Ole, Langer, Mathieu, Laudet, Philippe, Laurent, Philippe, Laurenza, Monica, Lesrel, Jean, Ligori, Sebastiano, Lorenz, Maximilian, Luminari, Alfredo, Maffei, Bruno, Maisonnave, Océane, Marelli, Lorenzo, Massonet, Didier, Maussang, Irwin, Melchor, Alejandro Gonzalo, Le Mer, Isabelle, Millan, Francisco Javier San, Millerioux, Jean-Pierre, Mineo, Teresa, Minervini, Gabriele, Molin, Alexeï, Monestes, David, Montinaro, Nicola, Mot, Baptiste, Murat, David, Nagayoshi, Kenichiro, Nazé, Yaël, Noguès, Loïc, Pailot, Damien, Panessa, Francesca, Parodi, Luigi, Petit, Pascal, Piconcelli, Enrico, Pinto, Ciro, Plaza, Jose Miguel Encinas, Plaza, Borja, Poyatos, David, Prouvé, Thomas, Ptak, Andy, Puccetti, Simonetta, Puccio, Elena, Ramon, Pascale, Reina, Manuel, Rioland, Guillaume, Rodriguez, Louis, Roig, Anton, Rollet, Bertrand, Roncarelli, Mauro, Roudil, Gilles, Rudnicki, Tomasz, Sanisidro, Julien, Sciortino, Luisa, Silva, Vitor, Sordet, Michael, Soto-Aguilar, Javier, Spizzi, Pierre, Surace, Christian, Sánchez, Miguel Fernández, Taralli, Emanuele, Terrasa, Guilhem, Terrier, Régis, Todaro, Michela, Ubertini, Pietro, Uslenghi, Michela, de Vaate, Jan Geralt Bij, Vaccaro, Davide, Varisco, Salvatore, Varnière, Peggy, Vibert, Laurent, Vidriales, María, Villa, Fabrizio, Vodopivec, Boris Martin, Volpe, Angela, de Vries, Cor, Wakeham, Nicholas, Walmsley, Gavin, Wise, Michael, de Wit, Martin, and Woźniak, Grzegorz
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- 2023
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4. Isolated and Combined Respiratory Training for Muscle Tension Dysphonia: Preliminary Findings
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Lowell, Soren Y., Colton, Raymond H., Kelley, Richard T., Auld, Madeline, and Schmitz, Hanna
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- 2022
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5. Assessment of Tongue Position and Laryngeal Height in Two Professional Voice Populations
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Hosbach-Cannon, Carly Jo, Lowell, Soren Y., Colton, Raymond H., Kelley, Richard T., and Bao, Xue
- Abstract
Purpose: To advance our current knowledge of singer physiology by using ultrasonography in combination with acoustic measures to compare physiological differences between musical theater (MT) and opera (OP) singers under controlled phonation conditions. Primary objectives addressed in this study were (a) to determine if differences in hyolaryngeal and vocal fold contact dynamics occur between two professional voice populations (MT and OP) during singing tasks and (b) to determine if differences occur between MT and OP singers in oral configuration and associated acoustic resonance during singing tasks. Method: Twenty-one singers (10 MT and 11 OP) were included. All participants were currently enrolled in a music program. Experimental procedures consisted of sustained phonation on the vowels /i/ and /a/ during both a low-pitch task and a high-pitch task. Measures of hyolaryngeal elevation, tongue height, and tongue advancement were assessed using ultrasonography. Vocal fold contact dynamics were measured using electroglottography. Simultaneous acoustic recordings were obtained during all ultrasonography procedures for analysis of the first two formant frequencies. Results: Significant oral configuration differences, reflected by measures of tongue height and tongue advancement, were seen between groups. Measures of acoustic resonance also showed significant differences between groups during specific tasks. Both singer groups significantly raised their hyoid position when singing high-pitched vowels, but hyoid elevation was not statistically different between groups. Likewise, vocal fold contact dynamics did not significantly differentiate the two singer groups. Conclusions: These findings suggest that, under controlled phonation conditions, MT singers alter their oral configuration and achieve differing resultant formants as compared with OP singers. Because singers are at a high risk of developing a voice disorder, understanding how these two groups of singers adjust their vocal tract configuration during their specific singing genre may help to identify risky vocal behavior and provide a basis for prevention of voice disorders.
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- 2020
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6. Cliff Retreat Rates Associated with a Low-Level Radioactive Waste Disposal Facility in Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA.
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Goehring, Brent, Miller, Elizabeth, Birdsell, Kay, Schultz-Fellenz, Emily S., Kelley, Richard, French, Sean, and Stauffer, Philip H.
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RADIOACTIVE waste disposal ,CLIFFS ,SLOPE stability ,MULTIVARIATE analysis ,CARBON isotopes - Abstract
We present an analysis and interpretation of potential cliff stability at a low-level waste disposal facility at Los Alamos National Laboratory, New Mexico, using cliff morphologic and fracture characteristics coupled with carbon-14 surface exposure dating. Our study is important as it directly bears on the licensing criteria for low-level radioactive waste sites. We find that future characteristic cliff failures will likely not breach disposal pits and shafts over the 1000-year minimum regulatory period. Further, we find, using a multivariate regression model, that slope angle and cliff face aspect are sub-equal in importance to predict regions of high risk of failure when combined with surface exposure ages and assuming that old exposure ages are most indicative of stability (instability) and therefore can aid decision making in final design implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. High-resolution surface topographic change analyses to characterize a series of underground explosions
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Schultz-Fellenz, Emily S., Swanson, Erika M., Sussman, Aviva J., Coppersmith, Ryan T., Kelley, Richard E., Miller, Elizabeth D., Crawford, Brandon M., Lavadie-Bulnes, Anita F., Cooley, James R., Vigil, Steven R., Townsend, Margaret J., and Larotonda, Jennifer M.
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- 2020
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8. Cooling system for the Resolve onboard XRISM
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Ezoe, Yuichiro, Ishisaki, Yoshitaka, Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Takei, Yoh, Horiuchi, Takafumi, Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Ishikawa, Kumi, Yasuda, Susumu, Yanagase, Keiichi, Shibano, Yasuko, Sato, Kosuke, Kitamoto, Shunji, Yoshida, Seiji, Kanao, Keiichi, Tsunematsu, Shoji, Otsuka, Kiyomi, Mizunuma, Syou, Isshiki, Masahito, Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Calorine A., Porter, Frederick S., DiPirro, Michael J., and Shirron, Peter
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- 2020
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9. Thermal Crosstalk Measurements and Simulations for an X-ray Microcalorimeter Array
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Miniussi, Antoine R., Adams, Joseph S., Bandler, Simon R., Beaumont, Sophie, Chang, Meng P., Chervenak, James A., Finkbeiner, Fred M., Ha, Jong Y., Hummatov, Ruslan, Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Caroline A., Porter, Frederick S., Sadleir, John E., Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J., Wakeham, Nicholas A., and Wassell, Edward J.
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- 2020
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10. Thermal Impact of Cosmic Ray Interaction with an X-Ray Microcalorimeter Array
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Miniussi, Antoine R., Adams, Joseph S., Bandler, Simon R., Beaumont, Sophie, Chang, Meng P., Chervenak, James A., Finkbeiner, Fred M., Ha, Jong Y., Hummatov, Ruslan, Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Caroline A., Porter, Frederick S., Sadleir, John E., Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J., Wakeham, Nicholas A., and Wassell, Edward J.
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- 2020
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11. WE OFF THE CHRISTMAS CARD CRANKIN' IT UP!
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Kelley, Richard J.
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Comedians ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
I listened to the 'Gun Cranks YouTube series: We Get Letters' episode. Listening to the viewer email about the teacher and the hats, I'm reminded of what George Carlin said [...]
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- 2023
12. Design of Magnetic Shielding and Field Coils for a TES X-ray Microcalorimeter Test Platform
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Miniussi, Antoine R., Adams, Joseph S., Bandler, Simon R., Chervenak, James A., Datesman, Aaron M., Doriese, William B., Eckart, Megan E., Finkbeiner, Fred M., Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Caroline A., Porter, Frederick S., Sadleir, John E., Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J., Wakeham, Nicholas A., Wassell, Edward J., van Weers, Henk J., and Yoon, Wonsik
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- 2019
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13. Wire-Like Charge Transport at near Constant Bridge Energy through Fluorene Oligomers
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Goldsmith, Randall H., Sinks, Louise E., Kelley, Richard F., Betzen, Laura J., Liu, Wenhao, Weiss, Emily A., Ratner, Mark A., Wasielewski, Michael R., and Gray, Harry B.
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- 2005
14. Extent of Chromatin Spreading Determined by roX RNA Recruitment of MSL Proteins
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Park, Yongkyu, Kelley, Richard L., Oh, Hyangyee, Kuroda, Mitzi I., and Meller, Victoria H.
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- 2002
15. Performance of an X-ray Microcalorimeter with a 240 μm Absorber and a 50 μm TES Bilayer
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Miniussi, Antoine R., Adams, Joseph S., Bandler, Simon R., Chervenak, James A., Datesman, Aaron M., Eckart, Megan E., Ewin, Audrey J., Finkbeiner, Fred M., Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Caroline A., Porter, Frederick S., Sadleir, John E., Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J., Wakeham, Nicholas A., Wassell, Edward J., and Yoon, Wonsik
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- 2018
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16. FRIENDS INDEED
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Kelley, Richard J., Sr.
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Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
I was just watching the Gun Cranks video episode where Roy referred to us as your customers. Because of the way you gentlemen do your job, I am not renewing [...]
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- 2023
17. The k43 Gene, Required for Chorion Gene Amplification and Diploid Cell Chromosome Replication, Encodes the Drosophila Homolog of Yeast Origin Recognition Complex Subunit 2
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Landis, Gary, Kelley, Richard, Spradling, Allan C., and Tower, John
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- 1997
18. A Preliminary Quantitative Comparison of Vibratory Amplitude Using Rigid and Flexible Stroboscopic Assessment
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Hosbach-Cannon, Carly J., Lowell, Soren Y., Kelley, Richard T., and Colton, Raymond H.
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- 2016
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19. Operating modes and cooling capabilities of the 3-stage ADR developed for the Soft-X-ray Spectrometer instrument on Astro-H
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Shirron, Peter J., Kimball, Mark O., James, Bryan L., Muench, Theodore, DiPirro, Michael J., Letmate, Richard V., Sampson, Michael A., Bialas, Tom G., Sneiderman, Gary A., Porter, Frederick S., and Kelley, Richard L.
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- 2016
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20. Thermodynamic performance of the 3-stage ADR for the Astro-H Soft-X-ray Spectrometer instrument
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Shirron, Peter J., Kimball, Mark O., James, Bryan L., Muench, Theodore, DiPirro, Michael J., Bialas, Thomas G., Sneiderman, Gary A., Porter, Frederick S., and Kelley, Richard L.
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- 2016
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21. SIMPLE AND EZ
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Kelley, Richard J., Sr.
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Why can't manufacturers of handguns sell softer spring sets for their pistols so an older person could install them and be able to work the slide on their gun? I [...]
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- 2023
22. Multiabsorber Transition-Edge Sensors for X-Ray Astronomy
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Smith, Stephen J, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Eckart, Megan E, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Hummatov, Ruslan A, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Miniussi, Antoine R, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John. E, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Wakeham, Nicholas A, and Wassell, Edward J
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We are developing arrays of position-sensitive microcalorimeters for future x-ray astronomy applications. These position-sensitive devices commonly referred to as hydras consist of multiple x-ray absorbers, each with a different thermal coupling to a single-transition-edge sensor microcalorimeter. Their development is motivated by a desire to achieve very large pixel arrays with some modest compromise in performance. We report on the design, optimization, and first results from devices with small pitch pixels (<75 μm) being developed for a high-angular and energy resolution imaging spectrometer for Lynx. The Lynx x-ray space telescope is a flagship mission concept under study for the National Academy of Science 2020 decadal survey. Broadband full-width-half-maximum (FWHM) resolution measurements on a 9-pixel hydra have demonstrated ΔE(FWHM) = 2.23 ± 0.14 eV at Al-Kα, ΔE(FWHM) = 2.44 ± 0.29 eV at Mn-Kα, and ΔE(FWHM) = 3.39 ± 0.23 eV at Cu-Kα. Position discrimination is demonstrated to energies below <1 keV and the device performance is well-described by a finite-element model. Results from a prototype 20-pixel hydra with absorbers on a 50-μm pitch have shown ΔE(FWHM) = 3.38 ± 0.20 eV at Cr-Kα1. We are now optimizing designs specifically for Lynx and extending the number of absorbers up to 25/hydra. Numerical simulation suggests optimized designs could achieve ∼3 eV while being compatible with the bandwidth requirements of the state-of-the art multiplexed readout schemes, thus making a 100,000 pixel microcalorimeter instrument a realistic goal.
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- 2019
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23. Line Emission Mapper (LEM): Probing the physics of cosmic ecosystems
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Kraft, Ralph, Markevitch, Maxim, Kilbourne, Caroline, Adams, Joseph S., Akamatsu, Hiroki, Ayromlou, Mohammadreza, Bandler, Simon R., Barbera, Marco, Bennett, Douglas A., Bhardwaj, Anil, Biffi, Veronica, Bodewits, Dennis, Bogdan, Akos, Bonamente, Massimiliano, Borgani, Stefano, Branduardi-Raymont, Graziella, Bregman, Joel N., Burchett, Joseph N., Cann, Jenna, Carter, Jenny, Chakraborty, Priyanka, Churazov, Eugene, Crain, Robert A., Cumbee, Renata, Dave, Romeel, DiPirro, Michael, Dolag, Klaus, Doriese, W. Bertrand, Drake, Jeremy, Dunn, William, Eckart, Megan, Eckert, Dominique, Ettori, Stefano, Forman, William, Galeazzi, Massimiliano, Gall, Amy, Gatuzz, Efrain, Hell, Natalie, Hodges-Kluck, Edmund, Jackman, Caitriona, Jahromi, Amir, Jennings, Fred, Jones, Christine, Kaaret, Philip, Kavanagh, Patrick J., Kelley, Richard L., Khabibullin, Ildar, Kim, Chang-Goo, Koutroumpa, Dimitra, Kovacs, Orsolya, Kuntz, K. D., Lau, Erwin, Lee, Shiu-Hang, Leutenegger, Maurice, Lin, Sheng-Chieh, Lisse, Carey, Cicero, Ugo Lo, Lovisari, Lorenzo, McCammon, Dan, McEntee, Sean, Mernier, Francois, Miller, Eric D., Nagai, Daisuke, Negro, Michela, Nelson, Dylan, Ness, Jan-Uwe, Nulsen, Paul, Ogorzalek, Anna, Oppenheimer, Benjamin D., Oskinova, Lidia, Patnaude, Daniel, Pfeifle, Ryan W., Pillepich, Annalisa, Plucinsky, Paul, Pooley, David, Porter, Frederick S., Randall, Scott, Rasia, Elena, Raymond, John, Ruszkowski, Mateusz, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Sarkar, Arnab, Sasaki, Manami, Sato, Kosuke, Schellenberger, Gerrit, Schaye, Joop, Simionescu, Aurora, Smith, Stephen J., Steiner, James F., Stern, Jonathan, Su, Yuanyuan, Sun, Ming, Tremblay, Grant, Truong, Nhut, Tutt, James, Ursino, Eugenio, Veilleux, Sylvain, Vikhlinin, Alexey, Vladutescu-Zopp, Stephan, Vogelsberger, Mark, Walker, Stephen A., Weaver, Kimberly, Weigt, Dale M., Werk, Jessica, Werner, Norbert, Wolk, Scott J., Zhang, Congyao, Zhang, William W., Zhuravleva, Irina, and ZuHone, John
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High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The Line Emission Mapper (LEM) is an X-ray Probe for the 2030s that will answer the outstanding questions of the Universe's structure formation. It will also provide transformative new observing capabilities for every area of astrophysics, and to heliophysics and planetary physics as well. LEM's main goal is a comprehensive look at the physics of galaxy formation, including stellar and black-hole feedback and flows of baryonic matter into and out of galaxies. These processes are best studied in X-rays, and emission-line mapping is the pressing need in this area. LEM will use a large microcalorimeter array/IFU, covering a 30x30' field with 10" angular resolution, to map the soft X-ray line emission from objects that constitute galactic ecosystems. These include supernova remnants, star-forming regions, superbubbles, galactic outflows (such as the Fermi/eROSITA bubbles in the Milky Way and their analogs in other galaxies), the Circumgalactic Medium in the Milky Way and other galaxies, and the Intergalactic Medium at the outskirts and beyond the confines of galaxies and clusters. LEM's 1-2 eV spectral resolution in the 0.2-2 keV band will make it possible to disentangle the faintest emission lines in those objects from the bright Milky Way foreground, providing groundbreaking measurements of the physics of these plasmas, from temperatures, densities, chemical composition to gas dynamics. While LEM's main focus is on galaxy formation, it will provide transformative capability for all classes of astrophysical objects, from the Earth's magnetosphere, planets and comets to the interstellar medium and X-ray binaries in nearby galaxies, AGN, and cooling gas in galaxy clusters. In addition to pointed observations, LEM will perform a shallow all-sky survey that will dramatically expand the discovery space., 18 pages. White paper for a mission concept to be submitted for the 2023 NASA Astrophysics Probes opportunity. v2: All-sky survey figure expanded, references fixed. v3: Added energy resolution measurements for prototype detector array. v4: Author list and reference fixes
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- 2022
24. Those Nagant Revolvers
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Kelley, Richard
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Hobbies and crafts ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
I bought one, never shot it, and gave it to my son. LOL. Richard [...]
- Published
- 2023
25. PODCAST#144
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Yohannan, Gene and Kelley, Richard J., Sr.
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Podcasting ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Re: Episode #144 'Talking to Your Kids About School Violence.' Great subject this week! Definitely one that needs discussion. I did the grandkids' gun-safety training in our family. When I [...]
- Published
- 2022
26. San Diego Mountain: A "Rosetta Stone" for Interpreting the Cenozoic Tectonic Evolution of South-Central New Mexico.
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Seager, William R., Kelley, Shari A., Thacker, Jacob O., and Kelley, Richard E.
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VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,GEOLOGISTS ,MOUNTAINS ,VALLEYS ,PLEISTOCENE Epoch - Abstract
For more than 65 years, geologists working in southern New Mexico have recognized that the sedimentary and volcanic rocks, unconformities, and structures exposed at San Diego Mountain and in the Tonuco uplift of northern Doña Ana County are keys to interpreting the Cenozoic evolution of the region. When combined with interpretations of outcrops from neighboring mountain ranges, a nearly complete record of major Cenozoic tectonic events can be pieced together, ranging from Laramide deformation to the evolution of the Rio Grande rift. Laramide contraction in south-central New Mexico produced the large Rio Grande uplift, which may rival some of the Wyoming Laramide uplifts in magnitude and style. Its northwest trend and northeast vergence are consistent with other Laramide uplifts that have been reconstructed across southern New Mexico. Its notable structural relief is confirmed by the thickness of 3.1 km of Paleozoic strata and an unknown amount of Proterozoic rocks that were eroded from its core. The sediments filled the complementary Love Ranch and Potrillo basins to a depth of 0.9-2.0 km, onlapped the uplift, and, in an imperfect way, recorded the erosional unroofing of the Rio Grande uplift. By middle Eocene time, Laramide uplifts were no longer active, were deeply eroded, and were at least partially buried in their own erosional debris. Intermediate-composition arc volcanism commenced at approximately 46 Ma, and by 37 Ma lava flows and lahar deposits had buried the Laramide structures to depths of as much as 0.6 km. The eruption of 36-34 Ma ignimbrite calderas and the deposition of ignimbrite outflow sheets, often interpreted to herald the onset of extension in southern New Mexico, may also be interpreted to represent the culmination of arc volcanism in a non-extensional stress field--a conclusion reached by other researchers in the southern Cordillera and southern Rocky Mountain regions. The ignimbrite outflow sheets, together with interbedded tuffaceous and fluvial sediment of the Bell Top Formation (36.0-28.6 Ma), accumulated on piedmont slopes adjacent to the Emory caldera and in a broad, shallow paleovalley across south-central New Mexico. Previous interpretations of the Bell Top Formation linked its origin to deposition in an extensional half graben (Mack et al., 1994a) or a volcano-tectonic depression (Seager, 1973), interpretations sometimes cited as evidence for late Eocene onset of extension in the Rio Grande rift. The geometry, facies distribution, low sedimentation rates, and lack of coeval faulting within the Bell Top Formation do not support an extensional setting for the formation. Instead, the outflow tuffs and sediment in the formation are interpreted to have filled a broad, shallow paleovalley and accumulated on a piedmont-slope landscape, both of non-extensional origin. Initiation of the San Andreas transform may have promoted earliest transtension across the western interior of North America, a hypothesis that is consistent with the onset of regional extension in the Rio Grande rift shortly after 30 Ma. Across south-central New Mexico, the outpouring of the Uvas Basaltic Andesite and Bear Springs Basalt (28 Ma), as well as a change to bimodal volcanism in the Mogollon-Datil volcanic field, mark significant extension. Together with other basaltic andesite units of southern New Mexico and northern Mexico, the basaltic lavas of these formations accumulated to form a broad plateau, fed largely by fissure eruptions. Local fissures, such as the ancestral Cedar Hills fault, probably had sufficient structural relief to produce small alluvial fans. By 27.4 Ma, accelerating extension is suggested by the initiation of a broad, deep basin in northern Doña Ana and southern Sierra counties. The basin was filled with the distal parts of an apron of ash-fall tuff and volcaniclastic sediment more than 0.5 km thick (Thurman Formation) derived from the Mt. Withington caldera located 60 km to the northwest. The onset of major faulting within the Rio Grande rift, at approximately 26 Ma, is recorded by the thick (1.5 km) "early rift" alluvial-fan and playa (closed basin) deposits exposed at San Diego Mountain and adjacent to the southern Caballo Mountains. The stratigraphy of these deposits, as well as the structures that transect them, indicate that oldest fault blocks within the rift, such as parts of the Caballo uplift, continued to rise throughout the Neogene up to the present. Other fault blocks were initiated at different times--middle Miocene, late Miocene, and perhaps Pliocene. The younger episodes of faulting not only initiated new uplifts but also fragmented all or parts of the older "early rift" closed basins, creating fault blocks such as the Tonuco, Rincon Hills, and Robledo uplifts, among many others. Although folding of middle Paleogene and Neogene rocks is not uncommon in the southern Rio Grande rift, all is extensional in origin, the product of draping or forced folding of strata across active normal faults. Extreme and perhaps very rapid local extension in the Tonuco uplift area is suggested by a rotated, uplifted, and abandoned low-angle normal fault on the Tonuco horst. At around 5 Ma, the broken and deeply eroded landscape was buried by "late rift" alluvial fans and fluvial deposits (Camp Rice Formation) associated with the ancestral Rio Grande as it entered southern New Mexico. At 0.8 Ma, this aggradational regime gave way to a degradational one, at least along the Rio Grande corridor. As a result, older structures, such as the Tonuco uplift, were exhumed, the Rio Grande and its tributaries were entrenched into modern valleys, and several generations of terraces along valley sideslopes formed in response to waxing and waning glacial cycles. The "late rift" Plio-Pleistocene deposits remain relatively undeformed, although locally they have been warped and broken along range-boundary faults by Pleistocene fault movements. Locally, Holocene movement has been documented. Broad, epeirogenic uplift of the Rio Grande rift and its flanks (perhaps 800 m or more) has accompanied the evolution of the rift since the late Paleogene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2023
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27. Integration of Multilevel Superconducting Buried Wiring Layers with Transition-Edge Sensor Detectors for Large Scale Arrays
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Datesman, Aaron M, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Bolkhovsky, Vladimir, Chang, Meng-Ping, Chervenak, James A, DeNigris, Natalie S, Eckart, Megan E, Ewin, Audrey J, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Ha, Jong Yoon, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Mendenhall, Jeffrey, Miniussi, Antoine R, Porter, Frederick S, Ryu, Kevin, Sadleir, John E, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J, Wakeham, Nicholas A, and Wassell, Edward J
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Computer Operations And Hardware ,Electronics And Electrical Engineering - Abstract
Lynx, one of the four mission concepts under consideration for the next Astrophysics DecadalReview, will include a microcalorimeter array consisting of more than 100,000 pixels in a compact arrangement with absorber pitch as small as 25 microns. In order to realize the desired array scale, fine-pitch multi-level superconducting wiring with high yield, compatible with rapid expansion of our hydra absorber designs, is essential. We have demonstrated a method of integrating transition edge sensor (TES) microcalorimeters with suitable multilevel buried wiring, fabricated at MIT Lincoln Laboratory using advanced tools dedicated to superconducting circuit fabrication. The TES Mo/Au bilayer is deposited on a high-quality oxide surface created by chemical-mechanical polishing, allowing tight specifications on the TES superconducting transition and link conductivity to be achieved even though the process order has been inverted. The TESs contact the top-level niobium wiring through vias etched through silicon dioxide down to the topmost wiring layer. The article discusses the overall fabrication process, as wellas the behavior of sensors with different via designs, proximity structures, and lateral sizes. An initial iteration of the integrated fabrication process indicates that microcalorimeters fabricated in this way should meet mission specifications using a Mo/Au bilayer with a reasonable critical temperature below 100 mK.
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- 2018
28. The Hitomi X-Ray Observatory, Part 2
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Kelley, Richard L and Nakazawa, Kazuhiro
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Instrumentation And Photography ,Astronomy - Abstract
When it was launched on 17 February 2016, the Hitomi X-ray Observatory carried four kinds of new-generation x-ray instruments—the Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS), the Soft X-ray Imager (SXI), the Hard X-ray Imager (HXI), and the Soft Gamma-ray Detector (SGD). All four instruments were turned on and were in the process of activation at the time of loss of contact on 26 March 2016. In the time it was operational, Hitomi was able to provide researchers with a trove of ground-breaking scientific results. Initial results demonstrated that the instruments were meeting or exceeding requirements and that Hitomi was on its way to pioneering a new era of broad-band and high-resolution x-ray spectroscopy. The results published here summarize the in-flight instrument performance, calibration, and data processing accomplishments of the observatory. Of the papers accepted for publication in this special section, 17 were presented in Part 1 in the January-March 2018 issue of JATIS (Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems). Ten more papers are presented here as Part 2 in the April-June 2018 issue. These papers cover the detailed in-flight performance of the four state-of the-art instruments on-board the Hitomi X-Ray Observatory. These instruments were extremely diverse in their design and principles of operation, ranging from low temperature x-ray calorimeters for high-resolution spectroscopy, CCDs (Charge-Coupled Devices) for wide field imaging, high fill-factor grazing incidence x-ray optics, including multilayer x-ray optics and silicon strip and CdTe strip detectors for high-energy imaging, and a Si/CdTe Compton cameras for extending the bandpass out to 600 kiloelectronvolts. All of these instruments operated as expected and for sufficient time to validate their operating principles and carry out first light scientific investigations, published elsewhere. Collectively, these instruments, all co-aligned and operated simultaneously, provided a tool for astronomers with unprecedented resolution and broadband sensitivity for investigating high-energy processes throughout the universe. These papers serve as part of the Hitomi legacy and will guide the next generation of instruments planned for future missions.
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- 2018
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29. Design and On-Orbit Operation of the Adiabatic Demagnetization Refrigerator on the Hitomi Soft X-Ray Spectrometer Instrument
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Shirron, Peter J, Kimball, Mark O, James, Bryan L, Muench, Theodore, Canavan, Edgar R, DiPirro, Michael J, Bialas, Thomas A, Sneiderman, Gary A, Boyce, Kevin R, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Porter, Frederick S, Kelley, Richard L, Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Takei, Yoh, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, and Yoshida, Seiji
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Engineering (General) - Abstract
The Soft X-ray Spectrometer instrument on the Astro-H observatory contains a 6x6 array of x-ray microcalorimeters that is cooled to 50 mK by an adiabatic demagnetization refrigerator (ADR). The ADR consists of three stages in order to provide stable detector cooling using either a 1.2 K superfluid helium bath or a 4.5 K Joule-Thomson (JT) cryocooler as its heat sink. When liquid helium is present, two of the ADR's stages are used to single-shot cool the detectors while rejecting heat to the helium. After the helium is depleted, all three stages are used to continuously cool the helium tank (to about 1.5 K) and single-shot cool the detectors (to 50 mK), using the JT cryocooler as its heat sink. The Astro-H observatory, renamed Hitomi after its successful launch in February 2016, carried approximately 36 liters of helium into orbit. On day 5, the helium had cooled sufficiently (<1.4 K) to allow operation of the ADR. This paper describes the design, operation and on-orbit performance of the ADR, and the use of the ADR's heat rejection as a tool for mass gauging the helium tank.
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- 2018
30. In-Flight Calibration of Hitomi Soft X-Ray Spectrometer. (1) Background
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Kilbourne, Caroline A, Sawada, Makoto, Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Angelini, Lorella, Boyce, Kevin R, Eckart, Megan, Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Ishisaki, Yoshitaka, Kelley, Richard, Koyama, Shu, Leutenegger, Maurice A, Loewenstein, Michael, McCammon, Dan, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, Nakashima, Shinya, Porter, Frederick S, Seta, Hiromi, Takei, Yoh, Tashiro, Makoto S, Terada, Yukikatsu, Yamada, Shinya, and Yamasaki, Noriko Y
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Instrumentation And Photography - Abstract
The X-Ray Spectrometer (XRS) instrument of Suzaku provided the first measurement of the non-X-ray background (NXB) of an X-ray calorimeter spectrometer, but the data set was limited. The Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) instrument of Hitomi was able to provide a more detailed picture of X-ray calorimeter background, with more than 360 ks of data while pointed at the Earth, and a comparable amount of blank-sky data. These data are important not only for analyzing SXS science data, but also for categorizing the contributions to the NXB in X-ray calorimeters as a class. In this paper, we present the contributions to the SXS NXB, the types and effectiveness of the screening, the interaction of the screening with the broad-band redistribution, and the residual background spectrum as a function of magnetic cut-off rigidity. The orbit-averaged SXS NXB in the range 0.3-12 keV was 4 × 10(exp −2) counts s(exp −1) -sq cm. This very low background in combination with groundbreaking spectral resolution gave SXS unprecedented sensitivity to weak spectral lines.
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- 2018
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31. In-Flight Calibration of Hitomi Soft X-Ray Spectrometer (3) Effective Area
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Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Okajima, Takashi, Eckart, Megan E, Hayashi, Takayuki, Hoshino, Akio, Iizuka, Ryo, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Leutenegger, Maurice A, Maeda, Yoshitomo, Mori, Hideyuki, Porter, Frederick S, Sato, Kosuke, Sato, Toshiki, Serlemitsos, Peter J, Szymkowiak, Andrew, and Yaqoob, Tahir
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the result of the in-flight calibration of the effective area of the Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) on board the Hitomi X-ray satellite using an observation of the Crab nebula. We corrected for artifacts when observing high count rate sources with the X-ray microcalorimeter. We then constructed a spectrum in the 0.5–20 keV band, which we modeled with a single power-law continuum attenuated by interstellar extinction. We evaluated the systematic uncertainty of the spectral parameters by various calibration items. In the 2–12 keV band, the SXS result is consistent with the literature values in flux (2.20 ± 0.08 × 10(exp −8) erg s(exp-1) cm(exp −2) with a 1 σ statistical uncertainty) but is softer in the power-law index (2.19 ± 0.11). The discrepancy is attributable to the systematic uncertainty of about +6%/−7% and +2%/−5% respectively for the flux and the power-law index. The softer spectrum is affected primarily by the systematic uncertainty of the Dewar gate valve transmission and the event screening.
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- 2018
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32. Temperature Structure in the Perseus Cluster Core Observed with Hitomi
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Aharonian, Felix, Akamatsu, Hiroki, Akimoto, Fumie, Allen, Steven W, Angelini, Lorella, Audard, Marc, Awaki, Hisamitsu, Axelsson, Magnus, Bamba, Aya, Bautz, Marshall W, Blandford, Roger, Brenneman, Laura W, Brown, Gregory V, Bulbul, Esra, Cackett, Edward M, Chernyakova, Maria, Chiao, Meng P, Coppi, Paolo S, Costantini, Elisa, Plaa, Jelle De, Vries, Cor P. De, Den Herder, Jan-Willem, Done, Chris, Dotani, Tadayasu, Ebisawa, Ken, Eckart, Megan E, Enoto, Teruaki, Ezoe, Yuichiro, Fabian, Andrew C, Ferrigno, Carlo, Foster, Adam R, Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Fukazawa, Yasushi, Furukawa, Maki, Furuzawa, Akihiro, Galeazzi, Massimiliano, Gallo, Luigi C, Gandhi, Poshak, Giustini, Margherita, Goldwurm, Andrea, Gu, Liyi, Guainazzi, Matteo, Haba, Yoshito, Hagino, Kouichi, Hamaguchi, Kenji, Harrus, Ilana M, Hatsukade, Isamu, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Hayashi, Takayuki, Hayashida, Kiyoshi, Hiraga, Junko S, Hornschemeier, Ann, Hoshino, Akio, Hughes, John P, Ichinohe, Yuto, Iizuka, Ryo, Inoue, Hajime, Inoue, Yoshiyuki, Ishida, Manabu, Ishikawa, Kumi, Ishisaki, Yoshitaka, Iwai, Masachika, Kaastra, Jelle, Kallman, Tim, Kamae, Tsuneyoshi, Kataoka, Jun, Kato, Yuichi, Katsuda, Satoru, Kawai, Nobuyuki, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Kitaguchi, Takao, Kitamoto, Shunji, Kitayama, Tetsu, Kohmura, Takayoshi, Kokubun, Motohide, Koyama, Katsuji, Koyama, Shu, Kretschmar, Peter, Krimm, Hans A, Kubota, Aya, Kunieda, Hideyo, Laurent, Philippe, Lee, Shiu-Hang, Leutenegger, Maurice A, Limousin, Olivier, Loewenstein, Michael, Long, Knox S, Lumb, David, Madejski, Greg, Maeda, Yoshitomo, Maier, Daniel, Makishima, Kazuo, Markevitch, Maxim, Matsumoto, Hironori, Matsushita, Kyoko, Mccammon, Dan, Mcnamara, Brian R, Mehdipour, Missagh, Miller, Eric D, Miller, Jon M, Mineshige, Shin, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki, Miyazawa, Takuya, Mizuno, Tsunefumi, Mori, Hideyuki, Mori, Koji, Mukai, Koji, Murakami, Hiroshi, Mushotzky, Richard F, Nakagawa, Takao, Nakajima, Hiroshi, Nakamori, Takeshi, Nakashima, Shinya, Nakazawa, Kazuhiro, Nobukawa, Kumiko K, Nobukawa, Masayoshi, Noda, Hirofumi, Odaka, Hirokazu, Ohashi, Takaya, Ohno, Masanori, Okajima, Takashi, Ota, Naomi, Ozaki, Masanobu, Paerels, Frits, Altani, Stephane P ´, Petre, Robert, Pinto, Ciro, Porter, Frederick S, Pottschmidt, Katja, Reynolds, Christopher S, Safi-Harb, Samar, Saito, Shinya, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Sasaki, Toru, Sato, Goro, Sato, Kosuke, Sato, Rie, Sawada, Makoto, Schartel, Norbert, Serlemtsos, Peter J, Seta, Hiromi, Shidatsu, Megumi, Simionescu, Aurora, Smith, Randall K, Soong, Yang, Stawarz, Łukasz, Sugawara, Yasuharu, Sugita, Satoshi, Szymkowiak, Andrew, Tajima, Hiroyasu, Takahashi, Hiromitsu, Takahashi, Tadayuki, Takeda, Shin´Ichiro, Takei, Yoh, Tamagawa, Toru, Tamura, Takayuki, Tanaka, Takaaki, Tanaka, Yasuo, Tanaka, Yasuyuki T, Tashiro, Makoto S, Tawara, Yuzuru, Terada, Yukikatsu, Terashima, Yuichi, Tombesi, Francesco, Tomida, Hiroshi, Tsuboi, Yohko, Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Tsunemi, Hiroshi, Tsuru, Takeshi Go, Uchida, Hiroyuki, Uchiyama, Hideki, Uchiyama, Yasunobu, Ueda, Shutaro, Ueda, Yoshihiro, Uno, Shin´Ichiro, Urry, C. Megan, Ursino, Eugenio, Watanabe, Shin, Werner, Norbert, Wilkins, Dan R, Williams, Brian J, Yamada, Shinya, Yamaguchi, Hiroya, Yamaoka, Kazutaka, Yamauchi, Noriko Y. Yamasaki 22. Makoto, Yamauchi, Shigeo, Yaqoob, Tahir, Yatsu, Yoichi, Yonetoku, Daisuke, Zhuravleva, Irina, and Zoghbi, Abderahmen
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The present paper investigates the temperature structure of the X-ray emitting plasma in the core of the Perseus cluster using the 1.8-20.0 keV data obtained with the Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) onboard the Hitomi Observatory. A series of four observations were carried out, with a total effective exposure time of 338 ks and covering a central region _ 7′ in diameter. The SXS was operated with an energy resolution of _5 eV (full width at half maximum) at 5.9 keV. Not only fine structures of K-shell lines in He-like ions but also transitions from higher principal quantum numbers are clearly resolved from Si through Fe. This enables us to perform temperature diagnostics using the line ratios of Si, S, Ar, Ca, and Fe, and to provide the first direct measurement of the excitation temperature and ionization temperature in the Perseus cluster. The observed spectrum is roughly reproduced by a single temperature thermal plasma model in collisional ionization equilibrium, but detailed line ratio diagnostics reveal slight deviations from this approximation. In particular, the data exhibit an apparent trend of increasing ionization temperature with increasing atomic mass, as well as small differences between the ionization and excitation temperatures for Fe, the only element for which both temperatures can be measured. The best-fit two-temperature models suggest a combination of 3 and 5 keV gas, which is consistent with the idea that the observed small deviations from a single temperature approximation are due to the effects of projection of the known radial temperature gradient in the cluster core along the line of sight. Comparison with the Chandra/ACIS and the XMM-Newton/RGS results on the other hand suggests that additional lower-temperature components
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- 2018
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33. A Scale and Translation Invariant Approach for Early Classification of Spatio-Temporal Patterns Using Spiking Neural Networks
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Rekabdar, Banafsheh, Nicolescu, Monica, Nicolescu, Mircea, Saffar, Mohammad Taghi, and Kelley, Richard
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- 2016
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34. An Unsupervised Approach to Learning and Early Detection of Spatio-Temporal Patterns Using Spiking Neural Networks
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Rekabdar, Banafsheh, Nicolescu, Monica, Kelley, Richard, and Nicolescu, Mircea
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- 2015
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35. Predictive Value and Discriminant Capacity of Cepstral- and Spectral-Based Measures During Continuous Speech
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Lowell, Soren Y., Colton, Raymond H., Kelley, Richard T., and Mizia, Sarah A.
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- 2013
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36. A comparison of academic libraries: an analysis using a self‐organizing map
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Ennis, Damien, Medaille, Ann, Lambert, Theodore, Kelley, Richard, and Harris, Frederick C., Jr
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- 2013
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37. Severity of cardiomyopathy associated with adenine nucleotide translocator-1 deficiency correlates with mtDNA haplogroup
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Strauss, Kevin A., DuBiner, Lauren, Simon, Mariella, Zaragoza, Michael, Sengupta, Partho P., Li, Peng, Narula, Navneet, Dreike, Sandra, Platt, Julia, Procaccio, Vincent, Ortiz-González, Xilma R., Puffenberger, Erik G., Kelley, Richard I., Morton, D. Holmes, Narula, Jagat, and Wallace, Douglas C.
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- 2013
38. Solar abundance ratios of the iron-peak elements in the Perseus cluster
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Aharonian, Felix, Akamatsu, Hiroki, Akimoto, Fumie, Allen, Steven W., Angelini, Lorella, Audard, Marc, Awaki, Hisamitsu, Axelsson, Magnus, Bamba, Aya, Bautz, Marshall W., Blandford, Roger, Brenneman, Laura W., Brown, Gregory V., Bulbul, Esra, Cackett, Edward M., Chernyakova, Maria, Chiao, Meng P., Coppi, Paolo S., Costantini, Elisa, de Plaa, Jelle, den Herder, Jan-Willem, Done, Chris, Dotani, Tadayasu, Ebisawa, Ken, Eckart, Megan E., Enoto, Teruaki, Ezoe, Yuichiro, Fabian, Andrew C., Ferrigno, Carlo, Foster, Adam R., Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Fukazawa, Yasushi, Furuzawa, Akihiro, Galeazzi, Massimiliano, Gallo, Luigi C., Gandhi, Poshak, Giustini, Margherita, Goldwurm, Andrea, Gu, Liyi, Guainazzi, Matteo, Haba, Yoshito, Hagino, Kouichi, Hamaguchi, Kenji, Harrus, Ilana M., Hatsukade, Isamu, Hayashi, Katsuhiro, Hayashi, Takayuki, Hayashida, Kiyoshi, Hiraga, Junko S., Hornschemeier, Ann, Hoshino, Akio, Hughes, John P., Ichinohe, Yuto, Iizuka, Ryo, Inoue, Hajime, Inoue, Yoshiyuki, Ishida, Manabu, Ishikawa, Kumi, Ishisaki, Yoshitaka, Iwai, Masachika, Kaastra, Jelle, Kallman, Tim, Kamae, Tsuneyoshi, Kataoka, Jun, Katsuda, Satoru, Kawai, Nobuyuki, Kelley, Richard L., Kilbourne, Caroline A., Kitaguchi, Takao, Kitamoto, Shunji, Kitayama, Tetsu, Kohmura, Takayoshi, Kokubun, Motohide, Koyama, Katsuji, Koyama, Shu, Kretschmar, Peter, Krimm, Hans A., Kubota, Aya, Kunieda, Hideyo, Laurent, Philippe, Lee, Shiu-Hang, Leutenegger, Maurice A., Limousine, Olivier, Loewenstein, Michael, Long, Knox S., Lumb, David, Madejski, Greg, Maeda, Yoshitomo, Maier, Daniel, Makishima, Kazuo, Markevitch, Maxim, Matsumoto, Hironori, Matsushita, Kyoko, McCammon, Dan, McNamara, Brian R., Mehdipour, Missagh, Miller, Eric D., Miller, Jon M., Mineshige, Shin, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki, Miyazawa, Takuya, Mizuno, Tsunefumi, Mori, Hideyuki, Mori, Koji, Mukai, Koji, Murakami, Hiroshi, Mushotzky, Richard F., Nakagawa, Takao, Nakajima, Hiroshi, Nakamori, Takeshi, Nakashima, Shinya, Nakazawa, Kazuhiro, Nobukawa, Kumiko K., Nobukawa, Masayoshi, Noda, Hirofumi, Odaka, Hirokazu, Ohashi, Takaya, Ohno, Masanori, Okajima, Takashi, Ota, Naomi, Ozaki, Masanobu, Paerels, Frits, Paltani, Stéphane, Petre, Robert, Pinto, Ciro, Porter, Frederick S., Pottschmidt, Katja, Reynolds, Christopher S., Safi-Harb, Samar, Saito, Shinya, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Sasaki, Toru, Sato, Goro, Sato, Kosuke, Sato, Rie, Sawada, Makoto, Schartel, Norbert, Serlemitsos, Peter J., Seta, Hiromi, Shidatsu, Megumi, Simionescu, Aurora, Smith, Randall K., Soong, Yang, Stawarz, Lukasz, Sugawara, Yasuharu, Sugita, Satoshi, Szymkowiak, Andrew, Tajima, Hiroyasu, Takahashi, Hiromitsu, Takahashi, Tadayuki, Takeda, Shinʼichiro, Takei, Yoh, Tamagawa, Toru, Tamura, Takayuki, Tanaka, Takaaki, Tanaka, Yasuo, Tanaka, Yasuyuki T., Tashiro, Makoto S., Tawara, Yuzuru, Terada, Yukikatsu, Terashima, Yuichi, Tombesi, Francesco, Tomida, Hiroshi, Tsuboi, Yohko, Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Tsunemi, Hiroshi, Go Tsuru, Takeshi, Uchida, Hiroyuki, Uchiyama, Hideki, Uchiyama, Yasunobu, Ueda, Shutaro, Ueda, Yoshihiro, Uno, Shinʼichiro, Urry, Megan C., Ursino, Eugenio, de Vries, Cor P., Watanabe, Shin, Werner, Norbert, Wik, Daniel R., Wilkins, Dan R., Williams, Brian J., Yamada, Shinya, Yamaguchi, Hiroya, Yamaoka, Kazutaka, Yamasaki, Noriko Y., Yamauchi, Makoto, Yamauchi, Shigeo, Yaqoob, Tahir, Yatsu, Yoichi, Yonetoku, Daisuke, Zhuravleva, Irina, and Zoghbi, Abderahmen
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- 2017
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39. Randomized open-label trial of dextromethorphan in Rett syndrome
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Smith-Hicks, Constance L., Gupta, Siddharth, Ewen, Joshua B., Hong, Manisha, Kratz, Lisa, Kelley, Richard, Tierney, Elaine, Vaurio, Rebecca, Bibat, Genila, Sanyal, Abanti, Yenokyan, Gayane, Brereton, Nga, Johnston, Michael V., and Naidu, Sakkubai
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- 2017
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40. In-orbit Operation of the Soft X-Ray Spectrometer Onboard the Hitomi Satellite
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Tsujimoto, Masahiro, Mitsuda, Kazuhisa, Kelley, Richard L, Herder, Jan-Willem den, Bialas, Thomas G, Boyce, Kevin R, Chiao, Meng P, Vries, Cor P. de, DiPirro, Michael J, Eckart, Megan E, Ezoe, Yuichiro, Fujimoto, Ryuichi, Hoshino, Akio, Ishikawa, Kumi, Ishisaki, Yoshitaka, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Koyama, Shu, Leutenegger, Maurice A, Masters, Candace M, Mitsuishi, Ikuyuki, Noda, Hirofumi, Okajima, Takashi, Okamoto, Atsushi, Porter, Frederic S, Sato, Kosuke, Sato, Yohichi, Savinell, Joseph C, Sawada, Makoto, Seta, Hiromi, Shirron, Peter J, Sneiderman, Gary A, Takei, Yoh, Tamagawa, Toru, Tashiro, Makoto S, Watanabe, Tomomi, Yamada, Shinya, Yamasaki, Noriko Y, and Yatsuo, Yoichi
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Astronomy - Abstract
We summarize all of the in-orbit operations of the soft x-ray spectrometer (SXS) onboard the ASTRO-H (Hitomi) satellite. The satellite was launched on February 17, 2016, and the communication with the satellite ceased on March 26, 2016. The SXS was still in the commissioning phase, in which the set-ups were progressively changed. This paper is intended to serve as a concise reference of the events in orbit in order to properly interpret the SXS data taken during its short lifetime and as a test case for planning the in-orbit operation for future microcalorimeter missions.
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- 2017
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41. High Count-Rate Study of Two TES X-Ray Microcalorimeters With Different Transition Temperatures
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Lee, Sang-Jun, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Betancourt-Martinez, Gabriele L, Chervenak, James A, Eckart, Megan E, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John E, Smith, Stephen J, and Wassell, Edward J
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We have developed transition-edge sensor (TES) microcalorimeter arrays with high count-rate capability and high energy resolution to carry out x-ray imaging spectroscopy observations of various astronomical sources and the Sun. We have studied the dependence of the energy resolution and throughput (fraction of processed pulses) on the count rate for such microcalorimeters with two different transition temperatures T(sub c). Devices with both transition temperatures were fabricated within a single microcalorimeter array directly on top of a solid substrate where the thermal conductance of the microcalorimeter is dependent upon the thermal boundary resistance between the TES sensor and the dielectric substrate beneath. Because the thermal boundary resistance is highly temperature dependent, the two types of device with different T(sub c)(sup s) had very different thermal decay times, approximately one order of magnitude different. In our earlier report, we achieved energy resolutions of 1.6 and 2.eV at 6 keV from lower and higher T(sub c) devices, respectively, using a standard analysis method based on optimal filtering in the low flux limit. We have now measured the same devices at elevated x-ray fluxes ranging from 50 Hz to 1000 Hz per pixel. In the high flux limit, however, the standard optimal filtering scheme nearly breaks down because of x-ray pile-up. To achieve the highest possible energy resolution for a fixed throughput, we have developed an analysis scheme based on the socalled event grade method. Using the new analysis scheme, we achieved 5.0 eV FWHM with 96 Percent throughput for 6 keV x-rays of 1025 Hz per pixel with the higher T(sub c) (faster) device, and 5.8 eV FWHM with 97 Percent throughput with the lower T(sub c) (slower) device at 722 Hz.
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- 2017
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42. Design and Optimization of Multi-Pixel Transition-Edge Sensors for X-Ray Astronomy Applications
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Smith, Stephen J, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron Michael, Eckart, Megan E, Ewin, Audrey J, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Miniussi, Antoine R, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John E, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Wakeham, Nicholas A, Wassell, Edward J, and Yoon, Wonsik
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Multi-pixel transition-edge sensors (TESs), commonly referred to as 'hydras', are a type of position sensitive micro-calorimeter that enables very large format arrays to be designed without commensurate increase in the number of readout channels and associated wiring. In the hydra design, a single TES is coupled to discrete absorbers via varied thermal links. The links act as low pass thermal filters that are tuned to give a different characteristic pulse shape for x-ray photons absorbed in each of the hydra sub pixels. In this contribution we report on the experimental results from hydras consisting of up to 20 pixels per TES. We discuss the design trade-offs between energy resolution, position discrimination and number of pixels and investigate future design optimizations specifically targeted at meeting the readout technology considered for Lynx.
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- 2017
43. Design of Magnetic Shielding and Field Coils for a TES X-Ray Microcalorimeter Test Platform
- Author
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Miniussi, Antoine R, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Doriese, William B, Eckart, Megan E, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John E, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J, Wakeham, Nicholas A, Wassell, Edward J, van Weers, Henk J, and Yoon, Yonsik
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The performance of Transition-Edge Sensors (TES) and their SQUID multiplexed read-outs are very sensitive to the ambient magnetic field from Earth and fluctuations that can arise due to fluctuating magnetic fields outside of the focal plane assembly from the Adiabatic Demagnetization Refrigerator (ADR).Thus, the experimental platform we are building to test the FPA of the X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) of the Athena mission needs to include a series of shields and a coil in order to meet the following requirement of magnetic field density and uniformity.
- Published
- 2017
44. Toward Large FOV High-Resolution X-Ray Imaging Spectrometer: Microwave Multiplexed Readout of 32 TES Microcalorimeters
- Author
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Yoon, Wonsik, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Eckart, Megan E, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Miniussi, Antoine R, Moseley, Samuel H, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John E, Kazuhiro, Sakai, Smith, Stephen J, Stevenson, Thomas R, Wakeham, Nicholas A, Wassell, Edward J, Wollack, Edward J, Noroozian, Omid, Becker, Dan, Bennett, Douglas A, Fowler, Joseph W, Gard, Johnathon D, Hilton, Gene C, Mates, John A. B, Reintsema, Carl D, Swetz, Daniel S, Ullom, Joel N, and Vale, Leila R
- Subjects
Instrumentation And Photography ,Communications And Radar - Abstract
We performed a small-scale demonstration at GSFC of high-resolution x-ray TES microcalorimeters read out using a microwave SQUID multiplexer. This work is part of our effort to develop detector and readout technologies for future space based x-ray instruments such as the microcalorimeter spectrometer envisaged for Lynx, a large mission concept under development for the Astro 2020 Decadal Survey. In this paper we describe our experiment, including details of a recently designed, microwave-optimized low-temperature setup that is thermally anchored to the 50 mK stage of our laboratory ADR. Using a ROACH2 FPGA at room temperature, we simultaneously read out 32 pixels of a GSFC-built detector array via a NIST-built multiplexer chip with Nb coplanar waveguide resonators coupled to RF SQUIDs. The resonators are spaced 6 MHz apart (at approx. 5.9 GHz) and have quality factors of approximately 15,000. Using flux-ramp modulation frequencies of 160 kHz we have achieved spectral resolutions of 3 eV FWHM on each pixel at 6 keV. We will present the measured system-level noise and maximum slew rates, and briefly describe the implications for future detector and readout design.
- Published
- 2017
45. Performance of an X-Ray Microcalorimeter with a 240 Micron Absorber and a 50 Micron TES Bilayer
- Author
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Miniussi, Antoine R, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Eckart, Megan E, Ewin, Audrey J, Finkbeiner, Fred M, Kelley, Richard L, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Porter, Frederick S, Sadleir, John E, Sakai, Kazuhiro, Smith, Stephen J, Wakeham, Nicholas A, Wassell, Edward J, and Yoon, Wonsik
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have been developing superconducting transition-edge sensor (TES) microcalorimeters for a variety of potential astrophysics missions, including Athena. The X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) instrument on this mission requires close-packed pixels on a 0.25 mm pitch, and high quantum efficiency between 0.2 and 12 keV. The traditional approach within our group has been to use square TES bilayers on molybdenum and gold that are between 100 and 140 microns in size, deposited on silicon nitride membranes to provide a weak thermal conductance to a 50 mK heat bath temperature. It has been shown that normal metal stripes on top of the bilayer are needed to keep the unexplained noise at a level consistent with the expected based upon estimates for the non-equilibrium non-linear Johnson noise.In this work we describe a new approach in which we use a square TES bilayer that is 50 microns in size. While the weak link effect is much stronger in this size of TES, we have found that excellent spectral performance can be achieved without the need for any normal metal strips on top of the TES. A spectral performance of 1.58 eV at 6 KeV has been achieved, the best resolution seen in any of our devices with this pixel size. The absence of normal metal stripes has led to more uniform transition shapes, and more reliable excellent spectral performance. The smaller TES size has meant that that the thermal conductance to the heat bath, determined by the perimeter length of the TES and the membrane thickness, is lower than on previous devices, and thus has a lower count rate capability. This is an advantage for low count-rate applications where the slower speed enables easier multiplexing in the read-out, thus potential higher multiplexing factors. In order to recover the higher count rate capabilities, a potential path exits using thicker silicon nitride membranes to increase the thermal conductance to the heat bath.
- Published
- 2017
46. Parametric Characterization of TES Detectors Under DC Bias
- Author
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Chiao, Meng P, Smith, Stephen James, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Betancourt-Martinez, Gabriele L, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Eckart, Megan E, Ewin, Audrey J, Finkbeiner, Fred Michael, Figueroa-Feliciano, Enectali, Kelley, Richard L, Lee, Sang Jun, Leutenegger, Maurice, Porter, Frederick Scott, Sadleir, John E, Wassell, Edward J, and Yoon, Wonsik
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,Instrumentation And Photography - Abstract
The X-ray integrated field unit (X-IFU) in European Space Agency's (ESA's) Athena mission will be the first high-resolution X-ray spectrometer in space using a large-format transition-edge sensor microcalorimeter array. Motivated by optimization of detector performance for X-IFU, we have conducted an extensive campaign of parametric characterization on transition-edge sensor (TES) detectors with nominal geometries and physical properties in order to establish sensitivity trends relative to magnetic field, dc bias on detectors, operating temperature, and to improve our understanding of detector behavior relative to its fundamental properties such as thermal conductivity, heat capacity, and transition temperature. These results were used for validation of a simple linear detector model in which a small perturbation can be introduced to one or multiple parameters to estimate the error budget for X-IFU. We will show here results of our parametric characterization of TES detectors and briefly discuss the comparison with the TES model.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Fabrication of X-ray Microcalorimeter Focal Planes Composed of Two Distinct Pixel Types
- Author
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Wassell, Edward J, Adams, Joseph S, Bandler, Simon R, Betancour-Martinez, Gabriele L, Chiao, Meng P, Chang, Meng Ping, Chervenak, James A, Datesman, Aaron M, Eckart, Megan E, Ewin, Audrey J, Kelley, Richard, Kilbourne, Caroline A, Porter, Frederick Scott, and Sadleir, John E
- Subjects
Astrophysics ,Instrumentation And Photography - Abstract
We develop superconducting transition-edge sensor (TES) microcalorimeter focal planes for versatility in meeting the specifications of X-ray imaging spectrometers, including high count rate, high energy resolution, and large field of view. In particular, a focal plane composed of two subarrays: one of fine pitch, high count-rate devices and the other of slower, larger pixels with similar energy resolution, offers promise for the next generation of astrophysics instruments, such as the X-ray Integral Field Unit Instrument on the European Space Agencys ATHENA mission. We have based the subarrays of our current design on successful pixel designs that have been demonstrated separately. Pixels with an all-gold X-ray absorber on 50 and 75 micron pitch, where the Mo/Au TES sits atop a thick metal heatsinking layer, have shown high resolution and can accommodate high count rates. The demonstrated larger pixels use a silicon nitride membrane for thermal isolation, thinner Au, and an added bismuth layer in a 250-sq micron absorber. To tune the parameters of each subarray requires merging the fabrication processes of the two detector types. We present the fabrication process for dual production of different X-ray absorbers on the same substrate, thick Au on the small pixels and thinner Au with a Bi capping layer on the larger pixels to tune their heat capacities. The process requires multiple electroplating and etching steps, but the absorbers are defined in a single-ion milling step. We demonstrate methods for integrating the heatsinking of the two types of pixel into the same focal plane consistent with the requirements for each subarray, including the limiting of thermal crosstalk. We also discuss fabrication process modifications for tuning the intrinsic transition temperature (T(sub c)) of the bilayers for the different device types through variation of the bilayer thicknesses. The latest results on these 'hybrid' arrays will be presented.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Spectral- and Cepstral-Based Measures During Continuous Speech: Capacity to Distinguish Dysphonia and Consistency Within a Speaker
- Author
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Lowell, Soren Y., Colton, Raymond H., Kelley, Richard T., and Hahn, Youngmee C.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Evaluation of Stroboscopic Signs
- Author
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Kelley, Richard T., Colton, Raymond H., Casper, Janina, Paseman, Ashley, and Brewer, David
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Spectral Moment Analysis of Unilateral Vocal Fold Paralysis
- Author
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Colton, Raymond H., Paseman, Ashley, Kelley, Richard T., Stepp, Debra, and Casper, Janina K.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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