B
Brian C. Hicks
Researcher at United States Naval Research Laboratory
Publications - 50
Citations - 1393
Brian C. Hicks is an academic researcher from United States Naval Research Laboratory. The author has contributed to research in topics: Water vapor & Radio telescope. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 48 publications receiving 1269 citations. Previous affiliations of Brian C. Hicks include United States Department of the Navy.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
The LWA1 Radio Telescope
Steven W. Ellingson,G. B. Taylor,J. Craig,J. M. Hartman,Jayce Dowell,C. N. Wolfe,Tracy Clarke,Brian C. Hicks,Namir E. Kassim,Paul S. Ray,L. J. Rickard,Frank K. Schinzel,K. W. Weiler +12 more
TL;DR: The LWA1 as discussed by the authors is a radio telescope operating in the frequency range 10-88 MHz, located in central New Mexico, which consists of 258 pairs of dipole-type antennas whose outputs are individually digitized and formed into beams.
Journal ArticleDOI
First light for the first station of the long wavelength array
G. B. Taylor,Steven W. Ellingson,Namir E. Kassim,J. Craig,Jayce Dowell,C. N. Wolfe,J. M. Hartman,Gianni Bernardi,Tracy Clarke,A.S. Cohen,N. P. Dalal,William C. Erickson,Brian C. Hicks,Lincoln J. Greenhill,Bryan A. Jacoby,W. M. Lane,Joseph Lazio,Daniel A. Mitchell,Robert Navarro,Stephen M. Ord,Ylva Pihlström,Emil Polisensky,Paul S. Ray,L. J. Rickard,Frank K. Schinzel,Henrique R. Schmitt,E. Sigman,M. Soriano,K. P. Stewart,Kevin Stovall,S. E. Tremblay,D. Wang,K. W. Weiler,Stephen M. White,D. L. Wood +34 more
TL;DR: The Long Wavelength Array (LWA1) as discussed by the authors is the first large-scale radio telescope with a large number of dual-polarization dipoles, which are digitized and combined into beams.
The Long Wavelength Array
Namir E. Kassim,Emil Polisensky,Tracy E. Clarke,Brian C. Hicks,P. C. Crane,K. P. Stewart,Paul S. Ray,K. W. Weiler,L. J. Rickard,T. J. W. Lazio,W. M. Lane,A. S. Cohen,Michael E. Nord,W. C. Erickson,Richard A. Perley +14 more
Journal ArticleDOI
Increases in middle atmospheric water vapor as observed by the Halogen Occultation Experiment and the ground-based Water Vapor Millimeter-Wave Spectrometer from 1991 to 1997
Gerald E. Nedoluha,Richard M. Bevilacqua,R. Michael Gomez,David E. Siskind,Brian C. Hicks,James M. Russell,Brian J. Connor +6 more
TL;DR: Water vapor measurements made by the Halogen Occultation Experiment (HALOE) from 1991 to 1997 are compared with ground-based observations by the Water Vapor Millimeter-wave Spectrometers (WVMS) taken from 1992 to 1997 at Table Mountain, California (34.4°N, 242.3°E), and at Lauder, New Zealand (45.0°S, 169.7°E).
Journal ArticleDOI
The 74 MHz System on the Very Large Array
Namir E. Kassim,T. Joseph W. Lazio,W. C. Erickson,Richard A. Perley,W. D. Cotton,Eric W. Greisen,A. S. Cohen,Brian C. Hicks,Henrique R. Schmitt,Debora M. Katz +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an example of a wide-field image, devoid of bright objects and containing hundreds of weaker sources, constructed from the field-based calibration and imaging.