E
Edward L. Wright
Researcher at University of California, Los Angeles
Publications - 662
Citations - 137397
Edward L. Wright is an academic researcher from University of California, Los Angeles. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cosmic microwave background & Galaxy. The author has an hindex of 119, co-authored 649 publications receiving 128250 citations. Previous affiliations of Edward L. Wright include Princeton University & University of California, Berkeley.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
An Improved Near-infrared Spectrum of the Archetype Y Dwarf WISEP J182831.08+265037.8
Michael C. Cushing,Adam C. Schneider,J. Davy Kirkpatrick,Caroline V. Morley,Mark S. Marley,Christopher R. Gelino,Gregory N. Mace,Edward L. Wright,Peter R. Eisenhardt,Michael F. Skrutskie,Kenneth A. Marsh +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a near infrared spectrum of the Y dwarf WISEP 182831.8, which covers the 0.9-1.7 um wavelength range at a resolving power of lambda/Delta lambda ~180 and is a significant improvement over the previously published spectrum.
Journal Article
The Disk Gas Mass and the Far-IR Revolution
Edwin A. Bergin,Klaus M. Pontoppidan,Charles M. Bradford,L. Ilsedore Cleeves,Neal J. Evans,Maryvonne Gerin,Paul F. Goldsmith,Quentin Kral,Gary J. Melnick,Melissa McClure,Karin I. Öberg,Thomas L. Roellig,Edward L. Wright,Richard Teague,Jonathan Williams,Ke Zhang +15 more
TL;DR: In the far-infrared spectrum, a large aperture telescope to 8 K was proposed in this paper to estimate the gas mass of the hydrogen deuteride (HD) isotopologue.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Lessions learned in WISE image quality
Martha Kendall,Valerie G. Duval,Mark F. Larsen,Ingolf Heinrichsen,Roy W. Esplin,Mark A. Shannon,Edward L. Wright +6 more
TL;DR: The WISE program can attribute some of its success in achieving the image quality needed to meet science goals to lessons learned along the way, after a requirement was missed in early decomposition and a missing need was noticed.
Book ChapterDOI
Prospects for MAP & PLANCK
TL;DR: The Microwave Anisotropy Probe (MAP) is a NASA medium Explorer (MIDEX) satellite to measure the anisotropic of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) with an angular resolution more than 30 times better than COBE as discussed by the authors.
Proceedings ArticleDOI
Recent results from an S-band high-power broadband 18-beam klystron
David K. Abe,F.N. Wood,Baruch Levush,Dean E. Pershing,Edward L. Wright,Khanh T. Nguyen,R.E. Myers,Edward Eisen +7 more
TL;DR: An 18-beam, seven-cavity multiple-beam klystron (MBK3) was developed at the Naval Research Laboratory and is designed to produce a peak rf output power of >500 kW over a 400-MHz frequency band centered at 3.1 GHz as discussed by the authors.