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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.

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Journal ArticleDOI

A Family-based Method of Quantifying NEOWISE Diameter Errors

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method for bounding the actual NEOWISE diameter errors in the Main Belt based on knowledge of the albedos of asteroid families was presented, and it was shown that the 1σ relative diameter error for the main Belt population must be less than 17.5% for the vast majority of objects.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Multiple-beam klystron development at the Naval Research Laboratory

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a review of MBK development at the Naval Research Laboratory and the creation of an accurate, simulation-based MBK design methodology to meet the needs of modern surveillance radar systems.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

ACCESS: status and pre-flight performance

TL;DR: The Absolute Color Calibration Experiment for Standard Stars (ACCESS) as discussed by the authors is a series of rocket-borne sub-orbital missions and ground-based experiments designed to enable improvements in the precision of the astrophysical flux scale through the transfer of absolute laboratory detector standards from the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) to a network of stellar standards with a calibration accuracy of 1% and a spectral resolving power of 500 across the 0.35 - 1.7μm bandpass.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comments on the quasi-steady-state cosmology

TL;DR: The Quasi-Steady-State Cosmology as proposed by Hoyle, Burbidge and Narlikar does not fit the observed facts of the universe as discussed by the authors, and it predicts that 75-90% of the radio sources in the brightest sample that shows steeper than Euclidean source counts should be blueshifted.