J
James Taylor
Researcher at Newcastle University
Publications - 1190
Citations - 43346
James Taylor is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Laser & Fiber laser. The author has an hindex of 95, co-authored 1161 publications receiving 39945 citations. Previous affiliations of James Taylor include Institut national de la recherche agronomique & European Spallation Source.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Zero-dispersion wavelength decreasing photonic crystal fibers for ultraviolet-extended supercontinuum generation
Alexandre Kudlinski,A.K. George,Jonathan Knight,John C. Travers,A. B. Rulkov,Sergei Popov,James Taylor +6 more
TL;DR: The fabrication of photonic crystal fibers with a continuously-decreasing zero-dispersion wavelength along their length is reported, designed to extend the generation of supercontinuum spectra from the visible into the ultraviolet.
Journal ArticleDOI
Short-Term Load Forecasting With Exponentially Weighted Methods
TL;DR: Five recently developed exponentially weighted methods that have not previously been used for load forecasting are considered, including several exponential smoothing formulations, as well as methods using discount weighted regression, cubic splines, and singular value decomposition.
Journal ArticleDOI
Ethical Beliefs of Marketing Managers
Journal ArticleDOI
Tm-doped fiber laser mode-locked by graphene-polymer composite
Meng Zhang,Edmund J. R. Kelleher,Felice Torrisi,Zhipei Sun,Tawfique Hasan,Daniel Popa,Fengqiu Wang,Andrea C. Ferrari,Sergei Popov,James Taylor +9 more
TL;DR: This work demonstrates mode-locking of a thulium-doped fiber laser operating at 1.94 μm, using a graphene-polymer based saturable absorber, which is a simple, low-cost, stable and convenient laser oscillator for applications where eye-safe and low-photon-energy light sources are required.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cocaethylene: A neuropharmacologically active metabolite assciated with concurrent cocaine-ethanol ingestion
P. Jatlow,John D. Elsworth,Charles W. Bradberry,Gail Winger,James Taylor,R. Russell,R. H. Roth +6 more
TL;DR: In rats, EC and cocaine each increased locomotor activity and rearing to the same extent following i.p. administration, and in self-administration studies in primates, EC was approximately equipotent to cocaine in maintaining responding.