M
Michael D. Smith
Researcher at Goddard Space Flight Center
Publications - 449
Citations - 25323
Michael D. Smith is an academic researcher from Goddard Space Flight Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Mars Exploration Program & Atmosphere of Mars. The author has an hindex of 85, co-authored 420 publications receiving 23108 citations. Previous affiliations of Michael D. Smith include Harvard University & University of Toronto.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Financial inclusion and international migration in low- and middle-income countries
Journal ArticleDOI
Assessment of Static Steadiness and Dynamic Stability at Various Stages of Healing a Grade 2 Medial Collateral Ligament Tear
TL;DR: The degree to which the prescribed physical therapy protocol was effective in healing the MCL was determined, which can be useful for tweaking the individual protocol for future conservative treatment and management of the injury.
ReportDOI
ARDP Natrium Neutronic Methodology: Argonne Neutronic Assessment of ABR-1000
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors compare the results from TerraPower and the Argonne National Laboratory (ANL) analysis of the ABR-1000 nuclear power plant with the results of the Advanced Reactor Demonstration Program Natrium Demo project.
Patent
Method and system for resolving dispute between service provider and service user
Miller T. Abel,Bruce E. Johnson,John A. Maffei,Max G. Morris,Michael D. Smith,エイ.マッフェイ ジョン,イー.ジョンソン ブルース,ディー.スミス マイケル,ジー.モリス マックス,ティー.アベル ミラー +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a system for resolving a dispute related to the request of service provision to a service provider, by which the service provider can verify to the service intermediary that a service user has requested the service.
Journal ArticleDOI
Food insecurity predicts well-being inequality.
TL;DR: This article used the estimated conditional variance as a measure of inter-personal inequality in subjective well-being at the individual-level and found that higher food insecurity is associated with higher inequality in wellbeing in middle and high income countries, but not in low-income countries.