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Peter H. Fisher

Researcher at Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publications -  71
Citations -  6959

Peter H. Fisher is an academic researcher from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Resonator & Neutrino. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 71 publications receiving 6302 citations. Previous affiliations of Peter H. Fisher include California Institute of Technology.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI

Wireless Power Transfer via Strongly Coupled Magnetic Resonances

TL;DR: A quantitative model is presented describing the power transfer of self-resonant coils in a strongly coupled regime, which matches the experimental results to within 5%.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neutrino Oscillation Experiments at the Gosgen Nuclear Power Reactor

TL;DR: A search for neutrino oscillations at the 2800-MW nuclear power reactor in Gosgen (Switzerland), providing 5×10^20 electron antineutrinos per second, shows that the data are consistent with the absence of neutrinos oscillations, and rule out large regions of parameters.
Posted Content

Fundamental Physics at the Intensity Frontier

J.L. Hewett, +466 more
TL;DR: The 2011 Workshop on Fundamental Physics at the Intensity Frontier as discussed by the authors identified and described opportunities at the intensity frontier in the areas of heavy quarks, charged leptons, neutrinos, proton decay, new light weakly-coupled particles, and nucleons, nuclei, and atoms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neutrino backgrounds to dark matter searches

TL;DR: Neutrino coherent scattering cross sections can be as large as 10.5 times smaller than WIMP scattering cross-sections as mentioned in this paper, while current experiments have sensitivities as small as 5 orders of magnitude smaller.
Patent

Applications of wireless energy transfer using coupled antennas

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a method for transmitting power wirelessly that includes driving a high-Q non-radiative resonator at a value near its resonant frequency to produce a magnetic field output, which is set by a detuning effect when a second resonator gets too close to said resonator.