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Institution

Boeing Phantom Works

About: Boeing Phantom Works is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Routing protocol & Adaptive control. The organization has 436 authors who have published 404 publications receiving 10556 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a numerical method for solving dynamic problems within the peridynamic theory is described, and the properties of the method for modeling brittle dynamic crack growth are discussed, as well as its accuracy and numerical stability.

1,644 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Numerical simulations using Maxwell's equations solvers show good agreement with the experimental results, confirming the existence of negative index of refraction materials.
Abstract: We report the results of a Snell's law experiment on a negative index of refraction material in free space from 12.6 to 13.2 GHz. Numerical simulations using Maxwell's equations solvers show good agreement with the experimental results, confirming the existence of negative index of refraction materials. The index of refraction is a function of frequency. At 12.6 GHz we measure and compute the real part of the index of refraction to be $\ensuremath{-}1.05$. The measurements and simulations of the electromagnetic field profiles were performed at distances of $14\ensuremath{\lambda}$ and $28\ensuremath{\lambda}$ from the sample; the fields were also computed at $100\ensuremath{\lambda}$.

757 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2004
TL;DR: It is argued that ontologies in particular and semantics-based technologies in general will play a key role in achieving seamless connectivity.
Abstract: The goal of having networks of seamlessly connected people, software agents and IT systems remains elusive. Early integration efforts focused on connectivity at the physical and syntactic layers. Great strides were made; there are many commercial tools available, for example to assist with enterprise application integration. It is now recognized that physical and syntactic connectivity is not adequate. A variety of research systems have been developed addressing some of the semantic issues. In this paper, we argue that ontologies in particular and semantics-based technologies in general will play a key role in achieving seamless connectivity. We give a detailed introduction to ontologies, summarize the current state of the art for applying ontologies to achieve semantic connectivity and highlight some key challenges.

437 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the potential of a large-scale space solar power (SSP) system with a DC-to-DC efficiency of 45% with optimized components in both the transmitter and rectenna.
Abstract: Future large-scale space solar power (SSP) will form a very complex integrated system of systems requiring numerous significant advances in current technology and capabilities. Ongoing technology developments have narrowed many of the gaps, but major technical, regulatory, and conceptual hurdles remain. Continuing systems concept studies and analyses will be critical to success, as will following a clear strategic R&T road map. This road map must assure both an incremental and evolutionary approach to developing needed technologies and systems is followed, with significant and broadly applicable advances with each increment. In particular, the technologies and systems needed for SPS must support highly leveraged applicability to needs in space science, robotic and human exploration, and the development of space. Considerable progress has been made in the critical area of microwave power transmission. At 5.8 GHz, DC-RF converters with efficiencies over 80% are achievable today. Rectennas developed at 5.8 GHz have also been measured with efficiencies greater than 80%. With optimized components in both the transmitter and rectenna, an SPS system has the potential of a DC-to-DC efficiency of 45%.

418 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2008
TL;DR: CORE uses FreeBSD network stack virtualization to extend physical networks for planning, testing and development, without the need for expensive hardware deployments, and scales to network topologies consisting of over a hundred virtual nodes emulated on a typical server computer.
Abstract: We present CORE (common open research emulator), a real-time network emulator that allows rapid instantiation of hybrid topologies composed of both real hardware and virtual network nodes. CORE uses FreeBSD network stack virtualization to extend physical networks for planning, testing and development, without the need for expensive hardware deployments. We evaluate CORE in wired and wireless settings, and compare performance results with those obtained on physical network deployments. We show that CORE scales to network topologies consisting of over a hundred virtual nodes emulated on a typical server computer, sending and receiving traffic totaling over 300,000 packets per second. We demonstrate the practical usability of CORE in a hybrid wired-wireless scenario composed of both physical and emulated nodes, carrying live audio and video streams.

288 citations


Authors

Showing all 436 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
John W. Tukey7325171754
Peter Clark471759851
Daniel E. Rivera392356954
Eugene Lavretsky331424073
John Vian32994110
Frederick T. Calkins20731545
James H. Mabe20631257
Krishna Sampigethaya19371879
Steven Poltrock19441595
Yueping Guo1748867
Valdis Kibens16231644
Arun Ayyagari16571074
James J. Troy16601540
Lisa C. Thomas1527697
Joseph H. Osborne14251055
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20153
201327
20123
20114
20107
200926