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Institution

Computer Sciences Corporation

About: Computer Sciences Corporation is a based out in . It is known for research contribution in the topics: Spacecraft & Software development. The organization has 1916 authors who have published 2389 publications receiving 62729 citations. The organization is also known as: CSC.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jul 2015-Icarus
TL;DR: The natural distillation of water from the regolith by sunlight and its capture on the cold night surface may provide energy-efficient access to volatile for in situ resource utilization (ISRU) by direct capture before volatiles can enter the surface, eliminating the need to actively mine regolith for volatile resource recovery.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Etude comparative de la temperature interne des œufs chez deux especes de pluvier (Charadrius Wilsonia et C. vociferus) est comparée en meme temps que celles du nid et de the air.
Abstract: Etude comparative de la temperature interne des œufs chez deux especes de pluvier (Charadrius Wilsonia et C. vociferus). Cette temperature est evaluee en meme temps que celles du nid et de l'air. De plus, les influences des materiaux de construction du nid, du comportement parental et de l'heure et du jour sont evaluees pour chacune des especes

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that Bythotrephes can have substantial impacts both on cladoceran community composition, and on the size distributions of individual species, as well as an upper size limit to efficient prey utilization by BythOTrephes.

15 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The methodology for dynamically characterizing a large 5-meter thin film inflatable reflector and the test arrangement and results are discussed, and nonlinear finite element modal results are compared to modal test data.
Abstract: Inflatable structures have been the subject of renewed interest in recent years for space applications such as communications antennas, solar thermal propulsion, and space solar power. A major advantage of using inflatable structures in space is their extremely light weight. An obvious second advantage is on-orbit deployability and related space savings in the launch configuration. A recent technology demonstrator flight for inflatable structures was the Inflatable Antenna Experiment (IAE) that was deployed on orbit from the Shuttle Orbiter. Although difficulty was encountered in the inflation/deployment phase, the flight was successful overall and provided valuable experience in the use of such structures. Several papers on static structural analysis of inflated cylinders have been written, describing different techniques such as linear shell theory, and nonlinear and variational methods, but very little work had been done in dynamics of inflatable structures until recent years. In 1988 Leonard indicated that elastic beam bending modes could be utilized in approximating lower-order frequencies of inflatable beams. Main, et al. wrote a very significant 1995 paper describing results of modal tests of inflated cantilever beams and the determination of effective material properties. Changes in material properties for different pressures were also discussed, and the beam model was used in a more complex structure. The paper demonstrated that conventional finite element analysis packages could be very useful in the analysis of complex inflatable structures. The purposes of this paper are to discuss the methodology for dynamically characterizing a large 5-meter thin film inflatable reflector, and to discuss the test arrangement and results. Nonlinear finite element modal results are compared to modal test data. The work is significant and of considerable interest to researchers because of 1) the large size of the structure, making it useful for scaling studies, and 2) application of commercially available finite element software for modeling pressurized thin-film structures.

15 citations

01 Oct 1998
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the evolution of wind statistics and wind models from the empirical scalar wind profile model established for the Saturn Program through the development of the vector wind profiles model used for the Space Shuttle design to the variations of this wind modeling concept for the X-33 program.
Abstract: The wind profile with all of its variations with respect to altitude has been, is now, and will continue to be important for aerospace vehicle design and operations. Wind profile databases and models are used for the vehicle ascent flight design for structural wind loading, flight control systems, performance analysis, and launch operations. This report presents the evolution of wind statistics and wind models from the empirical scalar wind profile model established for the Saturn Program through the development of the vector wind profile model used for the Space Shuttle design to the variations of this wind modeling concept for the X-33 program. Because wind is a vector quantity, the vector wind models use the rigorous mathematical probability properties of the multivariate normal probability distribution. When the vehicle ascent steering commands (ascent guidance) are wind biased to the wind profile measured on the day-of-launch, ascent structural wind loads are reduced and launch probability is increased. This wind load alleviation technique is recommended in the initial phase of vehicle development. The vehicle must fly through the largest load allowable versus altitude to achieve its mission. The Gumbel extreme value probability distribution is used to obtain the probability of exceeding (or not exceeding) the load allowable. The time conditional probability function is derived from the Gumbel bivariate extreme value distribution. This time conditional function is used for calculation of wind loads persistence increments using 3.5-hour Jimsphere wind pairs. These increments are used to protect the commit-to-launch decision. Other topics presented include the Shuttle Shuttle load-response to smoothed wind profiles, a new gust model, and advancements in wind profile measuring systems. From the lessons learned and knowledge gained from past vehicle programs, the development of future launch vehicles can be accelerated. However, new vehicle programs by their very nature will require specialized support for new databases and analyses for wind, atmospheric parameters (pressure, temperature, and density versus altitude), and weather. It is for this reason that project managers are encouraged to collaborate with natural environment specialists early in the conceptual design phase. Such action will give the lead time necessary to meet the natural environment design and operational requirements, and thus, reduce development costs.

15 citations


Authors

Showing all 1916 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David S. Ellsworth8020728072
Andrew A. Lacis7316127563
Dean F. Sittig7138117004
Thomas J. Schmugge6318813066
David C. Classen5816418303
James D. Kubicki5821610151
Damian J. Christian5221613461
Steven N. Shore462346982
Chris Shrader4514010678
Rupak Biswas411739962
M. P. Anantram401746193
Theodore R. Gull391256792
V. N. Venkatakrishnan38955355
James P. Meador37844630
Joel Wm. Parker361764627
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20181
20178
201615
201533
201421
201329