Institution
Langley Research Center
Facility•Hampton, Virginia, United States•
About: Langley Research Center is a facility organization based out in Hampton, Virginia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Mach number & Wind tunnel. The organization has 15945 authors who have published 37602 publications receiving 821623 citations. The organization is also known as: NASA Langley & NASA Langley Research Center.
Topics: Mach number, Wind tunnel, Aerodynamics, Boundary layer, Supersonic speed
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: The Earth Radiation Budget Experiment (ERBE) as discussed by the authors consists of scanning and nonscanning radiometer packages on three spacecraft, one is a satellite with a 57 deg inclination orbit which precesses around the earth once every 2 months.
Abstract: This paper gives an overview of the Earth Radiation Budget Experiment. The experiment consists of scanning and nonscanning radiometer packages on three spacecraft. One is a satellite with a 57 deg, inclination orbit which precesses around the earth once every 2 months. Packages are also flown on the sun-synchronous NOAA-F and NOAA-G operational meteorological satellites. The scanning radiometer includes three channels: shortwave, long-wave, and total. The nonscanner package encompasses a pair of wide-field-of-view radiometers and a pair of medium-field-of-view radiometers. Each pair consists of a total and a shortwave radiometer. The scientific importance and objectives of the mission are described, including the need for the three spacecraft and the utility of the complementary types of radiometers.
289 citations
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01 Jan 1984TL;DR: In this article, the effect of rib details on the riblet drag reduction performance was investigated in boundary layers having different upstream histories and at higher Reynolds numbers than previously reported, and it was found that the drag reduction was dependent on the height and spacing of riblets in law of the wall variables regardless of the free-stream Reynolds number or upstream boundary-layer history.
Abstract: Riblet surfaces have been tested in boundary layers having different upstream histories and at higher Reynolds numbers than previously reported. The drag reduction for the riblet surfaces was found to be dependent on the height and spacing of the riblets in law-of-the-wall variables regardless of the free-stream Reynolds number or upstream boundary-layer history. Micro-photographs of the actual riblet geometries are examined to determine the effect of rib details on the riblet drag-reduction performances. To further increase drag-reduction performance, riblet surfaces are combined with another drag-reduction concept, the large-eddy breakup device (LEBU). In addition, the yaw sensitivity of riblets is evaluated, as well as the characteristics of riblet surfaces manufactured out of a thin vinyl sheet.
289 citations
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École Polytechnique1, University of Paris-Sud2, Rutherford Appleton Laboratory3, Centre national de la recherche scientifique4, Goddard Space Flight Center5, California Institute of Technology6, Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University7, University of Burgundy8, Université libre de Bruxelles9, University of Strathclyde10, Université catholique de Louvain11, University of Massachusetts Lowell12, University of Denver13, Stony Brook University14, University of Bremen15, Langley Research Center16, École Centrale Paris17, Technische Universität München18, University of Alabama19
TL;DR: The current version of the GEISA-97 database is described in this paper, which contains 1,346,266 entries and includes a catalog of absorption cross-sections of molecules such as chlorofluorocarbons which exhibit unresolvable spectra.
Abstract: The current version GEISA-97 of the computer-accessible database system GEISA (Gestion et Etude des Informations Spectroscopiques Atmospheriques: Management and Study of Atmospheric Spectroscopic Information) is described. This catalogue contains 1,346,266 entries. These are spectroscopic parameters required to describe adequately the individual spectral lines belonging to 42 molecules (96 isotopic species) and located between 0 and 22,656 cm-1. The featured molecules are of interest in studies of the terrestrial as well as the other planetary atmospheres, especially those of the Giant Planets. GEISA-97 contains also a catalog of absorption cross-sections of molecules such as chlorofluorocarbons which exhibit unresolvable spectra. The modifications and improvements made to the earlier edition (GEISA-92) and the data management software are described. GEISA-97 and the associated management software are accessible from the ARA/LMD (Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique du CNRS, France) web site: http://ara01.polytechnique.fr/registration.
288 citations
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TL;DR: In this paper, the Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) aboard the Aura satellite has provided essentially daily global measurements of ozone (O3) profiles from the upper troposphere to the upper mesosphere since August of 2004.
Abstract: [1] The Earth Observing System (EOS) Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS) aboard the Aura satellite has provided essentially daily global measurements of ozone (O3) profiles from the upper troposphere to the upper mesosphere since August of 2004. This paper focuses on validation of the MLS stratospheric standard ozone product and its uncertainties, as obtained from the 240 GHz radiometer measurements, with a few results concerning mesospheric ozone. We compare average differences and scatter from matched MLS version 2.2 profiles and coincident ozone profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar measurements taken during Aura Validation Experiment (AVE) campaigns. Ozone comparisons are also made between MLS and balloon-borne remote and in situ sensors. We provide a detailed characterization of random and systematic uncertainties for MLS ozone. We typically find better agreement in the comparisons using MLS version 2.2 ozone than the version 1.5 data. The agreement and the MLS uncertainty estimates in the stratosphere are often of the order of 5%, with values closer to 10% (and occasionally 20%) at the lowest stratospheric altitudes, where small positive MLS biases can be found. There is very good agreement in the latitudinal distributions obtained from MLS and from coincident profiles from other satellite instruments, as well as from aircraft lidar data along the MLS track.
288 citations
Authors
Showing all 16015 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
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Daniel J. Jacob | 162 | 656 | 76530 |
Donald R. Blake | 118 | 727 | 49697 |
Veerabhadran Ramanathan | 100 | 301 | 47561 |
Raja Parasuraman | 91 | 402 | 41455 |
Robert W. Platt | 88 | 638 | 31918 |
James M. Russell | 87 | 691 | 29383 |
Daniel J. Inman | 83 | 918 | 37920 |
Antony Jameson | 79 | 474 | 31518 |
Ya-Ping Sun | 79 | 277 | 28722 |
Patrick M. Crill | 79 | 228 | 20850 |
Richard B. Miles | 78 | 759 | 25239 |
Patrick Minnis | 77 | 490 | 23403 |
Robert W. Talbot | 77 | 297 | 19783 |
Raphael T. Haftka | 76 | 773 | 28111 |
Jack E. Dibb | 75 | 344 | 18399 |