Institution
National Institute of Standards and Technology
Government•Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States•
About: National Institute of Standards and Technology is a government organization based out in Gaithersburg, Maryland, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Laser & Scattering. The organization has 26667 authors who have published 60661 publications receiving 2215547 citations. The organization is also known as: National Bureau of Standards & NIST.
Topics: Laser, Scattering, Neutron scattering, NIST, Spectroscopy
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
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TL;DR: A class of algorithms is described which enables computer quantized images to be decomposed into constituent reflecting the structure of the images, viewed as the morphological precursor to a higher level syntactic analysis.
590 citations
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TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that superconductivity in Fe1+?Se, which can be considered the parent compound of the superconducting arsenide family, is destroyed by very small changes in stoichiometry.
Abstract: The recently discovered iron arsenide superconductors appear to display a universal set of characteristic features, including proximity to a magnetically ordered state and robustness of the superconductivity in the presence of disorder. Here we show that superconductivity in Fe1+?Se, which can be considered the parent compound of the superconducting arsenide family, is destroyed by very small changes in stoichiometry. Further, we show that nonsuperconducting Fe1+?Se is not magnetically ordered down to 5 K. These results suggest that robust superconductivity and immediate instability against an ordered magnetic state should not be considered as intrinsic characteristics of iron-based superconducting systems.
590 citations
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TL;DR: Very high correlations were found among the rankings of systems produced using different relevance judgment sets, indicating that the comparative evaluation of retrieval performance is stable despite substantial differences in relevance judgments, and thus reaffirm the use of the TREC collections as laboratory tools.
Abstract: Test collections have traditionally been used by information retrieval researchers to improve their retrieval strategies. To be viable as a laboratory tool, a collection must reliably rank different retrieval variants according to their true effectiveness. In particular, the relative effectiveness of two retrieval strategies should be insensitive to modest changes in the relevant document set since individual relevance assessments are known to vary widely. The test collections developed in the TREC workshops have become the collections of choice in the retrieval research community. To verify their reliability, NIST investigated the effect changes in the relevance assessments have on the evaluation of retrieval results. Very high correlations were found among the rankings of systems produced using different relevance judgment sets. The high correlations indicate that the comparative evaluation of retrieval performance is stable despite substantial differences in relevance judgments, and thus reaffirm the use of the TREC collections as laboratory tools.
590 citations
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TL;DR: It is found that strong scientific and collaborative foundations exist for the continued understanding and improvement of dental ceramic systems.
Abstract: This article presents a brief history of dental ceramics and offers perspectives on recent research aimed at the further development of ceramics for clinical use, at their evaluation and selection, and very importantly, their clinical performance. Innovative ceramic materials and ceramics processing strategies that were introduced to restorative dentistry since the early 1980s are discussed. Notable research is highlighted regarding (1) wear of ceramics and opposing enamel, (2) polishability of porcelains, (3) influence of firing history on the thermal expansion of porcelains for metal ceramics, (4) machining and CAD/CAM as fabrication methods for clinical restorations, (5) fit of ceramic restorations, (6) clinical failure mechanisms of all-ceramic prostheses, (7) chemical and thermal strengthening of dental ceramics, (8) intraoral porcelain repair, and (9) criteria for selection of the various ceramics available. It is found that strong scientific and collaborative foundations exist for the continued understanding and improvement of dental ceramic systems.
588 citations
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TL;DR: A review of core-level binding energy shifts observed in photoelectron spectroscopy can be found in this paper, where the authors focus on shifts since most of the chemical and physical insights provided by core levels are derived not from the core energies themselves but from shifts they exhibit.
588 citations
Authors
Showing all 26760 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
Zhong Lin Wang | 245 | 2529 | 259003 |
John A. Rogers | 177 | 1341 | 127390 |
J. N. Butler | 172 | 2525 | 175561 |
Yury Gogotsi | 171 | 956 | 144520 |
Zhenan Bao | 169 | 865 | 106571 |
Gang Chen | 167 | 3372 | 149819 |
Michel C. Nussenzweig | 165 | 516 | 87665 |
Donald G. Truhlar | 165 | 1518 | 157965 |
Tobin J. Marks | 159 | 1621 | 111604 |
Jongmin Lee | 150 | 2257 | 134772 |
Galen D. Stucky | 144 | 958 | 101796 |
Thomas P. Russell | 141 | 1012 | 80055 |
William D. Travis | 137 | 605 | 93286 |
Peter Zoller | 134 | 734 | 76093 |
Anthony G. Evans | 130 | 576 | 65803 |