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Institution

Naval Surface Warfare Center

FacilityWashington D.C., District of Columbia, United States
About: Naval Surface Warfare Center is a facility organization based out in Washington D.C., District of Columbia, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Sonar & Radar. The organization has 2855 authors who have published 3697 publications receiving 83518 citations. The organization is also known as: NSWC.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the compressive response of rigidly supported stainless steel sandwich panels subject to a planar impulsive load in water is investigated, and the essential aspects of the dynamic response, such as the transmitted momentum and the degree of core compression, are captured with surprising fidelity by modeling the cores as equivalent metal foams having plateau strengths represented by the quasi-static peak strength.
Abstract: The compressive response of rigidly supported stainless steel sandwich panels subject to a planar impulsive load in water is investigated. Five core topologies that spanned a wide range of crush strengths and strain-dependencies were investigated. They included a (i) square-honeycomb, (ii) triangular honeycomb, (iii) multi-layer pyramidal truss, (iv) triangular corrugation and (v) diamond corrugation, all with a core relative density of approximately 5%. Quasi-statically, the honeycombs had the highest peak strength, but exhibited strong softening beyond the peak strength. The truss and corrugated cores had significantly lower strength, but a post yield plateau that extended to beyond a plastic strain of 60% similar to metal foams. Dynamically, the transmitted pressures scale with the quasi-static strength. The final transmitted momentum increased slowly with core strength (provided the cores were not fully crushed). It is shown that the essential aspects of the dynamic response, such as the transmitted momentum and the degree of core compression, are captured with surprising fidelity by modeling the cores as equivalent metal foams having plateau strengths represented by the quasi-static peak strength. The implication is that, despite considerable differences in core topology and dynamic deformation modes, a simple foam-like model replicates the dynamic response of rigidly supported sandwich panels subject to planar impulsive loads. It remains to ascertain whether such foam-like models capture more nuanced aspects of sandwich panel behavior when locally loaded in edge clamped configurations.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that uncorrelated transmit noise from multiple transmitters can be removed through tunable filtering or through adaptive beamforming of multiple receiving elements, both providing an additional 30-40 dB of interference reduction that is tunable over the frequency range of the system.
Abstract: A near-field cancellation duplexing system is demonstrated using multiple coordinated transceivers with symmetrically arranged antenna elements and a digital backend for baseband waveform phase and amplitude weighting controls. By adapting weights of multiple transmit elements, coupled interference at receiver elements deconstructively interferes, providing up to 50 dB of additional isolation over the coupling of a single transmitter to a receiving element. Bandwidth considerations of the array are presented. It is shown that uncorrelated transmit noise from multiple transmitters can be removed through tunable filtering or through adaptive beamforming of multiple receiving elements, both providing an additional 30-40 dB of interference reduction that is tunable over the frequency range of the system.

95 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, an approach to the investigation of molecular structures in disordered solids, using two-dimensional (2D) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) exchange spectroscopy with magic angle spinning (MAS), is described.
Abstract: An approach to the investigation of molecular structures in disordered solids, using two‐dimensional (2D) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) exchange spectroscopy with magic angle spinning (MAS), is described. This approach permits the determination of the relative orientation of two isotopically labeled chemical groups within a molecule in an unoriented sample, thus placing strong constraints on the molecular conformation. Structural information is contained in the amplitudes of crosspeaks in rotor‐synchronized 2D MAS exchange spectra that connect spinning sideband lines of the two labeled sites. The theory for calculating the amplitudes of spinning sideband crosspeaks in 2D MAS exchange spectra, in the limit of complete magnetization exchange between the labeled sites, is presented in detail. A new technique that enhances the sensitivity of 2D MAS exchange spectra to molecular structure, called orientationally weighted 2D MAS exchange spectroscopy, is introduced. Symmetry principles that underlie the cons...

94 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A novel camera technology for use in particle tracking velocimetry that consists of a dynamic vision sensor in which pixels operate in parallel, transmitting asynchronous events only when relative changes in intensity are encountered with a temporal resolution of 1 μs is presented.
Abstract: Optically based measurements in high Reynolds number fluid flows often require high-speed imaging techniques. These cameras typically record data internally and thus are limited by the amount of onboard memory available. A novel camera technology for use in particle tracking velocimetry is presented in this paper. This technology consists of a dynamic vision sensor in which pixels operate in parallel, transmitting asynchronous events only when relative changes in intensity of approximately 10% are encountered with a temporal resolution of 1 μs. This results in a recording system whose data storage and bandwidth requirements are about 100 times smaller than a typical high-speed image sensor. Post-processing times of data collected from this sensor also increase to about 10 times faster than real time. We present a proof-of-concept study comparing this novel sensor with a high-speed CMOS camera capable of recording up to 2,000 fps at 1,024 × 1,024 pixels. Comparisons are made in the ability of each system to track dense (ρ >1 g/cm3) particles in a solid–liquid two-phase pipe flow. Reynolds numbers based on the bulk velocity and pipe diameter up to 100,000 are investigated.

93 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a term-by-term analysis of the solvation equation yields a quantitative measure of the contribution to log K of various solute-stationary phase interactions, and leads to an understanding of how these interactions affect solute retention.

93 citations


Authors

Showing all 2860 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James A. Yorke10144544101
Edward Ott10166944649
Sokrates T. Pantelides9480637427
J. M. D. Coey8174836364
Celso Grebogi7648822450
David N. Seidman7459523715
Mingzhou Ding6925617098
C. L. Cocke513128185
Hairong Qi503279909
Kevin J. Hemker4923110236
William L. Ditto431937991
Carey E. Priebe434048499
Clifford George412355110
Judith L. Flippen-Anderson402056110
Mortimer J. Kamlet3910812071
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20233
20227
202172
202071
201982
201884