Patents by Inventor Herbert R. Carleton

Herbert R. Carleton has filed for patents to protect the following inventions. This listing includes patent applications that are pending as well as patents that have already been granted by the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO).

  • Patent number: 4855903
    Abstract: A modular, expandable, topologically-distributed-memory multiprocessor computer comprises a plurality of non-directly communicating slave processors under the control of a synchronizer and a master processor. Memory space is partitioned into a plurality of memory cells. Dynamic variables may be mapped into the memory cells so that they depend upon processing in nearby partitions. Each slave processor is connected in a topologically well-defined way through a dynamic bi-directional switching system (gateway) to different respective ones of the memory cells. Access by the slave processors to their respective topologically similar memory cells occurs concurrently or in parallel in such a way that no data-flow conflicts occur. The topology of data distribution may be chosen to take advantage of symmetries which occur in broad classes of problems. The system may be tied to a host computer used for data storage and analysis of data not efficiently processed by the multiprocessor computer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: January 22, 1988
    Date of Patent: August 8, 1989
    Assignee: State University of New York
    Inventors: Herbert R. Carleton, Jeremy Q. Broughton
  • Patent number: 4292574
    Abstract: Constant selected speed running of an electric motor, with a varying mechanical load, is achieved by intermittently pulsing the motor at full power and comparing the back EMF of the motor, between power pulses, with a selected speed voltage, to accordingly control application of the power pulses. A particular control circuit is disclosed which permits operation of a pocket-sized system, powered by a three cell battery, to achieve substantially constant speed, at normally varying loads, throughout a ten hour period, with back EMFs at selected values between 0.01 volt (motor barely turning) and 2.0 volts (high speed). The system is useful in a personal air sampler, used to monitor a workman's exposure to noxious ingredients of breathing air.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 18, 1980
    Date of Patent: September 29, 1981
    Assignee: Anatole J. Sipin Company
    Inventors: Anatole J. Sipin, Herbert R. Carleton