Patents Represented by Attorney John A. Koch
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Patent number: 4477958Abstract: A method of fabricating multishell fuel targets for inertial confinement fusion usage. Sacrificial hemispherical molds encapsulate a concentric fuel pellet which is positioned by fiber nets stretched tautly across each hemispherical mold section. The fiber ends of the net protrude outwardly beyond the mold surfaces. The joint between the sacrificial hemispheres is smoothed. A ceramic or glass cover is then deposited about the finished mold surfaces to produce an inner spherical surface having continuously smooth surface configuration. The sacrificial mold is removed by gaseous reaction accomplished through the porous ceramic cover prior to enclosing of the outer sphere by addition of an outer coating. The multishell target comprises the inner fuel pellet concentrically arranged within a surrounding coated cover or shell by fiber nets imbedded within the cover material.Type: GrantFiled: June 1, 1981Date of Patent: October 23, 1984Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: James R. Holland, Robert M. Del Vecchio
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Patent number: 4405199Abstract: A method for spectral equalization of high frequency spectrally broadband signals transmitted through an optical fiber. The broadband signal input is first dispersed by a grating. Narrow spectral components are collected into an array of equalizing fibers. The fibers serve as optical delay lines compensating for material dispersion of each spectral component during transmission. The relative lengths of the individual equalizing fibers are selected to compensate for such prior dispersion. The output of the equalizing fibers couple the spectrally equalized light onto a suitable detector for subsequent electronic processing of the enhanced broadband signal.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1981Date of Patent: September 20, 1983Inventors: James W. Ogle, Peter B. Lyons
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Patent number: 4405373Abstract: A method of adjustably tailoring the effective bulk density of a solid material in which a mixture comprising the solid material, a film-forming polymer and a volatile solvent are sprayed into a drying chamber such that the solvent evaporates and the polymer dries into hollow shells having the solid material captured within the shell walls. Shell density may be varied as a function of solid/polymer concentration, droplet size and drying temperature.Type: GrantFiled: December 21, 1979Date of Patent: September 20, 1983Inventors: Lawrence B. Kool, Robert L. Nolen, David E. Solomon
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Patent number: 4343675Abstract: A method of manufacturing a hollow structure of uniform wall thickness comprising the steps of selecting or forming a precursor having one wall surface of desired geometry, treating a portion of the precursor consisting of the one wall surface and a uniform depth of material beneath the wall surface to increase resistance to ablation, and then removing by ablation and discarding the remaining or untreated portion of the precursor.Type: GrantFiled: September 30, 1980Date of Patent: August 10, 1982Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Paul R. Anderson, Raymond L. Downs, Timothy M. Henderson
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Patent number: 4340407Abstract: A method of controllably varying the dimensions of cavitated objects such as hollow spherical shells wherein a precursor shell is heated to a temperature above the shell softening temperature in an ambient atmosphere wherein the ratio of gases which are permeable through the shell wall at that temperature to gases which are impermeable through the shell wall is substantially greater than the corresponding ratio for gases contained within the precursor shell. As the shell expands, the partial pressures of permeable gases internally and externally of the shell approach and achieve equilibrium, so that the final shell size depends solely upon the difference in impermeable gas partial pressures and shell surface tension.Type: GrantFiled: February 11, 1981Date of Patent: July 20, 1982Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Paul R. Anderson, Wayne J. Miller
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Patent number: 4336338Abstract: A method of manufacturing gel powder suitable for use as a starting material in the manufacture of hollow glass microspheres having a high concentration of silica. The powder is manufactured from a gel containing boron in the amount of about 1% to 20% (oxide equivalent mole percent), alkali metals, specifically potassium and sodium, in an amount exceeding 8% total, and the remainder silicon. Preferably, the ratio of potassium to sodium is greater than 1.5.Type: GrantFiled: August 15, 1980Date of Patent: June 22, 1982Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Raymond L. Downs, Wayne J. Miller
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Patent number: 4308750Abstract: Method and apparatus for determining diameter and wall thickness of hollow microspheres or shells wherein terminal velocities of shells traveling in fluid-filled conduits of differing diameters are measured. A wall-effect factor is determined as a ratio of the terminal velocities, and shell outside diameter may then be ascertained as a predetermined empirical function of wall-effect factor. For shells of known outside diameter, wall thickness may then be ascertained as a predetermined empirical function of terminal velocity in either conduit.Type: GrantFiled: May 30, 1980Date of Patent: January 5, 1982Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventor: David A. Steinman
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Patent number: 4296319Abstract: A method of producing optical and electrical pulses of desired shape. An optical pulse of arbitrary but defined shape illuminates one end of an array of optical fiber waveguides of differing lengths to time differentiate the input pulse. The optical outputs at the other end of the array are combined to form a synthesized pulse of desired shape.Type: GrantFiled: December 7, 1979Date of Patent: October 20, 1981Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Larry A. Franks, Melvin A. Nelson
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Patent number: 4292537Abstract: A system for nondestructively determining the attenuation coefficient, .alpha.(.lambda.), of low-loss optical fiber wave guides. Cerenkov light pulses are generated at a plurality of locations in the fiber by a beam of charged particles. The transit times of selected spectral components and their intensities are utilized to unfold the .alpha.(.lambda.) values over the measured spectrum.Type: GrantFiled: August 26, 1980Date of Patent: September 29, 1981Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Terence J. Davies, Larry A. Franks, Melvin A. Nelson
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Patent number: 4292527Abstract: A radiation detection system including a radiation-to-light converter and fiber optic wave guides to transmit the light to a remote location for processing. The system utilizes fluors particularly developed for use with optical fibers emitting at wavelengths greater than about 500 nm and having decay times less than about 10 ns.Type: GrantFiled: October 6, 1978Date of Patent: September 29, 1981Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Larry A. Franks, Stephen S. Lutz, Peter B. Lyons
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Patent number: 4266852Abstract: A system for welding fiber optic waveguides together. The ends of the two fibers to be joined together are accurately, collinearly aligned in a vertical orientation and subjected to a controlled, diffuse arc to effect welding and thermal conditioning. A front-surfaced mirror mounted at a 45.degree. angle to the optical axis of a stereomicroscope mounted for viewing the junction of the ends provides two orthogonal views of the interface during the alignment operation.Type: GrantFiled: February 9, 1979Date of Patent: May 12, 1981Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Robert W. Higgins, Roger E. Robichaud
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Patent number: 4253023Abstract: A system for obtaining improved resolution in relatively thick semiconductor radiation detectors, such as HgI.sub.2, which exhibit significant hole trapping. Two amplifiers are used: the first measures the charge collected and the second the contribution of the electrons to the charge collected. The outputs of the two amplifiers are utilized to unfold the total charge generated within the detector in response to a radiation event.Type: GrantFiled: April 13, 1979Date of Patent: February 24, 1981Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventor: Richard C. Whited
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Patent number: 4212537Abstract: A system for measuring a combination of optical transmission properties of fiber optic waveguides. A polarized light pulse probe is injected into one end of the optical fiber. Reflections from discontinuities within the fiber are unpolarized whereas reflections of the probe pulse incident to its injection remain polarized. The polarized reflections are prevented from reaching a light detector whereas reflections from the discontinuities reaches the detector.Type: GrantFiled: October 24, 1978Date of Patent: July 15, 1980Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the Unied States Department of EnergyInventors: John E. Golob, Larry D. Looney, Peter B. Lyons, Melvin A. Nelson, Terence J. Davies
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Patent number: 4176285Abstract: A technique for generating high-voltage, wide dynamic range, shaped electrical pulses in the nanosecond range. Two transmission lines are coupled together by resistive elements distributed along the length of the lines. The conductance of each coupling resistive element as a function of its position along the line is selected to produce the desired pulse shape in the output line when an easily produced pulse, such as a step function pulse, is applied to the input line.Type: GrantFiled: January 11, 1978Date of Patent: November 27, 1979Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventor: Neil J. Norris
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Patent number: 4156809Abstract: A data acquisition system capable of resolving transient pulses in the subnanosecond range. A pulse in an information carrying medium such as light is transmitted through means which disperse the pulse, such as a fiber optic light guide which time-stretches optical pulses by chromatic dispersion. This time-stretched pulse is used as a sampling pulse and is modulated by the signal to be recorded. The modulated pulse may be further time-stretched prior to being recorded. The recorded modulated pulse is unfolded to derive the transient signal by utilizing the relationship of the time-stretching that occurred in the original pulse.Type: GrantFiled: February 7, 1978Date of Patent: May 29, 1979Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventor: David T. Phillips
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Patent number: 4152647Abstract: A highly versatile, highly portable emergency communication system which permits deployment in a very short time to cover both wide areas and distant isolated areas depending upon mission requirements. The system employs a plurality of lightweight, fully self-contained repeaters which are deployed within the mission area to provide communication between field teams, and between each field team and a mobile communication control center. Each repeater contains a microcomputer controller, the program for which may be changed from the control center by the transmission of digital data within the audible range (300-3,000 Hz). Repeaters are accessed by portable/mobile transceivers, other repeaters, and the control center through the transmission and recognition of digital data code words in the subaudible range.Type: GrantFiled: February 23, 1978Date of Patent: May 1, 1979Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Charles A. Gladden, Martin H. Parelman
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Patent number: 4099852Abstract: A device for positioning lenses precisely with five degrees of freedom (three translations and two angular rotations). The unique features of the device are its compact design, large clear aperture, and high degree of positioning accuracy combined with five degrees of freedom in axis motion. Thus, the device provides precision and flexibility in positioning of optical components.BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTIONThe invention described herein was made in the course of, or under, Contract No. AT(29-1)-1183, with the United States Energy Research and Development Administration.Type: GrantFiled: October 5, 1976Date of Patent: July 11, 1978Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventors: Marian W. Kobierecki, Frederick Rienecker, Jr.
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Patent number: 4094268Abstract: A method and horizontal furnace for vapor phase growth of HgI.sub.2 crystals which utilizes controlled axial and radial airflow to maintain the desired temperature gradients. The ampoule containing the source material is rotated while axial and radial air tubes are moved in opposite directions during crystal growth to maintain a desired distance and associated temperature gradient with respect to the growing crystal, whereby the crystal interface can advance in all directions, i.e., radial and axial according to the crystallographic structure of the crystal. Crystals grown by this method are particularly applicable for use as room-temperature nuclear radiation detectors.Type: GrantFiled: March 30, 1977Date of Patent: June 13, 1978Assignee: United States Department of EnergyInventors: Michael M. Schieber, Israel Beinglass, Giora Dishon
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Patent number: 4091084Abstract: A process for purification of mercuric iodide (HgI.sub.2) to be used as a source material for the growth of detector quality crystals. The high purity HgI.sub.2 raw material is produced by a combination of three stages: synthesis of HgI.sub.2 from Hg and I.sub.2, repeated sublimation, and zone refining.Type: GrantFiled: June 6, 1977Date of Patent: May 23, 1978Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of EnergyInventor: Michael M. Schieber
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Patent number: 4046593Abstract: A technique and apparatus used therewith for determining the uptake of plutonium and other contaminants by soil microorganisms which, in turn, gives a measure of the plutonium and/or other contaminants available to the biosphere at that particular time. A measured quantity of uncontaminated spores of a selected mold is added to a moistened sample of the soil to be tested. The mixture is allowed to sit a predetermined number of days under specified temperature conditions. An agar layer is then applied to the top of the sample. After three or more days, when spores of the mold growing in the sample have formed, the spores are collected by a miniature vacuum collection apparatus operated under preselected vacuum conditions, which collect only the spores with essentially no contamination by mycelial fragments or culture medium. After collection, the fungal spores are dried and analyzed for the plutonium and/or other contaminants.Type: GrantFiled: June 17, 1976Date of Patent: September 6, 1977Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Energy Research and Development AdministrationInventors: Frederick H. F. Au, Werner F. Beckert