Patents Represented by Attorney V. D. Pitruzzella
  • Patent number: 4347210
    Abstract: A method of forging spinel into complex shapes in which a spinel plate is placed in a mold while the spinel plate is heated, in an atmosphere of helium, to a temperature below its melting point and above its solid two phases transition point that allows plastic deformation to take place. Forging stresses well above the yield point of the spinel are applied to the plate by the mold to reduce the forging time.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 9, 1980
    Date of Patent: August 31, 1982
    Assignee: Raytheon Company
    Inventors: Edward A. Maguire, Richard L. Gentilman
  • Patent number: 4342114
    Abstract: A transverse excitation atmospheric pressure laser employing a preionizing flash board formed on one of the sides of the laser tube. The side wall of the laser tube acts as an insulating support plate having a backing plate on the outside surface and a set of subsidiary electrodes on the inside surface. The subsidiary electrodes are short cylinders bonded to the inside surface of the support plate and having a flanged portion at the opposite end. The preionizing discharge takes place between adjacent subsidiary electrodes in the region between the flanged portions and is thus removed from the support plate. The material for the flanged portions has a high melting point and a low sputtering capability.A U-shaped enclosure provides a grounded housing for all the high voltage components and also provides a path for the discharge currents.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: February 4, 1980
    Date of Patent: July 27, 1982
    Assignee: Raytheon Company
    Inventor: Clarence F. Luck
  • Patent number: 4316115
    Abstract: A probe detects sonic energy in liquids and in materials containing liquids such as the flesh of living beings, the probe being particularly adapted for medical ultrasonics. The probe is constructed of materials having acoustic impedances substantially equal to that of water to maximize the transfer of sonic energy in a living being to an electric signal within the probe for accurate detection of high frequency pulses having a duration less than a microsecond. A piezoelectric polymer serves as the transducer and is mounted at the end of the probe housing between a thin metallic window which serves as one electrode, and a metallized rubber rod which serves as the second electrode and sonically insulates the transducer from the housing. An acoustically absorbent ring affixed to the perimeter of the face of the probe, and a flaring of the back end of the probe, reduce the diffraction and reflection of acoustic waves for improved accuracy in the measurement of submicrosecond pulses.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 3, 1979
    Date of Patent: February 16, 1982
    Assignee: Raytheon Company
    Inventors: David T. Wilson, Roger H. Tancrell, Joseph Callerame