Patents by Inventor Booth R. Myers

Booth R. Myers 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: 6376972
    Abstract: A powerful glow discharge lamp comprising two coaxial tubes, the outer tube being optically transparent, with a cathode and anode placed at opposite ends of the tubes, the space between the tubes being filled with working gas. The electrodes are made as cylindrical tumblers placed in line to one other in such a way that one end of the cathode is inserted into the inner tube, one end of the anode coaxially covers the end of the outer tube, the inner tube penetrating and extending through the anode. The increased electrodes' surface area increases glow discharge electron current and, correspondingly, average radiation power of discharge plasma. The inner tube contains at least one cooling liquid tube placed along the axis of the inner tube along the entire lamp length to provide cathode cooling. The anode has a circumferential heat extracting radiator which removes heat from the anode.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: November 18, 1999
    Date of Patent: April 23, 2002
    Assignee: The United States of America as represented by the United States Department of Energy
    Inventors: Victor F. Tarasenko, Aleksey N. Panchenko, Victor S. Skakun, Edward A. Sosnin, Francis T. Wang, Booth R. Myers, Martyn G. Adamson
  • Patent number: 6150630
    Abstract: The invention consists of a method for machining (cutting, drilling, sculpting) of explosives (e.g., TNT, TATB, PETN, RDX, etc.). By using pulses of a duration in the range of 5 femtoseconds to 50 picoseconds, extremely precise and rapid machining can be achieved with essentially no heat or shock affected zone. In this method, material is removed by a nonthermal mechanism. A combination of multiphoton and collisional ionization creates a critical density plasma in a time scale much shorter than electron kinetic energy is transferred to the lattice. The resulting plasma is far from thermal equilibrium. The material is in essence converted from its initial solid-state directly into a fully ionized plasma on a time scale too short for thermal equilibrium to be established with the lattice. As a result, there is negligible heat conduction beyond the region removed resulting in negligible thermal stress or shock to the material beyond a few microns from the laser machined surface.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 17, 1998
    Date of Patent: November 21, 2000
    Assignee: The Regents of the University of California
    Inventors: Michael D. Perry, Brent C. Stuart, Paul S. Banks, Booth R. Myers, Joseph A. Sefcik