Patents by Inventor Howard Johnsen

Howard Johnsen 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: 6809811
    Abstract: A shield is disclosed that is particularly useful for protecting exposed optical elements at the end of optical probes used in the analysis of hazardous emissions in and around an industrial environment from the contaminating effects of those emissions. The instant invention provides a hood or cowl in the shape of a right circular cylinder that can be fitted over the end of such optical probes. The hood provides a clear aperture through which the probe can perform unobstructed analysis. The probe optical elements are protected from the external environment by passing a dry gas through the interior of the hood and out through the hood aperture in sufficient quantity and velocity to prevent any significant mixing between the internal and external environments. Additionally, the hood is provided with a cooling jacket to lessen the potential for damaging the probe due to temperature excursions.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 26, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 26, 2004
    Assignee: Sandia National Laboratories
    Inventors: Howard A. Johnsen, James R. Ross, Sal R. Birtola
  • Publication number: 20030184746
    Abstract: A shield is disclosed that is particularly useful for protecting exposed optical elements at the end of optical probes used in the analysis of hazardous emissions in and around an industrial environment from the contaminating effects of those emissions. The instant invention provides a hood or cowl in the shape of a right circular cylinder that can be fitted over the end of such optical probes. The hood provides a clear apertures through which the probe can perform unobstructed analysis. The probe optical elements are protected form the external environment by passing a dry gas through the interior of the hood and out through the hood aperture in sufficient quantity and velocity to prevent any significant mixing between the internal and external environments. Additionally, the hood is provided with a cooling jacket to lessen the potential for damaging the probe due to temperature excursions.
    Type: Application
    Filed: March 26, 2002
    Publication date: October 2, 2003
    Inventors: Howard A. Johnsen, James R. Ross, Sal R. Birtola
  • Patent number: 6061641
    Abstract: This invention pertains generally to a method for improving the accuracy of particle analysis under conditions of discrete particle loading and particularly to a method for improving signal-to-noise ratio and instrument response in laser spark spectroscopic analysis of particulate emissions. Under conditions of low particle density loading (particles/m.sup.3) resulting from low overall metal concentrations and/or large particle size uniform sampling can not be guaranteed. The present invention discloses a technique for separating laser sparks that arise from sample particles from those that do not; that is, a process for systematically "gating" the instrument response arising from "sampled" particles from those responses which do not, is dislosed as a solution to his problem. The disclosed approach is based on random sampling combined with a conditional analysis of each pulse. A threshold value is determined for the ratio of the intensity of a spectral line for a given element to a baseline region.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 23, 1997
    Date of Patent: May 9, 2000
    Inventors: David W. Hahn, Kenneth R. Hencken, Howard A. Johnsen, William L. Flower
  • Patent number: 5081575
    Abstract: A crossbar switch which connects N (N=2.sup.k ; k=0, 1, 2, 3) coarse grain processing elements (rated at 20 million floating point operations per second) to a plurality of memories provides for a parallel processing system free of memory conflicts over a wide range of arithmetic computations (i.e. scalar, vector and matrix). The configuration of the crossbar switch, i.e., the connection between each processing element unit and each parallel memory module, may be changed dynamically on a cycle-by-cycle basis in accordance with the requirements of the algorithm under execution. Although there are certain crossbar usage rules which must be obeyed, the data is mapped over parallel memory such that the processing element units can access and operate on input streams of data in a highly parallel fashion with an effective memory transfer rate and computational throughput power comparable in performance to present-day supercomputers.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 3, 1989
    Date of Patent: January 14, 1992
    Assignee: Oryx Corporation
    Inventors: John Hiller, Howard Johnsen, John Mason, Brian Mulhearn, John Petzinger, Joseph Rosal, John Satta, Gerald Shurko, Yedidiah Solowiejczyk, Kenneth Stamm