Patents by Inventor Thomas W. Kenny

Thomas W. Kenny 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: 5315247
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for measuring gravitational and inertial forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on an object or fluid in space provide an electric tunneling current through a gap between an electrode and that object or fluid in space and vary that gap with any selected one of such forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on that object or fluid. These methods and apparatus sense a corresponding variation in an electric property of that gap and determine the latter force, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy in response to that corresponding variation, and thereby sense or measure such parameters as acceleration, position, particle mass, velocity, magnetic field strength, presence or direction, or wave or radiant energy intensity, presence or direction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 24, 1992
    Date of Patent: May 24, 1994
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: William J. Kaiser, Steven B. Waltman, Thomas W. Kenny
  • Patent number: 5298748
    Abstract: An uncooled infrared tunneling sensor in which the only moving part is a diaphragm which is deflected into contact with a micromachined silicon tip electrode prepared by a novel lithographic process. Similarly prepared deflection electrodes employ electrostatic force to control the deflection of a silicon nitride, flat diaphragm membrane. The diaphragm exhibits a high resonant frequency which reduces the sensor's sensitivity to vibration. A high bandwidth feedback circuit controls the tunneling current by adjusting the deflection voltage to maintain a constant deflection of the membrane which would otherwise change deflection depending upon incident infrared radiation. The resulting infrared sensor will meet or exceed the performance of all other broadband, uncooled, infrared sensors and can be miniaturized to pixel dimensions smaller than 100 .mu.m. The technology is readily implemented as a small-format linear array suitable for commercial and spacecraft applications.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 15, 1992
    Date of Patent: March 29, 1994
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: Thomas W. Kenny, William J. Kaiser, Judith A. Podosek, Erika C. Vote, Howard K. Rockstad, Joseph K. Reynolds
  • Patent number: 5293781
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for measuring gravitational and inertial forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on an object or fluid in space provide an electric tunneling current through a gap between an electrode and that object or fluid in space and vary that gap with any selected one of such forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on that object or fluid. These methods and apparatus sense a corresponding variation in an electric property of that gap and determine the latter force, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy in response to that corresponding variation, and thereby sense or measure such parameters as acceleration, position, particle mass, velocity, magnetic field strength, presence or direction, or wave or radiant energy intensity, presence or direction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 24, 1992
    Date of Patent: March 15, 1994
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: William J. Kaiser, Steven B. Waltman, Thomas W. Kenny
  • Patent number: 5290102
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for measuring gravitational and inertial forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on an object or fluid in space provide an electric tunneling current through a gap between an electrode and that object or fluid in space and vary that gap with any selected one of such forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on that object or fluid. These methods and apparatus sense a corresponding variation in an electric property of that gap and determine the latter force, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy in response to that corresponding variation, and thereby sense or measure such parameters as acceleration, position, particle mass, velocity, magnetic field strength, presence or direction, or wave or radiant energy intensity, presence or direction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 24, 1992
    Date of Patent: March 1, 1994
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: William J. Kaiser, Steven B. Waltman, Thomas W. Kenny
  • Patent number: 5265470
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for measuring gravitational and inertial forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on an object or fluid in space provide an electric tunneling current through a gap between an electrode and that object or fluid in space and vary that gap with any selected one of such forces, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy acting on that object or fluid. These methods and apparatus sense a corresponding variation in an electric property of that gap and determine the latter force, magnetic fields, or wave or radiant energy in response to that corresponding variation, and thereby sense or measure such parameters as acceleration, position, particle mass, velocity, magnetic field strength, presence or direction, or wave or radiant energy intensity, presence or direction.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 15, 1991
    Date of Patent: November 30, 1993
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: William J. Kaiser, Steven B. Waltman, Thomas W. Kenny
  • Patent number: 5211051
    Abstract: Methods and apparatus for improving performance of a sensor having a sensor proof mass elastically suspended at an initial equilibrium position by a suspension force, provide a tunable force opposing that suspension force and preset the proof mass with that tunable force to a second equilibrium position less stable than the initial equilibrium position. The sensor is then operated from that preset second equilibrium position of the proof mass short of instability. The spring constant of the elastic suspension may be continually monitored, and such continually monitored spring constant may be continually adjusted to maintain the sensor at a substantially constant sensitivity during its operation.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 25, 1991
    Date of Patent: May 18, 1993
    Assignee: California Institute of Technology
    Inventors: William J. Kaiser, Thomas W. Kenny, Joseph K. Reynolds, Thomas R. Van Zandt, Steven B. Waltman