Patents by Inventor William K. Warburton

William K. Warburton 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: 5870051
    Abstract: A signal processing system which accepts input from an x-ray detector-preamplifier and produces a signal of reduced dynamic range for subsequent analog-to-digital conversion. The system conditions the input signal to reduce the number of bits required in the analog-to-digital converter by removing that part of the input signal which varies only slowly in time and retaining the amplitude of the pulses which carry information about the x-rays absorbed by the detector. The parameters controlling the signal conditioner's operation can be readily supplied in digital form, allowing it to be integrated into a feedback loop as part of a larger digital x-ray spectroscopy system.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 2, 1996
    Date of Patent: February 9, 1999
    Assignee: William K. Warburton
    Inventors: William K. Warburton, Bradley Hubbard
  • Patent number: 5774522
    Abstract: A high speed, digitally based, signal processing system which accepts directly coupled input data from a detector with a continuous discharge type preamplifier and produces a spectral analysis of the x-rays illuminating the detector. The system's principal elements are an analog signal conditioning section, a combinatorial logic section which implements digital triangular filtering and pileup inspection, and a microprocessor which accepts values captured by the logic section and uses them to compute x-ray energy values. Operating without pole-zero correction, the system achieves high resolution by capturing, in conjunction with each peak value from the digital filter, an associated value of the unfiltered signal, and using this latter signal to correct the former for errors which arise from its local slope terms. This correction greatly reduces both energy resolution degradation and peak centroid shifting in the output spectrum as a function of input count rate.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 2, 1996
    Date of Patent: June 30, 1998
    Inventor: William K. Warburton
  • Patent number: 5684850
    Abstract: A high speed, digitally based, signal processing system which accepts input data from a detector-preamplifier and produces a spectral analysis of the x-rays illuminating the detector. The system achieves high throughputs at low cost by dividing the required digital processing steps between a "hardwired" processor implemented in combinatorial digital logic, which detects the presence of the x-ray signals in the digitized data stream and extracts filtered estimates of their amplitudes, and a programmable digital signal processing computer, which refines the filtered amplitude estimates and bins them to produce the desired spectral analysis. One set of algorithms allow this hybrid system to match the resolution of analog systems while operating at much higher data rates. A second set of algorithms implemented in the processor allow the system to be self calibrating as well. The same processor also handles the interface to an external control computer.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 2, 1996
    Date of Patent: November 4, 1997
    Assignee: William K. Warburton
    Inventors: William K. Warburton, Bradley Hubbard
  • Patent number: 5646488
    Abstract: An apparatus allows photons in the infrared, visible, ultraviolet, soft x-ray and hard x-ray energy ranges to pass freely along a line of sight path between two vacuum regions at different pressures, yet maintains the pressure difference between the two regions and, in particular, removes vapor species attempting to pass between the two regions along the line of sight path. The apparatus works by causing the line of sight path to pass through a volume provided with a pumping mechanism which is transparent to the photons. Within this volume the vapor species are ionized and deviated from the line of sight by both magnetic and electric fields. The ionization mechanism is provided by an electron plasma created by the Penning discharge mechanism in an equipotential volume between two sets of electrodes.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: October 11, 1995
    Date of Patent: July 8, 1997
    Inventor: William K. Warburton