Topic Review
CAPSTONE (Spacecraft)
Cislunar Autonomous Positioning System Technology Operations and Navigation Experiment (CAPSTONE) is a lunar orbiter that will test and verify the calculated orbital stability planned for the Gateway space station. The spacecraft is a 12-unit CubeSat that will also test a navigation system that will measure its position relative to NASA's Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (LRO) without relying on ground stations.
  • 464
  • 11 Oct 2022
Topic Review
Polymer-Based Sensors
Due to the wide application of wearable electronic devices in daily life, research into flexible electronics has become very attractive. Various polymer-based sensors have emerged with great sensing performance and excellent extensibility. It is well known that different structural designs each confer their own unique, great impacts on the properties of materials. For polymer-based pressure/strain sensors, different structural designs determine different response-sensing mechanisms, thus showing their unique advantages and characteristics. 
  • 463
  • 23 Feb 2023
Topic Review
Spectrochemistry
Spectrochemistry is the application of spectroscopy in several fields of chemistry. It includes analysis of spectra in chemical terms, and use of spectra to derive the structure of chemical compounds, and also to qualitatively and quantitively analyze their presence in the sample. It is a method of chemical analysis that relies on the measurement of wavelengths and intensity of electromagnetic radiation.
  • 461
  • 30 Oct 2022
Topic Review
Non-Targeted Effects of Australian and European Synchrotrons
The Australian Synchrotron (AS) and the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF) are best configured for a wide range of biomedical research involving animals and future cancer patients. Due to ultra-high dose rates, treatment doses can be delivered within milliseconds, abiding by FLASH radiotherapy principles. In addition, a homogeneous radiation field can be spatially fractionated into a geometric pattern called microbeam radiotherapy (MRT); a coplanar array of thin beams of microscopic dimensions. Both are clinically promising radiotherapy modalities because they trigger a cascade of biological effects that improve tumor control, while increasing normal tissue tolerance compared to conventional radiation. Synchrotrons can deliver high doses to a very small volume with low beam divergence, thus facilitating the study of non-targeted effects of these novel radiation modalities in both in-vitro and in-vivo models. Non-targeted radiation effects studied at the AS and ESRF include monitoring cell–cell communication after partial irradiation of a cell population (radiation-induced bystander effect, RIBE), the response of tissues outside the irradiated field (radiation-induced abscopal effect, RIAE), and the influence of irradiated animals on non-irradiated ones in close proximity (inter-animal RIBE).
  • 460
  • 19 Apr 2022
Topic Review
Controlled Impact Demonstration
The Controlled Impact Demonstration (or colloquially the Crash In the Desert) was a joint project between NASA and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) that intentionally crashed a remotely controlled Boeing 720 aircraft to acquire data and test new technologies to aid passenger and crew survival. The crash required more than four years of preparation by NASA Ames Research Center, Langley Research Center, Dryden Flight Research Center, the FAA, and General Electric. After numerous test runs, the plane was crashed on December 1, 1984. The test went generally according to plan, and produced a spectacular fireball that required more than an hour to extinguish. The FAA concluded that about one-quarter of the passengers would have survived, that the antimisting kerosene test fuel did not sufficiently reduce the risk of fire, and that several changes to equipment in the passenger compartment of aircraft were needed. NASA concluded that a head-up display and microwave landing system would have helped the pilot more safely fly the aircraft.
  • 460
  • 18 Oct 2022
Topic Review
Soft Templates for Fabricating 3D Nanostructures
Just like rigid templates, there are numerous types of soft templates, including electron resist polymer, photoresist polymer, and various assembled polymers consisting of block polymer, fiber or membrane, polystyrene (PS) sphere, and so forth. These versatile soft templates can be used in the ALA method and have broad prospects for development in powerful fabrication of multiple nanostructures, which possess a lot of advantages, such as simple process, good flexibility, repeatable simplicity of the process, and environmentally friendly easy elimination of the templates, resulting in diversiform 3D nanostructures with numerous device applications.
  • 460
  • 21 Jun 2022
Topic Review
Riemannian Metric and Lie Bracket in Computational Anatomy
Computational anatomy (CA) is the study of shape and form in medical imaging. The study of deformable shapes in computational anatomy rely on high-dimensional diffeomorphism groups [math]\displaystyle{ \varphi \in \operatorname{Diff}_V }[/math] which generate orbits of the form [math]\displaystyle{ \mathcal{M} \doteq \{ \varphi \cdot m \mid \varphi \in \operatorname{Diff}_V \} }[/math]. In CA, this orbit is in general considered a smooth Riemannian manifold since at every point of the manifold [math]\displaystyle{ m \in \mathcal{M} }[/math] there is an inner product inducing the norm [math]\displaystyle{ \| \cdot \|_m }[/math] on the tangent space that varies smoothly from point to point in the manifold of shapes [math]\displaystyle{ m \in \mathcal{M} }[/math]. This is generated by viewing the group of diffeomorphisms [math]\displaystyle{ \varphi \in \operatorname{Diff}_V }[/math] as a Riemannian manifold with [math]\displaystyle{ \| \cdot \|_\varphi }[/math], associated to the tangent space at [math]\displaystyle{ \varphi \in\operatorname{Diff}_V }[/math] . This induces the norm and metric on the orbit [math]\displaystyle{ m \in \mathcal{M} }[/math] under the action from the group of diffeomorphisms.
  • 460
  • 25 Oct 2022
Topic Review
Electron-beam Technology
Since the mid-20th century, electron-beam technology has provided the basis for a variety of novel and specialized applications in semiconductor manufacturing, microelectromechanical systems, nanoelectromechanical systems, and microscopy.
  • 460
  • 29 Sep 2022
Topic Review
MEMS Bionic Fish Ear Structure
The sensor is fabricated using microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) technology, and is encapsulated in castor oil, which has an acoustic impedance close to the human body.
  • 459
  • 27 Jan 2022
Topic Review
Main-belt Comet
User:RMCD bot/subject notice Main-belt comets (MBCs) are bodies orbiting within the asteroid belt that have shown comet-like activity during part of their orbit. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory defines a main-belt asteroid as an asteroid with a semi-major axis (average distance from the Sun) of more than 2 AU but less than 3.2 AU, and a perihelion (closest approach distance to the Sun) of no less than 1.6 AU. David Jewitt from UCLA points out that these objects are most likely not comets with sublimating ice, but asteroids that exhibit dust activity, and hence he and others started calling these class of objects active asteroids. The first main-belt comet discovered is 7968 Elst–Pizarro. It was discovered in 1979 and was found to have a tail by Eric Elst and Guido Pizarro in 1996 and given the cometary designation 133P/Elst-Pizarro.
  • 459
  • 19 Oct 2022
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