1,702 research outputs found
Interference and the lossless lossy beam splitter
By directing the input light into a particular mode it is possible to obtain
as output all of the input light for a beam splitter that is 50% absorbing.
This effect is also responsible for nonlinear quantum interference when two
photons are incident on the beam splitter.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures, to appear in J. Mod. Op
Water monitor system: Phase 1 test report
Automatic water monitor system was tested with the objectives of assuring high-quality effluent standards and accelerating the practice of reclamation and reuse of water. The NASA water monitor system is described. Various components of the system, including the necessary sensors, the sample collection system, and the data acquisition and display system, are discussed. The test facility and the analysis methods are described. Test results are reviewed, and recommendations for water monitor system design improvement are presented
Method and apparatus for eliminating luminol interference material
A method and apparatus for removing porphyrins from a fluid sample which are unrelated to the number of bacteria present in the sample and prior to combining the sample with luminol reagent to produce a light reaction is disclosed. The method involves a pre-incubation of the sample with a dilute concentration of hydrogen peroxide which inactivates the interfering soluble porphyrins. Further, by delaying taking a light measurement for a predetermined time period after combining the hydrogen peroxide-treated water sample with a luminol reagent, the luminescence produced by the reaction of the luminol reagent with ions present in the solution, being short lived, will have died out so that only porphyrins within the bacteria which have been released by rupturing the cells with the sodium hydroxide in the luminol reagent, will be measured. The measurement thus obtained can then be related to the concentration of live and dead bacteria in the fluid sample
Fidelity for imperfect postselection
We describe a simple measure of fidelity for mixed state postselecting
devices. The measure is most appropriate for postselection where the task
performed by the output is only effected by a specific state.Comment: 8 Pages, 8 Figure
Rapid, quantitative determination of bacteria in water
A bioluminescent assay for ATP in water borne bacteria is made by adding nitric acid to a water sample with concentrated bacteria to rupture the bacterial cells. The sample is diluted with sterile, deionized water, then mixed with a luciferase-luciferin mixture and the resulting light output of the bioluminescent reaction is measured and correlated with bacteria present. A standard and a blank also are presented so that the light output can be correlated to bacteria in the sample and system noise can be substracted from the readings. A chemiluminescent assay for iron porphyrins in water borne bacteria is made by adding luminol reagent to a water sample with concentrated bacteria and measuring the resulting light output of the chemiluminescent reaction
Method for detecting coliform organisms
A method and apparatus are disclosed for determining the concentration of coliform bacteria in a sample. The sample containing the coliform bacteria is cultured in a liquid growth medium. The cultured bacteria produce hydrogen and the hydrogen is vented to a second cell containing a buffer solution in which the hydrogen dissolves. By measuring the potential change in the buffer solution caused by the hydrogen, as a function of time, the initial concentration of bacteria in the sample is determined. Alternatively, the potential change in the buffer solution can be compared with the potential change in the liquid growth medium to verify that the potential change in the liquid growth medium is produced primarily by the hydrogen gas produced by the coliform bacteria
Automated water monitor system field demonstration test report. Volume 1: Executive summary
A system that performs water quality monitoring on-line and in real time much as it would be done in a spacecraft, was developed and demonstrated. The system has the capability to determine conformance to high effluent quality standards and to increase the potential for reclamation and reuse of water
NASA JSC water monitor system: City of Houston field demonstration
A water quality monitoring system with on-line and real time operation similar to the function in a spacecraft was investigated. A system with the capability to determine conformance to future high effluent quality standards and to increase the potential for reclamation and reuse of water was designed. Although all system capabilities were not verified in the initial field trial, fully automated operation over a sustained period with only routine manual adjustments was accomplished. Two major points were demonstrated: (1) the water monitor system has great potential in water monitoring and/or process control applications; and (2) the water monitor system represents a vast improvement over conventional (grab sample) water monitoring techniques
The color dependent morphology of the post-AGB star HD161796
Context. Many protoplanetary nebulae show strong asymmetries in their
surrounding shell, pointing to asymmetries during the mass loss phase.
Questions concerning the origin and the onset of deviations from spherical
symmetry are important for our understanding of the evolution of these objects.
Here we focus on the circumstellar shell of the post-AGB star HD 161796. Aims.
We aim at detecting signatures of an aspherical outflow, as well as to derive
the properties of it. Methods. We use the imaging polarimeter ExPo (the extreme
polarimeter), a visitor instrument at the William Herschel Telescope, to
accurately image the dust shell surrounding HD 161796 in various wavelength
filters. Imaging polarimetry allows us to separate the faint, polarized, light
from circumstellar material from the bright, unpolarized, light from the
central star. Results. The shell around HD 161796 is highly aspherical. A clear
signature of an equatorial density enhancement can be seen. This structure is
optically thick at short wavelengths and changes its appearance to optically
thin at longer wavelengths. In the classification of the two different
appearances of planetary nebulae from HST images it changes from being
classified as DUPLEX at short wavelengths to SOLE at longer wavelengths. This
strengthens the interpretation that these two appearances are manifestations of
the same physical structure. Furthermore, we find that the central star is
hotter than often assumed and the relatively high observed reddening is due to
circumstellar rather than interstellar extinction.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
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