Tuesday, June 30, 2020

New Design for ‘Optical Ruler’ Could Revolutionize Clocks, Telescopes, Telecommunications

Comb on a Chip

cryogenically cooled laser microresonator frequency combCredit: NIST
Caption:Experimental setup to generate a set of stable frequencies in a cryogenically cooled laser microresonator frequency comb. The ring-shaped microresonator, small enough to fit on a microchip, operates at very low laser power and is made from the semiconductor aluminum gallium arsenide.

Just as a meter stick with hundreds of tick marks can be used to measure distances with great precision, a device known as a laser frequency comb, with its hundreds of evenly spaced, sharply defined frequencies, can be used to measure the colors of light waves with great precision. 

Small enough to fit on a chip, miniature versions of these combs — so named because their set of uniformly spaced frequencies resembles the teeth of a comb — are making possible a new generation of atomic clocks, a great increase in the number of signals traveling through optical fibers, and the ability to discern tiny frequency shifts in starlight that hint at the presence of unseen planets. 

The newest version of these chip-based “microcombs,” created by researchers at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and the University of California at Santa Barbara (UCSB), is poised to further advance time and frequency measurements by improving and extending the capabilities of these tiny devices. 

At the heart of these frequency microcombs lies an optical microresonator, a ring-shaped device about the width of a human hair in which light from an external laser races around thousands of times until it builds up high intensity. Microcombs, often made of glass or silicon nitride, typically require an amplifier for the external laser light, which can make the comb complex, cumbersome and costly to produce. 

The NIST scientists and their UCSB collaborators have demonstrated that microcombs created from the semiconductor aluminum gallium arsenide have two essential properties that make them especially promising.

 The new combs operate at such low power that they do not need an amplifier, and they can be manipulated to produce an extraordinarily steady set of frequencies — exactly what is needed to use the microchip comb as a sensitive tool for measuring frequencies with extraordinary precision. (The research is part of the NIST on a Chip program.)

The newly developed microcomb technology can help enable engineers and scientists to make precision optical frequency measurements outside the laboratory, said NIST scientist Gregory Moille. In addition, the microcomb can be mass-produced through nanofabrication techniques similar to the ones already used to manufacture microelectronics. 

The researchers at UCSB led earlier efforts in examining microresonators composed of aluminum gallium arsenide. The frequency combs made from these microresonators require only one-hundredth the power of devices fabricated from other materials. 

However, the scientists had been unable to demonstrate a key property — that a discrete set of unwavering, or highly stable, frequencies could be generated from a microresonator made of this semiconductor. The NIST team tackled the problem by placing the microresonator within a customized cryogenic apparatus that allowed the researchers to probe the device at temperatures as low as 4 degrees above absolute zero. 

The low-temperature experiment revealed that the interaction between the heat generated by the laser light and the light circulating in the microresonator was the one and only obstacle preventing the device from generating the highly stable frequencies needed for successful operation.

At low temperatures, the team demonstrated that it could reach the so-called soliton regime — where individual pulses of light that never change their shape, frequency or speed circulate within the microresonator. The researchers describe their work in the June issue of Laser and Photonics Reviews.
 
With such solitons, all teeth of the frequency comb are in phase with each other, so that they can be used as a ruler to measure the frequencies employed in optical clocks, frequency synthesis, or laser-based distance measurements. 

Although some recently developed cryogenic systems are small enough that they could be used with the new microcomb outside the laboratory, the ultimate goal is to operate the device at room temperature. 

The new findings show that scientists will either have to quench or entirely avoid excess heating to achieve room-temperature operation.


Paper: G. Moille, L. Chang, W. Xie, A. Rao, X. Lu, M. Davanco, J.E. Bowers and K. Srinivasan. Dissipative Kerr Solitons in a III-V Microresonator. Laser and Photonics Reviews. June 2020. DOI: 10.1002/lpor.202000022

Original news release by NIST at: https://www.nist.gov/news-events/news/2020/06/comb-chip-new-design-optical-ruler-could-revolutionize-clocks-telescopes

Wednesday, June 24, 2020

IR Fever Scan Training- FREE

Many communicable diseases, including COVID-19, cause an increase in human body temperature. Based on this fact, one part of the Federal guideline “Opening Up America Again” requires businesses to perform temperature checks for workers, visitors, and guests.


As businesses reopen, there are a number of options available for conducting temperature checks. These include contact and noncontact thermometry and thermal imaging.

Methodology and equipment choice will vary between companies and will be largely dependent upon: 

·     Number of employees and visitors per day

·     Speed at which testing must be accomplished

·     Available budget for the testing system

Implementing a body temperature screening program can be a daunting task that is not “one-size fits all”. To help ensure your success, download a FREE copy of Jersey Infrared’s guide to Infrared Body Temperature Screening.


Jersey Infrared Consultants

Post Office Box 39
Burlington New Jersey 08016
United States

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Renewables Increasingly Beat Even Cheapest Coal Competitors on Cost


Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, 2 June 2020 — Renewable power is increasingly cheaper than any new electricity capacity based on fossil fuels, a new report by the International Renewable Energy Agency (IRENA) published today finds.

 Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2019 shows that more than half of the renewable capacity added in 2019 achieved lower power costs than the cheapest new coal plants. 

 The report highlights that new renewable power generation projects now increasingly undercut existing coal-fired plants. On average, new solar photovoltaic (PV) and onshore wind power cost less than keeping many existing coal plants in operation, and auction results show this trend accelerating – reinforcing the case to phase-out coal entirely. 

Next year, up to 1 200 gigawatts (GW) of existing coal capacity could cost more to operate than the cost of new utility-scale solar PV, the report shows.

Read more online at:
https://www.irena.org/newsroom/pressreleases/2020/Jun/Renewables-Increasingly-Beat-Even-Cheapest-Coal-Competitors-on-Cost.

Read the full report Renewable Power Generation Costs in 2019

See the interactive infographic on How Falling Costs Make Renewables a Cost-effective Investment

This press release is also available in Arabic (عربي), French (français), German (Deutsch)Japanese (日本語)Russian (русский)Spanish (español).

Friday, June 19, 2020

CoVIg-19 Plasma Alliance





"COVID-19 is an unprecedented challenge. The CoVIg-19 Plasma Alliance is an unprecedented partnership of the world’s leading plasma companies, spanning plasma collection, development, production, and distribution. 

"Rather than pursue our individual research, we are putting public and patient health first by working together. Our goals are to accelerate the development of a potential treatment, improve our chances of success, and increase supply of the potential treatment. 

 "In addition to those announced at its inception—Biotest, BPL, CSL Behring, LFB, Octapharma, and Takeda—the Alliance welcomes new industry members ADMA Biologics, BioPharma Plasma, GC Pharma, and Sanquin. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is providing advisory support. 

"Microsoft is providing technology including the Alliance website and the Plasma Bot for donor recruitment."

What Is CoVIg-19? 

Plasma from people who have recovered from COVID-19 — known as “convalescent plasma” — could be a key part of the fight against the new coronavirus. Once the plasma is donated, it can take one of two paths: be directly transfused into patients, or used to make a potential medicine for COVID-19. 

Both of these approaches are important and some hospitals are already using direct transfusion to treat severe COVID-19 patients. The CoVIg-19 Plasma Alliance is developing a hyperimmune globulin (H-Ig) called CoVIg-19. This potential medicine requires plasma donated by people who have fully recovered from COVID-19, since their plasma contains antibodies against the virus.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

Human Body Temperature Black Body Source

Isotech Model 988

First introduced to assist in relation to the SARS outbreak during the early 2000s the Model 988 is now helping in relation to coronavirus. It can be used to increase the accuracy of non-contact fever detection systems helping in the fight against COVID-19.

Applications also include checking non-contact clinical thermometers.

This blackbody meets the demand for a simple, cost effective but high accuracy calibrator for the calibration of thermal imagers and infrared thermometers used at temperatures around human body temperature.

A 70 mm diameter ridged plate is heated or cooled with an internal solid state thermoelectric heat pump. The temperature of the plate can be set from 20 °C to 45 °C to a resolution of 0.1 °C.

The standard version has a 210 mm long tube mainly used with thermal imagers. A second version has a 40 mm tube more suited for checking medical thermometers.

More online at: https://www.isotechna.com/Low-Temperature-Calibrator-p/988.htm

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

New Online Course - Elevated Skin Temperature Screening


The Infrared Training Center is now offering an online Elevated Skin Temperature (EST) screening course for anyone using thermal imaging for this application. 

EST screening utilizes thermal imaging to measure the surface temperature of a person’s inner eye corner to detect signs of a fever. 

While infrared cameras cannot confirm the presence of a fever or virus, they are utilized to help prevent the spread of communicable conditions by identifying individuals who may have a high skin temperature.

These readings can then be used to initiate secondary screening, if needed, to verify whether the subject has a fever.
For more details and to register, visit: https://irtraining.asentialms.com/catalog/?type=course&sc=EST

The Infrared Training Center's (ITC) training will increase your credibility, enhance your career, and build your thermal imaging business. ITC offers IR training, certification, and recertification in all aspects of thermography. It is a unit of FLIR Systems.

Monday, June 15, 2020

New app note on vector VSM measurement

June 11, 2020 by Andy Phillips 

 VVSM App Note Cover 


If you’re interested in using a vibrating sample magnetometer to measure the vector components of magnetization and torque curves for magnetically anisotropic materials, then be sure to read Lakeshore's latest app note. 

It describes the use of a vector VSM (VVSM), specifically our 8600 Series VSM with the vector option (86-VEC).


You can read more and download a copy online at: 

Sunday, June 14, 2020

IR Body Temperature Screening Distance Learning Course

By the Infraspection Institute

Infrared Body Temperature Screening is a 5 unit theory and application course for the use of thermal imaging to detect elevated body temperature in humans. 

This is a specialized course focused on a single application. 

Course is equivalent to a five hour classroom course with a two hour period allotted for the online exam at the end of the course. Course completion may be applied toward training requirements for Infraspection Institute Level I, II, or III thermographer certification.

This course covers infrared theory, heat transfer concepts, equipment operation and selection, current regulations, standards compliance, screening area setup and procedures, adjunctive equipment, and safety issues.

For more details including pricing, visit: https://infraspection.com/product/ir-body-temperature-screening-distance-learning/

The Infraspection Institute is the oldest independent infrared training and infrared certification firm in the world. Founded in 1980, Infraspection Institute has trained and certified over 10,000 thermographers worldwide. 

With 40 years in business, Infraspection Institute literally pioneered the infrared training industry. During their long history, they have shaped the infrared industry through training, technical consulting, technical publications, research, standards development, and software publishing. 

Their mission is to support practicing thermographers with educational, certification and support services. They provide timely, accurate and unbiased information about infrared hardware, applications and program development. They are deeply committed to the global advancement of thermography as a science and a profession. 

Friday, June 12, 2020

Recycling or Second Life for Used LI-ion Batteries?

By 2040 the global Li-ion battery recycling market will be worth $31 billion annuallyaccording to the latest IDTechEx report, “Li-ion Battery Recycling 2020-2040”. 

This report provides a comprehensive overview of the current market landscape and trends of Li-ion battery recycling, as well as an in-depth analysis of key recycling processes and technologies. This report also provides an in-depth analysis of the Li-ion battery recycling value chain from a lifecycle perspective: from mining and processing, to battery materials and production, battery usage, throughout to recycling (or second life and recycling). 

The key market players in Li-ion battery recycling are also analysed in the report.

For more information on this report, please visit www.IDTechex.com/LiRecycling or for the full portfolio of related research available from IDTechEx please visit www.IDTechEx.com/research.

Thursday, June 11, 2020

Ralph B Dinwiddie

Rest in Peace

Ralph B Dinwiddie found peace on April 9, 2020 in his home surrounded by love. He was 62 years old. Above all, Ralph was a loving father and husband.

His energy, creativity, and humor were inspiring and contagious. He loved his family and made them a priority in every aspect of his life. Ralph is an inspiration to those he has left behind. He will be missed by many and forgotten by none.

Ralph was born and raised in Southern New Jersey, where he graduated from Stockton State University with a BS in Applied Physics. He completed his MS and Ph.D. at the University of Delaware before making his home in East Tennessee.

He worked as a Senior Research Scientist with Oak Ridge National Laboratory for 30 years and he loved every minute of it, often referring to his job as being like a little boy in a toy store.

Ralph was a world leader in the area of Infrared Thermography, which provided him endless research opportunities.  Among his favorites were investigating the Hunley, examining paintings and their alleged relation to Jack the Ripper, and developing a nanocomposite separator which he and his colleagues received the R&D 100 Award, recognizing the 100 most technologically significant products.

He has been an instrumental member of the Board of Governors of the International Thermal Conductivity Conference, having served as president, chairman, historian and conference host. He was an active participant as an author, session chair and Program Committee member for the SPIE's ThermoSense Conference for many years.  He was also Chair or Co-Chair for the 2000, 2001 and 2009 ThermoSense Conferences. He has over 100 technical publications and 2 patents.

Tirelessly curious, Ralph had many hobbies, interests, and projects. He never stopped learning, and dreamt of returning to college after retirement and traveling with his wife, Sharon. He was an avid stamp collector and past president of the Knoxville Philatelic Society. He worked on the KPS newsletter, designed first day covers that showcased the launch of newly minted stamps for the KPS show KNOXPEx, as well as many KnoxPEx postal cancels.

Ralph was also a lover of good food and an excellent chef. He also enjoyed woodworking, following NASA developments, graphic design, photography, the stock market, and whatever his children were interested in at any given time.

He will be greatly missed by his family, fellow scientists and philatelists!

Wednesday, June 10, 2020

QIRT 2020, (21-30 September 2020 Quantitative InfraRed Thermography


Researchers have been familiar with infrared thermography for many years now. This technique took many fields by storm, sometimes to wither shortly after.

While the beauty of thermographic images and the ease of getting them could explain the success of this technique, the difficulty of getting accurate measurements using "thermal cameras" has caused a certain disaffection toward it.

For this reason, it was decided to establish a forum for:
  • discussing the latest developments in the instrument technique,
  • methodology and methods of analysis in the field of infrared thermography
  • helping to disseminate the latest results in the field throughout the industrial and research worlds.
An international conference, named Quantitative Infrared Thermography (QIRT'92), was held on the premises of École Centrale de Paris , in Château-Malabry, France. During the conference, the QIRT Working Group was established.

 Up to now, there has been thirteen QIRT conferences (see QIRT Archive Section for the complete list).

The last conference held in Berlin, Germany was a big success.

 The next conference, QIRT 2020 will be held in Porto, Portugal, in July 2020. The QIRT 2020 Website contains all details.

 The conference, 3rd QIRT Asia 2019 was held in Tokyo, Japan, in July 2019.

 The conference, 4th QIRT Asia 2021 will be held in Harbin, China, in Summer 2021.

 Organigram of QIRT Organization

 For additional information, contact: Prof. Xavier Maldague Email: maldagx@gel.ulaval.ca

Tuesday, June 9, 2020

AMETEK Land Releases Technology to Help Contain Threat of COVID-19

AMETEK Land's fever screening thermal imaging system designed for human body temperature measurement 


The vIRalert 2 fixed thermal imaging system provides a remote surface measurement of body temperature, automatically alerting the operator to elevated temperatures.

This proven technology calibrates the thermal image with a blackbody calibration source in real-time to provide a system "accuracy*" of better than 0.5 °C and can therefore detect even small temperature changes induced by a fever.

 As a result, the vIRalert 2 system provides reliable skin temperature measurement for screening at point-of-entry into key facilities, like offices, factories, warehouses, schools, government buildings and any other places where infectious diseases can easily spread.

 David Primhak, Director of Development and Product Management at AMETEK Land, explains: “In a world where global travel means infections can pass through populations fast, the ability to screen people for fever is a key tool in reducing the risk of disease spread. vIRalert 2 can detect fever at point-of-entry quickly and remotely, in compliance with social distancing requirements, preventing the risk of infection being transmitted between the operator and members of the public. This is cutting edge technology that could make a huge difference in protecting the population both now and in the future.”

He adds: "Many thermal imagers are unable to achieve the sensitivity required to detect a fever and therefore give false positive readings and low detection percentages – this means a higher chance of spreading the infection throughout the monitored area. vIRalert 2 provides traceable readings, giving mission critical operations the confidence to operate normally and safely."

AMETEK Land’s vIRalert 2 system provides on-screen and audible alerts when a pedestrian with an elevated temperature is detected, allowing simple decision making on whether a person should be further vetted for admission without slowing pedestrian flow.

Quick and easy to install, vIRalert 2 is simple to operate and works straight out of the box. It also has an automatic alert function, which reduces the potential for human error.
______________
* Accuracy is a term used by many instrument makers to imply the preciseness of their measurement devices. It is a qualitative term much like "beautiful" and "rugged"and is technically equivalent to saying "good". The technically correct, quantitative term is "Measurement Uncertainty" that indicates the measurement capability or precision, usually under calibration conditions, in numbers along with a confidence values. Land Instrument's and its predecessor, Land Pyrometers, Ltd. used to provide such detail with all their measurement devices.

EURAMET.M.G-K3 regional comparison of absolute gravimeters

Final Report By:

R Falk1, V Pálinkáš2, H Wziontek1, A Rülke1, M Val'ko2, Ch Ullrich3, H Butta3, J Kostelecký2, M Bilker-Koivula4, J Näränen4 et al.  Published 1 January 2020 • Metrologia, Volume 57, Number 1A


 Abstract


 "The regional key comparison of absolute gravimeters, EURAMET.M.G-K3 and the simultaneously organized additional comparison, was held in Germany at the Geodetic Observatory Wettzell of the German Federal Agency for Cartography and Geodesy in the spring of 2018."

 "Here we present the list of the participants who actually performed measurements during the comparison, the data submitted by the operators as well as the results of the determination of the gravity as a function of height at the comparison sites. The measurement strategy is briefly discussed and the results of the data harmonization is documented. Finally, the results of the constrained least squares adjustment are presented including the degrees of equivalence of each gravimeter and the key comparison reference values."

"To reach the main text of this paper, click on Final Report. Note that this text is that which appears in Appendix B of the BIPM key comparison database kcdb.bipm.org/.

"The final report has been peer-reviewed and approved for publication by the CCM, according to the provisions of the CIPM Mutual Recognition Arrangement (CIPM MRA)."

 Export citation and abstract BibTeX RIS

Thursday, June 4, 2020

World Environment Day

5 June 2020

World Environment Day is the most renowned day for environmental action. Since 1974, it has been celebrated every year on 5 June; engaging governments, businesses, celebrities and citizens to focus their efforts on a pressing environmental issue.

  THE THEME

In 2020, the theme is biodiversity–a concern that is both urgent and existential. Recent events, from bushfires in Brazil, the United States and Australia to locust infestations across East Africa–and now, a global disease pandemic–demonstrate the interdependence of humans and the webs of life in which they exist.

Nature is sending us a message.

  THE COMMUNITY

Above all, World Environment Day offers a global platform for inspiring positive change. It recognizes that global change requires a global community.

It pushes for individuals to think about the way they consume; for businesses to develop greener models; for farmers and manufacturers to produce more sustainably; for governments to safeguard wild spaces; for educators to inspire students to live in harmony with the Earth; and for youth to become fierce gatekeepers of a green future. It requires all of us.

  THE HOST

Every World Environment Day is hosted by a different country, in which official celebrations take place. This year's host is Colombia in partnership with Germany.

  STAY CONNECTED

This year, millions of people will be celebrating digitally, worldwide.

Sign up here to stay informed as we unite, for nature: https://www.worldenvironmentday.global


For media enquiries, email us at unenvironment-newsdesk@un.org
Please note that we can only respond to enquiries from journalists.
Contacts
News Desk
Region: Global
Head of News and Media
Region: Global
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Region: Latin America
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Region: North America
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Region: West Asia

Wednesday, June 3, 2020

Philly Looted and Burned in the Name of...


The Philadelphia Police are looking for these people to do more than study their prescriptions:

 

In the Food Desert area of Philadelphia, burglars both looted and destroyed some of the few grocery stores in the area, but also probably put a hundred or so local residents out of work. Police didn’t respond for 15 hours or more since they were understaffed due to downtown events, like the third video, but this is nothing compared to other cities.

 

 After anarchists and robbers tried to destroy Center City Philadelphia.

 

See more, if you can stand it: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztFXfC0kFHI 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEiqoLY60lY 

https://www.youtube.com/user/PhiladelphiaPolice/videos

https://youtu.be/0790lP0Mris

https://youtu.be/snbnrmvcST0

https://youtu.be/IzYt2eYDnj8

https://youtu.be/-TOxSar2n-4

https://youtu.be/-yxdgSad36c 

https://youtu.be/B6SX0Ocq8ew

https://youtu.be/ZS-ZLwJ5uN4

Celebrated Rizzo Statue moved after dark by Philadelphia’s Mayor, not the vandals who tried in daylight:

https://youtu.be/Kq4SANJNI3I

 Some Loot Found:

https://youtu.be/a3q8VFnSRE0

Monday, June 1, 2020

Climate risks & COVID-19 pandemic

Nature Climate Change May 15, 2020:

https://www.nature.com/nclimate

“The COVID-19 pandemic will be an unprecedented test of governments’ ability to manage compound risks, as climate hazards disrupt outbreak response around the world. 

“Immediate steps can be taken to minimize climate-attributable loss of life, but climate adaptation also needs a long-term strategy for pandemic preparedness.“

Authors

Phillips, C.A., Caldas, A., Cleetus, R. et al. “Compound climate risks in the COVID-19 pandemic”. Nat. Clim. Chang. (2020).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-020-0804-2

Download citation

Increasing the accuracy of your temperature measurements.

Monitor Newsletter at Windmill Software ( https://www.windmill.co.uk/ ) regularly publishes useful articles related to measurement, control,...