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California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo

2004

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Articles 31 - 60 of 75

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Development And Calibration Of A Large-Scale Thermal Conductivity Probe, James L. Hanson, Stefan Neuhaeuser, Nazli Yesiller Jul 2004

Development And Calibration Of A Large-Scale Thermal Conductivity Probe, James L. Hanson, Stefan Neuhaeuser, Nazli Yesiller

Civil and Environmental Engineering

A large-scale probe has been developed for measuring the thermal conductivity of geomaterials. The large probe was designed to conduct tests on materials containing large particles, materials with high heterogeneity, and materials with high stiffness. The probe has dimensions of 680 mm length and 15.9 mm diameter and was constructed of stainless steel tubing. The probe operates on the principle of heating an infinite line source in an infinite medium. Initially, parametric evaluations were conducted to determine the operational and test conditions for the large probe, including power level, heating duration, and zone of heating influence. Then, tests were conducted …


Identification Of Hysteretic Systems With Slip Using Bootstrap Filter, S. J. Li, Yoshiyuki Suzuki, Mohammad N. Noori Jul 2004

Identification Of Hysteretic Systems With Slip Using Bootstrap Filter, S. J. Li, Yoshiyuki Suzuki, Mohammad N. Noori

Office of the Dean (CENG) Scholarship

Hysteretic models with slip are frequently used to predict the non-linear behaviour of many structural systems, for example wood buildings and reinforced concrete structures. A model, called SL model, which can describe the pinching of most practical hysteresis loops perfectly was proposed by Baber and Noori. This model is characterised by control parameters that have to be identified from observed experimental data. A method of estimating the parameters of SL model on the basis of input–output data based on Bayesian state estimation and bootstrap filter is suggested in this paper, which has the great advantages of being able to handle …


Efficient Orchestration Of Sub-Word Parallelism In Media Processors, John Y. Oliver, Venkatesh Akella, Frederic T. Chong Jun 2004

Efficient Orchestration Of Sub-Word Parallelism In Media Processors, John Y. Oliver, Venkatesh Akella, Frederic T. Chong

Electrical Engineering

Communication and multimedia applications with increased data rates and enhanced functionality continuously raise the bar for the computational requirements of future microprocessors. In order to meet these computational demands it is necessary to exploit sub-word parallelism efficiently. We propose to make sub-word data movement a first-class operation in microprocessor architectures by introducing a Sub-word Permutation Unit (SPU)in the execution pipeline. The SPU is evaluated in the context of the MMX media co-processor for the Intel Pentium architectures, but our results can be extended to any processor that supports sub-word parallelism. We find that the SPU all ws us to orchestrate …


Travelogue From The Materials World: A First Week Laboratory Activity, Katherine C. Chen, Blair London, Linda Vanasupa, Timothy T. Orling, Lisa Christensen Jun 2004

Travelogue From The Materials World: A First Week Laboratory Activity, Katherine C. Chen, Blair London, Linda Vanasupa, Timothy T. Orling, Lisa Christensen

Materials Engineering

A fun, yet educational, laboratory activity was developed for the first week of an introductory Materials Engineering laboratory in order to set the stage for the rest of the quarter. The class is broken up into 8 teams, and each team performs a different experiment during each lab period. The teams then rotate lab experiments each week in a round robin manner, and thus teamwork is an important component of the class. In order to quickly promote team bonding the very first week, each team goes on a materials scavenger hunt together. A variety of materials-related items are to be …


Interactive Demonstrations And Laboratories Using Shape Memory Alloys, Wendy C. Crone, Eric J. Voss, Katherine C. Chen Jun 2004

Interactive Demonstrations And Laboratories Using Shape Memory Alloys, Wendy C. Crone, Eric J. Voss, Katherine C. Chen

Materials Engineering

Shape memory alloys (SMAs) constitute a unique class of materials that undergo a reversible phase transformation allowing the material to display dramatic stress-induced and temperature-induced deformations that are recoverable. Nickel titanium (NiTi) is a shape memory alloy used in a wide variety of biomedical, aerospace, automotive and other applications. The austenite-martensite phase transformation that occurs in these alloys with changes in temperature or applied stress is responsible for the unique properties of this material. The unusual behavior of SMAs provides an exciting way to engage students and can be incorporated into a variety of courses under topics such as phase …


Synchroscalar: A Multiple Clock Domain, Power-Aware, Tile-Based Embedded Processor, John Y. Oliver, Ravishankar Rao, Paul Sultana, Jedidiah Crandall, Erik Czernikowski, Leslie W. Jones, Iv, Diana Franklin, Venkatesh Akella, Frederic T. Chong Jun 2004

Synchroscalar: A Multiple Clock Domain, Power-Aware, Tile-Based Embedded Processor, John Y. Oliver, Ravishankar Rao, Paul Sultana, Jedidiah Crandall, Erik Czernikowski, Leslie W. Jones, Iv, Diana Franklin, Venkatesh Akella, Frederic T. Chong

Electrical Engineering

We present Synchroscalar, a tile-based architecture for embedded processing that is designed to provide the flexibility of DSPs while approaching the power efficiency of ASICs. We achieve this goal by providing high parallelism and voltage scaling while minimizing control and communication costs. Specifically, Synchroscalar uses columns of processor tiles organized into statically-assigned frequency-voltage domains to minimize power consumption. Furthermore, while columns use SIMD control to minimize overhead, data-dependent computations can be supported by extremely flexible statically-scheduled communication between columns. We provide a detailed evaluation of Synchroscalar including SPICE simulation, wire and device models, synthesis of key components, cycle-level simulation, and …


Does Academic Dishonesty Relate To Unethical Behavior In Professional Practice? An Exploratory Study, Trevor S. Harding, Donald D. Carpenter, Cynthia J. Finelli, Honor J. Passow Jun 2004

Does Academic Dishonesty Relate To Unethical Behavior In Professional Practice? An Exploratory Study, Trevor S. Harding, Donald D. Carpenter, Cynthia J. Finelli, Honor J. Passow

Materials Engineering

Previous research indicates that students in engineering self-report cheating in college at higher rates than those in most other disciplines. Prior work also suggests that participation in one deviant behavior is a reasonable predictor of future deviant behavior. This combination of factors leads to a situation where engineering students who frequently participate in academic dishonesty are more likely to make unethical decisions in professional practice. To investigate this scenario, we propose the hypotheses that (1) there are similarities in the decision-making processes used by engineering students when considering whether or not to participate in academic and professional dishonesty, and (2) …


Life Cycle Assessment As A Tool For Green Manufacturing Education, Trevor S. Harding Jun 2004

Life Cycle Assessment As A Tool For Green Manufacturing Education, Trevor S. Harding

Materials Engineering

The design and production of engineering products that have a reduced impact on the environment and human health has increasingly become a strategic goal of corporations. Consequently, starting engineers will need to be educated in green design techniques. One method that is particularly attractive to engineers is Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). LCA is an objective approach to evaluating the environmental burden of a product, process or activity by identifying and quantifying material and energy usage and waste outputs at every life stage. LCA involves three steps: identification of scope of analysis, life cycle inventory, and impact analysis. Such an approach …


The Influence Of Academic Dishonesty On Ethical Decision- Making In The Workplace: A Study Of Engineering Students, Trevor S. Harding, Donald D. Carpenter, Cynthia J. Finelli, Honor J. Passow Jun 2004

The Influence Of Academic Dishonesty On Ethical Decision- Making In The Workplace: A Study Of Engineering Students, Trevor S. Harding, Donald D. Carpenter, Cynthia J. Finelli, Honor J. Passow

Materials Engineering

According to studies conducted over the past four decades, engineering students self-report high frequencies of academic dishonesty (cheating) while in college. Research on college students in all fields has indicated that such behavior is more common among students who participate in academic dishonesty at the high school level and that it is correlated with other deviant or unethical behaviors, such as petty theft and lying. If, in fact, such correlations do exist, one might hypothesize that there is also a relationship between academic dishonesty in college and deviant or unethical behavior in professional practice. Placing this relationship in the context …


One-Tap Wideband I/Q Compensation For Zero-If Filters, Peter Kiss, Vladimir I. Prodanov Jun 2004

One-Tap Wideband I/Q Compensation For Zero-If Filters, Peter Kiss, Vladimir I. Prodanov

Electrical Engineering

The I/Q imbalance is one of the performance bottlenecks in transceivers with stringent requirements imposed by applications such as 802.11a. The mismatch between the frequency responses of two analog low-pass filters, used, e.g., for channel selection in zero-IF receivers, makes this I/Q imbalance frequency dependent. Usually, frequency-dependent I/Q mismatch is estimated and corrected by adaptive techniques, which are complex to implement and may converge slowly due to noise. In this work, a simple, delay-based I/Q compensation scheme is proposed based on an extensive statistical analysis. Its digital implementation uses only two coefficients, which are tuned by a one-step two-tone error …


Investigation Of Subcritical Fatigue Crack Growth In Gamma Titanium Aluminides, Blair London May 2004

Investigation Of Subcritical Fatigue Crack Growth In Gamma Titanium Aluminides, Blair London

Materials Engineering

Our titanium aluminide alloy was readily heat treated to a fully lamellar state by holding at 1345C for 1.5 hours and furnace cooling resulting in a grain size of 330 muon m. The yield stress, ultimate stress, and total elongation were 315MPa, 465MPa, and 0.46% respectively. The fully lamellar microstructure shows significant work hardening. No long cracks initiated at R=0.1 and variation max=300MPa with up to 1.4 million cycles.


I/Q Imbalance Of Two-Path Ladder Filters, Peter Kiss, Vladimir I. Prodanov May 2004

I/Q Imbalance Of Two-Path Ladder Filters, Peter Kiss, Vladimir I. Prodanov

Electrical Engineering

The frequency-(in)dependent I/Q imbalance of analog filters is a significant contributor to the tight noise budget of high-performance wireless applications, such as 802.11a wireless LANs. This paper proposes a “frequency-dependent” statistical I/Q-imbalance analysis method for two-path filters, which can be configured for both low-IF and zero-IF architectures. A 7-pole complex band-pass ladder filter is analyzed, and it shows large image rejection ratio (rms IMR > 43.7 dB for 3 σ). The same filter, but reconfigured as a pair of real low-pass filters, achieved about 13-dB less IMR. These results suggest a low-IF architectural choice to combat the I/Q imbalance of two-path …


Evaluation Of Nonlinear Static Procedures Using Strong-Motion Building Records, Rakesh K. Goel May 2004

Evaluation Of Nonlinear Static Procedures Using Strong-Motion Building Records, Rakesh K. Goel

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The objective of this investigation is to evaluate the FEMA-356 Nonlinear Static Procedure (NSP), the Sum-Difference procedure, and the Modal Pushover Analysis (MPA) procedure using recorded motions of buildings that were damaged during the 1994 Northridge earthquake. It is found the FEMA-356 NSP and the Sum-Difference procedures typically underestimates the drifts in upper stories and overestimates them in lower stories. The MPA procedure provides estimates of drifts that are better compared to the FEMA-356 NSP and the Sum-Difference procedure. In particular, the MPA procedure is able to capture the effects of higher modes.


Evaluation Of Nonlinear Static Procedures Using Strong-Motion Building Records, Rakesh K. Goel May 2004

Evaluation Of Nonlinear Static Procedures Using Strong-Motion Building Records, Rakesh K. Goel

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The objective of this investigation is to evaluate the FEMA-356 Nonlinear Static Procedure (NSP) and a recently developed Modal Pushover Analysis (MPA) procedure using recorded motions of buildings that were damaged during the 1994 Northridge earthquake. It is found the FEMA-356 NSP typically underestimates the drifts in upper stories and overestimates them in lower stories. The MPA procedure provides much-improved estimates of the response compared to the FEMA-356 NSP. In particular, the MPA procedure, unlike the FEMA-356 NSP, is able to capture the effects of higher modes.


Biological Feasibility And Optimization Of Biosparging At A Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Site, Jason G. Waudby, Yarrow M. Nelson May 2004

Biological Feasibility And Optimization Of Biosparging At A Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Site, Jason G. Waudby, Yarrow M. Nelson

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The purpose of this study was to identify any biological/chemical factors which may be limiting the biodegradation of total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) contaminants at a biosparge site located at a former oil field near Guadalupe, California. Laboratory experiments using a combination of respirometry and TPH analyses were conducted to determine if biodegradation of TPH at the site is limited by a lack of hydrocarbon-degrading microorganisms, depleted inorganic nutrient concentrations, insufficient dissolved oxygen supply, or the chemical composition of the partially biodegraded petroleum constituents in the groundwater. No increase in total CO2 production was observed in samples with added nutrients, …


Characterization Of Aerobic And Anaerobic Microbial Activity In Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soil, Lynne C. Maloney, Yarrow M. Nelson, Christopher L. Kitts May 2004

Characterization Of Aerobic And Anaerobic Microbial Activity In Hydrocarbon-Contaminated Soil, Lynne C. Maloney, Yarrow M. Nelson, Christopher L. Kitts

Civil and Environmental Engineering

Microbial activity in hydrocarbon-contaminated soil was characterized and quantified to determine the potential for natural attenuation at a former oil field in California. Plate counts, direct microscopic counts, and carbon dioxide and methane production rates were used to quantify the populations and activity of soil microorganisms. Terminal restriction fragment (TRF) analysis provided preliminary identification of dominant microorganisms and community shifts as depth and contaminant concentrations changed. Plate counts under aerobic conditions resulted in 1.5 to 22 × 106 colony-forming units (CFU) per gram of soil, and direct microscopic counts of total bacteria were 3 to 33 × 106 …


Biodegradability And Toxicity Of Hydrocarbon Leachate From Land Treatment Units, Sandy L. Scott, Yarrow M. Nelson May 2004

Biodegradability And Toxicity Of Hydrocarbon Leachate From Land Treatment Units, Sandy L. Scott, Yarrow M. Nelson

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The biodegradability of leachate from the land treatment of hydrocarbon-contaminated soil was investigated in the laboratory using respirometry and toxicity testing in combination with total petroleum hydrocarbon (TPH) measurements. Soil in land treatment units (LTU) had been contaminated with a diesel-like hydrocarbon mixture formerly used as a diluent for crude oil at an oil field in California. Leachate was collected from two different LTUs for treatability testing in a respirometer under aerobic conditions. Only about 12% reduction in TPH concentration was observed after aeration for 161 days, indicating limited biodegradability of the hydrocarbon constituents in the leachate. Similarly, Microtox® toxicity …


High Resolution Turbulence Treatment Of F/A-18 Tail Buffet, Scott A. Morton, Russell M. Cummings, Denis B. Kholodar Apr 2004

High Resolution Turbulence Treatment Of F/A-18 Tail Buffet, Scott A. Morton, Russell M. Cummings, Denis B. Kholodar

Aerospace Engineering

Unsteady tail loads of the F/A-18 are computed using various turbulence models at an angle of attack consistent with buffet induced by leading-edge extension vortex breakdown. Comparison of these industry standard turbulence models with the Detached Eddy Simulation (DES) hybrid RANS-LES approach reveals the inadequacies of RANS methods and the ability of DES to reproduce the observed unsteadiness at these conditions. Computed vortex breakdown position and frequencies of the DES method are shown to be accurate by comparison to flight test and experimental results. Finally, comparison of the DES unsteady tail pressures with flight-test tail pressures reveal the ability of …


Teaching Corporate Culture: An Engineer's Survival Guide, Richard N. Savage Apr 2004

Teaching Corporate Culture: An Engineer's Survival Guide, Richard N. Savage

Materials Engineering

The transition from new engineering graduate to successful member of corporate America is a difficult journey. Often the skills required are not part of a student’s traditional undergraduate education. At Cal Poly, we have integrated a new course into our existing Senior Project curriculum which enables students to develop the professional skills necessary to become an effective member of any corporation. Key skills such as communication, problem solving and project management are practiced through active learning techniques. These as well as other topics studied are required for ABET certification. The new course investigates the mission and values that are at …


Laser Ignition Of Pulverized Coals, John C. Chen, Masayuki Taniguchi, Kiyoshi Narato, Kazuyuki Ito Apr 2004

Laser Ignition Of Pulverized Coals, John C. Chen, Masayuki Taniguchi, Kiyoshi Narato, Kazuyuki Ito

Mechanical Engineering

We present a novel experiment to study the ignition of pulverized coal. A dilute stream of particles is dropped into a laminar, upward-flow wind tunnel with a quartz test section. The gas stream is not preheated. A single pulse from a Nd:YAG laser is focused through the tunnel and ignites the fuel. The transparent test section and cool walls allow for optical detection of the ignition process. In this article we describe the experiment and demonstrate its capabilities by observing the ignition behavior of spherical, amorphous-carbon particles and two coals: an anthracite are a high-volatile bituminous coal. The ignition behaviors …


Cm Facilities Update, Construction Management Department Apr 2004

Cm Facilities Update, Construction Management Department

Construction Management

No abstract provided.


Critical Variables Of Solder Paste Stencil Printing For Micro-Bga And Fine-Pitch Qfp, Jianbiao Pan, Gregory L. Tonkay, Robert H. Storer, Ronald M. Sallade, David J. Leandri Apr 2004

Critical Variables Of Solder Paste Stencil Printing For Micro-Bga And Fine-Pitch Qfp, Jianbiao Pan, Gregory L. Tonkay, Robert H. Storer, Ronald M. Sallade, David J. Leandri

Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering

Stencil printing continues to be the dominant method of solder deposition in high-volume surface-mount assembly. Control of the amount of solder paste deposited is critical in the case of fine-pitch and ultrafine-pitch surface-mount assembly. The process is still not well understood as indicated by the fact that industry reports 52-71% surface-mount technology (SMT) defects are related to the solder paste stencil printing process. The purpose of this paper is to identify the critical variables that influence the volume, area, and height of solder paste deposited. An experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of relevant process parameters on the amount …


Structural Health Monitoring And Damage Detection Using An Intelligent Parameter Varying (Ipv) Technique, Soheil Saadat, Mohammad N. Noori, Gregory D. Buckner, Tadatoshi Furukawa, Yoshiyuki Suzuki Mar 2004

Structural Health Monitoring And Damage Detection Using An Intelligent Parameter Varying (Ipv) Technique, Soheil Saadat, Mohammad N. Noori, Gregory D. Buckner, Tadatoshi Furukawa, Yoshiyuki Suzuki

Office of the Dean (CENG) Scholarship

Most structural health monitoring and damage detection strategies utilize dynamic response information to identify the existence, location, and magnitude of damage. Traditional model-based techniques seek to identify parametric changes in a linear dynamic model, while non-model-based techniques focus on changes in the temporal and frequency characteristics of the system response. Because restoring forces in base-excited structures can exhibit highly non-linear characteristics, non-linear model-based approaches may be better suited for reliable health monitoring and damage detection. This paper presents the application of a novel intelligent parameter varying (IPV) modeling and system identification technique, developed by the authors, to detect damage in …


Ultrasonic Testing For Geomembranes, Nazli Yesiller Mar 2004

Ultrasonic Testing For Geomembranes, Nazli Yesiller

Civil and Environmental Engineering

No abstract provided.


Preliminary Report On The 22 December 2003, M 6.5 San Simeon, California Earthquake, Jeanne L. Hardebeck, John Boatwright, Douglas Dreger, Rakesh K. Goel, Vladimir Graizer, Kenneth Hudnut, Chen Ji, Lucile Jones, John Langbein, Jian Lin, Evelyn Roeloffs, Robert Simpson, Keith Stark, Ross Stein, John C. Tinsley Mar 2004

Preliminary Report On The 22 December 2003, M 6.5 San Simeon, California Earthquake, Jeanne L. Hardebeck, John Boatwright, Douglas Dreger, Rakesh K. Goel, Vladimir Graizer, Kenneth Hudnut, Chen Ji, Lucile Jones, John Langbein, Jian Lin, Evelyn Roeloffs, Robert Simpson, Keith Stark, Ross Stein, John C. Tinsley

Civil and Environmental Engineering

The Mw 6.5 San Simeon earthquake struck the central California coast on 22 December 2003 at 19:15:56 UTC (11:15:56 am local time.) The epicenter was located 11 km northeast of the town of San Simeon, and 39 km west-northwest of Paso Robles (Figure 1), as reported by the California Integrated Seismic Network (CISN, the California region of the Advanced National Seismic System [ANSS]). The mainshock nucleated at 35.702°N, 121.108°W and a depth of 7.1 km, and the rupture propagated unilaterally to the southeast. The strong directivity of the rupture resulted in a concentration of damage and aftershock...


Irrigation District Observations On Large Diameter, Low Pressure Pipeline Materials, Charles M. Burt Mar 2004

Irrigation District Observations On Large Diameter, Low Pressure Pipeline Materials, Charles M. Burt

BioResource and Agricultural Engineering

There are approximately 1,400 miles of low pressure non-reinforced cast-in-place ("monolithic" or "CIP") concrete pipe in California irrigation districts. Cast-in-place pipe was irrigation districts’ material of choice for large diameter pipelines from 1930 to at least 1980. Many of these pipelines were installed in the early 1900’s. They are predominately found on the east side of the San Joaquin Valley, from Manteca in the north to Visalia in the south. Most of these pipes are deteriorating and will need to be replaced within the next 10-20 years.

Irrigation districts have attempted to find new ways to repair these pipes. However, …


A "Divide And Conquer" Technique For Implementing Wide Dynamic Range Continuous-Time Filters, Yorgos Palaskas, Yannis Tsividis, Vladimir I. Prodanov, Vito Boccuzzi Feb 2004

A "Divide And Conquer" Technique For Implementing Wide Dynamic Range Continuous-Time Filters, Yorgos Palaskas, Yannis Tsividis, Vladimir I. Prodanov, Vito Boccuzzi

Electrical Engineering

This paper presents a technique for implementing analog filters with wide dynamic range and low power dissipation and chip area. The desired dynamic range of the filter is divided into subranges, each covered by a different filtering path optimized specifically for this subrange. This results in small admittance levels for the individual filtering paths and correspondingly small power dissipation and chip area. The system provides undisturbed output during range switching, contrary to conventional automatic gain control (AGC)/filter arrangements that generate disturbances every time the gain of the AGC changes. We also report on a low-noise highly linear CMOS transconductor useful …


Evaluation Of Modal And Fema Pushover Analyses: Sac Buildings, Rakesh K. Goel, Anil K. Chopra Feb 2004

Evaluation Of Modal And Fema Pushover Analyses: Sac Buildings, Rakesh K. Goel, Anil K. Chopra

Civil and Environmental Engineering

This paper comprehensively evaluates the Modal Pushover Analysis (MPA) procedure against the ‘‘exact’’ nonlinear response history analysis (RHA) and investigates the accuracy of seismic demands determined by pushover analysis using FEMA-356 force distributions; the MPA procedure in this paper contains several improvements over the original version presented in Chopra and Goel (2002). Seismic demands are computed for six buildings, each analyzed for 20 ground motions. It is demonstrated that with increasing number of ‘‘modes’’ included, the height-wise distribution of story drifts and plastic rotations estimated by MPA becomes generally similar to trends noted from nonlinear RHA. The additional bias and …


A Virtual Reality Environment For Multi-Sensor Data Integration, Scott Papson, Joseph Oagaro, Robi Polikar, John Chen, John L. Schmalzel, Shreekanth Mandayam Jan 2004

A Virtual Reality Environment For Multi-Sensor Data Integration, Scott Papson, Joseph Oagaro, Robi Polikar, John Chen, John L. Schmalzel, Shreekanth Mandayam

Mechanical Engineering

Virtual reality (VR) has typically found applications in industrial design, rapid prototyping and advanced scientific visualization. In this paper, we investigate the use of VR for multi-sensor data integration. We attempt to demonstrate that multiple data types-graphical, functional and measurement can be effectively combined inside of a VR environment. This platform allows the user to rapidly sift through large and complex data sets and isolate features of interest. Furthermore, VR environments can be made to evolve based on system data and user input-this provides the ability to develop scenarios that can be used to make informed decisions. Results demonstrating the …


Optically Coupled Etalons And Methods Of Making And Using Same, Michael A. Scobey, Lucien P. Ghislain, Dennis Derickson, Loren F. Stokes Jan 2004

Optically Coupled Etalons And Methods Of Making And Using Same, Michael A. Scobey, Lucien P. Ghislain, Dennis Derickson, Loren F. Stokes

Electrical Engineering

Optical elements comprise stacked, optically matched and optically coupled etalons, at least one of the optically coupled etalons comprising first and second selectively transparent thin film mirror coatings on opposite surfaces of a bulk optic. The bulk optic defines the cavity spacing of the etalon and may, for example be formed of a monolithic body of silica or other optically transparent glass diced from a glass wafer. The bulk optic may further comprise a wedge coating of progressively increasing thickness overlying the monolithic glass body and compensating for, or offsetting non-parallelism of the bulk optic. The bulk optic may further …