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Stanford University research

J. W. Pepper, Effect of Nitric Oxide Control on MHD-Steam Power Plant Economics andPeformance, SU-IPR Report No. 614, Institute for Plasma Research, Stanford University, Calif., Dec. 1974. [Pg.438]

MJNOS5.4. A package available from Stanford Research Institute (affiliated with Stanford University). This package is the state of the ari for mildly nonlinear programming problems. [Pg.483]

The Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, administered by Stanford University, was founded in 1962 as a center for experimental particle physics, but it took until 1966 for its first linear accelerator to be completed. The Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Laboratoiy, built a decade later, became part of SLAC in 1992. Unlike many of other national laboratories that greatly expanded their mission through the years, SLAC always remained a national basic energy research laboratoiy. [Pg.818]

Rouson, D., S.R. Tieszen, and G. Evans, Modeling convection heat transfer and turbulence with fire applications A high temperature vertical plate and a methane fire, in Proceedings of the Summer Program. 2002, Center for Turbulence Research, Stanford University, pp. 53-70. [Pg.168]

Michael Thompson was bom in Cottingham, Yorkshire, on 7 June 1937, studied at Cambridge, where he graduated with first class honours in Mechanical Sciences in 1958 and obtained his PhD in 1962 and his ScD in 1977. He was a Fulbright researcher in aeronautics at Stanford University and joined University College London (UCL) in 1964. He has published four books on instabilities, bifurcations, catastrophe theory and chaos and... [Pg.183]

Stanford University Medical School Center for Research in Disease Prevention Palo Alto, CA 94304... [Pg.7]

R. Stephen Berry, University of Chicago, IL, USA John I. Brauman, Stanford University, CA, USA A. Welford Castleman, Jr., Pennsylvania State University, PA, USA Enrico Clementi, Universite Louis Pasteur, Strasbourg, France Stephen R. Langhoff, NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA, USA K. Morokuma, Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA Peter J. Rossky, University of Texas atAustin, TX, USA Zdenek Slanina, Czech Academy of Sciences, Prague, Czech Republic Donald G. Truhlar, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA IvarUgi, Technische Universitat, Munchen, Germany... [Pg.3]

The most sophisticated model available for predicting biodegradation of organic contaminants in subsurface systems is the biofilm model, presented by Williamson and McCarty149,150 which has been refined over several years by researchers at Stanford University and the University of Illinois/Urbana.151157... [Pg.833]

This research was supported by grants from the National Science Foundation and the Office of Naval Research. Helpful conversations with Professor J. P. Collman of Stanford University are also acknowledged. [Pg.418]

Mark A. Barteau is Robert L. Pigford Professor and Chair of the Department of Chemical Engineering at the University of Delaware. He received his B.S. degree from Washington University in 1976 and his M.S. (1977) and Ph.D. (1981) from Stanford University. His research area is chemical engineering with specialized interests in application of surface techniques to reactions on nonmetals, hydrocarbon and oxygenate chemistry on metals and metal oxides, scanning probe microscopies, and catalysis by metal oxides. [Pg.198]

Richard N. Zare is Marguerite Blake Wilbur Professor in Natural Science in the Department of Chemistry at Stanford University. He received his B.A. in 1961 and his Ph.D. in 1964 from Harvard University. His research areas are physical and analytical chemistry with specialized interests in application of lasers to chemical problems, molecular structure, molecular reaction dynamics, and chemical analysis. Zare has been a member of various NRC committees and served as co-chair of the Commission on Physical Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications and chair of the National Science Board. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences, and he received the U.S. National Medal of Science in 1983. [Pg.201]

Workshop on Fundamental Research in Homogeneous Catalysis as Related to United States Energy Problems. Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, 1974. [Pg.399]

Ye, T., Mittal, R., Udaykumar, H. S., and Shyy, W. J. Computat. Phys. 156, 209-240 (1999). Yusof, J. M. Combined immersed boundaries/B-splines methods for simulations of flows in complex geometries. CTR Annual Research Briefs, NASA Ames/Stanford University (1997). [Pg.63]

Bets received her Bachelor s degree in biology from Stanford University and her PhD in neurochemistry from Washington University (St. Louis). She was a postdoctoral fellow at the U.S. National Institutes of Health and after stints at the Dow-Corning Corporation and Washington State University, she moved to the Oregon Graduate Institute (OGI) in 1977. At the time of her death, Bets was a Research Professor in the Department of Environmental and Biomolecular Systems... [Pg.2]

Stanford-NASA/ Ames Joint Institute for Surface and Microstructure Research, Department of Chemical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA 94305... [Pg.430]

ExxonMobil has given 100 million to the Stanford University Global Climate and Energy Project, where research projects are involved with hydrogen power, advanced combustion, solar energy, biomass, advanced materials, catalysts and C02 storage, C02 capture, and separation. [Pg.96]

This study was initiated with support from the Center for Materials Research at Stanford University under the NSF-MRL program. Addi-... [Pg.110]

International Energy Workshop. EMF/IIASA, 18-20 June 2002. Stanford University. www.iiasa.ac.at/Research/ECS/IEW2002/docs/Paper Tsuchiya.pdf. [Pg.506]

Ex situ (also known as spotted or printed) arrays have become very popular formats, especially for the building of custom noncommercial arrays used primarily by academic laboratories [see Association of Biomolecular Resource Facilities (ABRF) surveys on microarrays atwww.abrf.org]. The printed cDNA microarray was largely developed from gene expression work originating in the laboratories of RO. Brown and R.W. Davis at Stanford University (Schena et al., 1995). Plans for the construction of the microarrayer and split pin designs were available at the Brown lab website at http //cmgm.stanford.edu/ pbrown/mguide/index.html. This enabled researchers to prepare their own microarrays appropriate for their particular experiments. [Pg.38]

Studies on isolation from adrenal cortex and the synthesis of cortisone (in 28 steps), an anti-arthritic hormone, was accomplished in the 1940s by Woodward and others. Cortisone was used as an important military medicine during World War II. Carl Djerassi from Stanford University directed the research at the Syntex Laboratories, which led to the synthesis of the first oral contraceptive pill for women. Koji Mori is very active in the field of the synthesis of pheromones. [Pg.4]

Partly taken from the US Panel Report on New Materials published by Centre for Materials Research, Stanford University (1979). [Pg.123]


See other pages where Stanford University research is mentioned: [Pg.49]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.249]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.24]    [Pg.831]    [Pg.572]    [Pg.31]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.198]    [Pg.79]    [Pg.45]    [Pg.460]    [Pg.392]    [Pg.3]    [Pg.70]    [Pg.235]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.39]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.48]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.440]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.8 , Pg.74 , Pg.75 , Pg.82 ]




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