DIFFERENTIAL EQUATIONS, 187 DIGITAL DATA, 84, 217 DIGITAL TELEVISION, 217 DILUTION, 53 DIMENSIONAL ANALYSIS, 96 DIOXIDES, 123 DIPOLE ANTENNAS, 62, 76 DIRAC EQUATION, 208 DIRECT CURRENT, 31 DIRECT NUMERICAL SIMULATION, 78 DIRECTIONAL SOLIDIFICATION (CRYSTALS), 37 DISCONTINUITY, 66 DISCRETE FUNCTIONS, 208 DISPLACEMENT, 129 DISPLAY DEVICES, 8, 27, 149 DISSOLVED ORGANIC MATTER, 140 DISTRIBUTED FEEDBACK LASERS, 89 DISTRIBUTED INTERACTIVE SIM- ULATION, 180 DISTRIBUTED MEMORY, 80 DISTRIBUTED PROCESSING, 25, 80, 161, 165, 174, 177, 179, 214, 218, 219 DISTRIBUTION (PROPERTY), 223 DISTRIBUTION FUNCTIONS, 25 DIURNAL VARIATIONS, 118 DOCUMENTS, 217 DOPPLER RADAR, 137 DRAG REDUCTION, 17, 20 DRAINAGE PATTERNS, 127 DRINKING, 144, 146 DROP SIZE, 9 DROPS (LIQUIDS), 9 DROUGHT, 100 DRUGS, 144 DUCTED FANS, 188 DUCTILITY, 52 DURABILITY, 44, 151 DUST, 130, 223, 225 DWARF GALAXIES, 225 DYNAMIC CONTROL, 198 DYNAMIC PRESSURE, 27 DYNAMIC RANGE, 144, 156 DYNAMIC RESPONSE, 20 DYNAMIC STRUCTURAL ANALYSIS, 2 ST–4 E EARTH ALBEDO, 115 EARTH MAGNETOSPHERE, <strong>28</strong>, 29 EARTH OBSERVATIONS (FROM SPACE), 88 EARTH RESOURCES, 107 EARTH SCIENCES, 99 EARTH-MARS TRAJECTORIES, 229 EARTHQUAKES, 129 ECOLOGY, 181 ECOSYSTEMS, 101, 118, 184 EDUCATION, 8, 11, 27, 68, 99, 149, 170, 173, 212, 213, 214 EIGENVECTORS, 208 ELASTIC PROPERTIES, 98 ELECTRIC FIELDS, 234 ELECTRIC GENERATORS, 39 ELECTRIC POTENTIAL, 71 ELECTRIC POWER PLANTS, 120 ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLIES, <strong>38</strong> ELECTRIC SWITCHES, 72 ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING, 204 ELECTRICAL RESISTIVITY, 51 ELECTRO-OPTICS, 72 ELECTROCUTANEOUS COMMU- NICATION, 149 ELECTROLYTES, 53 ELECTROLYTIC CELLS, 76 ELECTROMAGNETIC COUPLING, 62 ELECTRON DISTRIBUTION, 231 ELECTRON ENERGY, 202 ELECTRON SCATTERING, 193 ELECTRONIC AIRCRAFT, 2 ELECTRONIC COMMERCE, 72 ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT, 18, 73, 75 ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT TESTS, 73 ELECTRONIC MAIL, 174 ELECTRONIC PACKAGING, 61, 75 ELECTRONIC STRUCTURE, 46, 193 ELECTRONIC WARFARE, 2 ELECTRONS, 231 ELECTROPHYSICS, 204 ELECTROSTATIC GENERATORS, 234 ELLIPTICAL GALAXIES, 232, 233 EMISSION, 124 EMISSION SPECTRA, 103, 106, 224 ENCAPSULATED MICROCIRCUITS, 77 END-TO-END DATA SYSTEMS, 158 ENERGY DISTRIBUTION, 192 ENERGY STORAGE, <strong>38</strong> ENERGY TECHNOLOGY, 121, 122 ENGINE DESIGN, 24, 25, <strong>38</strong>, 79, 91 ENGINE INLETS, 82 ENGINE NOISE, 188 ENGINE PARTS, 91 ENGINE TESTS, 91 ENGINEERS, 11, 60 ENHANCED VISION, 153 ENTROPY, 182 ENVIRONMENT EFFECTS, 104 ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION, 127 ENVIRONMENT PROTECTION, 54, 124 ENVIRONMENT SIMULATION, 99 ENVIRONMENTAL CLEANUP, 134 ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING, 122 ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING, 100 ENVIRONMENTAL TESTS, 199 ENVIRONMENTS, 148 EPITAXY, 206 EPOXY RESINS, 53 EQUALIZERS (CIRCUITS), 154 EQUATIONS OF STATE, 197 ERROR ANALYSIS, 84, 97, 160, 186, 216 ERRORS, 186 ESA SATELLITES, 34 ESTIMATES, 186 ESTIMATING, 100, 159, 185, 223 ESTUARIES, 140 ETCHANTS, 76 ETHERS, 47 ETHYLENE, 53 EUCLIDEAN GEOMETRY, 186 EULER BUCKLING, 18 EVALUATION, 3, 57, 66, 73, 88, 213, 216 EVANESCENCE, 203 EVAPORATION, 78 EVOLUTION (DEVELOPMENT), 148 EXHAUST EMISSION, 54, 61, 125, 129 EXHAUST GASES, 25, 42, 54 EXOBIOLOGY, 142 EXPERIMENT DESIGN, 21, 204 EXPERIMENTATION, 51 EXPERT SYSTEMS, 168 EXPIRATION, 147 EXPOSURE, 232 EXTRACTION, 144 EXTRAVEHICULAR ACTIVITY, 153 F F-16 AIRCRAFT, 25 FABRICATION, 21, <strong>38</strong>, 65, 67, 72, 74, 83, 88, 199, 215, 221 FAILURE, 36, 183, 199, 2<strong>28</strong> FAR ULTRAVIOLET RADIATION, 57, 71 FARM CROPS, 109 FAST FOURIER TRANSFORMA- TIONS, 172 FASTENERS, 30
FATIGUE (MATERIALS), 50, 93, 96 FATIGUE LIFE, 50 FEASIBILITY ANALYSIS, 136 FERRITIC STAINLESS STEELS, 50 FERROELECTRICITY, 63 FEYNMAN DIAGRAMS, 210 FIBER COMPOSITES, 43, 44, 54 FIBER OPTICS, 49 FIELD EFFECT TRANSISTORS, 74 FIELD TESTS, 152 FIELD THEORY (PHYSICS), 208 FIGHTER AIRCRAFT, 12, 16 FINE STRUCTURE, 196, 227 FINITE ELEMENT METHOD, 19, 34, 92, 186 FINITE VOLUME METHOD, 186 FIRE PREVENTION, 116 FISSION, 47, 196, 197 FIXTURES, 53 FLAMMABILITY, 100 FLAT SURFACES, 11 FLATNESS, 115 FLEET SATELLITE COMMUNICA- TION SYSTEM, 36 FLEXIBILITY, 185 FLIGHT ALTITUDE, 116 FLIGHT CONDITIONS, 4 FLIGHT CONTROL, 26 FLIGHT CREWS, 8, 10, 149 FLIGHT HAZARDS, 214 FLIGHT OPERATIONS, 116 FLIGHT OPTIMIZATION, 1 FLIGHT PATHS, 117 FLIGHT SIMULATION, 8 FLIGHT TESTS, 5, 18 FLOW CHARACTERISTICS, 80, 190 FLOW DISTRIBUTION, 39, 48, 78, 80, 83 FLOW MEASUREMENT, 202 FLUID DYNAMICS, 83 FOCAL PLANE DEVICES, 68 FOLIAGE, 119 FORECASTING, 9, 136, 139 FOREST FIRES, 100, 108, 116 FORESTS, 119 FOSSILS, 129 FRACTURE MECHANICS, 52 FRACTURES (MATERIALS), 129 FRACTURING, 18, 199 FRAGMENTATION, 51, 197 FREE CONVECTION, 51 FREEZING, 9 FREQUENCIES, 59, 62, 65, 190 FRICTION WELDING, 95 FUELS, 129 FUNCTIONAL DESIGN SPECIFI- CATIONS, 27 FURNACES, 94 FUSELAGES, 18 FUZZY SYSTEMS, 71, 155 G GALACTIC MASS, 221 GALAXIES, 184, 223, 226 GAMMA RAY BURSTS, 233 GAMMA RAY OBSERVATORY, 233 GAMMA RAYS, 184, 195 GAS DYNAMICS, 40, 79 GAS EXCHANGE, 118 GAS GENERATORS, 91 GAS JETS, 4 GAS TURBINE ENGINES, 23, 24, 25 GASES, 225 GAUGE THEORY, 210 GENETIC ALGORITHMS, 14, 15, 16, 97, 161, 181, 186 GEODESY, 134 GEODETIC SURVEYS, 131, 134 GEOLOGICAL FAULTS, 129, 134 GEOLOGICAL SURVEYS, 134 GEOLOGY, 129 GEOMETRIC ACCURACY, 86, 117 GEOMETRIC RECTIFICATION (IMAGERY), 86 GEOMETRY, 191 GEOPHYSICS, 217 GEOS SATELLITES (ESA), 34 GEOTHERMAL ENERGY UTILIZA- TION, 122 GEOTHERMAL RESOURCES, 100 GERMANIUM, 74, 204 GLACIERS, 135 GLACIOLOGY, 135 GLASS, 46, 207 GLOBAL POSITIONING SYSTEM, 10, 131 GLOBULAR CLUSTERS, 224 GLYCEROLS, 42 GOGGLES, 151, 152, 153 GRADIENTS, 59, 109 GRAIN SIZE, 51 GRAPHICAL USER INTERFACE, 162, 164 GRAPHITE-EPOXY COMPOSITES, 44 GRAVITATIONAL EFFECTS, 29 GRAVITATIONAL FIELDS, 211 GRAVITATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY, 36 GREENLAND, 130 GRID GENERATION (MATHEMAT- ICS), 22, 93 GROUND TESTS, 215 GROUND TRUTH, 117 GUIDANCE (MOTION), 10 GUIDANCE SENSORS, 8 GULFS, 101 H H II REGIONS, 221, 222 H LINES, 224 H-2 CONTROL, 59 HALL EFFECT, 42 HALOS, 197 HANDBOOKS, 75 HARDWARE, 73, 155 HARDWARE-IN-THE-LOOP SIMULA- TION, 68 HARMONIC EXCITATION, 191 HARMONIC RADIATION, 191 HARMONICS, 74 HAZARDS, 144 HEAD (ANATOMY), 150 HEAD-UP DISPLAYS, 8 HEALTH, 147 HEARING, 67 HEART, 144 HEAT RESISTANT ALLOYS, 41, 94, 96 HEAT SOURCES, 121 HEAT TRANSFER, 40 HEATING EQUIPMENT, 121 HEAVY ELEMENTS, 226 HELICOPTERS, 7, 18, 20 HELIUM, 46 HELIUM ISOTOPES, 139 HELMETS, 150, 151 HETEROJUNCTIONS, 204 HEURISTIC METHODS, 183 HH-65 HELICOPTER, 152 HIGH CURRENT, 75 HIGH ELECTRON MOBILITY TRAN- SISTORS, 64, 74 HIGH ENERGY ELECTRONS, 231 HIGH PRESSURE, 55 HIGH RESOLUTION, 85, 137 HIGH TEMPERATURE, 94, 108, 151 HIGH TEMPERATURE SUPERCON- DUCTORS, 74 HIGH VOLTAGES, 31 HIPPOCAMPUS, 142 HISTORIES, 215 HOLOGRAPHY, 178 HOMOGENEITY, 115 HOMOGENEOUS TURBULENCE, 83 HUBBLE SPACE TELESCOPE, 224 HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 150 HUMAN BEINGS, 144, 145 ST–5
- Page 1 and 2:
Scientific and Technical Aerospace
- Page 3 and 4:
Introduction Scientific and Technic
- Page 5 and 6:
Subject Divisions Table of Contents
- Page 7 and 8:
ground equipment and systems. For a
- Page 9 and 10:
Subject Categories of the Division
- Page 11 and 12:
48 Oceanography 139 Includes the ph
- Page 13 and 14:
72 Atomic and Molecular Physics 191
- Page 15 and 16:
Document Availability Information T
- Page 17 and 18:
Avail: NASA Public Document Rooms.
- Page 19 and 20:
NASA CASI Price Tables — Effectiv
- Page 21 and 22:
ALABAMA AUBURN UNIV. AT MONTGOMERY
- Page 23 and 24:
���������� �
- Page 25 and 26:
20000061433 Pisa Univ., Dipartiment
- Page 27 and 28:
English; 34th; 34th Thermophysics C
- Page 29 and 30:
ciency of the generated derivative
- Page 31 and 32:
20000063509 NASA Glenn Research Cen
- Page 33 and 34:
05 AIRCRAFT DESIGN, TESTING AND PER
- Page 35 and 36:
A long tradition of aerodynamic des
- Page 37 and 38:
sonic and transonic cases will be p
- Page 39 and 40:
20000061449 British Aerospace Publi
- Page 41 and 42:
20000064593 NASA Langley Research C
- Page 43 and 44:
performance required for a proposed
- Page 45 and 46:
ment cost and create better product
- Page 47 and 48:
tion (NPSS), is focused on the inte
- Page 49 and 50:
surface measurement techniques used
- Page 51 and 52:
with emphasis on the search for lin
- Page 53 and 54:
20000063520 NASA Kennedy Space Cent
- Page 55 and 56:
primary issues for it’s adaptatio
- Page 57 and 58:
Footage shows the night vertical ta
- Page 59 and 60:
20000067665 NASA Kennedy Space Cent
- Page 61 and 62:
necessary for ignition modeling, or
- Page 63 and 64:
engine lifetime, and high power ope
- Page 65 and 66:
24 COMPOSITE MATERIALS ����
- Page 67 and 68:
ments. For the screening of liner m
- Page 69 and 70:
formation of a neutral, fluorescent
- Page 71 and 72:
20000065655 Ames Lab., IA USA Funda
- Page 73 and 74:
This is a second Triennial Conferen
- Page 75 and 76:
of completely charged PSSNa solutio
- Page 77 and 78:
20000064100 NASA Langley Research C
- Page 79 and 80:
Spacecraft in low Earth orbit (LEO)
- Page 81 and 82:
Pressure gradients, i.e. pressure h
- Page 83 and 84:
agreed that the NO(sub x) levels co
- Page 85 and 86:
tectural approach to extending the
- Page 87 and 88:
20000064078 Physics and Electronics
- Page 89 and 90:
20000064925 Institute for Human Fac
- Page 91 and 92:
20000066607 Institute for Human Fac
- Page 93 and 94:
20000062455 National Inst. of Stand
- Page 95 and 96:
Added Analysis (Risk Reduction); 6)
- Page 97 and 98:
shipboard electrical power generati
- Page 99 and 100:
20000067664 Jet Propulsion Lab., Ca
- Page 101 and 102:
other, The theoretical framework go
- Page 103 and 104:
figures compare the lift and pitchi
- Page 105 and 106:
ment phase demonstrate desired feat
- Page 107 and 108:
esolution mode with resolving power
- Page 109 and 110:
to track 1% or 0.5% changes was hig
- Page 111 and 112:
20000067643 NASA Marshall Space Fli
- Page 113 and 114:
37 MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ���
- Page 115 and 116:
solver based on overset grid techno
- Page 117 and 118:
20000067659 NASA Marshall Space Fli
- Page 119 and 120:
20000064621 Rensselaer Polytechnic
- Page 121 and 122:
that for a specific example of a be
- Page 123 and 124:
km x 1000 km). As with the nearly c
- Page 125 and 126:
20000064527 Analytical Imaging and
- Page 127 and 128:
20000064533 Austin State Univ., Dep
- Page 129 and 130:
20000064539 California Univ., Inst.
- Page 131 and 132:
20000064547 Jet Propulsion Lab., Ca
- Page 133 and 134:
in Yellowstone National Park. We ar
- Page 135 and 136:
terns of community hysteresis based
- Page 137 and 138:
20000064565 Jet Propulsion Lab., Ca
- Page 139 and 140:
tion model (DEM) fitting to the sca
- Page 141 and 142:
The Carolina slate belt is a 10- to
- Page 143 and 144:
20000063373 Los Alamos National Lab
- Page 145 and 146:
20000064912 New Energy and Industri
- Page 147 and 148:
and discusses the issues and resear
- Page 149 and 150:
The objective of this study was to
- Page 151 and 152:
distributions with engine test resu
- Page 153 and 154:
7.6, while the 1926 events appear t
- Page 155 and 156:
We investigate the compositional di
- Page 157 and 158:
Flight Center, USA; Moore, T. E., N
- Page 159 and 160:
This report presents the Applied Me
- Page 161 and 162:
in Goa, India, by 3 - 4 days. Wind
- Page 163 and 164:
51 LIFE SCIENCES (GENERAL) Includes
- Page 165 and 166:
20000062717 Joint Inst. for Nuclear
- Page 167 and 168:
20000064015 Institute for Human Fac
- Page 169 and 170:
during 50% (SD 4%) of the breathing
- Page 171 and 172:
20000064711 Massachusetts Inst. of
- Page 173 and 174:
The analysis of this smaller data s
- Page 175 and 176:
vided a functional helmet mount. Th
- Page 177 and 178:
61 COMPUTER PROGRAMMING AND SOFTWAR
- Page 179 and 180:
The goal of multi-image classificat
- Page 181 and 182:
20000063526 Defence Science and Tec
- Page 183 and 184:
85 dB amplifier design evolved by o
- Page 185 and 186:
20000064594 New Mexico Univ., Elect
- Page 187 and 188:
20000064615 NASA Ames Research Cent
- Page 189 and 190:
declarations with a pattern recogni
- Page 191 and 192:
containing point where interpolatio
- Page 193 and 194:
has his own responsibility, while t
- Page 195 and 196:
the people, documents and projects
- Page 197 and 198:
and experimental technology, many o
- Page 199 and 200:
tems. In particular this applicatio
- Page 201 and 202:
Over the past decade, high performa
- Page 203 and 204:
expensive than a single analysis. I
- Page 205 and 206:
20000064726 Carnegie-Mellon Univ.,
- Page 207 and 208:
20000064099 Teledyne Brown Engineer
- Page 209 and 210: 20000066597 Geophysical Observatory
- Page 211 and 212: 20000065633 Institute TNO of Applie
- Page 213 and 214: important conclusion is that for su
- Page 215 and 216: est frame of the string. The modifi
- Page 217 and 218: isotopes. The method and program we
- Page 219 and 220: A detailed study is undertaken, usi
- Page 221 and 222: 20000063497 Kaiser Electro-Optics,
- Page 223 and 224: delivers 60% of the x-ray flux from
- Page 225 and 226: 76 SOLID-STATE PHYSICS ����
- Page 227 and 228: 20000064660 Abdus Salam Internation
- Page 229 and 230: 20000067648 NASA Marshall Space Fli
- Page 231 and 232: 20000064703 Institute of Atomic Ene
- Page 233 and 234: The BRST approach is applied to the
- Page 235 and 236: 20000067671 Hampton Univ., VA USA A
- Page 237 and 238: 82 DOCUMENTATION AND INFORMATION SC
- Page 239 and 240: ecoming almost too cumbersome to be
- Page 241 and 242: physical world. These are the two p
- Page 243 and 244: with WFPC2 data. Tests of HSTphot
- Page 245 and 246: A brief description is given of the
- Page 247 and 248: 20000064070 NASA Ames Research Cent
- Page 249 and 250: gas, show variations that have rema
- Page 251 and 252: egy, called Power In that would all
- Page 253 and 254: 20000065631 NASA Kennedy Space Cent
- Page 255 and 256: 20000064089 Smithsonian Astrophysic
- Page 257 and 258: A ABERRATION, 143, 198 ABRASION, 22
- Page 259: COMPRESSIBLE FLOW, 83 COMPRESSION L
- Page 263 and 264: LASING, 90 LATE STARS, 224 LATITUDE
- Page 265 and 266: PATCH ANTENNAS, 74 PATHOLOGY, 98 PA
- Page 267 and 268: SPACE PLATFORMS, 38 SPACE PROBES, 2
- Page 269 and 270: WIND PROFILES, 137 WIND TUNNEL TEST
- Page 271 and 272: Brown, Andy, 38 Brown, April S., 20
- Page 273 and 274: Grosvenor, C. A., 70 Grosvenor, J.
- Page 275 and 276: Lu, Gui-Ying, 50 Lugg, Desmond J.,
- Page 277 and 278: Robertson, Tony, 39 Robinson, Jeffr
- Page 279: Warner, J. D., 63 Warren, James, 16