Federal Agencies Join in Air Safety Program
Despite the best efforts of air traffic controllers, pilots sometimes have to rely on old-fashioned visual sightings to avoid collisions.
Although red or white anticollision lights on planes provide a last defense, the field intensity measurements of the lights vary by as much as 30 percent. To provide more accurate intensity measurements of a flash that lasts only a split second, the
Federal Aviation Administration has enlisted the
National Institute of Standards and Technology to develop a calibration standard.
NIST physicists came up with a system that uses two independent calibration methods to produce a primary standard photometer system with an uncertainty of 0.6 percent. The institute is using the system to provide calibrations for reference photometers with the hope of improving uncertainty for field measurements to less than 10 percent.
LATEST NEWS
- Fraunhofer CAP Appoints Head, Scientific Director: People in the News: 1/15/25
Jan 15, 2025
- Bioluminescent Tags Track RNA Dynamics in Live Cells in Real Time
Jan 15, 2025
- Sensing and Inspection Specialist EVK Joins Headwall Group
Jan 14, 2025
- PHOTON IP Raises $4.9M Seed Round
Jan 14, 2025
- Graphene Prevents Damage to Flexible Thin Films for Wearable Electronics
Jan 14, 2025
- Thorlabs Acquires VCSEL Developer, Longtime Partner Praevium Research
Jan 13, 2025
- Electrically-Pumped GaAs-Based Nano-Ridge Lasers Fabricated at Wafer Scale
Jan 13, 2025
- Photoactivated Gel Achieves Bone Regeneration and Adhesion at Same Time
Jan 13, 2025