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Description Within the last few years, detectors such as superconducting transition edge sensors capable of spanning the single photon regime to millions of photons have become available. The issue is how
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Description Our group is developing chip-scale nonlinear optical devices based on dispersion engineered waveguides in a variety of materials including silicon, silicon nitride, and AlGaAs. A major thrust for
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301.975.3716 Description In support of the development of future electronic systems, research focuses in areas that relate to measurements and physics on the nanometer scale based on scanning tunneling
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disruptive events. More research is needed to understand the planning, protective, and recovery processes of its highly interdependent physical, social, and economic systems. In particular, advancements in
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critical to a variety of soft material applications ranging from sustainability to impact mitigation. The polymer chemistry and structure of these entangled materials are essential to defining
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focuses on polymer composites thin films that exhibit enhanced dielectric properties and low water vapor transmission rate. Our goal is to investigate hydration mechanism and the charge transport in thin
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nanocomposites containing these networks. Our objective is to develop metrologies to understand how morphology and functionalization affect the alternating current (AC) conductivity of composite materials
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This research aims to engineer atomic systems with special features that are favorable for testing theory, and for measuring fundamental constants and atomic data. In many cases, progress is impeded, not by
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Security Division opportunity location 50.77.31.B7615 Gaithersburg, MD NIST only participates in the February and August reviews. Advisers name email phone Lidong Chen lily.chen@nist.gov 301.975.6974 Meltem
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with stable isotopes such as 2 H, 13 C, 15 N, and 18 O is an important tool for structural and bioanalytical methods such as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), small angle neutron scattering (SANS), and