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Dive into the research topics where Stuart Bowyer is active.

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Featured researches published by Stuart Bowyer.


International Astronomical Union Colloquium | 1997

A New Major Seti Project Based on Project Serendip Data and 100,000 Personal Computers

Woodruff T. Sullivan; Dan Werthimer; Stuart Bowyer; Jeff Cobb; David Gedye; David P. Anderson

We are now developing an innovative SETI project, tentatively named seti@home, involving massively parallel computation on desktop computers scattered around the world. The public will be uniquely involved in a real scientific project. Individuals will download a screensaver program that will not only provide the usual attractive graphics when their computer is idle, but will also perform sophisticated analysis of SETI data using the host computer. The data are tapped off Project Serendip IVs receiver and SETI survey operating on the 305-meter diameter Arecibo radio telescope. We make a continuous tape-recording of a 2 MHz bandwidth signal centered on the 21 cm HI line. The data on these tapes are then preliminarily screened and parceled out by a server that supplies small chunks of data (50 seconds of 20 kHz bandwidth, a total of 0.25 MB) over the Internet to clients possessing the screen-saver software. After the client computer has automatically analyzed a complete chunk of data (in a much more detailed manner than Serendip normally does) a report on the best candidate signals is sent back to the server, whereupon a new chunk of data is sent out. If 50,000-100,000 customers can be achieved, the computing power will be equivalent to a substantial fraction of a typical supercomputer, and seti@home will cover a comparable volume of parameter space to that of Serendip IV.


Applied Optics | 1983

Variable line-space gratings: new designs for use in grazing incidence spectrometers

Michael C. Hettrick; Stuart Bowyer

An account is given of a fundamentally different approach to the use of variable line-space gratings for grazing incidence spectrometers. In the new approach, the gratings are flat and they are placed to intercept the converging beam from a collecting mirror rather than the diverging beam from a slit. This results in (1) small aberrations over a wide instantaneous range in wavelength, (2) a modest required variation in line spacing across the ruled width, (3) a simultaneous minimization of both the spectral and image height aberrations, and (4) a completely stigmatic zero order image. The slitless arrangement common to these designs is very compact, having no additional length behind the focal plane of the collecting mirror. In-plane and conical fan designs are considered. One combination design, in the form of an echelle spectrometer, is discussed. The designs are considered to represent ideal candidates for moderate to high resolution spectrometers on such missions as the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE, now Columbus) and the Advanced X-ray Astrophysics Facility (AXAF).


Science | 1996

Diffuse Extreme-Ultraviolet Emission from the Coma Cluster: Evidence for Rapidly Cooling Gases at Submegakelvin Temperatures

Richard Lieu; Jonathan P. D. Mittaz; Stuart Bowyer; Jeffrey O. Breen; Felix J. Lockman; E. M. Murphy; Chorng-Yuan Hwang

The central region of the Coma cluster of galaxies was observed in the energy band from 0.065 to 0.245 kiloelectron volts by the Deep Survey telescope aboard the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer. A diffuse emission halo of angular diameter ∼30 arc minutes was detected. The extreme-ultraviolet (EUV) emission level exceeds that expected from the x-ray temperature gas in Coma. This halo suggests the presence of two more phases in the emitting gas, one at a temperature of ∼2 × 106 kelvin and the other at ∼8 × 105 kelvin. The latter phase cools rapidly and, in steady state, would have produced cold matter with a mass of ∼1014 solar masses within the EUV halo. Although a similar EUV enhancement was discovered in the Virgo cluster, this detection in Coma applies to a noncooling flow system.


Applied Optics | 1982

Quantum efficiency of opaque CsI photocathodes with channel electron multiplier arrays in the extreme and far ultraviolet

Christopher Martin; Stuart Bowyer

The arrays are overcoated with a CsI photocathode in the VUV. The measurements are part of the development program for the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer. Monochromatic light from a hollow cathode discharge source passing through a McPherson grazing incidence monochromator is used to illuminate the CsI photocathode. The beam diameter is kept small (approximately 2 mm) to confine it within the individual thickness strips. A bias grid is used to produce a 50-V/mm electric field to guarantee collection of all photoelectrons emitted by the CEMA (channel electron multiplier array) webbing. The CEMAs are operated with a gain of 2-3 x 10 to the 6th and are moderately saturated. A channeltron secondary transfer standard is used to determine the absolute QE in the EUV, whereas an NBS calibrated windowed photodiode is used to measure the FUV absolute QE. It is noted that the CsI gives a factor of 3 increase in the QE in the EUV and a factor of 50-5000 in the FUV.


The Astronomical Journal | 1994

Interstellar medium continuum, autoionization, and line absorption in the extreme ultraviolet

Todd Rumph; Stuart Bowyer; Stephane Vennes

We provide a new estimate of the effective absorption cross section of the interstellar medium at extreme ultraviolet wavelengths. The cross section for neutral helium is discussed in detail. Two spectral features of interstellar neutral helium, the 504 A ionization edge and the autoionization resonance feature at 206 A, are detectable with existing instrumentation. Measurements of the autoionization feature in continuum sources will provide a direct estimate of the intervening neutral helium column; in many cases this will be the only method to obtain this parameter. Although continuum metal opacities are negligible at wavelengths greater than 50 A we find that metal line features should be detectable in continuum sources with high signal to noise observations. A selection of some of the most prominent lines expected is provided.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1977

The optical counterpart of GX 1+4: A symbiotic star

Arthur F. Davidsen; Roger F. Malina; Stuart Bowyer

Spectrophotometry of the proposed optical counterpart of the hard X-ray source GX 1+4 is presented. The spectrum is that of a symbiotic star which is an M giant with a variable blue continuum and a rich emission line spectrum including H I, He I, Fe II, (Fe VII), and probably (Fe X). An explanation in terms of a compact object accreting material from an M6 III companion near the galactic center appears acceptable. The similarity of the emission line spectrum to the spectra of Seyfert nuclei is discussed, and it is suggested that photoionization of gas in the binary system can explain the strength of the high-excitation lines.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1999

Extreme-Ultraviolet Emission in Abell 1795, Abell 2199, and the Coma Cluster

Stuart Bowyer; Thomas W. Berghofer; Eric J. Korpela

We report new EUV data on the cluster of galaxies Abell 1795. These data were taken well away from a detector defect which could have compromised earlier results on this cluster. Our new observations confirm the validity of the original data set. However, we find our results are strongly influenced by the variation of the telescope sensitivity over the field of view and upon the details of the subtraction of the EUV emission from the X-ray plasma. We investigate these effects using our new data and archival data on Abell 1795, Abell 2199, and the Coma Cluster. When we use the appropriate correction factors, we find there is no evidence for any excess EUV emission in Abell 1795 or Abell 2199. However, we do find extended EUV emission in the Coma Cluster using our new analysis procedures, confirming that in at least this cluster some as yet unidentified process is operative.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1994

The first extreme ultraviolet explorer source catalog

Stuart Bowyer; Richard Lieu; M. Lampton; James W. Lewis; X. Wu; Jeremy J. Drake; Roger F. Malina

The Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE) has conducted an all-sky survey to locate and identify point sources of emission in four extreme ultraviolet wavelength bands centered at approximately 100, 200, 400, and 600 A. A companion deep survey of a strip along half the ecliptic plane was simultaneously conducted. In this catalog we report the sources found in these surveys using rigorously defined criteria uniformly applied to the data set. These are the first surveys to be made in the three longer wavelength bands, and a substantial number of sources were detected in these bands. We present a number of statistical diagnostics of the surveys, including their source counts, their sensitivites, and their positional error distributions. We provide a separate list of those sources reported in the EUVE Bright Source List which did not meet our criteria for inclusion in our primary list. We also provide improved count rate and position estimates for a majority of these sources based on the improved methodology used in this paper. In total, this catalog lists a total of 410 point sources, of which 372 have plausible optical ultraviolet, or X-ray identifications, which are also listed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1982

Discovery of a 50 minute binary period and a likely 22 magnitude optical counterpart for the X-ray burster 4U 1915-05

F. M. Walter; K. O. Mason; John Clarke; J. Halpern; Jonathan E. Grindlay; Stuart Bowyer; J. P. Henry

Absorption dips which recur with a period of 2985 s have been observed from the X-ray burst source 4U 1915-05. It is suggested that the dips are caused by obscuration of the X-ray source by material at the point where the gas stream from the companion meets the accretion disk, and that the 2985 s periodicity is the orbital period of the binary system. These observations represent the first direct evidence of the binary nature of X-ray burst sources. In addition, a new optical identification of 4U 1915-05 is suggested: a 22 magnitude candidate observed in a CCD image of the optical field at the arcsec-accurate HRI X-ray position.


Applied Optics | 1981

Continuous-readout extreme-ultraviolet airglow spectrometer

Stuart Bowyer; Randy Kimble; Francesco Paresce; Michael L. Lampton; G. Penegor

A satellite-borne extreme-ultraviolet airglow spectrometer is described covering the 275-1420-A range with 8-A resolution. The spectrometer is of near normal incidence Rowland circle design and employs a holographically ruled concave grating. The detector is a microchannel plate with resistive anode providing a continuous readout of any 650-A ground-commandable subset of the total bandpass. This simultaneous wide spectral coverage results in a factor of 80 increase in sensitivity over a fixed exit slit design of equivalent resolution.

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Mark Hurwitz

University of California

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Bruce Margon

University of California

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Stephane Vennes

Australian National University

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