To: LoneClone  who wrote (831 ) 7/30/2025 7:32:03 PM From: Thomas A Watson  1 RecommendationRecommended By  longz
    Read Replies (1)  | Respond to    of 926  I have not seen you post any science.    I have posted  explanations from Scientists and Engineers that expain the  science behind what they believe.    Your comment suggest to me that all science concerning weather and climate is beyond you comprehension.  I also  have no problem with being right wing.       Science is about being right and not out to lunch. Science has nothing to do with politics of being socialist or free market of judging people by the color of their skin vs the content of their character.     I am an engineering scientist.    I think it is reasonable for my to conclude based upon your posts that I knew and understood science at age 10 more than you do today.       The following works were authored by Thomas A. Watson.    In the late eighties using networks to  interconnect word processing work stations to central mini-computers was  a first step in office automation. In the figure right, a process functional block diagram shows some of  the first methods of moving files between a Decmate word processing  system and Vax mini computers.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
    In the late eighties networks of mini-computers were also used to  allow design engineers to interactively design circuits and past the  design to other stages of computer aided manufacturing. The figure show Valid Scald Computer Aided Engineering Workstation  network.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
    Also In the late eighties mini-computers were used to allow design  engineers to do design verification complete functional testing or  electronic designs.  The functional testing could be used  generate a set of digital test vectors that would be used an automatic  test system to functionally test circuit boards during manufacture. The figure shows a network of mini computers used to perform functional  test, the workstations and a automatic functional tester.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
    In the development of a large system design normal  documentation requires the creation of a complete parts database of  drawings for all components, sub assemblies and assemblies.  In the DOD there is also a  CDRL to create a family tree of related drawings.  The generation of a system wide Family tree and the maintenance of this  drawing set involves hundreds to thousands of man hours of work.  In 1990 Watman Associates developed a fully interactive program to  create family tree drawings.  The program allowed users to select  drawing properties and the would create a colorized preview of  drawings.  When the user was satisfied with the look of the family tree  DYNATREE would  then create a drawing command script that when input to a Computer  Aided Engineering drawing program would automatically generate the  family tree drawing set.  The use of DYNATREE could create the family tree drawing set for  systems with thousands of drawings in a few hours.   DYNATREE was written in the C programing language and featured 30 plus screen with built in detail help.    Link to view the DYNATREE screens.            723x927     VGA 640x480     320x240    
    In the early nineties Emhart Glass Machinery decided to redesign their line of automatic glass bottle inspection equipment. The goal of the design were add more programmability to the check detection algorithms and interconnect all machines to allow  for an integrated automated quality control.  Mr. Watson was a principle contributor to the network system architecture shown.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
    Each of the several glass inspection machines was upgraded with an  embedded control computer with custom interface circuit cards to  interface to physical sensors. The functional block diagram of a check detector is shown.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
       		    On January 28, 1986, at 11:38, Mr. Watson was at lunch with a group of students. The students were taking a course authored by Mr. Watson on the use of Computer Aided Schematic  capture and netlist database generation.   In the restaurant the TV station broke to live  coverage of the the launch of STS Challenger.  Challenger exploded 73 seconds after takeoff. Television film footage captured the tragic explosion and its aftermath, as smoke trailed out of the craft and it fell to the ocean. All seven crew members died due to a faulty "O-ring" seal failed in the solid-fuel rocket on the shuttle's right side. Flames escaped through the failed seal. The flames burned through the shuttle's external fuel tank and a support attaching the rocket to the tank. The rocket broke loose and pierced the tank. Liquid hydrogen and liquid oxygen fuels ignited, tearing the shuttle apart. The shuttle launch program was not resumed until designers made modifications and National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) management implemented stricter regulations regarding quality control and safety. The accident and the ensuing investigation into its cause temporarily halted the space shuttle program. Shuttle missions resumed on September 28, 1988, with the flight of the shuttle Discovery.   In 1990, as a result Challenger accident NASA contracted with the PowerDyne Division of  Raymond Engineering for the development the Hydraulic Ultra Sonic Bolting System.   Mr. Watson as a Consultant to Raymond Engineering designed and developed the HUBS control program.   The HUBS program was a real time embedded control program for the controlled sequential bolting  of the joints of the solid rocket boosters.   The program maintained a database of the bolting process and provided complete calibration  of pressure and ultrasonic load measuring instrumentation.  To provide realtime signal  emulation Mr Watson designed and fabricated the  HUBS Electronic Emulation Simulator.   For an excellent discussion of   Space Shuttle Challenger disaster        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
     While working at Northrup Grumman Norden Systems Mr. Watson developed  several programs to extract time aligned 4 channel IQ, IMU and calibration data sets.   The extracted data sets  were used to create SAR, Wide Area SAR, Ultra high  resolution (UHR) SAR and IFSAR  maps.  The APG-76 RADAR has 4 receiving antenna and this allows for mapping with simultaneous detection and display of moving targets.   The image shows the amplitude of raw radar data.   The Y dimension is radar range and the X dimension is time. Today radars generate several thousand pulse a second and by looking or  pulsing for several seconds several hundred megabytes of complex radar  data is collected and processed into photo looking images. UHR images often are created with more than a gigabyte of raw IQ RADAR  data.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240    
   	      The   F-111 Upgrade Options page   show the APG-76 radar and images showing Moving Target Indicators(MTI).  The   GPS Guided Weapons Page  also features APG-76 Ultra High Resolution images.     Interferometric synthetic aperture radar (IFSAR)  data can be used   in the generation of rectified SAR images co-registered with an accurate terrain elevation file.  The use of a wide area IFSAR map can also be  married with a trajectory of observation with a fixed or moving  observation view.  The  image shows a snapshot of a perspective view.      Additional IFSAR views and a 10.3 meg. flyby movie          660x517     320x240    
         To demonstrate a new and more efficient way of  evaluating large area high resolution radar imagery an Xwindow based  display demonstration was created. The application was developed and compiled on a common Intel based PC  using the Linux operating system. This demonstration software was also compiled to run on SGI irix and Sun  Solaris and HP hp-ux systems. The images show a radar display demonstration program that incorporated  the functionality of automatic target recognition. A target is located within a familiar pentagon area.  The detection of  likely target signature was highlited with squares.   A radar operator could quickly look at zoomed area of detected  possible targets.        Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240       Full XGA.     VGA 640x480     320x240