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Multiple part type decomposition method in manufacturing processing line
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Flexure based mounts for sensitive payloads : a management and engineering study
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
With the cooperation of the Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, an investigative and design study was performed to examine the history of the W80- 0 Area Aft Mount, understand its ...
Structural design of an underground cylindrical shell
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Interactive spectral analysis learning module
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Due to increased demand for interactive learning opportunities for engineering students, an interactive spectral analysis learning module was developed for the course Biomedical Signal and Image Processing (HST582J/6.555 ...
Design of a near-field coded aperture cameras for high-resolution medical and industrial gamma-ray imaging
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Coded Aperture Imaging is a technique originally developed for X-ray astronomy, where typical imaging problems are characterized by far-field geometry and an object made of point sources distributed over a mainly dark ...
Rapid and flexible product development : an analysis of software projects at Hewlett Packard an Agilent
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Before companies started competing on Internet time, most companies involved in software product development carried out the different phases of the product development sequentially. If, during the later stages of product ...
Helicopter configuration optimization
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Design of cable systems for cable suspension bridges
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
An evolutionary approach to improved performance of merged companies
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Bombs unbuilt : power, ideas and institutions in international politics
(Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2001)
Nuclear weapons are the most powerful weapons in human history, but contrary to virtually every prediction by scholars, relatively few states have acquired them. Why are there so few nuclear weapons states? What factors ...