Publications by authors named "Erick T Young"

Two images of Cassiopeia A obtained at 24 micrometers with the Spitzer Space Telescope over a 1-year time interval show moving structures outside the shell of the supernova remnant to a distance of more than 20 arc minutes. Individual features exhibit apparent motions of 10 to 20 arc seconds per year, independently confirmed by near-infrared observations. The observed tangential velocities are at roughly the speed of light.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The use of a separation step, such as liquid chromatography, prior to inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-MS) has become a common tool for highly selective and sensitive analyses. This type of coupling has several benefits including the ability to perform speciation analysis or to remove isobaric interferences. Several limitations of conventional instruments result from the necessity to scan or pulse the mass spectrometer to obtain a complete mass spectrum.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A novel charge-sensitive detector array, termed the focal plane camera (FPC), has been coupled to a Mattauch-Herzog mass spectrograph (MHMS) with an inductively coupled plasma ionization source. The FPC employs an array of gold Faraday cups, each with its own charge-integrating circuit that allows the simultaneous detection of several m/z ratios. The ion-sampling interface of the MHMS has been redesigned to provide better heat transfer away from the sampler and skimmer cones and to reduce the negative effects of turbulent gas flows around the plasma.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A Mattauch-Herzog geometry mass spectrograph (MHMS) has been equipped with a novel array detector, the focal plane camera (FPC). The FPC consists of an array of gold Faraday cups, each coupled to its own integrator, with interrogation of the integrators performed by a multiplexer. The initial coupling of this instrument with a pin-type glow discharge source has provided limits of detection in the single to hundreds of nanograms per gram regime; isotope ratio accuracy and precision better than 5% error and 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF