Commercializing high-temperature superconductivity.DIANE Publishing |
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الصفحة
... Technology Policy : Issues for High - Temperature Conductivity . . . Chapter 5 : Strategies for Commercial Technology Development : High - Temperature Superconductivity and Beyond Appendix A : Glossary . ... Appendix B : The Technology ...
... Technology Policy : Issues for High - Temperature Conductivity . . . Chapter 5 : Strategies for Commercial Technology Development : High - Temperature Superconductivity and Beyond Appendix A : Glossary . ... Appendix B : The Technology ...
الصفحة 3
... technology , and industry , of U. S.- Japan competition in high technology . In De- cember of the preceding year ... development of commercial tech- nologies . This special report begins with a look at U.S. strengths and weaknesses in ...
... technology , and industry , of U. S.- Japan competition in high technology . In De- cember of the preceding year ... development of commercial tech- nologies . This special report begins with a look at U.S. strengths and weaknesses in ...
الصفحة 4
... commercial technology development ( as op veral measures , priorities for commercial R & D are lower HIGH-TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTIVITY: U.S. AND JAPANESE RESPONSES PRINCIPAL FINDINGS FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. re World War II , US . 1 seldom ...
... commercial technology development ( as op veral measures , priorities for commercial R & D are lower HIGH-TEMPERATURE SUPERCONDUCTIVITY: U.S. AND JAPANESE RESPONSES PRINCIPAL FINDINGS FEDERAL GOVERNMENT. re World War II , US . 1 seldom ...
الصفحة 8
... technology base than a dollar spent by NSF. A good deal of DoD's R&D will go for specialized applications in defense ... commercial development. Successful commercialization, in any case, takes more than R&D. It depends on market conditions— ...
... technology base than a dollar spent by NSF. A good deal of DoD's R&D will go for specialized applications in defense ... commercial development. Successful commercialization, in any case, takes more than R&D. It depends on market conditions— ...
الصفحة 9
... commercial spinoffs will diminish as military requirements become more spe ... technology transfer from defense contractors and Federal labora- tories will ... development (as was true in LTS). With U.S. difficulties in commercialization ...
... commercial spinoffs will diminish as military requirements become more spe ... technology transfer from defense contractors and Federal labora- tories will ... development (as was true in LTS). With U.S. difficulties in commercialization ...
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
American companies American firms basic research centers ceramics civilian commercializing HTS competition Congress cooperation corporate costs DARPA defense efforts electrical electronics Energy engineering Federal agencies Federal R&D fiscal Funding for HTS High-Temperature Superconductivity HTS R&D innovation integrated circuits investment Japa Japan Japanese Japanese companies Japanese firms Josephson Josephson junctions labora linear motor LTS magnets maglev train magnetically levitated trains managers manufacturing marketplace materials ment mercialization military million MITI Monbusho national laboratories National Science Foundation needs nese niobium nology Office of Technology Option percent priorities private sector problems processing projects proposals R&D budget R&D funding Science and Technology scientists Sematech semiconductor spending startups strategy superconductivity R&D tech technical technol Technology Assessment technology base technology policy technology transfer temperatures tion tive U.S. companies U.S. firms U.S. Government U.S. industry United universities
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 89 - Director of the Office of Science and Technology Policy in the Executive Office of the President and to serve as Science and Technology Adviser to the President.
الصفحة 67 - International Competitiveness in Electronics (Washington, DC: Office of Technology Assessment, November 1983), pp. 413-422. On patenting, below, see SK Yoder, "Rush to Exploit New Superconductors Makes Japan Even More Patent-Crazy,
الصفحة 63 - Japan pay attention to goals and objectives announced by the Ministry of International Trade and Industry (MITI), or the Ministry of Finance.
الصفحة 26 - LTS materials. [Page Omitted] This page was originally printed on a gray background. The scanned version of the page is almost entirely black and is unusable. It has been intentionally omitted. If a replacement page image of higher quality becomes available, it will be posted within the copy of this report found on one of the OTA websites.
الصفحة 56 - Press, 1985), pp. 196-197. [Page Omitted] This page was originally printed on a gray background. The scanned version of the page is almost entirely black and is unusable. It has been intentionally omitted. If a replacement page image of higher quality becomes available, it will be posted within the copy of this report found on one of the OTA websites.
الصفحة 128 - Companies in the World Economy, BR Guile and H. Brooks (eds.) (Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1987], p.
الصفحة 7 - American companies have taken a wait-and-see attitude. They plan to take advantage of developments as they emerge from the laboratory — someone else's laboratory — or buy into emerging markets when the time is right. Unfortunately, reactive strategies such as these have seldom worked in industries like electronics over the past 10 to 15 years.
الصفحة 152 - SMES, superconducting magnetic energy storage system: A coil or solenoid of superconducting wire in which an electric current can circulate, storing energy until needed for purposes such as feeding an electric utility grid or powering a free-electron laser. SQUID, superconducting quantum interference device: A very sensitive instrument, built with Josephson junctions, used to detect magnetic signals. STA, Science and Technology Agency: Under the Prime Minister's Office in Japan.
الصفحة 23 - Report of the White House Science Council Federal Laboratory Review Panel [Washington, DC: Office of Science and Technology Policy, May 1983). For more recent perspectives, see FV Guterl, "Technology Transfer Isn't Working,