Biography and Research Information
OverviewAI-generated summary
Jackson Marsh's research focuses on the development and application of data acquisition systems and condition monitoring techniques, particularly for semiconductor devices and heat transfer phenomena. He has investigated the use of LabVIEW and Arduino as alternatives for data acquisition, as detailed in his 2024 publication. His work also includes the multimodal characterization of boiling heat transfer, examining both steady-state and transient conditions, and exploring remote thermal measurements correlated with acoustic emissions, as presented in his 2023 publications. Additionally, Marsh studies the condition monitoring of semiconductors using wide band acoustic emission sensors. He has collaborated with researchers including Han Hu and Christy Dunlap at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville on multiple publications.
Metrics
- h-index: 2
- Publications: 3
- Citations: 69
Selected Publications
-
Introducing LabVIEW and Arduino as Data Acquisition System Alternatives (2024)
-
Condition Monitoring of Semiconductors Using Wide Band Acoustic Emission Sensors (2023)
-
Multimodal Characterization of Steady-State and Transient Boiling Heat Transfer (2023)
-
Remote Thermal Measurements With Regression of Acoustic Emissions (2023)
Collaboration Network
Top Collaborators
- Introducing LabVIEW and Arduino as Data Acquisition System Alternatives
- Remote Thermal Measurements With Regression of Acoustic Emissions
- Condition Monitoring of Semiconductors Using Wide Band Acoustic Emission Sensors
- Introducing LabVIEW and Arduino as Data Acquisition System Alternatives
- Remote Thermal Measurements With Regression of Acoustic Emissions
- Remote Thermal Measurements With Regression of Acoustic Emissions
- Remote Thermal Measurements With Regression of Acoustic Emissions
- Condition Monitoring of Semiconductors Using Wide Band Acoustic Emission Sensors
- Introducing LabVIEW and Arduino as Data Acquisition System Alternatives
Similar Researchers
Based on overlapping research topics