3,266 research outputs found
Discussion on the progress and future of satellite communication (Japan)
The current status of communications satellite development in Japan is presented. It is shown that beginning with research on satellite communucations in the late 1950's, progress was made in the areas of communications, remote sensing, and technology experimentation. The current status of communication satellites is presented, stressing development in the areas of CFRP construction elements, the use of LSI and MIC circuits, advanced multibeam antenna systems, Ku and Ka band transmission systems, and the shift to small-scale earth stations. Methods for reducing costs and increasing transmission efficiency are shown. The technical specifications of all satellite projects currently under development are given. Users of Japanese communications satellite are presented
Displacement energy of unit disk cotangent bundles
We give an upper bound of a Hamiltonian displacement energy of a unit disk
cotangent bundle in a cotangent bundle , when the base manifold
is an open Riemannian manifold. Our main result is that the displacement
energy is not greater than , where is the inner radius of ,
and is a dimensional constant. As an immediate application, we study
symplectic embedding problems of unit disk cotangent bundles. Moreover,
combined with results in symplectic geometry, our main result shows the
existence of short periodic billiard trajectories and short geodesic loops.Comment: Title slightly changed. Close to the version published online in Math
Zei
In vivo colonization profile study of Bordetella bronchiseptica in the nasal cavity
Bordetella bronchiseptica chronically infects a wide range of mammals, and resides primarily in the nasal cavity of the infected host. Multiple virulence factors of Bordetella species have been studied in the context of lower respiratory tract infections, but relatively less is known about the bacterial life cycle in the nasal cavity. Evidences were discovered for Bvg intermediate (Bvgi) phase expression in vivo and that the major adhesin filamentous hemagglutinin plays a major role in the colonization of B. bronchiseptica in the unciliated olfactory epithelia of the nasal cavity
Performance of MAX-DOAS measurements of aerosols at Tsukuba, Japan: a comparison with lidar and sky radiometer measurements
International audienceGround-based Multi-Axis Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (MAX-DOAS) measurements were performed at Tsukuba, Japan (36.1° N, 140.1° E), in November?December 2006. The measured spectra of scattered sunlight are analyzed by DOAS and optimal estimation methods to retrieve the aerosol optical depth (?) and the vertical profile of the aerosol extinction coefficient (?) at 476 nm in the lower troposphere. We characterize these retrieved quantities through comparisons with coincident lidar and sky radiometer measurements. The retrieved ? values for layers of 0?1 and 1?2 km agree with lidar data to within 30% and 60%, respectively, for most cases, including partly cloudy conditions. Results similar to ? at 0?1 km are obtained for the retrieved ? values, demonstrating that MAX-DOAS provides the new, unique aerosol dataset in the lower troposphere
Precision Measurements of d(d,p)t and d(d,n)^3He Total Cross Sections at Big-Bang Nucleosynthesis Energies
Recent Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) measurements have
determined the baryon density of the Universe with a precision of
about 4%. With tightly constrained, comparisons of Big Bang
Nucleosynthesis (BBN) abundance predictions to primordial abundance
observations can be made and used to test BBN models and/or to further
constrain abundances of isotopes with weak observational limits. To push the
limits and improve constraints on BBN models, uncertainties in key nuclear
reaction rates must be minimized. To this end, we made new precise measurements
of the d(d,p)t and d(d,n)^3He total cross sections at lab energies from 110 keV
to 650 keV.
A complete fit was performed in energy and angle to both angular distribution
and normalization data for both reactions simultaneously. By including
parameters for experimental variables in the fit, error correlations between
detectors, reactions, and reaction energies were accurately tabulated by
computational methods. With uncertainties around 2% +/- 1% scale error, these
new measurements significantly improve on the existing data set. At relevant
temperatures, using the data of the present work, both reaction rates are found
to be about 7% higher than those in the widely used Nuclear Astrophysics
Compilation of Reaction Rates (NACRE). These data will thus lead not only to
reduced uncertainties, but also to modifications in the BBN abundance
predictions.Comment: 15 pages, 11 figures, minor editorial change
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Effects of biomass burning, lightning, and convection on O-3, CO, and NOy over the tropical Pacific and Australia in August-October 1998 and 1999
Implementation of Geoportal in open environment for the community of the Human Sciences and Society
The Center for Digital Geospatial Resources “Methodologies of Modelling for the Spatial Information Applied to Human Sciences and Society” (M2SIA– M2ISA) was created in March 2006 by the CNRS. The purpose is to facilitate the pooling, exchange, access, transmission, broadcasting, and mutualization of spatial data as well as respect the international geographical standards of the ISO/TC211 from a portal and from a geoportal. The CSDR M²SIA (CRN M²ISA) is constituted by ten partners who belong to the network of the MSH. This structure depends on multi-third party architecture in an open environment. One of the third parties of this architecture is formed by the suppliers of data who correspond to the various MSH sites. These sites give cartographic services created under the ArcIMS software with the AXL language. These services are automatically joined into the architecture and directly consumable by the simple user via an interface developed in Javascript, HTML. The AJAX and Web 2.0 technologies are implemented
Technical Note: Determination of formaldehyde mixing ratios in polluted air with PTR-MS: laboratory experiments and field measurements
International audienceFormaldehyde (HCHO), the most abundant carbonyl compound in the atmosphere, is generated as an intermediate product in the oxidation of nonmethane hydrocarbons. Proton transfer reaction mass spectrometry (PTR-MS) has the capability to detect HCHO from ion signals at m/z 31 with high time-resolution. However, the detection sensitivity is low compared to other detectable species, and is considerably affected by humidity, due to back reactions between protonated HCHO and water vapor prior to analysis. We performed a laboratory calibration of HCHO by PTR-MS and examined the detection sensitivity and humidity dependence at various field strengths. Subsequently, we deployed the PTR-MS instrument in a field campaign at Mount Tai in China in June 2006 to measure HCHO in various meteorological and photochemical conditions; we also conducted intercomparison measurements by Multi-Axis Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy (MAX-DOAS). Correction of interference in the m/z 31 signals by fragments from proton transfer reactions with methyl hydroperoxide, methanol, and ethanol greatly improves agreement between the two methods, giving the correlation [HCHO]MAX-DOAS = (0.99±0.16) [HCHO]PTR-MS + (0.02±0.38), where error limits represent 95% confidence levels
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