43,320 research outputs found

    The Depths of Cast Shadow

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    To improve the accuracy of analysis outputs from remotely sensed images, shadow and illumination effects need to be minimised or removed. Shadow behaviour at different spectral wavelengths needs to be understood to quantify shadow accurately. This study examined whether a normalised spectral signature of shadow is invariant to sun–object–sensor geometry and can be used to quantify shadow depth. A “FieldSpec® Pro FR” Spectroradiometer and a Canon 450D digital SLR camera were used to measure signatures of cast shadow. Our field-based experiment used an occulter to cast shadow onto a ‘Spectralon’ white plate at six incremental zenith angles and evaluated shadow behaviour within and between varying footprints. A white-balanced image of each shadow zenith was taken by the Canon 450D. The FR Spectroradiometer signatures were normalised to unit vector form and compared to longitudinal transect profiles of shadow from normalised camera images using a scattering index (SI). The normalised signatures show that shadow depth is darker and more ‘blue’ at the proximal areas and conversely that image brightness values increases towards distal areas. Since image brightness is a result of sun–object–sensor geometry, we conclude that a normalised spectral signature is invariant to geometry and can be used to quantify shadow depth

    Smoke and Shadows: Rendering and Light Interaction of Smoke in Real-Time Rendered Virtual Environments

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    Realism in computer graphics depends upon digitally representing what we see in the world with careful attention to detail, which usually requires a high degree of complexity in modelling the scene. The inevitable trade-off between realism and performance means that new techniques that aim to improve the visual fidelity of a scene must do so without compromising the real-time rendering performance. We describe and discuss a simple method for realistically casting shadows from an opaque solid object through a GPU (graphics processing unit) based particle system representing natural phenomena, such as smoke

    Evidence for the Galactic X-ray Bulge II

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    A mosaic of 5 \ros~PSPC pointed observations in the Galactic plane (l25l\sim25^{\circ}) reveals X-ray shadows in the 0.52.00.5-2.0 keV band cast by distant molecular clouds. The observed on-cloud and off-cloud X-ray fluxes indicate that 15\sim15% and 37\sim37% of the diffuse X-ray background in this direction in the \tq~keV and 1.5 keV bands, respectively, originates behind the molecular gas which is located at \sim3 kpc from the Sun. The implication of the derived background X-ray flux beyond the absorbing molecular cloud is consistent with, and lends further support to recent observations of a Galactic X-ray bulge.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figures, 2 table

    SeaWiFS technical report series. Volume 5: Ocean optics protocols for SeaWiFS validation

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    Protocols are presented for measuring optical properties, and other environmental variables, to validate the radiometric performance of the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS), and to develop and validate bio-optical algorithms for use with SeaWiFS data. The protocols are intended to establish foundations for a measurement strategy to verify the challenging SeaWiFS accuracy goals of 5 percent in water-leaving radiances and 35 percent in chlorophyll alpha concentration. The protocols first specify the variables which must be measured, and briefly review rationale. Subsequent chapters cover detailed protocols for instrument performance specifications, characterizing and calibration instruments, methods of making measurements in the field, and methods of data analysis. These protocols were developed at a workshop sponsored by the SeaWiFS Project Office (SPO) and held at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California (9-12 April, 1991). This report is the proceedings of that workshop, as interpreted and expanded by the authors and reviewed by workshop participants and other members of the bio-optical research community. The protocols are a first prescription to approach unprecedented measurement accuracies implied by the SeaWiFS goals, and research and development are needed to improve the state-of-the-art in specific areas. The protocols should be periodically revised to reflect technical advances during the SeaWiFS Project cycle

    How the First Stars Regulated Star Formation. II. Enrichment by Nearby Supernovae

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    Metals from Population III (Pop III) supernovae led to the formation of less massive Pop II stars in the early universe, altering the course of evolution of primeval galaxies and cosmological reionization. There are a variety of scenarios in which heavy elements from the first supernovae were taken up into second-generation stars, but cosmological simulations only model them on the largest scales. We present small-scale, high-resolution simulations of the chemical enrichment of a primordial halo by a nearby supernova after partial evaporation by the progenitor star. We find that ejecta from the explosion crash into and mix violently with ablative flows driven off the halo by the star, creating dense, enriched clumps capable of collapsing into Pop II stars. Metals may mix less efficiently with the partially exposed core of the halo, so it might form either Pop III or Pop II stars. Both Pop II and III stars may thus form after the collision if the ejecta do not strip all the gas from the halo. The partial evaporation of the halo prior to the explosion is crucial to its later enrichment by the supernova.Comment: Accepted to Ap

    Faces of the Teouma Lapita People: Art, Accuracy and Facial Approximation

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    In 2008 we completed facial approximations of four individuals from the early Lapita Culture, a seafaring people who were the first to settle the islands of the Western Pacific circa 3000 years ago. Typically an approximation is performed as a 3D sculpture or using computer graphics. We chose to sketch what we have been able to determine from the remains because the artistic conventions of drawing work with visual perception in ways that are more complementary to the knowledge, theories and methods that make up the facial approximation of human remains

    Talking Back: Lessons in the Wilderness: Student Immersion and Inspiration

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    Using Multibeam Echosounders for Hydrographic Surveying in the Water Column: Estimating Wreck Least Depths

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    Wreck superstructure can extend into the water column and pose a danger to navigation if the least depth is not accurately portrayed to mariners. NOAA has several methods available to acquire a wreck least depth: lead line, wire drag, diver investigation, side scan shadow length, single beam bathymetry, and multibeam bathymetry. Previous studies have demonstrated that the bottom detection algorithm can fail to locate a wreck mast that is evident in the water column data. Modern multibeam sonars can record water column data in addition to bottom detections. NOAA’s current Hydrographic Specifications do not require water column collection; the best practice is to collect additional bathymetry data during wreck developments. Several multibeam bathymetry and multibeam water column datasets collected by NOAA vessels are evaluated and the wreck least depth results are compared to previous international field trials. A workflow to extract filtered and sidelobe suppressed water column point clouds is presented using currently available software packages. This paper explores the challenges encountered with water column data collection and processing and finds that analysis of water column data provides an improvement to finding wreck least depths, in some cases

    Shadows along the spiritual pathway

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    Contemporary spirituality discourses tend to assume that a canopy of light and love overarches all spiritual pathways. Unfortunately, the dark side of humanity cannot be spirited away so easily, and aberrations of personal spiritual development, interpersonal spiritual relationships and new spiritual movements can often be traced to the denial, repression and return of our dark side. Transpersonal psychology offers a way of approaching, reframing and redeeming the unconscious depths of our psyche, with its metaphors of shadows and daimons on the one hand, and its therapeutic practices for symbolically containing and transcending polarities on the other. In its absence, any spirituality which eulogises holistic growth is likely to engender the reverse effect
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