9,931 research outputs found
Geometry of contours and Peierls estimates in d=1 Ising models
Following Fr\"ohlich and Spencer, we study one dimensional Ising spin systems
with ferromagnetic, long range interactions which decay as ,
. We introduce a geometric description of the spin
configurations in terms of triangles which play the role of contours and for
which we establish Peierls bounds. This in particular yields a direct proof of
the well known result by Dyson about phase transitions at low temperatures.Comment: 28 pages, 3 figure
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Editorial: Innovative Technologies and Clinical Applications for Invasive and Non-invasive Neuromodulation: From the Workbench to the Bedside.
Detection of variations in aspen forest habitat from LANDSAT digital data: Bear River Range, Utah
The aspen forests of the Bear River Range were analyzed and mapped using data recorded on July 2, 1979 by the LANDSAT III satellite; study efforts yielded sixty-seven light signatures for the study area, of which three groups were identified as aspen and mapped at a scale of 1:24,000. Analysis and verification of the three groups were accomplished by random location of twenty-six field study plots within the LANDSAT-defined aspen areas. All study plots are included within the Cache portion of the Wasatch-Cache National Forest. The following selected site characteristics were recorded for each study plot: a list of understory species present; average percent cover density for understory species; aspen canopy cover estimates and stem measurements; and general site topographic characteristics. The study plot data were then analyzed with respect to corresponding Landsat spectral signatures. Field studies show that all twenty-six study plots are associated with one of the three aspen groups. Further study efforts concentration on characterizing the differences between the site characteristics of plots falling into each of the three aspen groups
Detection of aspen/conifer forest mixes from multitemporal LANDSAT digital data
Aspen, conifer and mixed aspen/conifer forests were mapped for a 15-quadrangle study area in the Utah-Idaho Bear River Range using LANDSAT multispectral scanner (MSS) data. The digital MSS data were utilized to devise quantitative indices which correlate with apparently stable and seral aspen forests. The extent to which a two-date LANDSAT MSS analysis may permit the delineation of different categories of aspen/conifer forest mix was explored. Multitemporal analyses of MSS data led to the identification of early, early to mid, mid to late, and late seral stages of aspen/conifer forest mixing
Detecting agricultural to urban land use change from multi-temporal MSS digital data
Conversion of agricultural land to a variety of urban uses is a major problem along the Wasatch Front, Utah. Although LANDSAT MSS data is a relatively coarse tool for discriminating categories of change in urban-size plots, its availability prompts a thorough test of its power to detect change. The procedures being applied to a test area in Salt Lake County, Utah, where the land conversion problem is acute are presented. The identity of land uses before and after conversion was determined and digital procedures for doing so were compared. Several algorithms were compared, utilizing both raw data and preprocessed data. Verification of results involved high quality color infrared photography and field observation. Two data sets were digitally registered, specific change categories internally identified in the software, results tabulated by computer, and change maps printed at 1:24,000 scale
Cyclic cycle systems of the complete multipartite graph
In this paper, we study the existence problem for cyclic -cycle
decompositions of the graph , the complete multipartite graph with
parts of size , and give necessary and sufficient conditions for their
existence in the case that
An integrated LANDSAT/ancillary data classification of desert rangeland
Range inventorying methods using LANDSAT MSS data, coupled with ancillary data were examined. The study area encompassed nearly 20,000 acres in Rush Valley, Utah. The vegetation is predominately desert shrub and annual grasses, with some annual forbs. Three LANDSAT scenes were evaluated using a Kauth-Thomas brightness/greenness data transformation (May, June, and August dates). The data was classified using a four-band maximum-likelihood classifier. A print map was taken into the field to determine the relationship between print symbols and vegetation. It was determined that classification confusion could be greatly reduced by incorporating geomorphic units and soil texture (coarse vs fine) into the classification. Spectral data, geomorphic units, and soil texture were combined in a GIS format to produce a final vegetation map identifying 12 vegetation types
A Novel Hierarchy of Integrable Lattices
In the framework of the reduction technique for Poisson-Nijenhuis structures,
we derive a new hierarchy of integrable lattice, whose continuum limit is the
AKNS hierarchy. In contrast with other differential-difference versions of the
AKNS system, our hierarchy is endowed with a canonical Poisson structure and,
moreover, it admits a vector generalisation. We also solve the associated
spectral problem and explicity contruct action-angle variables through the
r-matrix approach.Comment: Latex fil
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