9,086 research outputs found

    Environmental study of ERTS-1 imagery: Lake Champlain and Vermont

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    Environmental concerns of the State of Vermont currently being stressed include water quality in Lake Champlain and a state-wide land use and capability plan. Significant results obtained from ERTS-1 relate directly to the above concerns. Industrial water pollution and turbidity in Lake Champlain have been identified and mapped and the ERTS pollution data will be used in the developing court suit which Vermont has initiated against the polluters. ERTS imagery has also provided a foundation for updating and revising land use inventories. Major classes of land use have been identified and mapped, and substantial progress has been made toward the mapping of such land use divisions as crop and forest type, and wetlands

    Directed percolation in aerodynamics: resolving laminar separation bubble on airfoils

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    In nature, phase transitions prevail amongst inherently different systems, while frequently showing a universal behavior at their critical point. As a fundamental phenomenon of fluid mechanics, recent studies suggested laminar-turbulent transition belonging to the universality class of directed percolation. Beyond, no indication was yet found that directed percolation is encountered in technical relevant fluid mechanics. Here, we present first evidence that the onset of a laminar separation bubble on an airfoil can be well characterized employing the directed percolation model on high fidelity particle image velocimetry data. In an extensive analysis, we show that the obtained critical exponents are robust against parameter fluctuations, namely threshold of turbulence intensity that distinguishes between ambient flow and laminar separation bubble. Our findings indicate a comprehensive significance of percolation models in fluid mechanics beyond fundamental flow phenomena, in particular, it enables the precise determination of the transition point of the laminar separation bubble. This opens a broad variety of new fields of application, ranging from experimental airfoil aerodynamics to computational fluid dynamics.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figure

    Electrodynamic Radiation Reaction and General Relativity

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    We argue that the well-known problem of the instabilities associated with the self-forces (radiation reaction forces) in classical electrodynamics are possibly stabilized by the introduction of gravitational forces via general relativity

    Spectral Simplicity of Apparent Complexity, Part II: Exact Complexities and Complexity Spectra

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    The meromorphic functional calculus developed in Part I overcomes the nondiagonalizability of linear operators that arises often in the temporal evolution of complex systems and is generic to the metadynamics of predicting their behavior. Using the resulting spectral decomposition, we derive closed-form expressions for correlation functions, finite-length Shannon entropy-rate approximates, asymptotic entropy rate, excess entropy, transient information, transient and asymptotic state uncertainty, and synchronization information of stochastic processes generated by finite-state hidden Markov models. This introduces analytical tractability to investigating information processing in discrete-event stochastic processes, symbolic dynamics, and chaotic dynamical systems. Comparisons reveal mathematical similarities between complexity measures originally thought to capture distinct informational and computational properties. We also introduce a new kind of spectral analysis via coronal spectrograms and the frequency-dependent spectra of past-future mutual information. We analyze a number of examples to illustrate the methods, emphasizing processes with multivariate dependencies beyond pairwise correlation. An appendix presents spectral decomposition calculations for one example in full detail.Comment: 27 pages, 12 figures, 2 tables; most recent version at http://csc.ucdavis.edu/~cmg/compmech/pubs/sdscpt2.ht

    Modern information technologies in construction of kinetic models for reactions of metal complex catalysis

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    AbstractFor detailed study of complex chemical reactions mechanisms experiment is conducted for selected private reactions. This causes a problem of kinetic parameters getting—the same set of rate constants must describe both public and private reaction stages, and also a general mechanism. In this paper, solution of this problem for a reaction of olefins hydroalumination is proposed. To optimize the computational process a methodology of parallelization is elaborated. On the base of parallel computations, a kinetic model for the reaction assigned is constructed, and on its base, the physical and chemical conclusions about reaction mechanism are done

    Mid-infrared frequency comb generation via cascaded quadratic nonlinearities in quasi-phase-matched waveguides

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    We experimentally demonstrate a simple configuration for mid-infrared (MIR) frequency comb generation in quasi-phase-matched lithium niobate waveguides using the cascaded-χ(2)\chi^{(2)} nonlinearity. With nanojoule-scale pulses from an Er:fiber laser, we observe octave-spanning supercontinuum in the near-infrared with dispersive-wave generation in the 2.5--3 \text{\mu}m region and intra-pulse difference-frequency generation in the 4--5 \text{\mu}m region. By engineering the quasi-phase-matched grating profiles, tunable, narrow-band MIR and broadband MIR spectra are both observed in this geometry. Finally, we perform numerical modeling using a nonlinear envelope equation, which shows good quantitative agreement with the experiment---and can be used to inform waveguide designs to tailor the MIR frequency combs. Our results identify a path to a simple single-branch approach to mid-infrared frequency comb generation in a compact platform using commercial Er:fiber technology

    Superdiffusion of massive particles induced by multi-scale velocity fields

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    We study drag-induced diffusion of massive particles in scale-free velocity fields, where superdiffusive behavior emerges due to the scale-free size distribution of the vortices of the underlying velocity field. The results show qualitative resemblance to what is observed in fluid systems, namely the diffusive exponent for the mean square separation of pairs of particles and the preferential concentration of the particles, both as a function of the response time.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures. Accepted for publication in EP
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