1,348 research outputs found
Radiative transfer theory for polarimetric remote sensing of pine forest
The radiative transfer theory is applied to interpret polarimetric radar backscatter from pine forest with clustered vegetation structures. To take into account the clustered structures with the radiative transfer theory, the scattering function of each cluster is calculated by incorporating the phase interference of scattered fields from each component. Subsequently, the resulting phase matrix is used in the radiative transfer equations to evaluate the polarimetric backscattering coefficients from random medium layers embedded with vegetation clusters. Upon including the multi-scale structures, namely, trunks, primary and secondary branches, as well as needles, we interpret and simulate the polarimetric radar responses from pine forest for different frequencies and looking angles. The preliminary results are shown to be in good agreement with the measured backscattering coefficients at the Landes maritime pine forest during the MAESTRO-1 experiment
Automated Grain Yield Behavior Classification
A method for classifying grain stress evolution behaviors using unsupervised learning techniques is presented. The method is applied to analyze grain stress histories measured in-situ using high-energy X-ray diffraction microscopy (HEDM) from the aluminum-lithium alloy Al-Li 2099 at the elastic-plastic transition (yield). The unsupervised learning process automatically classified the grain stress histories into four groups: major softening, no work-hardening or softening, moderate work-hardening, and major work-hardening. The orientation and spatial dependence of these four groups are discussed. In addition, the generality of the classification process to other samples is explored
Retrieval of pine forest biomass using JPL AIRSAR data
The analysis of Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) Airborne Synthetic Aperture Radar (AIRSAR) data over the Landes forest in South-West France revealed strong correlation between L- and especially P-band sigma degrees and the pine forest biomass. To explain the physical link of radar backscatter to biomass, a polarimetric backscattering model was developed and validated. Then the model was used in a simulation study to predict sigma degree sensitivity to undesired canopy and environmental parameters. Main results concerning the data analysis, modeling, and simulation at P-band are reported
Dislocation transport and intermittency in the plasticity of crystalline solids
International audienceWhen envisioned at the relevant length scale, plasticity of crystalline solids consists in the transport of dislocations through the lattice. In this paper, transport of dislocations is evidenced by experimental data gathered from high-resolution extensometry carried out on copper single crystals in tension. Spatiotemporal kinematic fields display spatial correlation through characteristic lines intermittently covered by plastic activity. Intermittency shows temporal correlation and power-law distribution of avalanche size. Interpretation of this phenomenon is proposed within the framework of a field dislocation theory attacking the combined problem of dislocation transport and long-range internal stress field development. Intermittency and transport properties show remarkable independence from sample size, aspect ratio, loading rate, and strain-rate sensitivity of the flow stress
Selected Essays for Strategy Curriculum
How Adaptive Has the Military Been to Technological Change? Thucydides on the Influence of Seapower Union Victory: Manpower, Management of Resources, or Generalship? The Royal Navy\u27s Defeat of the French at Sea in the Years 1793-181
Ultra-strong light–matter coupling for designer Reststrahlen band
The strength of the light–matter interaction depends on the number of dipoles that can couple with the photon trapped in an optical cavity. The coupling strength can thus be maximized by filling the entire cavity volume with an ensemble of interacting dipoles. In this work this is achieved by inserting a highly doped semiconductor layer in a subwavelength plasmonic resonator. In our system the ultra-strong light–matter coupling occurs between a collective electronic excitation and the cavity photon. The measured coupling strength is 73% of the matter excitation energy, the highest ever reported for a light–matter coupled system at room temperature. We experimentally and theoretically demonstrate that such an ultra-strong interaction modifies the optical properties on a very wide spectral range (20–250 meV), and results in the appearance of a photonic gap of 38 meV, independently of the light polarization and angle of incidence. Light–matter ultra-strong coupling can thus be exploited to conceive metasurfaces with an engineered reflectivity band
-NMR of Isolated Li Implanted into a Thin Copper Film
Depth-controlled -NMR was used to study highly spin-polarized Li
in a Cu film of thickness 100 nm deposited onto a MgO substrate. The positive
Knight Shifts and spin relaxation data show that Li occupies two sites at
low temperatures, assigned to be the substitutional () and octahedral ()
interstitial sites. Between 50 to 100 K, there is a site change from to
. The temperature dependence of the Knight shifts and spin-lattice
relaxation rates at high temperatures, i.e. when all the Li are in the
site, is consistent with the Korringa Law for a simple metal.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
2D photonic-crystal optomechanical nanoresonator
We present the optical optimization of an optomechanical device based on a
suspended InP membrane patterned with a 2D near-wavelength grating (NWG) based
on a 2D photonic-crystal geometry. We first identify by numerical simulation a
set of geometrical parameters providing a reflectivity higher than 99.8 % over
a 50-nm span. We then study the limitations induced by the finite value of the
optical waist and lateral size of the NWG pattern using different numerical
approaches. The NWG grating, pierced in a suspended InP 265 nm-thick membrane,
is used to form a compact microcavity involving the suspended nano-membrane as
end mirror. The resulting cavity has a waist size smaller than 10 m and a
finesse in the 200 range. It is used to probe the Brownian motion of the
mechanical modes of the nanomembrane
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