1,224 research outputs found
Acquisition of weather and ground data for Skylab
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
A reconnaissance space sensing investigation of the crustal structure for a strip from the eastern Sierra Nevada to the Colorado Plateau: April 1971
The author has identified the following significant results. An area of anomalous linear topographic grain and color expressions was recognized in Apollo 9 and ERTS-1 imagery along the Colorado River of northwestern Arizona and southern Nevada. Field reconnaissance and analysis of U-2 photography has shown the anomaly to be a zone of north to north-northwest trending dike swarms and associated granitic plutons. The dikes vary in composition from rhyolite to diabase, with an average composition nearer rhyolite. Shearing and displacement of host rocks along dikes suggest dike emplacement along active fault zones. Post-dike deformation has resulted in shearing and complex normal faulting along a similar north-south trend. The epizonal plutonism and volcanism of this north-south belt appears to represent a structurally controlled volcanogenic province which ends abruptly in the vicinity of Lake Mead at a probable eastern extension of the Las Vegas Shear Zone. The magnitude and chronology of extensional faulting and plutonism recognized in the north-south zone, support the hypothesis that the Las Vegas Shear Zone is a transform fault separating two areas of crustal spreading
Constraints on the active tectonics of the Friuli/NW Slovenia area from CGPS measurements and three-dimensional kinematic modeling
We use site velocities from continuous GPS (CGPS) observations and kinematic
modeling to investigate the active tectonics of the Friuli/NW Slovenia area. Data from 42
CGPS stations around the Adriatic indicate an oblique collision, with southern Friuli
moving NNW toward northern Friuli at the relative speed of 1.6 to 2.2 mm/a. We
investigate the active tectonics using 3DMove, a three-dimensional kinematic model tool.
The model consists of one indenter-shaped fault plane that approximates the Adriatic
plate boundary. Using the ‘‘fault-parallel flow’’ deformation algorithm, we move the
hanging wall along the fault plane in the direction indicated by the GPS velocities. The
resulting strain field is used for structural interpretation. We identify a pattern of
coincident strain maxima and high vorticity that correlates well with groups of
hypocenters of major earthquakes (including their aftershocks) and indicates the
orientation of secondary, active faults. The pattern reveals structures both parallel and
perpendicular to the strike of the primary fault. In the eastern sector, which shows more
complex tectonics, these two sets of faults probably form an interacting strike-slip
system
A reconnaissance space sensing investigation of crustal structure for a strip from the eastern Sierra Nevada to the Colorado Plateau
There are no author-identified significant results in this report. Research progress in applications of ERTS-1 MSS imagery in study of Basin-Range tectonics is summarized. Field reconnaissance of ERTS-1 image anomalies has resulted in recognition of previously unreported fault zones and regional structural control of volcanic and plutonic activity. NIMBUS, Apollo 9, X-15, U-2, and SLAR imagery are discussed with specific applications, and methods of image enhancement and analysis employed in the research are summarized. Areas studied and methods employed in geologic field work are outlined
The Size and Nature of Lyman alpha Forest Clouds Probed by QSO Pairs and Groups
We describe a robust Bayesian statistical method for determining Lyman alpha
forest cloud sizes in spherical and in thin disk geometries, using absorption
in adjacent sightlines toward closely separated QSO pairs and groups, apply
this method to the available data, and discuss implications of our results for
models of Ly alpha clouds. Under the assumption of a population of uniform-
size and unclustered clouds, the data from Q1343+2640A/B give a 99% confidence
lower and upper bounds 61<R<533 kpc/h on the radius of spherical clouds at z
about 1.8, with a median value of 149 kpc/h [].
The baryonic mass of such large clouds is comparable to that of dwarf irregular
galaxies. Their cosmic overdensity is close to the turn-around density but
generally below the virialization density, suggesting a population of gravi-
tationally bound but unvirialized protogalactic objects at z about 2. Their
comoving volume density is similar to that of the faint blue galaxies (FBGs) at
the limiting magnitude B of 26-27. The dynamical collapsing timescale of over-
densities like these clouds is also comparable with the cosmic time difference
between z of 2 to 1. Both populations of objects show similar weak clustering
in space. All this evidence suggests a possible identification of Ly alpha
clouds as the collapsing progenitors of the FBGs at z about 1. We also
investigate the other QSO pairs: Q0307-1931/1932, Q0107-0232/0235, and the
triplet of Q1623+268. Imposing an uniform W_0 > 0.4 A threshold on all
linelists, we find a trend of larger inferred cloud radius with larger proper
separation of QSO pairs, significant at the 3.4 sigma level. This indicates
that the idealization of unclustered, uniform-sized clouds does not accurately
describe the Ly alpha cloud population.Comment: Astrophysical Journal accepted; 28 pages of uuencoded gzip compressed
postscript file (including 8 figures). Also see the uncompressed postscript
file at http://www.astro.columbia.edu/~fang
An evaluation of Skylab (EREP) remote sensing techniques applied to investigations of crustal structure
The author has identified the following significant results. Film positives (70mm) from all six S190A multispectral photographic camera stations for any one scene can be registered and analyzed in a color additive viewer. Using a multispectral viewer, S190A and B films can be projected directly onto published geologic and topographic maps at scales as large as 1:62,500 and 1:24,000 without significant loss of detail. S190A films and prints permit the detection of faults, fractures, and other linear features not visible in any other space imagery. S192 MSS imagery can be useful for rock-type discrimination studies and delineation of linear patterns and arcuate anomalies. Anomalous color reflectances and arcuate color patterns revealed mineralized zones, copper deposits, vegetation, and volcanic rocks in various locations such as Panamint Range (CA), Greenwater (Death Valley), Lava Mountains (CA), northwestern Arizona, and Coso Hot Springs (CA)
The Discovery of Extended Thermal X-ray Emission from PKS 2152-699: Evidence for a `Jet-cloud' Interaction
A Chandra ACIS-S observation of PKS 2152-699 reveals thermal emission from a
diffuse region around the core and a hotspot located 10" northeast from the
core. This is the first detection of thermal X-ray radiation on kiloparsec
scales from an extragalactic radio source. Two other hotspots located 47"
north-northeast and 26" southwest from the core were also detected. Using a
Raymond-Smith model, the first hotspot can be characterized with a thermal
plasma temperature of 2.6 K and an electron number density of 0.17
cm. These values correspond to a cooling time of about 1.6
yr. In addition, an emission line from the hotspot, possibly Fe xxv, was
detected at rest wavelength 10.04\AA.
The thermal X-ray emission from the first hotspot is offset from the radio
emission but is coincident with optical filaments detected with broadband
filters of HST/WFPC2. The best explanation for the X-ray, radio, and optical
emission is that of a `jet-cloud' interaction.
The diffuse emission around the nucleus of PKS 2152-699 can be modeled as a
thermal plasma with a temperature of 1.2 K and a luminosity of
1.8 erg s. This emission appears to be asymmetric with a
small extension toward Hotspot A, similar to a jet. An optical hotspot (EELR)
is seen less than an arcsecond away from this extension in the direction of the
core. This indicates that the extension may be caused by the jet interacting
with an inner ISM cloud, but entrainment of hot gas is unavoidable. Future
observations are discussed.Comment: To appear in the Astrophysical Journal 21 pages, 5 Postscript
figures, 1 table, AASTeX v. 5.
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