17,105 research outputs found
Semi-automatic crop inventory from sequential ERTS-1 imagery
The detection of a newly introduced crop into the Imperial (California) Valley by sequential ERTS-1 imagery is proving that individual crop types can be identified by remote sensing techniques. Initial results have provided an extremely useful product for water agencies. A system for the identification of field conditions enables the production of a statistical summary within two to three days of receipt of the ERTS-1 imagery. The summary indicates the total acreage of producing crops and irrigated planted crops currently demanding water and further indicates freshly plowed fields that will be demanding water in the near future. Relating the field conditions to the crop calendar of the region by means of computer techniques will provide specific crop identification for the 8000 plus fields
Evaluation of remote sensing in control of pink bollworm in cotton
The author has identified the following significant results. This project is to identify and map cotton fields in the southern deserts of California. Cotton in the Imperial, Coachella, and Palo Verde Valleys is heavily infested by the pink bollworm which affects both the quantity and quality of cotton produced. In California the growing season of cotton is regulated by establishing planting and plowdown dates. These procedures ensure that the larvae, whose diapause or resting period occurs during the winter months, will have no plant material on which to feed, thus inhibiting spring moth emergence. the underflight data from the U-2 aircraft has shound that it is possible to detect the differences between a growing, a defoliated, and plowed down field providing the locations of the fields are known. The ERTS-1 MSS data are being analyzed using an I2S optical color combiner to determine which combinations of dates and colors will identify cotton fields and thus provide the data needed to produce maps of the fields for the forthcoming season
Evaluation of remote sensing in control of pink bollworm in cotton
The author has identified the following significant results. This investigation is to evaluate the use of a satellite in monitoring the cotton production regulation program of the State of California as an aid in controlling pink bollworm infestation in the southern deserts of California. Color combined images of ERTS-1 multispectral images simulating color infrared are being used for crop identification. The status of each field (crop, bare, harvested, wet, plowed) is mapped from the imagery and is then compared to ground survey information taken at the time of ERTS-1 overflights. A computer analysis has been performed to compare field and satellite data to a crop calendar. Correlation to date has been 97% for field condition. Actual crop identification varies; cotton identification is only 63% due to lack of full season coverage
Magnetic Wormholes and Vertex Operators
We consider wormhole solutions in Euclidean dimensions. A duality
transformation is introduced to derive a new action from magnetic wormhole
action of Gupta, Hughes, Preskill and Wise. The classical solution is
presented. The vertex operators corresponding to the wormhole are derived.
Conformally coupled scalars and spinors are considered in the wormhole
background and the vertex operators are computed. ( To be published in Phys.
Rev. D15)Comment: 18 pages of RevTex, preprint IP/BBSR/94-2
Wormholes and Supersymmetry
Revisions: reference added to: G. Gilbert, {\sl Nucl.Phys.} {\bf B328}, 159
(1989)Comment: 29 pages, jnl, McGill/92-2
Probabilistic Approach to Time-Dependent Load-Transfer Models of Fracture
A probabilistic method for solving time-dependent load-transfer models of
fracture is developed. It is applicable to any rule of load redistribution,
i.e, local, hierarchical, etc. In the new method, the fluctuations are
generated during the breaking process (annealed randomness) while in the usual
method, the random lifetimes are fixed at the beginning (quenched disorder).
Both approaches are equivalent.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures. To appear in Phys.Rev.
Non-Singular Stationary Global Strings
A field-theoretical model for non-singular global cosmic strings is
presented. The model is a non-linear sigma model with a potential term for a
self-gravitating complex scalar field. Non-singular stationary solutions with
angular momentum and possibly linear momentum are obtained by assuming an
oscillatory dependence of the scalar field on t, phi and z. This dependence has
an effect similar to gauging the global U(1) symmetry of the model, which is
actually a Kaluza-Klein reduction from four to three spacetime dimensions. The
method of analysis can be regarded as an extension of the
gravito-electromagnetism formalism beyond the weak field limit. Some D=3
self-dual solutions are also discussed.Comment: 20 pages Latex, 12 PS figures included. Minor corrections. Version to
appear in Phys.Rev.
Pipeline column separation flow regimes
A generalized set of pipeline column separation equations is presented describing all conventional types of low-pressure regions. These include water hammer zones, distributed vaporous cavitation, vapor cavities, and shocks (that eliminate distributed vaporous cavitation zones). Numerical methods for solving these equations are then considered, leading to a review of three numerical models of column separation. These include the discrete vapor cavity model, the discrete gas cavity model, and the generalized interface vaporous cavitation model. The generalized interface vaporous cavitation model enables direct tracking of actual column separation phenomena (e.g., discrete cavities, vaporous cavitation zones), and consequently, better insight into the transient event. Numerical results from the three column separation models are compared with results of measurements for a number of flow regimes initiated by a rapid closure of a downstream valve in a sloping pipeline laboratory apparatus. Finally, conclusions are drawn about the accuracy of the modeling approaches. A new classification of column separation (active or passive) is proposed based on whether the maximum pressure in a pipeline following column separation results in a short-duration pressure pulse that exceeds the magnitude of the Joukowsky pressure rise for rapid valve closure.Anton Bergant and Angus R. Simpso
Black hole formation from colliding bubbles
Some indication of conditions that are necessary for the formation of black
holes from the collision of bubbles during a supercooled phase transition in
the the early universe are explored. Two colliding bubbles can never form a
black hole. Three colliding bubbles can refocus the energy in their walls to
the extent that it becomes infinite.Comment: 12 pages, NCL93-TP13 (RevTeX
Time dependence of breakdown in a global fiber-bundle model with continuous damage
A time-dependent global fiber-bundle model of fracture with continuous damage
is formulated in terms of a set of coupled non-linear differential equations. A
first integral of this set is analytically obtained. The time evolution of the
system is studied by applying a discrete probabilistic method. Several results
are discussed emphasizing their differences with the standard time-dependent
model. The results obtained show that with this simple model a variety of
experimental observations can be qualitatively reproduced.Comment: APS style, two columns, 4 figures. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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