2,081 research outputs found

    Developing a data relay network for monitoring hydrologic conditions in south and central Florida

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Water-management models in Florida from ERTS-1 data

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    The author has identified the following significant results. The usefullness of ERTS 1 to improving the overall effectiveness of collecting and disseminating data was evaluated. ERTS MSS imagery and in situ monitoring by DCS were used to evaluate their separate and combined capabilities. Twenty data collection platforms were established in southern Florida. Water level and rainfall measurements were collected and disseminated to users in less than 2 hours, a significant improvement over conventional techniques requiring 2 months. ERTS imagery was found to significantly enhance the utility of ground measurements. Water stage was correlated with water surface areas from imagery in order to obtain water stage-volume relations. Imagery provided an economical basis for extrapolating water parameters from the point samples to unsampled data and provided a synoptic view of water mass boundaries that no amount of ground sampling or monitoring could provide

    Advantages of ERTS data collection system in south Florida

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Acquisition and processing problem of ERTS data in south Florida

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Surface water modeling Everglades Water Basin, Florida

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    There are no author-identified significant results in this report

    Complete genome sequence and construction of an infectious full-length cDNA clone of a cucumber vein yellowing virus (CVYV) isolate from Portugal

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    Cucumber vein yellowing virus (CVYV) is a member of the genus Ipomovirus in the family Potyviridae. In the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) database, three complete genome sequences of CVYV isolates from Spain (NC_006941), Israel (KT276369), and Jordan (JF460793) are available. In this study, we report the complete sequence of an isolate of CVYV from Portugal (DSMZ PV-0776) along with the construction of an infectious full-length cDNA clone via Gibson assembly. The sequence of CVYV Portugal shows the closest relationship to a CVYV isolate from Spain (genome, 99.7% identity; polyprotein, 99.7% identity). The CVYV full-length cDNA clone was introduced by electroporation into Rhizobium radiobacter and infiltrated into the cotyledons of Cucumis sativus plantlets, resulting in symptoms resembling those of the wild-type virus. Transmission of the infectious CVYV full-length clone by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci was confirmed. This first report confirming the infectivity of a CVYV cDNA clone provides the opportunity to study gene functions in a consistent genomic background

    Water-Management Models In Florida From ERTS-1 Data

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    A prototype multiparameter data acquisition network, installed and operated by the U. S. Geological Survey is a viable approach for obtaining near real-time data needed to solve hydrologic problems confronting nearly 2. 5 million residents of south Florida. Selected water quantity and quality data obtained from ground stations are transmitted for relay via ERTS-1 to NASA receiving stations in virtual real time. This data-relay system has been very reliable and, by coupling the ground information with ERTS imagery, a modeling technique is available for water resource management in south Florida. For example, water stage is correlated with watersurface areas to provide water stage-volume relations in near real-time for management decisions concerning the distribution of water to people, fauna, and flora of southern Florida. An overall water-resource model will be generated when the other aspects (stage-seepage, climate, evapotranspiration, water control releases to salt water, etc.) are incorporated. An ecological model has been designed\u27for the Shark River Slough in Everglades National Park. This model uses areal measurements of water surface from ERTS data in conjunction with an aquatic animal sampling program to determine density of aquatic animals in the Shark River Slough. These data are then used by U. S. National Park Service ornithologists to make decisions for regulation of water during the bird rookery season in Everglades National Park

    Extremely Anisotropic Scintillations

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    A small number of quasars exhibit interstellar scintillation on time-scales less than an hour; their scintillation patterns are all known to be anisotropic. Here we consider a totally anisotropic model in which the scintillation pattern is effectively one-dimensional. For the persistent rapid scintillators J1819+3845 and PKS1257-326 we show that this model offers a good description of the two-station time-delay measurements and the annual cycle in the scintillation time-scale. Generalising the model to finite anisotropy yields a better match to the data but the improvement is not significant and the two additional parameters which are required to describe this model are not justified by the existing data. The extreme anisotropy we infer for the scintillation patterns must be attributed to the scattering medium rather than a highly elongated source. For J1819+3845 the totally anisotropic model predicts that the particular radio flux variations seen between mid July and late August should repeat between late August and mid November, and then again between mid November and late December as the Earth twice changes its direction of motion across the scintillation pattern. If this effect can be observed then the minor-axis velocity component of the screen and the orientation of that axis can both be precisely determined. In reality the axis ratio is finite, albeit large, and spatial decorrelation of the flux pattern along the major axis may be observable via differences in the pairwise fluxes within this overlap region; in this case we can also constrain both the major-axis velocity component of the screen and the magnitude of the anisotropy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS submitte

    Some Explorations in Holomorphy

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    In supersymmetric theories, one can obtain striking results and insights by exploiting the fact that the superpotential and the gauge coupling function are holomorphic functions of the model parameters. The precise meaning of this holomorphy is subtle, and has been explained most clearly by Shifman and Vainshtein, who have stressed the role of the Wilsonian effective action. In this note, we elaborate on the Shifman-Vainshtein program, applying it to examples in grand unification, supersymmetric QCD and string theory. We stress that among the ``model parameters" are the cutoffs used to define the Wilsonian action itself, and that generically these must be defined in a field-dependent manner to obtain holomorphic results.Comment: (26 pages and 2 figures as one uuencoded PostScript file) SCIPP 94/11. Important references added; typos correcte
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