2,572 research outputs found
Thunderstorm vertical velocities and mass flux estimated from satellite data
Infrared geosynchronous satellite data with an interval of five minutes between images are used to estimate thunderstorm top ascent rates on two case study days. A mean vertical velocity of 3.5/ms for 19 clouds is calculated at a height of 8.7 km. This upward motion is representative of an area of approximately 10km on a side. Thunderstorm mass flux of approximately 2x10 to the 11th power/gs is calculated, which compares favorably with previous estimates. There is a significant difference in the mean calculated vertical velocity between elements associated with severe weather reports (w bar=4.6/ms) and those with no such reports (2.5/ms). Calculations were made using a velocity profile for an axially symmetric jet to estimate the peak updraft velocity. For the largest observed w value of 7.8/ms the calculation indicates a peak updraft of approximately 50/ms
Performance of a Brayton power system with a space type radiator
Test results of an experimental investigation to measure Brayton engine performance while operating at the sink temperatures of a typical low earth orbit are presented. The results indicate that the radiator area was slightly oversized. The steady state and transient responses of the power system to the sink temperatures in orbit were measured. During the orbital operation, the engine did not reach the steady state operation of either sun or shade conditions. The alternator power variation during orbit was + or - 4 percent from its mean value of 9.3 kilowatts
Community detection in temporal multilayer networks, with an application to correlation networks
Networks are a convenient way to represent complex systems of interacting
entities. Many networks contain "communities" of nodes that are more densely
connected to each other than to nodes in the rest of the network. In this
paper, we investigate the detection of communities in temporal networks
represented as multilayer networks. As a focal example, we study time-dependent
financial-asset correlation networks. We first argue that the use of the
"modularity" quality function---which is defined by comparing edge weights in
an observed network to expected edge weights in a "null network"---is
application-dependent. We differentiate between "null networks" and "null
models" in our discussion of modularity maximization, and we highlight that the
same null network can correspond to different null models. We then investigate
a multilayer modularity-maximization problem to identify communities in
temporal networks. Our multilayer analysis only depends on the form of the
maximization problem and not on the specific quality function that one chooses.
We introduce a diagnostic to measure \emph{persistence} of community structure
in a multilayer network partition. We prove several results that describe how
the multilayer maximization problem measures a trade-off between static
community structure within layers and larger values of persistence across
layers. We also discuss some computational issues that the popular "Louvain"
heuristic faces with temporal multilayer networks and suggest ways to mitigate
them.Comment: 42 pages, many figures, final accepted version before typesettin
The structure of one-relator relative presentations and their centres
Suppose that G is a nontrivial torsion-free group and w is a word in the
alphabet G\cup\{x_1^{\pm1},...,x_n^{\pm1}\} such that the word w' obtained from
w by erasing all letters belonging to G is not a proper power in the free group
F(x_1,...,x_n). We show how to reduce the study of the relative presentation
\^G= to the case n=1. It turns out that an
"n-variable" group \^G can be constructed from similar "one-variable" groups
using an explicit construction similar to wreath product. As an illustration,
we prove that, for n>1, the centre of \^G is always trivial. For n=1, the
centre of \^G is also almost always trivial; there are several exceptions, and
all of them are known.Comment: 15 pages. A Russian version of this paper is at
http://mech.math.msu.su/department/algebra/staff/klyachko/papers.htm . V4:
the intoduction is rewritten; Section 1 is extended; a short introduction to
Secton 5 is added; some misprints are corrected and some cosmetic
improvements are mad
Potassium condensing tests of horizontal multitube convective and radiative condensers operating at vapor temperatures of 1250 deg to 1500 deg F
Potassium condensing tests of horizontal multitube convective and radiative condenser operating at vapor temperature
The Mirage of Triangular Arbitrage in the Spot Foreign Exchange Market
We investigate triangular arbitrage within the spot foreign exchange market
using high-frequency executable prices. We show that triangular arbitrage
opportunities do exist, but that most have short durations and small
magnitudes. We find intra-day variations in the number and length of arbitrage
opportunities, with larger numbers of opportunities with shorter mean durations
occurring during more liquid hours. We demonstrate further that the number of
arbitrage opportunities has decreased in recent years, implying a corresponding
increase in pricing efficiency. Using trading simulations, we show that a
trader would need to beat other market participants to an unfeasibly large
proportion of arbitrage prices to profit from triangular arbitrage over a
prolonged period of time. Our results suggest that the foreign exchange market
is internally self-consistent and provide a limited verification of market
efficiency
Evaluation of be-38 percent al alloy final report, 27 jun. 1964 - 28 feb. 1965
Mechanical properties, microstructural features, and general metallurgical quality of beryllium- aluminum allo
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