1,355 research outputs found
Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS): An investigator's guide to TIMS data
The Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS) is a NASA aircraft scanner providing six channel spectral capability in the thermal infrared region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Operating in the atmospheric window region (8 to 12 micrometers) with a channel sensitivity of approximately 0.1 C, TIMS may be used whenever an accurate measure of the Earth's surface is needed. A description of this scanner is provided as well as a discussion of data acquisition and reduction
Brief Announcement: The Temporal Firefighter Problem
The Firefighter problem asks how many vertices can be saved from a fire spreading over the vertices of a graph. At timestep 0 a vertex begins burning, then on each subsequent timestep a non-burning vertex is chosen to be defended, and the fire then spreads to all undefended vertices that it neighbours. The problem is NP-Complete on arbitrary graphs, however existing work has found several graph classes for which there are polynomial time solutions. We introduce Temporal Firefighter, an extension of Firefighter to temporal graphs. We show that Temporal Firefighter is also NP-Complete, and remains so on all but one of the underlying classes of graphs on which Firefighter is known to have a polynomial-time solution. This motivates us to explore restrictions on the temporal structure of the graph, and we find that Temporal Firefighter is fixed parameter tractable with respect to the temporal graph parameter vertex-interval-membership-width
Numerical investigation of high-pressure combustion in rocket engines using Flamelet/Progress-variable models
The present paper deals with the numerical study of high pressure LOx/H2 or
LOx/hydrocarbon combustion for propulsion systems. The present research effort
is driven by the continued interest in achieving low cost, reliable access to
space and more recently, by the renewed interest in hypersonic transportation
systems capable of reducing time-to-destination. Moreover, combustion at high
pressure has been assumed as a key issue to achieve better propulsive
performance and lower environmental impact, as long as the replacement of
hydrogen with a hydrocarbon, to reduce the costs related to ground operations
and increase flexibility. The current work provides a model for the numerical
simulation of high- pressure turbulent combustion employing detailed chemistry
description, embedded in a RANS equations solver with a Low Reynolds number
k-omega turbulence model. The model used to study such a combustion phenomenon
is an extension of the standard flamelet-progress-variable (FPV) turbulent
combustion model combined with a Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes equation
Solver (RANS). In the FPV model, all of the thermo-chemical quantities are
evaluated by evolving the mixture fraction Z and a progress variable C. When
using a turbulence model in conjunction with FPV model, a probability density
function (PDF) is required to evaluate statistical averages of chemical
quantities. The choice of such PDF must be a compromise between computational
costs and accuracy level. State- of-the-art FPV models are built presuming the
functional shape of the joint PDF of Z and C in order to evaluate
Favre-averages of thermodynamic quantities. The model here proposed evaluates
the most probable joint distribution of Z and C without any assumption on their
behavior.Comment: presented at AIAA Scitech 201
Annotated bibliography of published articles, speeches and books having significance to public relations
Thesis (M.S.)--Boston University, 195
Efficient asymptotic frame selection for binary black hole spacetimes using asymptotic radiation
Previous studies have demonstrated that gravitational radiation reliably
encodes information about the natural emission direction of the source (e.g.,
the orbital plane). In this paper, we demonstrate that these orientations can
be efficiently estimated by the principal axes of , an average of the
action of rotation group generators on the Weyl tensor at asymptotic infinity.
Evaluating this average at each time provides the instantaneous emission
direction. Further averaging across the entire signal yields an average
orientation, closely connected to the angular components of the Fisher matrix.
The latter direction is well-suited to data analysis and parameter estimation
when the instantaneous emission direction evolves significantly. Finally, in
the time domain, the average provides fast, invariant diagnostics of
waveform quality.Comment: Submitted to PR
AADC deficiency from infancy to adulthood: Symptoms and developmental outcome in an international cohort of 63 patients
Aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase deficiency (AADCD) is a rare, autosomal recessive neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by impaired synthesis of dopamine, noradrenaline, adrenaline and serotonin, leading to a complex syndrome of motor, behavioral, and autonomic symptoms. This retrospective study assessed the symptoms and developmental outcome of a large international cohort of patients with AADCD via physician and/or caregiver responses to a detailed, standardized questionnaire. Sixty-three patients (60% female; ages 6 months-36 years, median 7 years; 58 living) from 23 individual countries participated. Common symptoms at onset (median age 3 months, range 0-12 months) were hypotonia, developmental delay, and/or oculogyric crises. Oculogyric crises were present in 97% of patients aged 2 to 12 years, occurred in the majority of patients in all age groups, and tended to be most severe during early childhood. Prominent non-motor symptoms were sleep disturbance, irritable mood, and feeding difficulties. The majority of subjects (70%) had profound motor impairment characterized by absent head control and minimal voluntary movement, while 17% had mild motor impairment and were able to walk independently. Dopamine agonists were the medications most likely to produce some symptomatic benefit, but were associated with dose-limiting side effects (dyskinesia, insomnia, irritability, vomiting) that led to discontinuation 25% of the time. The age distribution of our cohort (70% of subjects under age 13 years) and the observation of a greater proportion of patients with a more severe disease phenotype in the younger compared to the older patients, both suggest a significant mortality risk during childhood for patients with severe disease
Is J enough? Comparison of gravitational waves emitted along the total angular momentum direction with other preferred orientations
The gravitational wave signature emitted from a merging binary depends on the
orientation of an observer relative to the binary. Previous studies suggest
that emission along the total initial or total final angular momenta leads to
both the strongest and simplest signal from a precessing compact binary. In
this paper we describe a concrete counterexample: a binary with ,
, placed in orbit in the x,y plane. We extract the
gravitational wave emission along several proposed emission directions,
including the initial (Newtonian) orbital angular momentum; the final (~
initial) total angular momentum; and the dominant principal axis of . Using several diagnostics, we show that the suggested preferred
directions are not representative. For example, only for a handful of other
directions (< 15%) will the gravitational wave signal have comparable shape to
the one extracted along each of these fiducial directions, as measured by a
generalized overlap (>0.95). We conclude that the information available in just
one direction (or mode) does not adequately encode the complexity of
orientation-dependent emission for even short signals from merging black hole
binaries. Future investigations of precessing, unequal-mass binaries should
carefully explore and model their orientation-dependent emission.Comment: v2 errat
Effect of non-zero constant vorticity on the nonlinear resonances of capillary water waves
The influence of an underlying current on 3-wave interactions of capillary
water waves is studied. The fact that in irrotational flow resonant 3-wave
interactions are not possible can be invalidated by the presence of an
underlying current of constant non-zero vorticity. We show that: 1) wave trains
in flows with constant non-zero vorticity are possible only for two-dimensional
flows; 2) only positive constant vorticities can trigger the appearance of
three-wave resonances; 3) the number of positive constant vorticities which do
trigger a resonance is countable; 4) the magnitude of a positive constant
vorticity triggering a resonance can not be too small.Comment: 6 pages, submitte
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