459 research outputs found
Using Spatial Analysis to Study the Values of Variable Rate Technology and Information
We present a review of the last few years' literature on the economic feasibility of variable rate technology in agriculture. Much of the research on this topic has involved the estimation of site-specific yield response functions. Data used for such estimations most often inherently lend themselves to spatial analysis. We discuss the different types of spatial analyses that may be appropriate in estimating various types yield response functions. Then, we present a taxonomy for the discussion of the economics of precision agriculture technology and information. We argue that precision agriculture technology and information must be studied together since they are by nature economic complements. We contend that longer-term, multi-location agronomic experiments are needed for the estimation of ex ante optimal variable input rates and the expected profitability of variable rate technology and information gathering. We use our taxonomy to review the literature and its results with consistency and rigor.precision agriculture, spatial econometrics, variable rate technology, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, C31, O33, Q16,
H2S data reduction
Calculating microwave opacity from a weakly absorbing gas mixture using a resonator requires measuring the quality factor of that resonator which necessitates accurately determining the center frequency (f(sub O)) and the half power bandwidth (Delta-f) of a noisy resonant line. The center frequency can be determined very accurately and varies very little over many measurements (a few kHz at GHz frequencies or a few hundredths of a percent). The greater source of error in estimating the Q of a resonator come from the bandwidth measurements. The half power bandwidth is determined essentially by eye-fitting a curve over a noisy resonant line and measuring with a spectrum analyzer
The Georgia Tech High Sensitivity Microwave Measurement System
As observations and models of the planets become increasingly more accurate and sophisticated, the need for highly accurate laboratory measurements of the microwave properties of the component gases present in their atmospheres become ever more critical. This paper describes the system that has been developed at Georgia Tech to make these measurements at wavelengths ranging from 13.3 cm to 1.38 cm with a sensitivity of 0.05 dB/km at the longest wavelength and 0.6 db/km at the shortest wavelength
Effects of Antenna Beam Chromaticity on Redshifted 21~cm Power Spectrum and Implications for Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array
Unaccounted for systematics from foregrounds and instruments can severely
limit the sensitivity of current experiments from detecting redshifted 21~cm
signals from the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). Upcoming experiments are faced
with a challenge to deliver more collecting area per antenna element without
degrading the data with systematics. This paper and its companions show that
dishes are viable for achieving this balance using the Hydrogen Epoch of
Reionization Array (HERA) as an example. Here, we specifically identify
spectral systematics associated with the antenna power pattern as a significant
detriment to all EoR experiments which causes the already bright foreground
power to leak well beyond ideal limits and contaminate the otherwise clean EoR
signal modes. A primary source of this chromaticity is reflections in the
antenna-feed assembly and between structures in neighboring antennas. Using
precise foreground simulations taking wide-field effects into account, we
provide a framework to set cosmologically-motivated design specifications on
these reflections to prevent further EoR signal degradation. We show HERA will
not be impeded by such spectral systematics and demonstrate that even in a
conservative scenario that does not perform removal of foregrounds, HERA will
detect EoR signal in line-of-sight -modes, ~Mpc, with high significance. All baselines in a 19-element HERA
layout are capable of detecting EoR over a substantial observing window on the
sky.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures (10 total including subfigures), submitted to Ap
Ammonia Abundance Derived from Juno MWR and VLA Observations of Jupiter
The vertical distribution of trace gases in planetary atmospheres can be
obtained with observations of the atmosphere's thermal emission. Inverting
radio observations to recover the atmospheric structure, however, is
non-trivial, and the solutions are degenerate. We propose a modeling framework
to prescribe a vertical distribution of trace gases that combines a
thermo-chemical equilibrium model {based on a vertical temperature structure
and compare these results to models where ammonia can vary between pre-defined
pressure nodes}. To this means we retrieve nadir brightness temperatures and
limb-darkening parameters, together with their uncertainties, from the Juno
Microwave Radiometer (MWR). We then apply this framework to MWR observations
during Juno's first year of operation (Perijove passes 1 - 12) and to
longitudinally-averaged latitude scans taken with the upgraded Very Large Array
(VLA) (de Pater 2016,2019a). We use the model to constrain the distribution of
ammonia between -60 and 60 latitude and down to 100 bar. We
constrain the ammonia abundance to be ppm
( solar abundance), and find a depletion of
ammonia down to a depth of 20 bar, which supports the existence of
processes that deplete the atmosphere below the ammonia and water cloud layers.
At the equator we find an increase of ammonia with altitude, while the zones
and belts in the mid-latitudes can be traced down to levels where the
atmosphere is well-mixed. The latitudinal variation in the ammonia abundance
appears to be opposite to that shown at higher altitudes, which supports the
existence of a stacked-cell circulation model.Comment: Accepted by Planetary Science Journa
No bursts detected from FRB121102 in two 5-hour observing campaigns with the Robert C. Byrd Green Bank Telescope
Here, we report non-detection of radio bursts from Fast Radio Burst FRB
121102 during two 5-hour observation sessions on the Robert C. Byrd 100-m Green
Bank Telescope in West Virginia, USA, on December 11, 2017, and January 12,
2018. In addition, we report non-detection during an abutting 10-hour
observation with the Kunming 40-m telescope in China, which commenced UTC 10:00
January 12, 2018. These are among the longest published contiguous observations
of FRB 121102, and support the notion that FRB 121102 bursts are episodic.
These observations were part of a simultaneous optical and radio monitoring
campaign with the the Caltech HIgh- speed Multi-color CamERA (CHIMERA)
instrument on the Hale 5.1-m telescope.Comment: 1 table, Submitted to RN of AA
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