5,372 research outputs found
To Relate Chlorophyll and Suspended Sediment Content in the Lower Chesapeake Bay to ERTS-1 Imagery
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Investigation to relate chlorophyll and suspended sediment content in waters of lower Chesapeake Bay to ERTS-1 imagery
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Attitude dynamics simulation subroutines for systems of hinge-connected rigid bodies
Several computer subroutines are designed to provide the solution to minimum-dimension sets of discrete-coordinate equations of motion for systems consisting of an arbitrary number of hinge-connected rigid bodies assembled in a tree topology. In particular, these routines may be applied to: (1) the case of completely unrestricted hinge rotations, (2) the totally linearized case (all system rotations are small), and (3) the mixed, or partially linearized, case. The use of the programs in each case is demonstrated using a five-body spacecraft and attitude control system configuration. The ability of the subroutines to accommodate prescribed motions of system bodies is also demonstrated. Complete listings and user instructions are included for these routines (written in FORTRAN V) which are intended as multi- and general-purpose tools in the simulation of spacecraft and other complex electromechanical systems
Attitude dynamics simulation subroutines for systems of hinge-connected rigid bodies with nonrigid appendages
Three computer subroutines designed to solve the vector-dyadic differential equations of rotational motion for systems that may be idealized as a collection of hinge-connected rigid bodies assembled in a tree topology, with an optional flexible appendage attached to each body are reported. Deformations of the appendages are mathematically represented by modal coordinates and are assumed small. Within these constraints, the subroutines provide equation solutions for (1) the most general case of unrestricted hinge rotations, with appendage base bodies nominally rotating at a constant speed, (2) the case of unrestricted hinge rotations between rigid bodies, with the restriction that those rigid bodies carrying appendages are nominally nonspinning, and (3) the case of small hinge rotations and nominally nonrotating appendages. Sample problems and their solutions are presented to illustrate the utility of the computer programs
Investigation to relate the chlorophyll and suspended sediment content in the waters of the lower Chesapeake Bay to ERTS-1 imagery
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Project {\tt SANC} (former {\tt CalcPHEP}): Support of Analytic and Numeric calculations for experiments at Colliders
The project, aimed at the theoretical support of experiments at modern and
future accelerators -- TEVATRON, LHC, electron Linear Colliders (TESLA, NLC,
CLIC) and muon factories, is presented. Within this project a four-level
computer system is being created, which must automatically calculate, at the
one-loop precision level the pseudo- and realistic observables (decay rates and
event distributions) for more and more complicated processes of elementary
particle interaction, using the principle of knowledge storing.
It was already used for a recalculation of the EW radiative corrections for
Atomic Parity Violation [1] and complete one-loop corrections for the process
[2-4]; for the latter an, agreement up to 11 digits with
FeynArts and the other results is found. The version of {\tt SANC} that we
describe here is capable of automatically computing the decay rates and the
distributions for the decays in the one-loop
approximation.Comment: 3 Latex, Presented at ICHEP2002, Amsterdam, July 24-30, 2000;
Submitted to Proceeding
Microscopic models for exotic nuclei
Starting from successful self-consistent mean-field models, this paper
discusses why and how to go beyond the mean field approximation. To include
long-range correlations from fluctuations in collective degrees of freedom, one
has to consider symmetry restoration and configuration mixing, which give
access to ground-state correlations and spectroscopy.Comment: invited talk at ENAM0
Extracting gamma and Penguin Topologies through CP Violation in B_s^0 -> J/psi K_S
The B_s^0 -> J/psi K_S decay has recently been observed by the CDF
collaboration and will be of interest for the LHCb experiment. This channel
will offer a new tool to extract the angle gamma of the unitarity triangle and
to control doubly Cabibbo-suppressed penguin corrections to the determination
of sin(2beta) from the well-known B_d^0 -> J/psi K_S mode with the help of the
U-spin symmetry of strong interactions. While any competitive determination of
gamma is interesting, the latter aspect is particularly relevant as LHCb will
enter a territory of precision which makes the control of doubly
Cabibbo-suppressed Standard-Model corrections mandatory. Using the data from
CDF and the e^+e^- B factories as a guideline, we explore the sensitivity for
gamma and the penguin parameters and point out that the B_s^0-\bar B_s^0 mixing
phase phi_s, which is only about -2 deg in the Standard Model but may be
enhanced through new physics, is a key parameter for these analyses. We find
that the mixing-induced CP violation S(B_s^0 -> J/psi K_S) shows an interesting
correlation with sin(phi_s), which serves as a target region for the first
measurement of this observable at LHCb.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figure
Correlation of ERTS multispectral imagery with suspended matter and chlorophyll in lower Chesapeake Bay
The feasibility of using multispectral satellite imagery to monitor the characteristics of estuarine waters is being investigated. Preliminary comparisons of MSS imagery with suspended matter concentrations, particle counts, chlorophyll, transmittance and bathymetry have been made. Some visual correlation of radiance with particulates and chlorophyll has been established. Effects of bathymetry are present, and their relation to transmittance and radiance is being investigated. Greatest detail in suspended matter is revealed by MSS band 5. Near-surface suspended sediment load and chlorophyll can be observed in bands 6 and 7. Images received to date have partially defined extent and location of high suspensate concentrations. Net quantity of suspended matter in the lower Bay has been decreasing since the inception of the study, and represents the diminution of turbid flood waters carried into the Bay in late September, 1972. The results so far point to the utility of MSS imagery in monitoring estuarine water character for the assessment of siltation, productivity, and water types
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