7,438 research outputs found

    Experimental L-band SST satellite communications/surveillance terminal study. Volume 5 - Aircraft terminal definition

    Get PDF
    Aircraft terminal designs for experimental and operational supersonic transport for L band satellite air traffic contro

    Optical-inertia space sextant for an advanced space navigation system, phase B

    Get PDF
    Optical-inertia space sextant for advanced space navigation syste

    Engine restart and thermodynamic analysis of Apollo spacecraft engine tests, volume 1

    Get PDF
    Thermodynamic performance test analyses for Apollo spacecraft ascent, descent, and service propulsion system engines to define hypergol engine restart limit

    Estimating Linkages between Redfish and Cold Water Coral on the Norwegian Coast

    Get PDF
    The importance of essential fish habitat in supporting commercial fisheries has received increasing attention in recent years. Bottom trawling is known to cause particularly destructive damage to habitat that is effectively non-renewable, such as cold water corals. This paper applies the production function approach to estimate the link between cold water corals and redfish in Norway. Both the carrying capacity and growth rate of redfish are found to be functions of cold water coral habitat and thus cold water corals can be considered an essential fish habitat. The paper also estimates a facultative relationship between cold water coral and redfish stocks. The essential habitat model shows the best fit to the data. Comparative statics of an essential habitat indicate an approximate annual loss in harvest of between 11 and 29% within the bounds of coral decline estimated by scientists. In terms of policy, our results indicate that essential fish habitat protection should be considered when managing commercially important species.Cold water coral, redfish, production function, habitat-fishery linkages, essential fish habitat, International Development, Research Methods/ Statistical Methods, Q22,

    NALNET book system: Cost benefit study

    Get PDF
    The goals of the NASA's library network system, NALNET, the functions of the current book system, the products and services of a book system required by NASA Center libraries, and the characteristics of a system that would best supply those products and services were assessed. Emphasis was placed on determining the most cost effective means of meeting NASA's requirements for an automated book system. Various operating modes were examined including the current STIMS file, the PUBFILE, developing software improvements for products as appropriate to the Center needs, and obtaining cataloging and products from the bibliographic utilities including at least OCLC, RLIN, BNA, and STIF. It is recommended that NALNET operate under the STIMS file mode and obtain cataloging and products from the bibliographic utilities. The recommendations are based on the premise that given the current state of the art in library automation it is not cost effective for NASA to maintain a full range of cataloging services on its own system. The bibliographic utilities can support higher quality systems with a greater range of services at a lower total cost

    Dipolar and scalar 3^3He and 129^{129}Xe frequency shifts in mm-sized cells

    Full text link
    We describe a 3^{3}He-129^{129}Xe comagnetometer operating in stemless anodically bonded cells with a 6 mm3^3 volume and a 129^{129}Xe spin coherence time of 300 sec. We use a 87^{87}Rb pulse-train magnetometer with co-linear pump and probe beams to study the nuclear spin frequency shifts caused by spin polarization of 3^{3}He. By systematically varying the cell geometry in a batch cell fabrication process we can separately measure the cell shape dependent and independent frequency shifts. We find that a certain aspect ratio of the cylindrical cell can cancel the effects of 3^3He magnetization that limit the stability of vapor-cell comagnetometers. Using this control we also observe for the first time a scalar 3^{3}He-129^{129}Xe collisional frequency shift characterized by an enhancement factor ĪŗHeXe=āˆ’0.011Ā±0.001\kappa_{\text{HeXe}} = -0.011\pm0.001.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    The ecological and economic value of cold-water coral ecosystems

    Get PDF
    Despite the growing scientific literature on cold-water corals (CWC) there appears to be no studies that address the economic values or economic management of the resource. This paper presents an overview of the goods and services of CWC and their associated biodiversity. Use and non-use values associated with CWC are presented, and the methods relevant for assessing their valuation are discussed. The impact of human induced disturbance on CWC is reviewed, in order to indicate how knowledge of CWC values can be used by policy makers in the management of CWC as a habitat and vehicle for biodiversity

    CT Automated Exposure Control Using A Generalized Detectability Index

    Get PDF
    Purpose Identifying an appropriate tube current setting can be challenging when using iterative reconstruction due to the varying relationship between spatial resolution, contrast, noise, and dose across different algorithms. This study developed and investigated the application of a generalized detectability index (d\u27gen) to determine the noise parameter to input to existing automated exposure control (AEC) systems to provide consistent image quality (IQ) across different reconstruction approaches. Methods This study proposes a taskā€based automated exposure control (AEC) method using a generalized detectability index (d\u27gen). The proposed method leverages existing AEC methods that are based on a prescribed noise level. The generalized d\u27gen metric is calculated using lookup tables of taskā€based modulation transfer function (MTF) and noise power spectrum (NPS). To generate the lookup tables, the American College of Radiology CT accreditation phantom was scanned on a multidetector CT scanner (Revolution CT, GE Healthcare) at 120 kV and tube current varied manually from 20 to 240 mAs. Images were reconstructed using a reference reconstruction algorithm and four levels of an inā€house iterative reconstruction algorithm with different regularization strengths (IR1ā€“IR4). The taskā€based MTF and NPS were estimated from the measured images to create lookup tables of scaling factors that convert between d\u27gen and noise standard deviation. The performance of the proposed d\u27genā€AEC method in providing a desired IQ level over a range of iterative reconstruction algorithms was evaluated using the American College of Radiology (ACR) phantom with elliptical shell and using a human reader evaluation on anthropomorphic phantom images. Results The study of the ACR phantom with elliptical shell demonstrated reasonable agreement between the d\u27gen predicted by the lookup table and d\u27 measured in the images, with a mean absolute error of 15% across all dose levels and maximum error of 45% at the lowest dose level with the elliptical shell. For the anthropomorphic phantom study, the mean reader scores for images resulting from the d\u27genā€AEC method were 3.3 (reference image), 3.5 (IR1), 3.6 (IR2), 3.5 (IR3), and 2.2 (IR4). When using the d\u27genā€AEC method, the observersā€™ IQ scores for the reference reconstruction were statistical equivalent to the scores for IR1, IR2, and IR3 iterative reconstructions (P \u3e 0.35). The d\u27genā€AEC method achieved this equivalent IQ at lower dose for the IR scans compared to the reference scans. Conclusions A novel AEC method, based on a generalized detectability index, was investigated. The proposed method can be used with some existing AEC systems to derive the tube current profile for iterative reconstruction algorithms. The results provide preliminary evidence that the proposed d\u27genā€AEC can produce similar IQ across different iterative reconstruction approaches at different dose levels

    Identification of Electron Donor States in N-doped Carbon Nanotubes

    Full text link
    Nitrogen doped carbon nanotubes have been synthesized using pyrolysis and characterized by Scanning Tunneling Spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The doped nanotubes are all metallic and exhibit strong electron donor states near the Fermi level. Using tight-binding and ab initio calculations, we observe that pyridine-like N structures are responsible for the metallic behavior and the prominent features near the Fermi level. These electron rich structures are the first example of n-type nanotubes, which could pave the way to real molecular hetero-junction devices.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, revtex, submitted to PR
    • ā€¦
    corecore