8,273 research outputs found
Spatiotemporal Calibration of Atmospheric Nitrogen Dioxide Concentration Estimates From an Air Quality Model for Connecticut
A spatiotemporal calibration and resolution refinement model was fitted to
calibrate nitrogen dioxide (NO) concentration estimates from the Community
Multiscale Air Quality (CMAQ) model, using two sources of observed data on
NO that differed in their spatial and temporal resolutions. To refine the
spatial resolution of the CMAQ model estimates, we leveraged information using
additional local covariates including total traffic volume within 2 km,
population density, elevation, and land use characteristics. Predictions from
this model greatly improved the bias in the CMAQ estimates, as observed by the
much lower mean squared error (MSE) at the NO monitor sites. The final
model was used to predict the daily concentration of ambient NO over the
entire state of Connecticut on a grid with pixels of size 300 x 300 m. A
comparison of the prediction map with a similar map for the CMAQ estimates
showed marked improvement in the spatial resolution. The effect of local
covariates was evident in the finer spatial resolution map, where the
contribution of traffic on major highways to ambient NO concentration
stands out. An animation was also provided to show the change in the
concentration of ambient NO over space and time for 1994 and 1995.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figures, supplementary materia
The Antarctic dry valley lakes: Relevance to Mars
The similarity of the early environments of Mars and Earth, and the biological evolution which occurred on early Earth, motivates exobiologists to seriously consider the possiblity of an early Martian biota. Environments are being identified which could contain Martian life and areas which may presently contain evidence of this former life. Sediments which were thought to be deposited in large ice-covered lakes are present on Mars. Such localities were identified within some of the canyons of the Valles Marineris and more recently in the ancient terrain in the Southern Hemisphere. Perennially ice-covered Antarctic lakes are being studied in order to develop quantitative models that relate environmental factors to the nature of the biological community and sediment forming processes. These models will be applied to the Martian paleolakes to establish the scientific rationale for the exobiological study of ancient Martian sediments
Constant-angle surfaces in liquid crystals
We discuss some properties of surfaces in R3 whose unit normal has constant angle with an assigned direction field. The constant angle condition can be rewritten as an Hamilton-Jacobi equation correlating the surface and the direction field. We focus on examples motivated by the physics of interfaces in liquid crystals and of layered fluids, and discuss the properties of the constant-angle surfaces when the direction field is singular along a line (disclination) or at a point (hedgehog defect
Large Networks of Diameter Two Based on Cayley Graphs
In this contribution we present a construction of large networks of diameter
two and of order for every degree , based on Cayley
graphs with surprisingly simple underlying groups. For several small degrees we
construct Cayley graphs of diameter two and of order greater than of
Moore bound and we show that Cayley graphs of degrees
constructed in this paper are the largest
currently known vertex-transitive graphs of diameter two.Comment: 9 pages, Published in Cybernetics and Mathematics Applications in
Intelligent System
Exhaustive generation of -critical -free graphs
We describe an algorithm for generating all -critical -free
graphs, based on a method of Ho\`{a}ng et al. Using this algorithm, we prove
that there are only finitely many -critical -free graphs, for
both and . We also show that there are only finitely many
-critical graphs -free graphs. For each case of these cases we
also give the complete lists of critical graphs and vertex-critical graphs.
These results generalize previous work by Hell and Huang, and yield certifying
algorithms for the -colorability problem in the respective classes.
Moreover, we prove that for every , the class of 4-critical planar
-free graphs is finite. We also determine all 27 4-critical planar
-free graphs.
We also prove that every -free graph of girth at least five is
3-colorable, and determine the smallest 4-chromatic -free graph of
girth five. Moreover, we show that every -free graph of girth at least
six and every -free graph of girth at least seven is 3-colorable. This
strengthens results of Golovach et al.Comment: 17 pages, improved girth results. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:1504.0697
Analysis of RR Lyrae Stars in the Northern Sky Variability Survey
We use data from the Northern Sky Variability Survey (NSVS), obtained from
the first generation Robotic Optical Transient Search Experiment (ROTSE-I), to
identify and study RR Lyrae variable stars in the solar neighborhood. We
initially identified 1197 RRab (RR0) candidate stars brighter than the ROTSE
median magnitude V = 14. Periods, amplitudes, and mean V magnitudes are
determined for a subset of 1188 RRab stars with well defined light curves.
Metallicities are determined for 589 stars by the Fourier parameter method and
by the relationship between period, amplitude, and [Fe/H]. We comment upon the
difficulties of clearly classifying RRc (RR1) variables in the NSVS dataset.
Distances to the RRab stars are calculated using an adopted
luminosity-metallicity relation with corrections for interstellar extinction.
The 589 RRab stars in our final sample are used to study the properties of the
RRab population within 5 kpc of the Sun. The Bailey diagram of period versus
amplitude shows that the largest component of this sample belongs to Oosterhoff
type I. Metal-rich ([Fe/H] > -1) RRab stars appear to be associated with the
Galactic disk. Our metal-rich RRab sample may include a thin disk as well as a
thick disk population, although the uncertainties are too large to establish
this. There is some evidence among the metal-rich RRab stars for a decline in
scale height with increasing [Fe/H], as was found by Layden (1995). The
distribution of RRab stars with -1 < [Fe/H] < -1.25 indicates that within this
metallicity range the RRab stars are a mixture of stars belonging to halo and
disk populations.Comment: 68 pages, 26 figures, 9 tables, accepted to A
MERLIN observations of relativistic ejections from GRS 1915+105
We present high resolution MERLIN radio images of multiple relativistic
ejections from GRS 1915+105 in 1997 October / November. The observations were
made at a time of complex radio behaviour, corresponding to multiple
optically-thin outbursts and several days of rapid radio flux oscillations. The
radio imaging resolved four major ejection events from the system. As
previously reported from earlier VLA observations of the source, we observe
apparent superluminal motions resulting from intrinsically relativistic motions
of the ejecta. However, our measured proper motions are significantly greater
than those observed on larger angular scales with the VLA. Under the assumption
of an intrinsically symmetric ejection, we can place an upper limit on the
distance to GRS 1915+105 of 11.2 +/- 0.8 kpc. Solutions for the velocities
unambiguously require a higher intrinsic speed by about 0.1c than that derived
from the earlier VLA observations, whilst the angle to the line-of-sight is not
found to be significantly different. At a distance of 11 kpc, we obtain
solutions of v = 0.98 (-0.05,+0.02)c and theta = 66 +/- 2 degrees. The jet also
appears to be curved on a scale which corresponds to a period of around 7 days.
We observe significant evolution of the linear polarisation of the approaching
component, with large rotations in position angle and a general decrease in
fractional polarisation. The power input into the formation of the jet is very
large, >10^38 erg/s at 11 kpc for a pair plasma. If the plasma contains a cold
proton for each electron, then the mass outflow rate, >10^18 g/sec is
comparable to inflow rates previously derived from X-ray spectral fits.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures. Accepted for publication in MNRA
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