401 research outputs found
An Improved Cryosat-2 Sea Ice Freeboard Retrieval Algorithm Through the Use of Waveform Fitting
We develop an empirical model capable of simulating the mean echo power cross product of CryoSat-2 SAR and SAR In mode waveforms over sea ice covered regions. The model simulations are used to show the importance of variations in the radar backscatter coefficient with incidence angle and surface roughness for the retrieval of surfaceelevation of both sea ice floes and leads. The numerical model is used to fit CryoSat-2 waveforms to enable retrieval of surface elevation through the use of look-up tables and a bounded trust region Newton least squares fitting approach. The use of a model to fit returns from sea ice regions offers advantages over currently used threshold retrackingmethods which are here shown to be sensitive to the combined effect of bandwidth limited range resolution and surface roughness variations. Laxon et al. (2013) have compared ice thickness results from CryoSat-2 and IceBridge, and found good agreement, however consistent assumptions about the snow depth and density of sea ice werenot used in the comparisons. To address this issue, we directly compare ice freeboard and thickness retrievals from the waveform fitting and threshold tracker methods of CryoSat-2 to Operation IceBridge data using a consistent set of parameterizations. For three IceBridge campaign periods from March 20112013, mean differences (CryoSat-2 IceBridge) of 0.144m and 1.351m are respectively found between the freeboard and thickness retrievals using a 50 sea ice floe threshold retracker, while mean differences of 0.019m and 0.182m are found when using the waveform fitting method. This suggests the waveform fitting technique is capable of better reconciling the seaice thickness data record from laser and radar altimetry data sets through the usage of consistent physical assumptions
Phytohormonal regulation of in vitro formation of wheat androgenic structures
This research is devoted to developing a method of phytohormonal regulation of in vitro formation of a certain type of wheat androgenic structures. Using the method of ELISA it was shown that the induction of certain sporophytic morphogenesis pathway in vitro of anther haploid cells - microspores depends on both the content of endogenous auxin IAA in anthers before inoculating them onto induction medium, and the concentration of exogenous auxin 2,4-D in this medium. The obtained data confirms the principle possibility of regulation of ways of getting androgenic regenerants in vitro by selecting the optimal balance of endogenous and exogenous auxin
Gravitational Lensing by Rotating Naked Singularities
We model massive compact objects in galactic nuclei as stationary,
axially-symmetric naked singularities in the Einstein-massless scalar field
theory and study the resulting gravitational lensing. In the weak deflection
limit we study analytically the position of the two weak field images, the
corresponding signed and absolute magnifications as well as the centroid up to
post-Newtonian order. We show that there are a static post-Newtonian
corrections to the signed magnification and their sum as well as to the
critical curves, which are function of the scalar charge. The shift of the
critical curves as a function of the lens angular momentum is found, and it is
shown that they decrease slightingly for the weakly naked and vastly for the
strongly naked singularities with the increase of the scalar charge. The
point-like caustics drift away from the optical axis and do not depend on the
scalar charge. In the strong deflection limit approximation we compute
numerically the position of the relativistic images and their separability for
weakly naked singularities. All of the lensing quantities are compared to
particular cases as Schwarzschild and Kerr black holes as well as
Janis--Newman--Winicour naked singularities.Comment: 35 pages, 30 figure
Kerr-Sen dilaton-axion black hole lensing in the strong deflection limit
In the present work we study numerically quasi-equatorial lensing by the
charged, stationary, axially-symmetric Kerr-Sen dilaton-axion black hole in the
strong deflection limit. In this approximation we compute the magnification and
the positions of the relativistic images. The most outstanding effect is that
the Kerr-Sen black hole caustics drift away from the optical axis and shift in
clockwise direction with respect to the Kerr caustics. The intersections of the
critical curves on the equatorial plane as a function of the black hole angular
momentum are found, and it is shown that they decrease with the increase of the
parameter . All of the lensing quantities are compared to particular
cases as Schwarzschild, Kerr and Gibbons-Maeda black holes.Comment: 31 pages, 17 figures; V2 references added, some typos corrected, V3
references added, language corrections, V4 table added, minor technical
correction
«Grey zone» of heart failure
The review is devoted to modern understanding of heart failure with mid-range ejection fraction. The formation of the paradigm of «two phenotypes» of heart failure began around the end of the last century. As a result of a number of large epidemiological studies on heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, so-called «grey zone» of ejection fraction values was formed in the range of about 40-50%. This situation arose because of the lack of clearly established level of normal ejection fraction and underlines imperfection of this parameter as the only classification criterion. But no more convenient «tool» for research work was offered. In the past decade, «grey zone» of heart failure has been actively explored by clinical epidemiologists and clinicians. Should we classify these patients as one of the existing phenotypes of heart failure or present them as a new, separate phenotype? Both the first and second decisions require information about the population «portrait» of subgroup, about their response to treatment, and presumptive pathophysiological mechanisms of heart failure. In 2016 European society of cardiology guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure, heart failure with mid-range ejection fraction was determined as a separate subgroup to stimulate the search for such data. At the moment mid-range ejection fraction is known to be recorded in about 10-20% of patients with heart failure. They have substantial comorbidities as patients with preserved ejection fraction but the prevalence of ischemic heart disease in this subgroup makes it similar to heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. The response to treatment with beta-blockers and aldosterone antagonists is similar to that of heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. It is important that the mortality rates in all three groups of patients are approximately the same. This circumstance underlines the importance of further searche. Perhaps the research of «grey zone» of the syndrome will help to better understand pathophysiology of the existing heart failure phenotypes and confirm the validity of their identification based on ejection fraction
Corrosion of diffusion zinc coatings in sodium chloride solutions
Diffusion galvanizing is widely used in the pipe industry for coating the threaded surface of pipe couplings, protecting water and gas pipelines, and other metal products. Diffusion coatings have a number of advantages over other types of zinc coatings. In this work, electrochemical and gravimetric methods are used to study the corrosion behavior of diffusion zinc coatings in sodium chloride solutions. The corrosion rate depends non-linearly on the thickness of the coating. At the initial stages, the corrosion rate of coatings depends on the structure of the phases on the surface, and with an increase in the holding time, the corrosion rate depends to a greater extent on the properties of the products formed during the corrosion process. Films of corrosion products of diffusion zinc coatings consist of zinc oxide/hydroxide and basic zinc salts, while the composition of the film changes with increasing coating thickness
Limitation of energy deposition in classical N body dynamics
Energy transfers in collisions between classical clusters are studied with
Classical N Body Dynamics calculations for different entrance channels. It is
shown that the energy per particle transferred to thermalised classical
clusters does not exceed the energy of the least bound particle in the cluster
in its ``ground state''. This limitation is observed during the whole time of
the collision, except for the heaviest system.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, 1 tabl
ELPIS-JP: a dataset of local-scale daily climate change scenarios for Japan
We developed a dataset of local-scale daily climate change scenarios for Japan (called ELPIS-JP) using the stochastic weather generators (WGs) LARS-WG and, in part, WXGEN. The ELPIS-JP dataset is based on the observed (or estimated) daily weather data for seven climatic variables (daily mean, maximum and minimum temperatures; precipitation; solar radiation; relative humidity; and wind speed) at 938 sites in Japan and climate projections from the multi-model ensemble of global climate models (GCMs) used in the coupled model intercomparison project (CMIP3) and multi-model ensemble of regional climate models form the Japanese downscaling project (called S-5-3). The capability of the WGs to reproduce the statistical features of the observed data for the period 1981–2000 is assessed using several statistical tests and quantile–quantile plots. Overall performance of the WGs was good. The ELPIS-JP dataset consists of two types of daily data: (i) the transient scenarios throughout the twenty-first century using projections from 10 CMIP3 GCMs under three emission scenarios (A1B, A2 and B1) and (ii) the time-slice scenarios for the period 2081–2100 using projections from three S-5-3 regional climate models. The ELPIS-JP dataset is designed to be used in conjunction with process-based impact models (e.g. crop models) for assessment, not only the impacts of mean climate change but also the impacts of changes in climate variability, wet/dry spells and extreme events, as well as the uncertainty of future impacts associated with climate models and emission scenarios. The ELPIS-JP offers an excellent platform for probabilistic assessment of climate change impacts and potential adaptation at a local scale in Japan
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