2,528 research outputs found
A study of aircraft fire hazards related to natural electrical phenomena Final report, Jun. 1966 - Jul. 1967
Natural electrical phenomena as aircraft fire hazards, with study of flame propagation in fuel vent system
Communications Biophysics
Contains research objectives and reports on one research project.U. S. Air Force under Contract AF19(604)-411
Underestimation of Visual Texture Slant by Human Observers: A Model
The perspective image of an obliquely inclined textured surface exhibits shape and density distortions of texture elements which allow a human observer to estimate the inclination angle of the surface. However, since the work of Gibson (1950) it has been known that, in the absence of other cues, humans tend to underestimate the slant angle of the surface, particularly when the texture is perceived as being irregular.
The perspective distortions which affect texture elements also shift the projected spatial frequencies of the texture in systematic ways. Using a suitable local spectral filter to measure these frequency gradients, the inclination angle of the surface may be estimated. A computational model has been developed which performs this task using distributions of outputs from filters found to be a good description of simple cell receptive fields. However, for irregular textures the filter output distributions are more like those of regular textures at shallower angles of slant, leading the computational algorithm to underestimate the slant angle. This behavioral similarity between human and algorithm suggests the possibility that a similar visual computation is performed in cortex
Estimation of Textured Surface Inclination by Parallel Local Spectral Analysis
When an inclined, uniformly textured surface is viewed by an observer or imaged by a camera, the systematic distortions of the perspective transformation will induce a predictable distribution of shifts in the projected spatial frequencies which compose the texture. By measuring these shifts using a set of filters having suitable spatial, frequency, and orientation resolution, the inclination angles of the original textured surface may be estimated. An algorithm is presented which uses the amplitude distributions of 2D Gabor filters to perform such a calculation. Central to the algorithm is a pair of iteratively executed routines. The fist adjusts local sets of parameters to reduce the error between predicted and measured filter amplitudes. The second propagates the local parameters to neighboring regions to consolidate the estimates of inclination. The algorithm is capable of operating in parallel on any number of regions in the image and with a diverse set of filter inputs
Fundamental flame velocities of pure hydrocarbons II : alkadienes
Data are presented for the fundamental flame velocities of 10 pure alkadienes that have isolated, conjugated, or cumulative double-bond systems. On the basis of this limited amount of data and the flame velocities previously reported, it is concluded that unsaturation changes the flame velocity in the order alkanes ? alkenes ? alkadienes with isolated double bonds ?= alkadienes with conjugated double bonds ? alkadienes with cumulative double bonds ?= alkynes. There were no significant differences in the flame velocities of cis and trans 1,3-pentadiene. The alkadienes 1,2-pentadiene and 2,3-pentadiene, with different positions of the cumulative double bond in the straight chain, have similar flame velocities. Methyl substitution in a hydrocarbon reduces the flame velocity; the extent of the reduction increases with the degree of unsaturation of the hydrocarbon
Decay and Scattering
Using chiral low energy theorems and elastic unitarity assumption, the
decay is investigated. The vector and scalar form
factors are calculated. It is found that the spectrum is dominated by
the resonance. By measuring the forward-backward asymmetry, it is shown
that the S wave phase shift can be determined near the
resonance region. The calculated branching ratio and resonance parameters are
in good agreement with experiments.Comment: 15 pages, Tex, 6 included figure
A Study of Aircraft Fire Hazards Related to Natural Electrical Phenomena
The problems of natural electrical phenomena as a fire hazard to aircraft are evaluated. Assessment of the hazard is made over the range of low level electrical discharges, such as static sparks, to high level discharges, such as lightning strikes to aircraft. In addition, some fundamental work is presented on the problem of flame propagation in aircraft fuel vent systems. This study consists of a laboratory investigation in five parts: (1) a study of the ignition energies and flame propagation rates of kerosene-air and JP-6-air foams, (2) a study of the rate of flame propagation of n-heptane, n-octane, n-nonane, and n-decane in aircraft vent ducts, (3) a study of the damage to aluminum, titanium, and stainless steel aircraft skin materials by lightning strikes, (4) a study of fuel ignition by lightning strikes to aircraft skins, and (5) a study of lightning induced flame propagation in an aircraft vent system
Receptive Fields for the Determination of Textured Surface Inclination
The image of a uniformly textured inclined surface exhibits systematic distortions which affect the projection of the spatial frequencies of which the texture is composed. Using a set of filters having suitable spatial, frequency and orientation resolution, the inclination angle of the textured surface may be estimated from the resulting spatial frequency gradients. Psychophysical experiments suggest that, in absence of other cues, humans perceive surface inclination from perspective distortions, suggesting the possibility of a specific neuronal mechanism in the visual system. Beginning with a low level filter model found to be an accurate and economical model for simple cell receptive fields, we have developed both algorithmic machine vision and neural network models to investigate physiologically plausible mechanisms for this behavior. The two models are related through a new class of receptive field formed in the hidden layer of a neural network which learned to solve the problem. This receptive field can also be described analytically from the analysis developed for the algorithmic study. This paper, then, offers a prediction for a new type of receptive field in cortex which may be involved in the perception of inclined textured surfaces
First Passage Time Densities in Non-Markovian Models with Subthreshold Oscillations
Motivated by the dynamics of resonant neurons we consider a differentiable,
non-Markovian random process and particularly the time after which it
will reach a certain level . The probability density of this first passage
time is expressed as infinite series of integrals over joint probability
densities of and its velocity . Approximating higher order terms
of this series through the lower order ones leads to closed expressions in the
cases of vanishing and moderate correlations between subsequent crossings of
. For a linear oscillator driven by white or coloured Gaussian noise,
which models a resonant neuron, we show that these approximations reproduce the
complex structures of the first passage time densities characteristic for the
underdamped dynamics, where Markovian approximations (giving monotonous first
passage time distribution) fail
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