2,904 research outputs found
The application of GIS based decision-tree models for generating the spatial distribution of hydromorphic organic landscapes in relation to digital terrain data
Accurate information about organic/mineral soil occurrence is a prerequisite for many land resources management applications (including climate change mitigation). This paper aims at investigating the potential of using geomorphometrical analysis and decision tree modeling to predict the geographic distribution of hydromorphic organic landscapes in unsampled area in Denmark. Nine primary (elevation, slope angle, slope aspect, plan curvature, profile curvature, tangent curvature, flow direction, flow accumulation, and specific catchment area) and one secondary (steady-state topographic wetness index) topographic parameters were generated from Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) acquired using airborne LIDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) systems. They were used along with existing digital data collected from other sources (soil type, geological substrate and landscape type) to explain organic/mineral field measurements in hydromorphic landscapes of the Danish area chosen. A large number of tree-based classification models (186) were developed using (1) all of the parameters, (2) the primary DEM-derived topographic (morphological/hydrological) parameters only, (3) selected pairs of parameters and (4) excluding each parameter one at a time from the potential pool of predictor parameters. The best classification tree model (with the lowest misclassification error and the smallest number of terminal nodes and predictor parameters) combined the steady-state topographic wetness index and soil type, and explained 68% of the variability in organic/mineral field measurements. The overall accuracy of the predictive organic/inorganic landscapes' map produced (at 1:50 000 cartographic scale) using the best tree was estimated to be ca. 75%. The proposed classification-tree model is relatively simple, quick, realistic and practical, and it can be applied to other areas, thereby providing a tool to facilitate the implementation of pedological/hydrological plans for conservation and sustainable management. It is particularly useful when information about soil properties from conventional field surveys is limited
Radio supernovae, supernova remnants and HII regions in NGC 2146 observed with MERLIN and the VLA
We present a high-resolution 5-GHz radio continuum map of the starburst
galaxy NGC 2146 made with MERLIN and the VLA, in a search of radio supernovae
and supernova remnants expected to be already produced by the most massive
stars in the starburst. At 5 GHz, about 20 point sources were detected earlier
by Glendenning & Kronberg (1986) in the central 800 pc of NGC 2146. Our
observations with higher sensitivity and resolution made with MERLIN and the
VLA confirms the detection of 18 sources, and resolves 7 of them. Additional
1.6-GHz MERLIN observations disclose 9 sources coincident in position with
those detected at 5 GHz, which allows us to derive their spectral indices. Only
3 sources have indices consistent with synchrotron emission from supernova
remnants or radio supernovae, while the others have very steep inverted
spectra. We suggest that the sources with positive spectral index are optically
thick ultra-compact and/or ultra-dense HII regions with high electron densities
and high emission measures (EM > 10^(7) cm^(-6) pc). Minimum energy
requirements indicate that these regions may contain up to 1000 equivalent
stars of type O6. When compared with M 82, the galaxy NGC 2146 lacks however a
large number of supernova remnants. We suggest that NGC 2146 is experiencing a
burst of star formation stronger than that in M 82, but being in a younger
phase. We may, however, not exclude an alternative scenario in which strong
free-free absorption at 1.6 GHz in foreground ionized gas with very high
emission measures (EM > 10^(8) cm^(-6) pc) hides a certain number of supernova
remnants, thus rendering for some sources the observed inverted spectra.Comment: 10 pages, including 2 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysic
MAIC-2, a latitudinal model for the Martian surface temperature, atmospheric water transport and surface glaciation
The Mars Atmosphere-Ice Coupler MAIC-2 is a simple, latitudinal model, which
consists of a set of parameterisations for the surface temperature, the
atmospheric water transport and the surface mass balance (condensation minus
evaporation) of water ice. It is driven directly by the orbital parameters
obliquity, eccentricity and solar longitude (Ls) of perihelion. Surface
temperature is described by the Local Insolation Temperature (LIT) scheme,
which uses a daily and latitude-dependent radiation balance. The evaporation
rate of water is calculated by an expression for free convection, driven by
density differences between water vapor and ambient air, the condensation rate
follows from the assumption that any water vapour which exceeds the local
saturation pressure condenses instantly, and atmospheric transport of water
vapour is approximated by instantaneous mixing. Glacial flow of ice deposits is
neglected. Simulations with constant orbital parameters show that low
obliquities favour deposition of ice in high latitudes and vice versa. A
transient scenario driven by a computed history of orbital parameters over the
last 10 million years produces essentially monotonically growing polar ice
deposits during the most recent 4 million years, and a very good agreement with
the observed present-day polar layered deposits. The thick polar deposits
sometimes continue in thin ice deposits which extend far into the mid
latitudes, which confirms the idea of "ice ages" at high obliquity.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figures, 2 table
Eclipsing Binaries in the OGLE Variable Star Catalogs.V. Long-Period Beta Lyrae-type Systems in the Small Magellanic Cloud and the PLC-beta Relation
Thirty eight long-period (P>10 days), apparently contact binary stars
discovered by the OGLE-II project in the SMC appear to be Beta Lyrae-type
systems with ellipsoidal variations of the cool components dominating over
eclipse effects in the systemic light variations and in the total luminosity. A
new period-luminosity- color (PLC) relation has been established for these
systems; we call it the PLC-beta relation, to distinguish it from the Cepheid
relation. Two versions of the PLC-beta relation - based on the (B-V)0 or (V-I)0
color indices - have been calibrated for 33 systems with (V-I)0>0.25 spanning
the orbital period range of 11 to 181 days. The relations can provide
maximum-light, absolute-magnitude estimates accurate to epsilon-M_V~0.35 mag.
within the approximate range -3<M_V<+1. In terms of their number in the SMC,
the long-period Beta Lyrae-type binaries are about 50 times less common than
the Cepheids. Nevertheless, their large luminosities coupled with continuous
light variations make these binaries very easy to spot in nearby galaxies, so
that the PLC-beta relation can offer an auxiliary and entirely independent
method of distance determination to nearby stellar systems rich in massive
stars. The sample of the long-period Beta Lyrae systems in the SMC analyzed in
this paper is currently the best defined and uniform known sequence of such
binaries.Comment: submitted for publication in Astronomical Journal; 8 PS figures, 2
table
Low-diffusivity scalar transport using a WENO scheme and dual meshing
Interfacial mass transfer of low-diffusive substances in an unsteady flow
environment is marked by a very thin boundary layer at the interface and other
regions with steep concentration gradients. A numerical scheme capable of
resolving accurately most details of this process is presented. In this scheme,
the fourth-order accurate WENO method developed by Liu et al. (1994) was
implemented on a non-uniform staggered mesh to discretize the scalar convection
while for the scalar diffusion a fourth-order accurate central discretization
was employed. The discretization of the scalar convection-diffusion equation
was combined with a fourth-order Navier-Stokes solver which solves the
incompressible flow. A dual meshing strategy was employed, in which the scalar
was solved on a finer mesh than the incompressible flow. The solver was tested
by performing a number of two-dimensional simulations of an unstably stratified
flow with low diffusivity scalar transport. The unstable stratification led to
buoyant convection which was modelled using a Boussinesq approximation with a
linear relationship between flow temperature and density. The order of accuracy
for one-dimensional scalar transport on a stretched and uniform grid was also
tested. The results show that for the method presented above a relatively
coarse mesh is sufficient to accurately describe the fluid flow, while the use
of a refined mesh for the low-diffusive scalars is found to be beneficial in
order to obtain a highly accurate resolution with negligible numerical
diffusion
Dust Distribution during Reionization
The dust produced by the first generation of stars will be a foreground to
cosmic microwave background. In order to evaluate the effect of this early
dust, we calculate the power spectrum of the dust emission anisotropies and
compare it with the sensitivity limit of the Planck satellite. The spatial
distribution of the dust is estimated through the distribution of dark matter.
At small angular scales () the dust signal is found to be
noticeable with the Planck detector for certain values of dust lifetime and
production rates. The dust signal is also compared to sensitivities of other
instruments. The early dust emission anisotropies are finally compared to those
of local dust and they are found to be similar in magnitude at mm wavelengths.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures; Typos fixed. Clarifications in the abstract,
sections 2 and 4.1 and fig
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