1,252 research outputs found

    Assessing satellite-derived land product quality for earth system science applications: results from the ceos lpv sub-group

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    The value of satellite derived land products for science applications and research is dependent upon the known accuracy of the data. CEOS (Committee on Earth Observation Satellites), the space arm of the Group on Earth Observations (GEO), plays a key role in coordinating the land product validation process. The Land Product Validation (LPV) sub-group of the CEOS Working Group on Calibration and Validation (WGCV) aims to address the challenges associated with the validation of global land products. This paper provides an overview of LPV sub-group focus area activities, which cover seven terrestrial Essential Climate Variables (ECVs). The contribution will enhance coordination of the scientific needs of the Earth system communities with global LPV activities

    An extremal model for amorphous media plasticity

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    An extremal model for the plasticity of amorphous materials is studied in a simple two-dimensional anti-plane geometry. The steady-state is analyzed through numerical simulations. Long-range spatial and temporal correlations in local slip events are shown to develop, leading to non-trivial and highly anisotropic scaling laws. In particular, the plastic strain is shown to statistically concentrate over a region which tends to align perpendicular to the displacement gradient. By construction, the model can be seen as giving rise to a depinning transition, the threshold of which (i.e. the macroscopic yield stress) also reveal scaling properties reflecting the localization of the activity.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure

    Systemic analysis of production scenarios for bioethanol produced from ligno-cellulosic biomass [abstract]

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    Defining alternatives for non-renewable energy sources constitutes a priority to the development of our societies. One of these alternatives is biofuels production starting from energy crops, agricultural wastes, forest products or wastes. In this context, a "second generation" biofuels production, aiming at utilizing the whole plant, including ligno-cellulosic (hemicelluloses, cellulose, lignin) fractions (Ogier et al., 1999) that are not used for human food, would allow the reduction of the drawbacks of bioethanol production (Schoeling, 2007). However, numerous technical, economical, ethical and environmental questions are still pending. One of the aims of the BioEtha2 project, directed by the Walloon Agricultural Research Centre, is to define the position of bioethanol produced from ligno-cellulosic biomass among the different renewable energy alternatives that could be developed in Wallonia towards 2020. With this aim, and in order to answer the numerous questions in this field, the project aims at using tools and methods coming from the concept of "forecasting scenarios" (Sebillotte, 2002; Slegten et al., 2007; For-learn, 2008). This concept, based on a contemporary reality, aims to explore different possible scenarios for the future development of alternative sources of energy production. The principle is to evaluate, explore, possible futures of the studied problematic, through the establishment of possible evolution trajectories. We contribute to this prospective through a systemic approach (Vanloqueren, 2007) that allows lightening the existing interactions within the system "ligno-cellulosic biomass chain" without isolating it from its environment. We explain and sketch the two contexts needed to identify primary stakes. The global context includes inter-dependant and auto-regulating fields such as society, politics, technology and economy. These four fields influence each part of the "chain" with specific tools. However, the interest and possible action fields lay within the intermediary context representing the "resources" such as agriculture, forestry, "driving" elements such as mobility, mediation elements such as territories and environment and concurrent elements such as non-cellulosic biomass, the energy mix and the non-energy valorization

    Search for magnetic monopoles with ten years of the ANTARES neutrino telescope

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    This work presents a new search for magnetic monopoles using data taken with the ANTARES neutrino telescope over a period of 10 years (January 2008 to December 2017). Compared to previous ANTARES searches, this analysis uses a run-by-run simulation strategy, with a larger exposure as well as a new simulation of magnetic monopoles taking into account the Kasama, Yang and Goldhaber model for their interaction cross-section with matter. No signal compatible with the passage of relativistic magnetic monopoles is observed, and upper limits on the flux of magnetic monopoles with ß = v/c = 0.55, are presented. For ultra-relativistic magnetic monopoles the flux limit is ~ 7×10-18 cm-2 s -1 sr-1 .Postprint (author's final draft

    Land cover classification using multi-temporal MERIS vegetation indices

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    The spectral, spatial, and temporal resolutions of Envisat's Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS) data are attractive for regional- to global-scale land cover mapping. Moreover, two novel and operational vegetation indices derived from MERIS data have considerable potential as discriminating variables in land cover classification. Here, the potential of these two vegetation indices (the MERIS global vegetation index (MGVI), MERIS terrestrial chlorophyll index (MTCI)) was evaluated for mapping eleven broad land cover classes in Wisconsin. Data acquired in the high and low chlorophyll seasons were used to increase inter-class separability. The two vegetation indices provided a higher degree of inter-class separability than data acquired in many of the individual MERIS spectral wavebands. The most accurate landcover map (73.2%) was derived from a classification of vegetation index-derived data with a support vector machine (SVM), and was more accurate than the corresponding map derived from a classification using the data acquired in the original spectral wavebands

    Caracterización de la fenología de la vegetación a escala global mediante series temporales SPOT VEGETATION

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    Revista oficial de la Asociación Española de Teledetección[EN] Land surface phenology from time series of satellite data are expected to contribute to improve the represen-tation of vegetation phenology in earth system models. We characterized the baseline phenology of the vegetation at the global scale from GEOCLIM-LAI, a global climatology of leaf area index (LAI) derived from 1-km SPOT VEGETATION time series for 1999-2010. The calibration with ground measurements showed that the start and end of season were best identified using respectively 30% and 40% threshold of LAI amplitude values. The satellite-derived phenology was spatially consistent with the global distributions of climatic drivers and biome land cover. The accuracy of the derived phenological metrics, evaluated using available ground observations for birch forests in Europe, cherry in Asia and lilac shrubs in North America showed an overall root mean square error lower than 19 days for the start, end and length of season, and good agreement between the latitudinal gradients of VEGETATION LAI phenology and ground data[ES] La teledetección debe contribuir a mejorar la representación de la fenología en los modelos climáticos. En este estudio se ha caracterizado la fenología típica de la vegetación a escala global mediante GEOCLIM-LAI, una climatología del índice de área foliar (LAI) calculada a partir de series temporales en el periodo 1999-2010 de datos SPOT VEGETATION a 1-km de resolución espacial. A partir de la calibración con observaciones in situ, el inicio y fin de la estación de crecimiento se han definido como la fecha para la cual el LAI alcanza, respectivamente, el 30% y 40% de la amplitud de su ciclo anual. Los patrones espaciales de la fenología de satélite muestran una gran consistencia con la distribución espacial de cubiertas vegetales y factores climáticos. La comparación con medidas in situ para las fe-nofases correspondientes al inicio, fin y duración de la estación de crecimiento de abedul común en Europa, cerezo en Asia y lilo en Norte América muestra errores medios menores de 19 días, y un gran acuerdo en el gradiente latitudinal de la fenología observada in situ y estimada a partir de series temporales LAI VEGETATION.Este trabajo ha sido financiado en parte por el programa Europeo de observación Copernicus Global Land, y los proyectos FP7 geoland2 (218795), GIOBIO (32-566), LONGLOVE (32-594), CGL2013-48074-P, SGR 2014-274 y IMBALANCE-P (ERC-2013-SyG-610028). A. Verger fue beneficiario de un contrato Juan de la Cierva del Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, Gobierno de España.Verger, A.; Filella, I.; Baret, F.; Peñuelas, J. (2016). Land surface phenology from SPOT VEGETATION time series. Revista de Teledetección. (47):1-11. https://doi.org/10.4995/raet.2016.5718SWORD1114

    Accelerator Testing of the General Antiparticle Spectrometer, a Novel Approach to Indirect Dark Matter Detection

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    We report on recent accelerator testing of a prototype general antiparticle spectrometer (GAPS). GAPS is a novel approach for indirect dark matter searches that exploits the antideuterons produced in neutralino-neutralino annihilations. GAPS captures these antideuterons into a target with the subsequent formation of exotic atoms. These exotic atoms decay with the emission of X-rays of precisely defined energy and a correlated pion signature from nuclear annihilation. This signature uniquely characterizes the antideuterons. Preliminary analysis of data from a prototype GAPS in an antiproton beam at the KEK accelerator in Japan has confirmed the multi-X-ray/pion star topology and indicated X-ray yields consistent with prior expectations. Moreover our success in utilizing solid rather than gas targets represents a significant simplification over our original approach and offers potential gains in sensitivity through reduced dead mass in the target area.Comment: 18 pages, 9 figures, submitted to JCA

    Joint searches between gravitational-wave interferometers and high-energy neutrino telescopes: science reach and analysis strategies

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    Many of the astrophysical sources and violent phenomena observed in our Universe are potential emitters of gravitational waves (GWs) and high-energy neutrinos (HENs). A network of GW detectors such as LIGO and Virgo can determine the direction/time of GW bursts while the IceCube and ANTARES neutrino telescopes can also provide accurate directional information for HEN events. Requiring the consistency between both, totally independent, detection channels shall enable new searches for cosmic events arriving from potential common sources, of which many extra-galactic objects.Comment: 4 pages. To appear in the Proceedings of the 2d Heidelberg Workshop: "High-Energy Gamma-rays and Neutrinos from Extra-Galactic Sources", Heidelberg (Germany), January 13-16, 200

    Search for an association between neutrinos and radio-selected blazars with ANTARES

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    Recently, evidence for an association between high energy neutrinos detected by IceCube and radio-selected blazars has been found by Plavin et al.(2020, 2021). This result wa.s achieved using an all sky complete sample of 3411 blazars selected on their parsec-scale flux density at 8 GHz higher than 150 mJy. We perform a positional correlation analysis using the same sample of radioselected blazars, with the latest point source sample of neutrinos extracted from the data collected by the ANTARES detector between January 29, 2007 and February 28, 2020. Preliminary results are presented and discussedPostprint (published version

    The AMS-02 RICH Imager Prototype - In-Beam Tests with 20 GeV/c per Nucleon Ions -

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    A prototype of the AMS Cherenkov imager (RICH) has been tested at CERN by means of a low intensity 20 GeV/c per nucleon ion beam obtained by fragmentation of a primary beam of Pb ions. Data have been collected with a single beam setting, over the range of nuclear charges 2<Z<~45 in various beam conditions and using different radiators. The charge Z and velocity beta resolutions have been measured.Comment: 4 pages, contribution to the ICRC 200
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