3,414 research outputs found
Ion mixing of markers in SiO2 and Si
The amount of atomic mixing in amorphous SiO2 and Si is studied by measuring the redistribution of thin metal markers due to irradiation with 300-keV Xe+ ions. In SiO2, the mixing efficiency appears to be independent of the chemical nature of marker atoms and can be explained in terms of a linear cascade model. In Si, the mixing is found to correlate with thermally activated diffusivities of the marker species
A low noise, high thermal stability, 0.1 K test facility for the Planck HFI bolometers
We are developing a facility which will be used to characterize the bolometric detectors for Planck, an ESA mission to investigate the Cosmic Microwave Background. The bolometers operate at 0.1 K, employing neutron-transmutation doped (NTD) Ge thermistors with resistances of several megohms to achieve NEPs~1×10^(–17) W Hz^(–1/2). Characterization of the intrinsic noise of the bolometers at frequencies as low as 0.010 Hz dictates a test apparatus thermal stability of 40 nK Hz^(–1/2) to that frequency. This temperature stability is achieved via a multi-stage isolation and control geometry with high resolution thermometry implemented with NTD Ge thermistors, JFET source followers, and dedicated lock-in amplifiers. The test facility accommodates 24 channels of differential signal readout, for measurement of bolometer V(I) characteristics and intrinsic noise. The test facility also provides for modulated radiation in the submillimeter band incident on the bolometers, for measurement of the optical speed-of-response; this illumination can be reduced below detectable limits without interrupting cryogenic operation. A commercial Oxford Instruments dilution refrigerator provides the cryogenic environment for the test facility
Development of a severe local storm prediction system: A 60-day test of a mesoscale primitive equation model
The progress and problems associated with the dynamical forecast system which was developed to predict severe storms are examined. The meteorological problem of severe convective storm forecasting is reviewed. The cascade hypothesis which forms the theoretical core of the nested grid dynamical numerical modelling system is described. The dynamical and numerical structure of the model used during the 1978 test period is presented and a preliminary description of a proposed multigrid system for future experiments and tests is provided. Six cases from the spring of 1978 are discussed to illustrate the model's performance and its problems. Potential solutions to the problems are examined
Some recent results in aerospace vehicle trajectory optimization techniques
Algorithms and computation techniques for solving trajectory optimization problem
Averaging and Adding in Children's Worth Judgements
Under the normative Expected Value (EV) model, multiple outcomes are
additive, but in everyday worth judgement intuitive averaging
prevails. Young children also use averaging in EV judgements, leading to a
disordinal, crossover violation of utility when children average the part
worths of simple gambles involving independent events (Schlottmann, 2000).
This study explored the origins of this averaging bias in children‘s worth
judgements, assessing whether averaging also appears for riskless
judgements and for other types of risky judgements. In Experiment 1, 8-
year-olds judged the worth of having either one or two squares of chocolates
in two formally equivalent tasks: Children made additive worth judgements
when chocolates varied in size, but used averaging when they varied in
winning probability. Performance on the EV task was slightly more advanced
when risky followed riskless judgements, with some evidence of transfer. In
Experiment 2, 5-year-olds gave additive worth judgements when judging
variable fractions of chocolate pies, with displays closely parallel to the
spinner discs used for the gambles in Experiment 1. In Experiment 3, 5-yearolds
gave additive worth judgements of gambles in which to win either one
or two prizes, with alternative rather than independent probabilities of
winning. Thus the overgeneralisation of averaging processes to EV
judgement, while persistent, neither reflects a general difficulty with additive
value judgement, nor with displays showing positive and negative
information, nor with risky judgement per se. It may come into play because
children have difficulty appreciating the implications of independence,
apparent also in other domains. Despite such difficulty, children realize that
risky game outcomes go beyond what they can see, and so may apply
averaging, as default strategy for population judgement, whereas addition
might be the default for judging the sample itself
The comparative evaluation of ERTS-1 imagery for resource inventory in land use planning
The author has identified the following significant results. Multidiscipline team interpretation and mapping of resources for Crook County is nearly complete on 1:250,000 scale enlargements of ERTS-1 imagery. Maps of geology, landforms, soils and vegetation-land use are being interpreted to show limitations, suitabilities and geologic hazards for land use planning. Mapping of lineaments and structures from ERTS-1 imagery has shown a number of features not previously mapped in Oregon. A timber inventory of Ochoco National Forest has been made. Inventory of forest clear-cutting practices has been successfully demonstrated with ERTS-1 color composites. Soil tonal differences in fallow fields shown on ERTS-1 correspond with major soil boundaries in loess-mantled terrain. A digital classification system used for discriminating natural vegetation and geologic materials classes has been successful in separation of most major classes around Newberry Cauldera, Mt. Washington and Big Summit Prairie. Computer routines are available for correction of scanner data variations; and for matching scales and coordinates between digital and photographic imagery. Methods of Diazo film color printing of computer classifications and elevation-slope perspective plots with computer are being developed
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Summary Report for the 1998-1999 STATEMAP Project: Geological Mapping to Support Improved Data-Base Development and Understanding of Critical Aquifers of Texas
This Texas STATEMAP project focuses on geologic mapping in areas where enhanced geological information can significantly impact development, land use, public education, environmental protection, and the economy. For the 1998-1999 work year, the project was divided into three subprojects. Subproject 1 addressed the third and final year of mapping in several karst aquifer areas experiencing rapid urban growth along the Edwards aquifer and recharge zone. Three map areas comprised subproject 1: West San Antonio, Austin-Georgetown, and Del Rio (Fig. 1). These areas encompass some of the fastest-growing urban regions in Texas, with development further spurred by NAFTA due to the region's proximity to major transportation routes from Mexico. A portion of the Edwards aquifer serves as the sole-source aquifer for San Antonio. Geologic maps of subproject 1 areas offer essential information for water and land resource management and construction practices.
Subproject 2 involved digitally compiling existing geologic maps, originally at a scale of 1:24,000, of the West Hueco Bolson-El Paso region, which were developed for previous STATEMAP projects (Fig. 2; Table 1). The contractual outcome is a color geologic map (digital dataset) at a scale of 1:100,000, covering the West Hueco Bolson-El Paso region in Texas. This digital map holds significance as it serves as a robust geologic foundation and vital dataset for a portion of the Texas-Mexico border area experiencing rapid urban expansion, declining water resources, and environmental pressures due to development. Moreover, the mapped area includes extensive public access lands (such as Franklin Mountains and Hueco Tanks State Parks), whose management stands to benefit from the availability of digital geologic data for planning, development, and enhancing public awareness of geological processes and history.Bureau of Economic Geolog
The comparative evaluation of ERTS-1 imagery for resource inventory in land use planning
The author has identified the following significant results. Multidiscipline team interpretation and mapping of resources for Crook County is complete on 1:250,000 scale enlargements of ERTS imagery and 1:120,000 hi-flight photography. Maps of geology, soils, vegetation-land use and land resources units were interpreted to show limitations, suitabilities, and geologic hazards for land use planning. Mapping of lineaments and structures from ERTS imagery has shown a number of features not previously mapped in Oregon. A multistage timber inventory of Ochoco National Forest was made, using ERTS images as the first stage. Inventory of forest clear-cutting practices was successfully demonstrated with color composites. Soil tonal differences in fallow fields correspond with major soil boundaries in loess-mantled terrain. A digital classification system used for discriminating natural vegetation and geologic material classes was successful in separating most major classes around Newberry Caldera, Mt. Washington, and Big Summit Prairie
Initial test results on bolometers for the Planck high frequency instrument
We summarize the fabrication, flight qualification, and dark performance of bolometers completed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory for the High Frequency Instrument (HFI) of the joint ESA/NASA Herschel/Planck mission to be launched in 2009. The HFI is a multicolor focal plane which consists of 52 bolometers operated at 100 mK. Each bolometer is mounted to a feedhorn-filter assembly which defines one of six frequency bands centered between 100-857 GHz. Four detectors in each of five bands from 143-857 GHz are coupled to both linear polarizations and thus measure the total intensity. In addition, eight detectors in each of four bands (100, 143, 217, and 353 GHz) couple only to a single linear polarization and thus provide measurements of the Stokes parameters, Q and U, as well as the total intensity. The measured noise equivalent power (NEP) of all detectors is at or below the background limit for the telescope and time constants are a few ms, short enough to resolve point sources as the 5 to 9 arc min beams move across the sky at 1 rpm
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