10,388 research outputs found
Is the transition redshift a new cosmological number?
Observations from Supernovae Type Ia (SNe Ia) provided strong evidence for an
expanding accelerating Universe at intermediate redshifts. This means that the
Universe underwent a transition from deceleration to acceleration phases at a
transition redshift of the order unity whose value in principle depends
on the cosmology as well as on the assumed gravitational theory. Since
cosmological accelerating models endowed with a transition redshift are
extremely degenerated, in principle, it is interesting to know whether the
value of itself can be observationally used as a new cosmic
discriminator. After a brief discussion of the potential dynamic role played by
the transition redshift, it is argued that future observations combining SNe
Ia, the line-of-sight (or "radial") baryon acoustic oscillations, the
differential age of galaxies, as well as the redshift drift of the spectral
lines may tightly constrain , thereby helping to narrow the parameter
space for the most realistic models describing the accelerating Universe.Comment: 12 pages, 5 figures. Some discussions about how to estimate the
transition redshift have been added. New data by Planck and H(z) data have
been mentioned. New references have been adde
New coupled quintessence cosmology
A component of dark energy has been recently proposed to explain the current
acceleration of the Universe. Unless some unknown symmetry in Nature prevents
or suppresses it, such a field may interact with the pressureless component of
dark matter, giving rise to the so-called models of coupled quintessence. In
this paper we propose a new cosmological scenario where radiation and baryons
are conserved, while the dark energy component is decaying into cold dark
matter (CDM). The dilution of CDM particles, attenuated with respect to the
usual scaling due to the interacting process, is characterized by a
positive parameter , whereas the dark energy satisfies the equation
of state (). We carry out a joint statistical
analysis involving recent observations from type Ia supernovae, baryon acoustic
oscillation peak, and Cosmic Microwave Background shift parameter to check the
observational viability of the coupled quintessence scenario here proposed.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures. Minor corrections to match published versio
Acoustic oceanographic buoy (version 1)
SiPLAB Report 06/05, FCT, University of Algarve,2005.One of the known impairements in the application of ocean acoustic tomography in operational scenarios has been the size, weight and difficulty of operation of actual ocean going equipment, such as hydrophone arrays and acoustic sources. The Acoustic Oceanographic Buoy - AOB is meant to be, at its final stage, an easy to deploy and easy to maintain autonomous vertical array that puts together in a single system acoustic and non-acoustic sensors, self-storing of geotime and GPS referred data, on the buoy preprocessing capabilities and network seamless integrability and data online transfer via a wireless lan high speed link. These capabilities make the AOB a versatile system for a variety of applications such as ocean tomography, underwater communications, rapid environmental assessment (REA), passive and multistatic sonar and underwater target tracking. The AOB version 1 described in this report was developed between 2003 and 2004 and tested at sea during the MREA’03 and MREA’04 sea trials
INTIFANTE'00 sea trial data report - Events I,II and III
Rep 02/01 - SiPLAB
4/May/2001This report describes the data acquired during Events I,
II and III of the INTIFANTE'00 sea trial, that took
place from 9 - 29 October 2000, o the Tr oia
Peninsula, near Set ubal, Portugal
Acoustic Oceanographic Buoy Test during the MREA’03 Sea Trial
Rep 04/03 - SiPLAB
10/Nov/2003Environmental inversion of acoustic signals for bottom and water column properties is
being proposed in the literature as an interesting concept for complementing direct hydrographic
and oceanographic measurements for Rapid Environmental Assessment (REA).
The acoustic contribution to REA can be cast as the result of the inversion of ocean
acoustic properties to be assimilated into ocean circulation models specifically tailored
and calibrated to the scale of the area under observation. Traditional ocean tomography
systems and methods for their requirements of long and well populated receiving
arrays and precise knowledge of the source/receiver geometries are not well adapted to
operational Acoustic REA (AREA).
An innovative concept that responds to the operational requirements of AREA is being
proposed under a Saclantcen JRP jointly submitted by the the Universit´e Libre de
Bruxelles (ULB), SiPLAB/CINTAL at University of Algarve, the Instituto Hidrogr´afico
(IH) and the Royal Netherlands Naval College (RNLNC) and approved by Saclantcen
in 2003 under the 2004 SPOW. That concept includes the development of water column
and geo-acoustic inversion methods being able to retrieve environmental true properties
from signals received on a drifting network of Acoustic-Oceanographic Buoys (AOB). A
prototype of an AOB and a preliminary version of the inversion code, was tested at sea
during the Maritime Rapid Environment Assessment’2003 sea trial (MREA’03) and is
described in this report together with the results obtained.This report presents the AOB system and the results obtained during its testing in the
MREA’03 sea trial. The MREA’03 sea trial took place off the Italian coast, near Elba I.
in the period 26 May - 27 June 2003.
The authors of this report would like to thank: the SACLANT Undersea Research Centre for the opportunity for participating in
the sea trial
• the scientist in charge Dr. Emanuel Coelho; the collaboration of Saclantcen personnel; the master and crew of the R/V Alliance; the contribution of Prof. J.-P. Hermand from ULB for the discussions and pictures
shown in this report
Doppler Domain Decomposition of the Underwater Acoustic Channel Response
Most underwater applications are very sensitive to environmental perturbations like source/receiver motion and surface variations. In real conditions, the transmitted signal reaches the receiver through different paths where each path is affected by different environmental perturbations. Due to the interaction with these environmental variations different Doppler is induced in each path. By observing the Doppler for the whole signal it is not possible to determine the contribution of each environmental variation. The main goal of this paper is to isolate different paths and analyse the effects of the environmental variations on each path in terms of the induced Doppler. A new technique called Time Windowed Doppler Spectrum is proposed which has been found very effective in tracking the Doppler due to each path separately. By using this technique it can be shown that it is possible to distinguish between surface reflected and direct path by observing the Doppler variations associated with each path. The surface induced Doppler was observed using this technique by analysing the temporal evolution of the surface reflected path. The surface variability effects the Doppler in terms of stretching and shortening the path between the transmitter and receiver. The data processed in this paper was acquired during CALCOMM'10 Experiment which took place in June 2010 at the south coast of Portugal
An environmental equalizer for underwater acoustic communications Tested at Hydralab III
It is known that small changes in source and receiver locations can cause significant changes in underwater acoustic channel impulse responses. At HYDRALAB III an underwater acoustic experiment was conducted to show that a source depth-shift causes a frequency-shift in the channel impulse response and that such behavior can be used to implement an environmental-based equalizer for underwater communications that compensates for the performance loss due to the source depth-shift
A time-frequency approach to blind deconvolution in multipath underwater channels
Blind deconvolution is presented in the underwater acoustic channel context, by time-frequency processing. The acoustic propagation environment was modelled as a multipath propagation channel. For noiseless simulated data, source signature estimation was performed by a model-based method. The channel estimate was obtained via a time-frequency formulation of the conventional matched-filter. Simulations used a ray-tracing physical model, initiated with at-sea recorded environmental data, in order to produce realistic underwater channel conditions. The quality of the estimates was 0.793 for the source signal, and close to I for the resolved amplitudes and time-delays of the impulse response. Time-frequency processing has proved to overcome the typical ill-conditioning of single sensor deterministic deconvolution techniques
Época de preparo de área e plantio de milho no sistema de corte e trituração no município de Igarapé-Açu, Pará.
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