2,866 research outputs found
Effect of sampling rate and record length on the determination of stability and control derivatives
Flight data from five aircraft were used to assess the effects of sampling rate and record length reductions on estimates of stability and control derivatives produced by a maximum likelihood estimation method. Derivatives could be extracted from flight data with the maximum likelihood estimation method even if there were considerable reductions in sampling rate and/or record length. Small amplitude pulse maneuvers showed greater degradation of the derivative maneuvers than large amplitude pulse maneuvers when these reductions were made. Reducing the sampling rate was found to be more desirable than reducing the record length as a method of lessening the total computation time required without greatly degrading the quantity of the estimates
The new HiVIS spectropolarimeter and spectropolarimetric calibration of the AEOS telescope
We designed, built, and calibrated a new spectropolarimeter for the HiVIS
spectrograph (R 12000-49000) on the AEOS telescope. We also did a polarization
calibration of the telescope and instrument. We will introduce the design and
use of the spectropolarimeter as well as a new data reduction package we have
developed, then discuss the polarization calibration of the spectropolarimeter
and the AEOS telescope. We used observations of unpolarized standard stars at
many pointings to measure the telescope induced polarization and compare it
with a Zemax model. The telescope induces polarization of 1-6% with a strong
variation with wavelength and pointing, consistent with the altitude and
azimuth variation expected. We then used scattered sunlight as a linearly
polarized source to measure the telescopes spectropolarimetric response to
linearly polarized light. We then made an all-sky map of the telescope's
polarization response to calibrate future spectropolarimetry.Comment: PASP 118, June 200
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The Syntax of CP and V-2 in Early Child German (ECG) The Strong Continuity Hypothesis
Ductus arteriosus aneurysm presenting as pulmonary artery obstruction: Diagnosis and management
The occurrence of pulmonary artery obstruction in an 8 day old infant as a complication of an aneurysm of a nonpatent ductus arteriosus is reported, together with the echocardiographic and angiographic findings. To relieve the obstruction, the aneurysm and an intrapulmonary thrombus were successfully removed with the use of cardiopulmonary bypass when the infant was 3 months old
Modulating terrestrial impacts from Oort cloud comets by the adiabatically changing galactic tides
Time modulation of the flux of new Jupiter-dominated Oort cloud comets is the subject of interest here. The major perturbation of these comets during the present epoch is due to the tidal field of the relatively smooth distribution of matter in the galactic disk. A secondary source of the near-parabolic comet flux are stars penetrating the inner Oort cloud and providing impulses that create brief comet showers. Substantial stellar-induced showers occur approximately every 100 m.y. Less frequent (but stronger) impulses due to giant molecular clouds can also perturb comets from the inner cloud. These occur on timescales of approximately equal to 500 m.y. In contrast to these infrequent stochastic shower phenomena is the continuously varying tidal-induced flux due to the galaxy. As the Sun orbits the galactic center it undergoes quasiharmonic motion about the galactic midplane, which is superimposed on the small eccentricity, near-Keplerian motion in the plane having epicycle period approximately equal to 150 m.y. In the process the galactic tidal field on the Sun/cloud system will vary causing a modulation of the observable Oort cloud flux. We have created a model of the galactic matter distribution as it affects the solar motion over a time interval ranging from 300 m.y. in the past to 100 m.y. into the future. As constraints on the disk's compact dark matter component we require consistency with the following: (1) the observed galactic rotation curve, (2) today's flux distribution of new comets, (3) the studies of K-giant distributions, and (4) the periodicity found in the terrestrial cratering record. The adiabatically varying galactic tidal torque is then determined and used to predict the time dependence of the flux. We find that a model in which approximately half the disk matter is compact is consistent with these constraints. Under such circumstances the peak-to-trough flux variation will be approx. equal to 5:1 with a full width of 9 m.y. This variability will manifest in the terrestrial cratering record and is consistent with the observed cratering periodicity, if over half of the impacts on Earth are caused by comets or asteroids that originate in the outer Oort cloud
Spectropolarimetry of the Deep Impact target comet 9P/Tempel 1 with HiVIS
High resolution spectropolarimetry of the Deep Impact target, comet 9P/
Tempel 1, was performed during the impact event on July 4th, 2005 with the
HiVIS Spectropolarimeter and the AEOS 3.67m telescope on Haleakala, Maui. We
observed atypical polarization spectra that changed significantly in the few
hours after the impact. The polarization of scattered light as a function of
wavelength is very sensitive to the size and composition (complex refractive
index) of the scattering particles as well as the scattering geometry. As
opposed to most observations of cometary dust, which show an increase in the
linear polarization with the wavelength (at least in the visible domain and for
phase angles greater than about 30%, a red polarization spectrum) observations
of 9P/Tempel 1 at a phase angle of 41 degrees beginning 8 minutes after impact
and centered at 6:30UT showed a polarization of 4% at 650 nm falling to 3% at
950 nm. The next observation, centered an hour later showed a polarization of
7% at 650 nm falling to 2% at 950nm. This corresponds to a spectropolarimetric
gradient, or slope, of -0.9% per 1000 Angstroms 40 minutes after impact,
decreasing to a slope of -2.3% per 1000 Angstroms an hour and a half after
impact. This is an atypical blue polarization slope, which became more blue 1
hour after impact. The polarization values of 4% and 7% at 650nm are typical
for comets at this scattering angle, whereas the low polarization of 2% and 3%
at 950nm is not. We compare observations of comet 9P/Tempel 1 to that of a
typical comet, C/2004 Machholz, at a phase angle of 30 degrees which showed a
typical red slope, rising from 2% at 650nm to 3% at 950nm in two different
observations (+1.0 and +0.9% per 1000 Angstroms).Comment: Icarus Deep Impact special issue, accepted Aug 28 200
A Richness Study of 14 Distant X-ray Clusters From the 160 Square Degree Survey
We have measured the surface density of galaxies toward 14 X-ray-selected
cluster candidates at redshifts greater than z=0.46, and we show that they are
associated with rich galaxy concentrations. We find that the clusters range
between Abell richness classes 0-2, and have a most probable richness class of
one. We compare the richness distribution of our distant clusters to those for
three samples of nearby clusters with similar X-ray luminosities. We find that
the nearby and distant samples have similar richness distributions, which shows
that clusters have apparently not evolved substantially in richness since
redshift z =0.5. We compare the distribution of distant X-ray clusters in the
L_x--richness plane to the distribution of optically-selected clusters from the
Palomar Distant Cluster Survey. The optically-selected clusters appear overly
rich for their X-ray luminosities when compared to X-ray-selected clusters.
Apparently, X-ray and optical surveys do not necessarily sample identical mass
concentrations at large redshifts. This may indicate the existence of a
population of optically rich clusters with anomalously low X-ray emission. More
likely, however, it reflects the tendency for optical surveys to select
unvirialized mass concentrations, as might be expected when peering along
large-scale filaments.Comment: The abstract has been abridged. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Atomic Scale Memory at a Silicon Surface
The limits of pushing storage density to the atomic scale are explored with a
memory that stores a bit by the presence or absence of one silicon atom. These
atoms are positioned at lattice sites along self-assembled tracks with a pitch
of 5 atom rows. The writing process involves removal of Si atoms with the tip
of a scanning tunneling microscope. The memory can be reformatted by controlled
deposition of silicon. The constraints on speed and reliability are compared
with data storage in magnetic hard disks and DNA.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figures, accepted by Nanotechnolog
Computer-Aided Detection of Breast Cancer â Have All Bases Been Covered?
The use of computer-aided detection (CAD) systems in mammography has been the subject of intense research for many years. These systems have been developed with the aim of helping radiologists to detect signs of breast cancer. However, the effectiveness of CAD systems in practice has sparked recent debate. In this commentary, we argue that computer-aided detection will become an increasingly important tool for radiologists in the early detection of breast cancer, but there are some important issues that need to be given greater focus in designing CAD systems if they are to reach their full potential
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