1,151 research outputs found
Sources of gravity waves in the polar middle atmosphere
Gravity waves are considered to be important for dynamics and chemistry in the polar middle atmosphere. However, there are only a limited number of studies of gravity waves in the polar region mostly because of difficulty of their observation. One of the significant issues on gravity waves is their source, because wave parameters such as wavelengths and phase velocities which are essential to evaluate the gravity wave effects on the large-scale field are highly dependent on the source. This paper describes dominant sources of gravity waves in the polar regions, namely topography, the polar- night jet, and tropical convection, by reviewing results from recent studies
Coping measurement and the state effect of depression and anxiety in psychiatric outpatients
The relationship between coping styles and mental health has received considerable attention, but the state effects on coping measures in a clinical sample are not well known. This study investigated changes in scores on the Coping Inventory for Stressful Situations between two treatment phases (acute and remitted phase) in 49 outpatients with major depression or anxiety disorders. Task-oriented coping changed significantly between the treatment phases in both depressive and anxious patients, as analyzed by two-way multivariate analysis of variance. Results from repeated measures of multivariate analysis of covariance indicated that task-oriented coping was influenced by depression and emotion-oriented coping was influenced by anxiety. Avoidance-oriented coping did not change significantly over time in either depressive or anxiety disorders controlled for depressive and anxiety symptoms. The results of this study suggest that depressive or anxiety symptoms and treatment phase affect coping measurement. Copyright (C) 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel
Design of the NIPR trajectory model
Kinematic and isentropic trajectory models developed at the National Institute of Polar Research(NIPR) are compared with METEX developed at the Center for Global Environmental Research, National Institute for Environmental Studies(CGER/NIES). The NIPR model shows good agreement with METEX both in the kinematic and isentropic trajectories. An intercomparison between the tra-jectories computed with different datasets is also performed using the NIPR model, and shows that the accuracy of the trajectory is far more sensitive to the difference of the dataset used than to the difference of trajectory model
Distributed Interference-Aware Energy-Efficient Resource Allocation for Device-to-Device Communications Underlaying Cellular Networks
The introduction of device-to-device (D2D) into cellular networks poses many
new challenges in the resource allocation design due to the co-channel
interference caused by spectrum reuse and limited battery life of user
equipments (UEs). In this paper, we propose a distributed interference-aware
energy-efficient resource allocation algorithm to maximize each UE's energy
efficiency (EE) subject to its specific quality of service (QoS) and maximum
transmission power constraints. We model the resource allocation problem as a
noncooperative game, in which each player is self-interested and wants to
maximize its own EE. The formulated EE maximization problem is a non-convex
problem and is transformed into a convex optimization problem by exploiting the
properties of the nonlinear fractional programming. An iterative optimization
algorithm is proposed and verified through computer simulations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, IEEE GLOBECOM 201
Energy Efficiency and Spectral Efficiency Tradeoff in Device-to-Device (D2D) Communications
In this letter, we investigate the tradeoff between energy efficiency (EE)
and spectral efficiency (SE) in device-to-device (D2D) communications
underlaying cellular networks with uplink channel reuse. The resource
allocation problem is modeled as a noncooperative game, in which each user
equipment (UE) is self-interested and wants to maximize its own EE. Given the
SE requirement and maximum transmission power constraints, a distributed
energy-efficient resource allocation algorithm is proposed by exploiting the
properties of the nonlinear fractional programming. The relationships between
the EE and SE tradeoff of the proposed algorithm and system parameters are
analyzed and verified through computer simulations.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, long version paper of IEEE Wireless
Communications Letters, accepted for publication. arXiv admin note: text
overlap with arXiv:1405.196
Interhemispheric Coupling Study by Observations and Modelling (ICSOM)
第6回極域科学シンポジウム分野横断型セッション:[IM] 横断 中層大気・熱圏11月17日(火) 統計数理研究所 セミナー室2(D304
TEM analysis and comparison on the BDC using several reanalysis data sets
第3回極域科学シンポジウム 横断セッション「中層大気・熱圏」 11月26日(月) 国立極地研究所 2階大会議
A Game-Theoretic Approach to Energy-Efficient Resource Allocation in Device-to-Device Underlay Communications
Despite the numerous benefits brought by Device-to-Device (D2D)
communications, the introduction of D2D into cellular networks poses many new
challenges in the resource allocation design due to the co-channel interference
caused by spectrum reuse and limited battery life of User Equipments (UEs).
Most of the previous studies mainly focus on how to maximize the Spectral
Efficiency (SE) and ignore the energy consumption of UEs. In this paper, we
study how to maximize each UE's Energy Efficiency (EE) in an
interference-limited environment subject to its specific Quality of Service
(QoS) and maximum transmission power constraints. We model the resource
allocation problem as a noncooperative game, in which each player is
self-interested and wants to maximize its own EE. A distributed
interference-aware energy-efficient resource allocation algorithm is proposed
by exploiting the properties of the nonlinear fractional programming. We prove
that the optimum solution obtained by the proposed algorithm is the Nash
equilibrium of the noncooperative game. We also analyze the tradeoff between EE
and SE and derive closed-form expressions for EE and SE gaps.Comment: submitted to IET Communications. arXiv admin note: substantial text
overlap with arXiv:1405.1963, arXiv:1407.155
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A diagnostic study of waves on the tropopause
The spatial structure and phase velocity of tropopause disturbances localized around the subpolar jet in the Southern Hemisphere are investigated using 6-hourly European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts reanalysis data covering 15 yr (1979–93). The phase velocity and phase structure of the tropopause disturbances are in good agreement with those of an edge wave vertically trapped at the tropopause. However, the vertical distribution of the ratio of potential to kinetic energy exhibits maxima above and below the tropopause and a minimum around the tropopause, in contradiction to edge wave theory for which the ratio is unity throughout the troposphere and stratosphere. This difference in vertical structure between the observed tropopause disturbances and edge wave theory is attributed to the effects of a finite-depth tropopause together with the next-order corrections in Rossby number to quasigeostrophic dynamic
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