30,340 research outputs found
Variations in the total electron content of the ionosphere at mid-latitudes during quiet sun conditions
Faraday rotation effect on satellite signals used to determine ionospheric electron content at midlatitudes during quiet sun condition
An economic assessment of STOL aircraft potential including terminal area environmental considerations, volume 1
The results of an economic and environmental study of short haul airline systems using short takeoff and landing (STOL) aircraft are presented. The STOL system characteristics were optimized for maximum patronage at a specified return on investment, while maintaining noise impact compatibility with the terminal area. Supporting studies of aircraft air pollution and hub airport congestion relief were also performed. The STOL concept specified for this study was an Augmentor Wing turbofan aircraft having a field length capability of 2,000 ft. and an effective perceived noise level of 95 EPNdB at 500 ft. sideline distance. An economic and environmental assessment of the defined STOL system and a summary of the methodology, STOL system characteristics and arena characteristics are provided
Homogeneous and heterogeneous chemistry along air parcel trajectories
The study of coupled heterogeneous and homogeneous chemistry due to polar stratospheric clouds (PSC's) using Lagrangian parcel trajectories for interpretation of the Airborne Arctic Stratosphere Experiment (AASE) is discussed. This approach represents an attempt to quantitatively model the physical and chemical perturbation to stratospheric composition due to formation of PSC's using the fullest possible representation of the relevant processes. Further, the meteorological fields from the United Kingdom Meteorological office global model were used to deduce potential vorticity and inferred regions of PSC's as an input to flight planning during AASE
Some results at Baker-Nunn tracking stations
Light curves and exposure data for Baker-Nunn cameras obtained during astronomical photography and satellite trackin
A STRATEGIC AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION MODEL WITH RISK AND RETURN CONSIDERATIONS
Decision support systems are generally geared to short-term tactical decision making. As an alternative, this paper develops a mathematical programming model to evaluate long-term strategic alternatives in the context of farm-level agricultural production where a broiler farm considers long-term implications of diversification into commercial aquaculture. The model considers a ten-year strategic planning horizon, incorporates financial risk and return considerations, and accommodates capacity variations. Results indicate that a diversification strategy significantly increases farm profitability over a strategic planning horizon while simultaneously maintaining financial risk below a predetermined tolerance level and return on investment above a predetermined level.Production Economics,
Quantitative observations of the behavior of anomalous low altitude ClO in the Antarctic spring Stratosphere, 1987
During the second National Ozone Expedition ground-based observations at McMurdo Station Antarctica were performed which resulted in a second season's measurement of abnormally large amounts of ClO in the Antarctic spring stratosphere. The original measurements of 1986, in which the presence of this anomalous layer was first discovered, were limited in low altitude recovery of the ClO mixing ratio profile by the restrictions of the spectral bandwidth (256 MHz) which was used to measure the pressure-broadened ClO emission line shape. The 1987 measurements were marked by the use of twice the spectral bandpass employed the previous year, and allow a better characterization of the ClO mixing ratio profile in the critical altitude range 18 to 25 km. In-situ aircraft measurements of ClO made over the Palmer Peninsula during Aug. and Sept. of 1987 by Anderson, et al. effectively determined the important question of the ClO mixing ratio profile at altitudes inaccessible to our technique, below approximately 18 to 18.5 km. These flights did not penetrate further than 75 deg S, however, (vs 78 deg S for McMurdo) and were thus limited to coverage near the outer boundaries of the region of severest ozone depletion over Antarctica in 1987, did not reach an altitude convincingly above that of the peak mixing ratio for ClO, and were not able to make significant observations of the diurnal variation of ClO. The two techniques, and the body of data recovered by each, thus complement one another in producing a full picture of the anomalous ClO layer intimately connected with the region of Antarctic spring ozone depletion. An analysis is presented of the mixing ratio profile from approximately 18 to 45 km, the diurnal behavior, and the secular change in ClO over McMurdo Station during Sept. and early Oct. 1987
Quantum Interference in Off-Resonant Transport through Single Molecules
We provide a simple set of rules for predicting interference effects in
off-resonant transport through single-molecule junctions. These effects fall in
two classes, showing respectively an odd or an even number of nodes in the
linear conductance within a given molecular charge state, and we demonstrate
how to decide the interference class directly from the contacting geometry. For
neutral alternant hydrocarbons, we employ the Coulson-Rushbrooke-McLachlan
pairing theorem to show that the interference class is decided simply by
tunneling on and off the molecule from same, or different sublattices. More
generally, we investigate a range of smaller molecules by means of exact diag-
onalization combined with a perturbative treatment of the molecule-lead tunnel
coupling. While these results generally agree well with GW calculations, they
are shown to be at odds with simpler mean-field treatments. For molecules with
spin-degenerate ground states, we show that for most junctions, interference
causes no transmission nodes, but argue that it may lead to a non-standard
gate-dependence of the zero-bias Kondo resonance.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figure
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