380 research outputs found
Signature extension preprocessing for LANDSAT MSS data
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Signature extension using transformed cluster statistics and related techniques
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Engineering evaluation of 24 channel multispectral scanner
The results of flight tests to evaluate the performance of the 24 channel multispectral scanner are reported. The flight plan and test site are described along with the time response and channel registration. The gain and offset drift, and moire patterns are discussed. Aerial photographs of the test site are included
Sea level changes in the Mediterranean: tectonic implications
The interpretation of sea level variations along the coasts of the Mediterranean region must be accompanied by the evaluation of vertical land movements associated with seismic and volcanic sources. This can be tentatively carried out through seismic strain analysis based on data pertaining the last 2 millennia as well as from the study of maritime archaeological structures.PublishedHersonissos, Crete island, Greece3.3. Geodinamica e struttura dell'interno della Terraope
Analysis of scanner data for crop inventories
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Sea level changes and vertical land movements in the Mediterranean from historical and geophysical data and modelling
The Mediterranean basin is a natural laboratory for the reconstruction of the sea level variations since paleo-historical times. During the Holocene, sea level variations in this region have been mainly determined by the response of the geoid and of the solid Earth to the melting of remote ice aggregates, which has produced spatially variable signals mostly governed by the effect of ocean loading. An analysis of past and recent sea level variations is possible from various indicators, which provide data on relative sea level and crustal vertical movements on different time scales.PublishedBurlington house, London3.3. Geodinamica e struttura dell'interno della Terraope
Core-mantle boundary deformations and J2 variations resulting from the 2004 Sumatra earthquake
The deformation at the core-mantle boundary produced by the 2004 Sumatra
earthquake is investigated by means of a semi-analytic theoretical model of
global coseismic and postseismic deformation, predicting a millimetric
coseismic perturbation over a large portion of the core-mantle boundary.
Spectral features of such deformations are analysed and discussed. The
time-dependent postseismic evolution of the elliptical part of the gravity
field (J2) is also computed for different asthenosphere viscosity models. Our
results show that, for asthenospheric viscosities smaller than 10^18 Pa s, the
postseismic J2 variation in the next years is expected to leave a detectable
signal in geodetic observations.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. It will appear in Geophysical Journal
Internationa
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Ice-sheet configuration in the CMIP5/PMIP3 Last Glacial Maximum experiments
We describe the creation of a data set describing
changes related to the presence of ice sheets, including
ice-sheet extent and height, ice-shelf extent, and the distribution
and elevation of ice-free land at the Last Glacial Maximum
(LGM), which were used in LGM experiments conducted
as part of the fifth phase of the Coupled Modelling
Intercomparison Project (CMIP5) and the third phase of the
Palaeoclimate Modelling Intercomparison Project (PMIP3).
The CMIP5/PMIP3 data sets were created from reconstructions
made by three different groups, which were all obtained
using a model-inversion approach but differ in the assumptions
used in the modelling and in the type of data used as
constraints. The ice-sheet extent in the Northern Hemisphere
(NH) does not vary substantially between the three individual
data sources. The difference in the topography of the NH
ice sheets is also moderate, and smaller than the differences
between these reconstructions (and the resultant composite
reconstruction) and ice-sheet reconstructions used in previous
generations of PMIP. Only two of the individual reconstructions
provide information for Antarctica. The discrepancy
between these two reconstructions is larger than the difference for the NH ice sheets, although still less than the difference
between the composite reconstruction and previous
PMIP ice-sheet reconstructions. Although largely confined
to the ice-covered regions, differences between the climate
response to the individual LGM reconstructions extend over
the North Atlantic Ocean and Northern Hemisphere continents,
partly through atmospheric stationary waves. Differences
between the climate response to the CMIP5/PMIP3
composite and any individual ice-sheet reconstruction are
smaller than those between the CMIP5/PMIP3 composite
and the ice sheet used in the last phase of PMIP (PMIP2)
Tidal torques. A critical review of some techniques
We point out that the MacDonald formula for body-tide torques is valid only
in the zeroth order of e/Q, while its time-average is valid in the first order.
So the formula cannot be used for analysis in higher orders of e/Q. This
necessitates corrections in the theory of tidal despinning and libration
damping.
We prove that when the inclination is low and phase lags are linear in
frequency, the Kaula series is equivalent to a corrected version of the
MacDonald method. The correction to MacDonald's approach would be to set the
phase lag of the integral bulge proportional to the instantaneous frequency.
The equivalence of descriptions gets violated by a nonlinear
frequency-dependence of the lag.
We explain that both the MacDonald- and Darwin-torque-based derivations of
the popular formula for the tidal despinning rate are limited to low
inclinations and to the phase lags being linear in frequency. The
Darwin-torque-based derivation, though, is general enough to accommodate both a
finite inclination and the actual rheology.
Although rheologies with Q scaling as the frequency to a positive power make
the torque diverge at a zero frequency, this reveals not the impossible nature
of the rheology, but a flaw in mathematics, i.e., a common misassumption that
damping merely provides lags to the terms of the Fourier series for the tidal
potential. A hydrodynamical treatment (Darwin 1879) had demonstrated that the
magnitudes of the terms, too, get changed. Reinstating of this detail tames the
infinities and rehabilitates the "impossible" scaling law (which happens to be
the actual law the terrestrial planets obey at low frequencies).Comment: arXiv admin note: sections 4 and 9 of this paper contain substantial
text overlap with arXiv:0712.105
Detection of Phase Jumps of Free Core Nutation of the Earth and their Concurrence with Geomagnetic Jerks
We detected phase jumps of the Free Core Nutation (FCN) of the Earth directly
from the analysis of the Very Long Baseline Interferometer (VLBI) observation
of the Earth rotation for the period 1984-2003 by applying the Weighted Wavelet
Z-Transform (WWZ) method and the Short-time Periodogram with the Gabor function
(SPG) method. During the period, the FCN had two significant phase jumps in
1992 and 1998. These epochs coincide with the reported occurrence of
geomagnetic jerks.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
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