22 research outputs found
Large Deviation Theory for a Homogenized and "Corrected" Elliptic ODE
We study a one-dimensional elliptic problem with highly oscillatory random
diffusion coefficient. We derive a homogenized solution and a so-called
Gaussian corrector. We also prove a "pointwise" large deviation principle (LDP)
for the full solution and approximate this LDP with a more tractable form.
These results allow one to access the limits of Gaussian correctors. In
general, the corrector does not capture the large deviation behavior.
Applications to uncertainty quantification are considered
A Hybrid (Monte-Carlo/Deterministic) Approach for Multi-Dimensional Radiation Transport
A novel hybrid Monte Carlo transport scheme is demonstrated in a scene with
solar illumination, scattering and absorbing 2D atmosphere, a textured
reflecting mountain, and a small detector located in the sky (mounted on a
satellite or a airplane). It uses a deterministic approximation of an adjoint
transport solution to reduce variance, computed quickly by ignoring atmospheric
interactions. This allows significant variance and computational cost
reductions when the atmospheric scattering and absorption coefficient are
small. When combined with an atmospheric photon-redirection scheme, significant
variance reduction (equivalently acceleration) is achieved in the presence of
atmospheric interactions
A scalable system to measure contrail formation on a per-flight basis
Persistent contrails make up a large fraction of aviation's contribution to
global warming. We describe a scalable, automated detection and matching (ADM)
system to determine from satellite data whether a flight has made a persistent
contrail. The ADM system compares flight segments to contrails detected by a
computer vision algorithm running on images from the GOES-16 Advanced Baseline
Imager. We develop a 'flight matching' algorithm and use it to label each
flight segment as a 'match' or 'non-match'. We perform this analysis on 1.6
million flight segments. The result is an analysis of which flights make
persistent contrails several orders of magnitude larger than any previous work.
We assess the agreement between our labels and available prediction models
based on weather forecasts. Shifting air traffic to avoid regions of contrail
formation has been proposed as a possible mitigation with the potential for
very low cost/ton-CO2e. Our findings suggest that imperfections in these
prediction models increase this cost/ton by about an order of magnitude.
Contrail avoidance is a cost-effective climate change mitigation even with this
factor taken into account, but our results quantify the need for more accurate
contrail prediction methods and establish a benchmark for future development.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure