67 research outputs found
Derivation of surface properties from Magellan altimetry data
The fit of the Hagfors model to the Magellan altimetry data provides a means to characterize the surface properties of Venus. However, the derived surface properties are only meaningful if the model provides a good representation of the data. The Hagfors model provides a good representation of the data. The Hagfors model is generally a realistic fit to surface scattering properties of a nadir-directed antenna such as the Magellan altimeter; however, some regions of the surface of Venus are poorly described by the existing model, according to the goodness of fit parameter provided on the ARCDR CD-ROMs. Poorly characterized regions need to be identified and fit to new models in order to derive more accurate surface properties for use in inferring the geological processes that affect the surface in those regions. We have compared the goodness of fit of the Hagfors model to the distribution of features across the planet, and preliminary results show a correlation between steep topographic slopes and poor fits to the standard model, as has been noticed by others. In this paper, we investigate possible relations between many classes of features and the ability of the Hagfors model to fit the observed echo profiles. In the regions that are not well characterized by existing models, we calculate new models that compensate for topographic relief in order to derive improved estimates of surface properties. Areas investigated to date span from longitude 315 through 45, at all latitudes covered by Magellan. A survey of those areas yields preliminary results that suggest that topographically high regions are well suited to the current implementation of the Hagfors model. Striking examples of such large-scale good fits are Alpha Regio, the northern edges of Lada Terra, and the southern edge of Ishtar Terra. Other features that are typically well fit are the rims of coronae such as Heng-O and the peaks of volcanos such as Gula Mons. Surprisingly, topographically low regions, such as the ubiquitous plains areas, are modeled poorly in comparison. However, this generalization has has exceptions: Lakshmi Planum is an elevated region that is not well fit compared to the rest of neighboring Ishtar, while the southern parts of topographically low Guinevere Planitia are characterized quite well by the Hagfors model. Features that are candidates for improved models are impact craters, coronae, ridges of significant scale, complex ridged terrains, moderate-sized mountains, and sharp terrain boundaries. These features are chosen because the goodness of fit is likely to be most affected either by departures from normal incidence angles or by sharp changes in terrain type within a single footprint. Most large features that are elevated with respect to their surroundings will suffer from steep slope effects, and smaller coronae and impact craters will probably suffer due to rapid changes in their appearance within a single footprint (10-20 km)
New perspectives on spectroscopic factor quenching from reactions
The evolution of single-particle strengths as the neutron-to-proton asymmetry
changes informs us of the importance of short- and long-range correlations in
nuclei and has therefore been extensively studied for the last two decades.
Surprisingly, the strong asymmetry dependence of these strengths and their
extreme values for highly-asymmetric nuclei inferred from knockout reaction
measurements on a target nucleus are not consistent with what is extracted from
electron-induced, transfer, and quasi-free reaction data, constituting a
two-decade old puzzle. This work presents the first consistent analysis of
one-nucleon transfer and one-nucleon knockout data, in which theoretical
uncertainties associated with the nucleon-nucleus effective interactions
considered in the reaction models are quantified using a Bayesian analysis. Our
results demonstrate that, taking into account these uncertainties, the
spectroscopic strengths of loosely-bound nucleons extracted from both probes
agree with each other and, although there are still discrepancies for
deeply-bound nucleons, the slope of the asymmetry dependence of the
single-particle strengths inferred from transfer and knockout reactions are
consistent within . Both probes are consistent with a small asymmetry
dependence of these strengths. The uncertainties obtained in this work
represent a lower bound and are already significantly larger than the original
estimates.Comment: 14 pages: 7 pages of the main text (including one and a half of
reference) and 7 pages of supplemental material. Accepted for publication in
Phys. Rev. Let
The complete quantification of parametric uncertainties in (d,p) transfer reactions
Previous work quantified the uncertainty associated with the optical
potentials between the nucleons and the target. In this study, we extend that
work by also including the parameters of the mean field associated with the
overlap function of the final bound state, thus obtaining the full parametric
uncertainty on transfer observables. We use Bayesian Markov Chain Monte Carlo
simulations to obtain parameter posterior distributions. We use
elastic-scattering cross sections to constrain the optical potential parameters
and use the asymptotic normalization coefficient of the final state to
constrain the bound state interaction. We then propagate these posteriors to
the transfer angular distributions and obtain confidence intervals for this
observable. We study (d,p) reactions on 14C, 16O, and 48Ca at energies in the
range E=10-24 MeV. Our results show a strong reduction in uncertainty by using
the asymptotic normalization coefficient as a constraint, particularly for
those reactions most sensitive to ambiguities in the mean-field. For those
reactions, the importance of constraining the bound state interaction is equal
to that of constrain the optical potentials. The case of 14C is an outlier
because it populates a halo state, and the observable is less sensitive to the
nuclear interior. We conclude that when minimal constraints are used on the
parameters of the nucleon-target interaction, the 68% confidence interval
uncertainties on the differential cross sections are very large (~ 140-185%).
However, if elastic-scattering data and the asymptotic normalization
coefficient are used in the analysis, with an error of 10% (5%), this
uncertainty reduces to ~30% (~15%)
Resolving topographic detail on Venus by modeling complex Magellan altimetry echoes
Magellan's altimeter is providing some of the finest resolution topography of Venus achieved to date. Nevertheless, efforts continue to improve the topographic resolution whenever possible. One effort to this end is stereoscopic imaging, which provides topography at scales similar to that of the synthetic aperture radar (SAR). However, this technique requires two SAR images of the same site to be obtained and limits the utility of this method. In this paper, we present another method to resolve topographic features at scales smaller than that of an altimeter footprint, which is more globally applicable than the stereoscopic approach. Each pulse which is transmitted by Magellan's altimeter scatters from the planet and echoes to the receiver, delayed based on the distance between the spacecraft and each surface element. As resolved in time, each element of an altimetry echo represents the sum of all points on the surface which are equidistant from the spacecraft. Thus, individual returns, as a function of time, create an echo profile which may be used to derive properties of the surface, such as the scattering law or, in this case, the topography within the footprint. The Magellan project has derived some of this information by fitting model templates to radar echo profiles. The templates are calculated based on Hagfor's Law, which assumes a smooth, gently undulating surface. In most regions these templates provide a reasonable fit to the observed echo profile; however, in some cases the surface departs from these simple assumptions and more complex profiles are observed. Specifically, we note that sub-footprint topographic relief apparently has a strong effect on the shape of the echo profile. To demonstrate the effects of sub-resolution relief on echo profiles, we have calculated the echo shapes from a wide range of simple topographic models. At this point, our topographic models have emphasized surfaces where only two dominant elevations are contained within a footprint, such as graben, ridges, crater rims, and central features in impact craters
Quantifying uncertainties due to optical potentials in one-neutron knockout reactions
One-neutron knockout reactions have been widely used to extract information
about the single-particle structure of nuclei from the valley of stability to
the driplines. The interpretation of knockout data relies on reaction models,
where the uncertainties are typically not accounted for. In this work we
quantify uncertainties of optical potentials used in these reaction models and
propagate them, for the first time, to knockout observables using a Bayesian
analysis. We study two reactions in the present paper, the first of which
involves a loosely-bound halo projectile, Be, and the second a
tightly-bound projectile, C. We first quantify the parametric
uncertainties associated with phenomenological optical potentials.
Complementing to this approach, we also quantify the model uncertainties
associated with the chiral forces that can be used to construct microscopic
optical potentials. For the phenomenological study, we investigate the impact
of the imaginary terms of the optical potential on the breakup and stripping
components of the knockout cross sections as well as the impact of the angular
range. For the Be case, the theoretical uncertainty from the
phenomenological method is on the order of the experiment uncertainty on the
knockout observables; however, for the C case, the theoretical
uncertainty is significantly larger. The widths of the confidence intervals for
the knockout observables obtained for the microscopic study and the
phenomenological approach are of similar order of magnitude. Based on this work
we conclude that structure information inferred from the ratio of the knockout
cross sections, will carry a theoretical uncertainty of at least for
halo nuclei and at least for tightly-bound nuclei.Comment: 12 pages (including 2 of supplemental material and 1 of reference), 5
figures, 2 table
Characterization of the High-Albedo NEA 3691 Bede
Characterization of NEAs provides important inputs to models for atmospheric entry, risk assessment and mitigation. Diameter is a key parameter because diameter translates to kinetic energy in atmospheric entry. Diameters can be derived from the absolute magnitude, H(PA=0deg), and from thermal modeling of observed IR fluxes. For both methods, the albedo (pv) is important - high pv surfaces have cooler temperatures, larger diameters for a given Hmag, and shallower phase curves (larger slope parameter G). Thermal model parameters are coupled, however, so that a higher thermal inertia also results in a cooler surface temperature. Multiple parameters contribute to constraining the diameter. Observations made at multiple observing geometries can contribute to understanding the relationships between and potentially breaking some of the degeneracies between parameters. We present data and analyses on NEA 3691 Bede with the aim of best constraining the diameter and pv from a combination of thermal modeling and light curve analyses. We employ our UKIRT+Michelle mid-IR photometric observations of 3691 Bede's thermal emission at 2 phase angles (27&43 deg 2015-03-19 & 04-13), in addition to WISE data (33deg 2010-05-27, Mainzer+2011). Observing geometries differ by solar phase angles and by moderate changes in heliocentric distance (e.g., further distances produce somewhat cooler surface temperatures). With the NEATM model and for a constant IR beaming parameter (eta=constant), there is a family of solutions for (diameter, pv, G, eta) where G is the slope parameter from the H-G Relation. NEATM models employing Pravec+2012's choice of G=0.43, produce D=1.8 km and pv0.4, given that G=0.43 is assumed from studies of main belt asteroids (Warner+2009). We present an analysis of the light curve of 3691 Bede to constrain G from observations. We also investigate fitting thermophysical models (TPM, Rozitis+11) to constrain the coupled parameters of thermal inertia (Gamma) and surface roughness, which in turn affect diameter and pv. Surface composition can be related to pv. This study focuses on understanding and characterizing the dependency of parameters with the aim of constraining diameter, pv and thermal inertia for 3691 Bede
Longitudinal access and exposure to green-blue spaces and individual-level mental health and well-being: protocol for a longitudinal, population-wide record-linked natural experiment
Studies suggest that access and exposure to green-blue spaces (GBS) have beneficial impacts on mental health. However, the evidence base is limited with respect to longitudinal studies. The main aim of this longitudinal, population-wide, record-linked natural experiment, is to model the daily lived experience by linking GBS accessibility indices, residential GBS exposure and health data; to enable quantification of the impact of GBS on well-being and common mental health disorders, for a national population. This research will estimate the impact of neighbourhood GBS access, GBS exposure and visits to GBS on the risk of common mental health conditions and the opportunity for promoting subjective well-being (SWB); both key priorities for public health. We will use a Geographic Information System (GIS) to create quarterly household GBS accessibility indices and GBS exposure using digital map and satellite data for 1.4 million homes in Wales, UK (2008-2018). We will link the GBS accessibility indices and GBS exposures to individual-level mental health outcomes for 1.7 million people with general practitioner (GP) data and data from the National Survey for Wales (n=~12 000) on well-being in the Secure Anonymised Information Linkage (SAIL) Databank. We will examine if these associations are modified by multiple sociophysical variables, migration and socioeconomic disadvantage. Subgroup analyses will examine associations by different types of GBS. This longitudinal study will be augmented by cross-sectional research using survey data on self-reported visits to GBS and SWB. All data will be anonymised and linked within the privacy protecting SAIL Databank. We will be using anonymised data and therefore we are exempt from National Research Ethics Committee (NREC). An Information Governance Review Panel (IGRP) application (Project ID: 0562) to link these data has been approved.The research programme will be undertaken in close collaboration with public/patient involvement groups. A multistrategy programme of dissemination is planned with the academic community, policy-makers, practitioners and the public
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