14,124 research outputs found
Application of HCMM satellite data to mineral exploration
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
An angular momentum approach to quadratic Fourier transform, Hadamard matrices, Gauss sums, mutually unbiased bases, unitary group and Pauli group
The construction of unitary operator bases in a finite-dimensional Hilbert
space is reviewed through a nonstandard approach combinining angular momentum
theory and representation theory of SU(2). A single formula for the bases is
obtained from a polar decomposition of SU(2) and analysed in terms of cyclic
groups, quadratic Fourier transforms, Hadamard matrices and generalized Gauss
sums. Weyl pairs, generalized Pauli operators and their application to the
unitary group and the Pauli group naturally arise in this approach.Comment: Topical review (40 pages). Dedicated to the memory of Yurii
Fedorovich Smirno
Fifty Years of Candidate Pulsar Selection - What next?
For fifty years astronomers have been searching for pulsar signals in
observational data. Throughout this time the process of choosing detections
worthy of investigation, so called candidate selection, has been effective,
yielding thousands of pulsar discoveries. Yet in recent years technological
advances have permitted the proliferation of pulsar-like candidates, straining
our candidate selection capabilities, and ultimately reducing selection
accuracy. To overcome such problems, we now apply intelligent machine learning
tools. Whilst these have achieved success, candidate volumes continue to
increase, and our methods have to evolve to keep pace with the change. This
talk considers how to meet this challenge as a community.Comment: 4 pages, submitted: Proceedings of Pulsar Astrophysics: The Next
Fifty Years, IAU Symposium 33
Field Utilization and Analysis of AIS 128-channel Imagery Using Microcomputers: Application to Yerington, Nevada Field Area
Geologists in exploration need to be able to determine the mineral composition of a given outcrop, and then proceed to another in order to carry out the process of geologic mapping. Since April 1984 researchers have been developing a portable microcomputer-based imaging system (with a grey-scale of 16 shades of amber), which were demonstrated during the November 1984 GSA field trip in the field at Yerington, NV. A color-version of the same technology was recently demonstrated. The portable computer selected is a COLBY 10-Megabyte, hard disk-equipped repackaged-IBM/XT, which operates on either 110/220 VAC or on 12VDC from the cigarette lighter in a field vehicle. A COMPAQ PLUS or an IBM Portable will also work on modified software. The underlying concept is that the atmospheric transmission and surface albedo/slope terms are multiplicative, relating the spectral irradiance to the spectral color of the surface materials. Thus, the spectral color of a pixel remains after averaged log-albedo and log-irradiance have been estimated. All these steps can be carried out on the COLBY microcomputer, using 80 image lines of the 128-channel, 12-bit imagery. Results are shown for such an 80-line segment, showing the identification of an O-H bearing mineral group (of slightly varying specific characters) on the flight line
Study made of interaction between sound fields and structural vibrations
Study analyzes structural vibrations and the interactions between them and sound fields. It outlines a conceptual framework to analyze the vibrations of systems and their interactions, incorporating the results of earlier studies and establishing a unified basis for continuing research
Multispectral signatures in relation to ground control signature using nested sampling approach
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Feasibility of using S-191 infrared spectra for geological studies from space
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Analytical procedure for determining random load acting on a spacecraft due to a primary random load acting on an exterior structure Quarterly report no. 2, 1 Sep. - 30 Nov. 1965
Sound and vibration transmission in OGO SPACECRAFT shroud syste
The prediction and measurement of sound radiated by structures
Theories regarding the radiation of sound are reviewed and the implementation in strategies for explaining or measuring the sound produced by practical strucutres are discussed. Particular attention is given to those aspects that relate to the determination of the relative amounts of sound generated by various parts of a machine or structure, which can be very useful information for noise reduction efforts
Reevaluation of the normative minerals of Sonora Pass rock standards - University of Nevada reports 7 and 12
Chemical analyses and normative minerals of Nevada mountain pass rock
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