56,305 research outputs found
Thermal control of the style of extensional tectonics
Crustal extension is accommodated by a wide range of structural styles ranging from high-angle normal faults to low-angle detachments. In some areas different structural styles are superposed by multiple extension events, and in other areas different structural styles are juxtaposed. As shown with examples from the Rio Grande rift and the Red Sea-Gulf of Aden rift system, high strains and low-angle faulting are commonly spatially and temporally associated with a hot and probably thin lithosphere as indicated by major magmatic activity. Theoretical studies of strength profiles in the lithosphere suggest that there may effectively be a critical range for the geotherm above which low-angle faulting and crustal decollement may be favored over high-angle faulting
Recommended from our members
Cultivating the ineffable: the role of contemplative practice in enactivist learning
Application of communications satellites to educational development
A summary of research is presented. The broad objectives of this interdisciplinary research effort were: (1) to assess the role of satellite communications as a means of improving education in the United States, as well as in less-developed areas of the world; (2) to generate basic knowledge which will aid in making rational decisions about satellite application in the field of education in the years ahead; (3) to devise systems and strategies for improving education; and (4) to educate individuals who will be knowledgeable about aspects of satellite communications policy which transcend any single discipline
Program on application of communications satellites to educational development. Computer-based instruction: A background paper on its status, cost/effectiveness and telecommunications requirements
Status, cost/effectiveness, and telecommunication/satellite requirements of computer-based instructio
L1TV computes the flat norm for boundaries
We show that the recently introduced L1TV functional can be used to
explicitly compute the flat norm for co-dimension one boundaries. While this
observation alone is very useful, other important implications for image
analysis and shape statistics include a method for denoising sets which are not
boundaries or which have higher co-dimension and the fact that using the flat
norm to compute distances not only gives a distance, but also an informative
decomposition of the distance. This decomposition is made to depend on scale
using the "flat norm with scale" which we define in direct analogy to the L1TV
functional. We illustrate the results and implications with examples and
figures
- …