2,301 research outputs found

    A noise assessment and prediction system

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    A system has been designed to provide an assessment of noise levels that result from testing activities at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Md. The system receives meteorological data from surface stations and an upper air sounding system. The data from these systems are sent to a meteorological model, which provides forecasting conditions for up to three hours from the test time. The meteorological data are then used as input into an acoustic ray trace model which projects sound level contours onto a two-dimensional display of the surrounding area. This information is sent to the meteorological office for verification, as well as the range control office, and the environmental office. To evaluate the noise level predictions, a series of microphones are located off the reservation to receive the sound and transmit this information back to the central display unit. The computer models are modular allowing for a variety of models to be utilized and tested to achieve the best agreement with data. This technique of prediction and model validation will be used to improve the noise assessment system

    Integration of Mars Global Surveyor observations of the MY 25 planet-encircling dust storm on Mars: implications for atmospheric dynamics and modeling

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    A survey of observations and analyses of the Mars year (MY) 25 planet-encircling dust storm (PDS) on Mars is presented. The environmental causes and dynamical mechanisms responsible for PDS initiation, expansion, decay, and interannual frequency are not fully understood. PDS seasonal occurrence suggests the presence of climatic and environmental components, yet interannual variability suggests that initiation and expansion mechanisms are not solely seasonal in character. The objectives of this research were to better understand the dynamical processes and circulation components responsible for MY 25 PDS initiation and evolution and to analyze why a PDS developed in MY 25 and not in MY 24 or 26. Negative anomalies in temperature data with &sim3-sol periodicity indicate the presence of baroclinic eddies. After comparing these eddies with dust storms observed in satellite imagery, the author hypothesized that six eastward-traveling transient baroclinic eddies triggered the MY 25 precursor storms due to the enhanced dust lifting associated with their low-level wind and stress fields. They were followed by a seventh eddy that contributed to dust storm expansion. All seven eddy cold anomalies were less than -4.5 K. It is possible that the sustained series of high-amplitude eddies in MY 25 were a factor in PDS onset and expansion
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