14,980 research outputs found
Detection and Characterization of Stress Symptoms in Forest Vegetation
Techniques used at the Pacific Southwest Forest and Range Experiment Station to detect advanced and previsual symptoms of vegetative stress are discussed. Stresses caused by bark beetles in coniferous stands of timber are emphasized because beetles induce stress more rapidly than most other destructive agents. Bark beetles are also the most damaging forest insects in the United States. In the work on stress symptoms, there are two primary objectives: (1) to learn the best combination of films, scales, and filters to detect and locate injured trees from aircraft and spacecraft, and (2) to learn if stressed trees can be detected before visual symptoms of decline occur. Equipment and techniques used in a study of the epidemic of the Black Hills bark beetle are described
Remote sensing in forestry: Promises and problems
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Exomoon Habitability and Tidal Evolution in Low-Mass Star Systems
Discoveries of extrasolar planets in the habitable zone (HZ) of their parent
star lead to questions about the habitability of massive moons orbiting planets
in the HZ. Around low-mass stars, the HZ is much closer to the star than for
Sun-like stars. For a planet-moon binary in such a HZ, the proximity of the
star forces a close orbit for the moon to remain gravitationally bound to the
planet. Under these conditions the effects of tidal heating, distortion
torques, and stellar perturbations become important considerations for exomoon
habitability.
Utilizing a model that considers both dynamical and tidal interactions
simultaneously, we performed a computational investigation into exomoon
evolution for systems in the HZ of low-mass stars ().
We show that dwarf stars with masses cannot host
habitable exomoons within the stellar HZ due to extreme tidal heating in the
moon. Perturbations from a central star may continue to have deleterious
effects in the HZ up to , depending on the host
planet's mass and its location in the HZ, amongst others. In addition to
heating concerns, torques due to tidal and spin distortion can lead to the
relatively rapid inward spiraling of a moon. Therefore, moons of giant planets
in HZs around the most abundant type of star are unlikely to have habitable
surfaces. In cases with lower intensity tidal heating the stellar perturbations
may have a positive influence on exomoon habitability by promoting long-term
heating and possibly extending the HZ for exomoons.Comment: accepted by MNRAS, 20 pages, 8 figures in main text (7 col, 1 b/w
Inventory of forest and rangeland resources, including forest stress
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Inventory of forest and rangeland resources, including forest stress
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Inventory of forest and rangeland resources, including forest stress
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Space probe/satellite ejection apparatus for spacecraft
An ejection apparatus for spinning and propelling objects for ejection from a spacecraft at a desired velocity and rotational speed is discussed. The apparatus includes a launch cradle on which the space object to be ejected rests. The cradle is rotatably supported by a central hub secured to the upper end of the pneumatic cylinder piston shaft. Release mechanisms consisting of a retractable pin and locking lug is utilized to hold the cradle and object to be ejected. The release mechanism has a fixed barrier member which holds the retractable pin in engagement with the locking lug until release by upward movement of the launch cradle beyond the barrier height
Inventory of forest and rangeland resources, including forest stress
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Inventory of forest and rangeland and detection of forest stress
The author has identified the following significant results. Eucalyptus tree stands killed by low temperatures in December 1972 were outlined by image enhancement of two separate dates of ERTS-1 images (January 22, 1973-I.D. 1183-18175 and April 22, 1973-I.D. 1273-18183). Three stands larger than 500 meters in size were detected very accurately. In Colorado, range and grassland communities were analyzed by visual interpretation of color composite scene I.D. 1028-17135. It was found that mixtures of plant litter, amount and kind of bare soil, and plant foliage cover made classification of grasslands very difficult. Changes in forest land use were detected on areas as small as 5 acres when ERTS-1 color composite scene 1264-15445 (April 13, 1973) was compared with 1966 ASCS index mosaics (scale 1:60,000). Verification of the changes were made from RB-57 underflight CIR transparencies (scale 1:120,000)
Inventory of forest and rangeland resources, including forest stress
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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