15,774 research outputs found
Lithologic mapping of silicate rocks using TIMS
Common rock-forming minerals have thermal infrared spectral features that are measured in the laboratory to infer composition. An airborne Daedalus scanner (TIMS) that collects six channels of thermal infrared radiance data (8 to 12 microns), may be used to measure these same features for rock identification. Previously, false-color composite pictures made from channels 1, 3, and 5 and emittance spectra for small areas on these images were used to make lithologic maps. Central wavelength, standard deviation, and amplitude of normal curves regressed on the emittance spectra are related to compositional information for crystalline igneous silicate rocks. As expected, the central wavelength varies systematically with silica content and with modal quartz content. Standard deviation is less sensitive to compositional changes, but large values may result from mixed admixture of vegetation. Compression of the six TIMS channels to three image channels made from the regressed parameters may be effective in improving geologic mapping from TIMS data, and these synthetic images may form a basis for the remote assessment of rock composition
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The area around the Orion Nebula observed in the CO (J = 1- 0) transition
An area 1 deg2 around the Orion Nebula has been surveyed with a 2.6 km s-1 wide single-channel receiver. The map shows considerable structure in the east including a bright spot 24' (2.8 pc) from the main CO peak
The Viking surface sampler
A surface sampler subsystem for the Viking Lander has been designed, fabricated, cleaned, and successfully tested. Testing has included component level tests to qualification environment and subsystem level tests. This development hardware has also been integrated into a System Test Bed (STB) for the lander system. In addition to the normal dynamic and thermal environments the surface sampler hardware has been tested in an aircraft to simulate the effects of the reduced Martian gravity. Although problems have been encountered with the first-build and integration, the basic design appears to be sound and hardware qualification is scheduled for late 1973
THE EFFECT OF RISK AND AUTONOMY ON INDEPENDENT HOG PRODUCERS' CONTRACTING DECISIONS
The introduction of vertical coordination in the hog industry has provided producers with new business arrangements for raising hogs. While some researchers have elicited utility functions for hog producers on the basis of income risk, none have addressed autonomy, a factor which appears to be important in business arrangement selection for independent family hog operations. In this study, a method is developed for eliciting a multi-attribute function with attributes of income and autonomy. Utility functions are elicited for a group of Minnesota farrow-to-finish hog producers. For these producers, autonomy dominated risk as the most important attribute in business arrangement selection.Livestock Production/Industries,
Geologic utility of improved orbital measurements
From a geologists point of view, the most important use of orbital cameras is probably to provide spatial or context information in remote areas. This information can be extracted even from broad-band, single channel images provided that the spatial resolution is adequate for the problem at hand. Topographic information, usually provided by stereoscopic images, is next in importance. Any satellite system designed to satisfy general geologic requirements must produce stereo images, preferably with large base/height ratios of 0.5 or more. Satellite coverage at different illumination geometries could provide low Sun angles for regions of low relief where topography must be accentuated, and high Sun angles for areas of high relief or when multispectral data are being collected. Thus a different polar orbit than that of LANDSAT would be advantageous. The extended spectral sensitivity of scanner permits interferences of the composition of rocks in the scene to be drawn directly, rather than from contextual clues
Elusive Codes in Hamming Graphs
We consider a code to be a subset of the vertex set of a Hamming graph. We
examine elusive pairs, code-group pairs where the code is not determined by
knowledge of its set of neighbours. We construct a new infinite family of
elusive pairs, where the group in question acts transitively on the set of
neighbours of the code. In our examples, we find that the alphabet size always
divides the length of the code, and prove that there is no elusive pair for the
smallest set of parameters for which this is not the case. We also pose several
questions regarding elusive pairs
THEORETICAL AND EMPIRICAL CONSIDERATIONS OF ELICITING PREFERENCES AND MODEL ESTIMATION IN CONJOINT ANALYSIS
The theoretical underpinnings associated with eliciting consumer preferences and statistical properties of alternative models in conjoint analysis are examined. Results show that model selection makes little difference in the context of sign and significance of coefficients. However, results show that tobit is a better predictor of ordinal ranking relative to the probit model.Demand and Price Analysis,
Beef Producer Choice in Cattle Marketing
In addition to the conventional auction method of cattle marketing, some alternative marketing arrangements include sale by private treaty, video auction, retained ownership, and use of strategic alliances. This study finds that 91% of Louisiana producers use conventional auctions, while 39% use other types of marketing arrangements. The most heavily used alternative marketing arrangement is private treaty, at 26%. Those producers using alternative marketing arrangements tend to be larger, have heavier weaning weights, have more diverse farming operations, be younger, have greater contact with their county extension agents, and depend less on income from off-farm sources.cattle marketing, conventional auction, private treaty, strategic alliance, video auction, Livestock Production/Industries, Marketing,
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