16,160 research outputs found
Visible and near-IR spectral reflectance of geologically important materials: A short review
Examples of reflectance spectra are presented and discussed for various mineral groups including pyroxenes, olivene, phylosilicates, amphiboles, feldspars, oxides and hydroxides, carbonates, and mixtures of minerals. The physical sources of some spectral features are also reviewed such as charge transfer and conduction bands, crystal field absorptions, and vibrational absorptions
A next-generation mapping spectrometer
Operational and design characteristics for a remote sensing instrument for aircraft and orbital use are defined. The ideal instrument would be based around two-dimensional detector arrays, silicon for the visible and very-near infrared (0.4 to 1.0 microns) and InSb or PbS for the rest of the near-infrared (out to about 2.6 microns). Spectral information would be dispersed along one axis. Thus one exposure or frame would simultaneously record a full spectrum for each pixel in a row perpendicular to the ground track. The instrument should be smart and versatile, with extensive pre-processing capability programmable from the ground. Spatial and spectral resolution, signal to noise radio, data precision, and calibration and atmospheric corrections are also discussed
Spectral effects of dehydration on phyllosilicates
Six phyllosilicates were progressively dehydrated under controlled conditions in an effort to study the spectral effects of their dehydration. The spectra obtained at each level of hydration provide information that may be used in future spectroscopic observations of the planets, as well as a data set which compliments the existing body of terrestrial soil knowledge
Fractional analytic index
For a finite rank projective bundle over a compact manifold, so associated to
a torsion, Dixmier-Douady, 3-class, w, on the manifold, we define the ring of
differential operators `acting on sections of the projective bundle' in a
formal sense. In particular, any oriented even-dimensional manifold carries a
projective spin Dirac operator in this sense. More generally the corresponding
space of pseudodifferential operators is defined, with supports sufficiently
close to the diagonal, i.e. the identity relation. For such elliptic operators
we define the numerical index in an essentially analytic way, as the trace of
the commutator of the operator and a parametrix and show that this is homotopy
invariant. Using the heat kernel method for the twisted, projective spin Dirac
operator, we show that this index is given by the usual formula, now in terms
of the twisted Chern character of the symbol, which in this case defines an
element of K-theory twisted by w; hence the index is a rational number but in
general it is not an integer.Comment: 23 pages, Latex2e, final version, to appear in JD
Determination of lunar ilmentite abundances from remotely sensed data
The mapping of ilmenite on the surface of the moon is a necessary precursor to the investigation of prospective lunar base sites. Telescopic observations of the moon using a variety of narrow bandpass optical interference filters are being performed as a preliminary means of achieving this goal. Specifically, ratios of images obtained using filters centered at 0.40 and 0.56 microns provide quantitative estimates of TiO2 abundances. Analysis of preliminary distribution maps of TiO2 concentrations allows identification of specific high-Ti areas. Investigations of these areas using slit spectra in the range 0.03 to 0.85 microns are underway to search for discrete spectral signatures attributable to ilmenite
Determination of lunar ilmenite abundances from remotely sensed data
The mineral ilmenite (FeTiO3) was found in abundance in lunar mare soils returned during the Apollo project. Lunar ilmenite often contains greater than 50 weight-percent titanium dioxide (TiO2), and is a primary potential resource for oxygen and other raw materials to supply future lunar bases. Chemical and spectroscopic analysis of the returned lunar soils produced an empirical function that relates the spectral reflectance ratio at 400 and 560 nm to the weight percent abundance of TiO2. This allowed mapping of the lunar TiO2 distribution using telescopic vidicon multispectral imaging from the ground; however, the time variant photometric response of the vidicon detectors produced abundance uncertainties of at least 2 to 5 percent. Since that time, solid-state charge-coupled device (CCD) detector technology capable of much improved photometric response has become available. An investigation of the lunar TiO2 distribution was carried out utilizing groundbased telescopic CCD multispectral imagery and spectroscopy. The work was approached in phases to develop optimum technique based upon initial results. The goal is to achieve the best possible TiO2 abundance maps from the ground as a precursor to lunar orbiter and robotic sample return missions, and to produce a better idea of the peak abundances of TiO2 for benefaction studies. These phases and the results are summarized
Mining Missing Hyperlinks from Human Navigation Traces: A Case Study of Wikipedia
Hyperlinks are an essential feature of the World Wide Web. They are
especially important for online encyclopedias such as Wikipedia: an article can
often only be understood in the context of related articles, and hyperlinks
make it easy to explore this context. But important links are often missing,
and several methods have been proposed to alleviate this problem by learning a
linking model based on the structure of the existing links. Here we propose a
novel approach to identifying missing links in Wikipedia. We build on the fact
that the ultimate purpose of Wikipedia links is to aid navigation. Rather than
merely suggesting new links that are in tune with the structure of existing
links, our method finds missing links that would immediately enhance
Wikipedia's navigability. We leverage data sets of navigation paths collected
through a Wikipedia-based human-computation game in which users must find a
short path from a start to a target article by only clicking links encountered
along the way. We harness human navigational traces to identify a set of
candidates for missing links and then rank these candidates. Experiments show
that our procedure identifies missing links of high quality
Analysis of pyroxene absorptions observed in Martian dark regions
We have investigated the mineralogy of the Martian dark regions by analysis of the pyroxene Fe(2+) absorption band near 1.0 micron in a set of VIS/NIR reflectance spectral images. The data used for these analyses were selected from a larger set, extending from 0.44 to 1.02 microns, obtained during the close 1988 opposition and covering substantially all of Mars south of 40 degrees N. This data set is being used in regional mapping of spectral parameters related to surface mineralogy. Martian dark regions are of interest in reconstructing the geologic history because they contain exposures of unaltered or little-altered basaltic crustal material; mapping differences in composition among dark regions could reveal regional or temporal variation in magmatic activity or mantle source composition. Two types of dark regions are seen, with the pyroxene band present and absent; where present, the inferred composition is in the range pigeonite-augite to very high-Fe, low-Ca pyroxene, with a two-pyroxene mixture possible
Spectator Effects in the Decay B -> K \gamma \gamma
We report the results of the first computation related to the study of the
spectator effects in the rare decay mode within the
framework of Standard Model. It is found that the account of these effects
results in the enhancement factor for the short-distance reducible contribution
to the branching ratio.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, RevTeX
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