15,458 research outputs found
Structural design of a vertical antenna boresight 18.3 by 18.3-m planar near-field antenna measurement system
A large very precise near-field planar scanner was proposed for NASA Lewis Research Center. This scanner would permit near-field measurements over a horizontal scan plane measuring 18.3 m by 18.3 m. Large aperture antennas mounted with antenna boresight vertical could be tested up to 60 GHz. When such a large near field scanner is used for pattern testing, the antenna or antenna system under test does not have to be moved. Hence, such antennas and antenna systems can be positioned and supported to simulate configuration in zero g. Thus, very large and heavy machinery that would be needed to accurately move the antennas are avoided. A preliminary investigation was undertaken to address the mechanical design of such a challenging near-field antenna scanner. The configuration, structural design and results of a parametric NASTRAN structural optimization analysis are contained. Further, the resulting design was dynamically analyzed in order to provide resonant frequency information to the scanner mechanical drive system designers. If other large near field scanners of comparable dimensions are to be constructed, the information can be used for design optimization of these also
A new fabrication method for precision antenna reflectors for space flight and ground test
Communications satellites are using increasingly higher frequencies that require increasingly precise antenna reflectors for use in space. Traditional industry fabrication methods for space antenna reflectors employ successive modeling techniques using high- and low-temperature molds for reflector face sheets and then a final fit-up of the completed honeycomb sandwich panel antenna reflector to a master pattern. However, as new missions are planned at much higher frequencies, greater accuracies will be necessary than are achievable using these present methods. A new approach for the fabrication of ground-test solid-surface antenna reflectors is to build a rigid support structure with an easy-to-machine surface. This surface is subsequently machined to the desired reflector contour and coated with a radio-frequency-reflective surface. This method was used to fabricate a 2.7-m-diameter ground-test antenna reflector to an accuracy of better than 0.013 mm (0.0005 in.) rms. A similar reflector for use on spacecraft would be constructed in a similar manner but with space-qualified materials. The design, analysis, and fabrication of the 2.7-m-diameter precision antenna reflector for antenna ground tests and the extension of this technology to precision, space-based antenna reflectors are described
Physical activity : strategies for school communities : based on strategies developed during the Be Active School & Community Project 1995-1998
The Be Active School and Community Project (BASC) operated in approximately 30 WA primary and secondary schools each year from August 1995 until December 1998 (three years). BASC was a Healthway funded project, promoting the National Heart Foundation\u27s Be Active Everyday message. Under the direction of a Management Committee, two project officers worked with the broad aim of increasing the physical activity rates of children at school and in the local community
Geostatistical merging of weather radar data with a sparse rain gauge network in Queensland
Many parts of Australia, including much of Queensland and Northern Australia, tend to have sparse rain gauge coverage. To provide rainfall information across Australia, several gridded daily rainfall datasets such as those available through the Australian Water Availability Project and Scientific Information for Land Owners services have been developed. These daily grids are produced by interpolation of rain gauge data and therefore can provide unrealistic rainfall estimates in areas that have few rain gauges. To obtain rainfall data at a higher spatial resolution, weather radars and satellites can provide coverage over a large area although their measurements come with considerable uncertainty.
Various approaches have been developed to adjust radar and satellite data and statistically merge them with rain gauge measurements in interpolation schemes, the goal being to retain the information on the spatial distribution of rainfall provided by remote sensing while also taking advantage of the greater accuracy of the rain gauges, but many of these techniques have been applied primarily on shorter time scales of an hour or less. This paper applies some existing methods for geostatistical merging of radar data with sparse rain gauge networks and evaluates the performance of the approaches using the Mt Stapylton radar in Brisbane and 15 surrounding rain gauges. Summer and winter data from 01/12/2013 to 28/02/2018 are considered. The radar data is corrected for mean field bias using quantile mapping and is used to develop the variogram models for use in Kriging. The performance of Kriging the gauge data using the radar variogram is compared with conditional merging and Kriging with radar values introduced as a drift variable. Leave-one-out cross-validation is used to evaluate the performance of the methods.
We find some disagreement between all radar-based approaches and the validation gauge measurements with typical daily root-mean-square errors being between 10mm and 20mm for all approaches. Some outliers with substantially higher RMSE are noted for some days in the unadjusted radar data as well as in the corrected and interpolated data. For winter data the bias-correction and interpolation steps increased the agreement between the radar data and the validation gauges, but this improvement was not observed in the summer data. In addition, due to the low number of gauges the performance of the interpolation is extremely sensitive to the rain gauge values, with certain combinations of rain gauge values and choice of validation gauge leading to extremely large cross-validation errors. The results indicate that while incorporating the radar data makes it possible to perform Kriging with few gauges ona single day's data, this is not an ideal approach for quantitative precipitation estimation and further steps should be taken to improve the radar-gauge correlation
General Framework for phase synchronization through localized sets
We present an approach which enables to identify phase synchronization in
coupled chaotic oscillators without having to explicitly measure the phase. We
show that if one defines a typical event in one oscillator and then observes
another one whenever this event occurs, these observations give rise to a
localized set. Our result provides a general and easy way to identify PS, which
can also be used to oscillators that possess multiple time scales. We
illustrate our approach in networks of chemically coupled neurons. We show that
clusters of phase synchronous neurons may emerge before the onset of phase
synchronization in the whole network, producing a suitable environment for
information exchanging. Furthermore, we show the relation between the localized
sets and the amount of information that coupled chaotic oscillator can
exchange
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The Relative Importance of Different Trophic Pathways for Secondary Exposure to Anticoagulant Rodenticides
Secondary exposure of predators to anticoagulant rodenticides, and in particular second generation anticoagulant rodenticides (SGARs), is a global phenomenon. The widespread and large-scale nature of this exposure has attracted considerable concern, although the consequences in terms of likelihood of poisoning of individuals and resultant impacts on populations are not well characterised. Secondary exposure of predators may as rise from once or more of: (i) eating contaminated commensal rodents subject to control (target species are typically rats and house mice); (ii) consumption of contaminated non-target small mammals (such as Peromyscus, Microtus, and Apodemus species) that encounter and feed on what are rodent-attractive baits; (iii) consumption of non-rodent vertebrate and invertebrate prey that may also incidentally encounter and eat baits. We hypothesised that predators feeding primarily on target species may be most at risk of exposure to SGARs while those predominantly taking non-mammalian prey may be at least risk. We tested this hypothesis by comparing exposure, determined from the presence and magnitude of SGAR liver residues, in red kites (Milvus milvus), which feeds extensively on rats, in barn owls (Tyto alba), kestrels (Falco tinnunculus), and tawny owls (Strix aluco) that feed widely on non-target small mammals, and in sparrowhawks (Accipiter nisus) that feed predominantly on small birds. We found that the scale and magnitude of exposure was broadly consistent with our hypothesis, and that controlling for age in the analysis could be important as older birds can accumulate residues with age. However, exposure in kestrels was typically greater than that in barn owls and tawny owls, despite what is thought to be a general similarity among the species in their diets. We discuss the relative importance of trophic pathways relative to other factors that may drive secondary exposure in predators, and confirm that species that feed on rats or other target species may be at most risk of exposure and poisoning
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