19,721 research outputs found
Study of an auroral zone rocket experiment Final report
Measurement of flux and energy spectra of protons, energetic particles, hydrogen atoms, and electrons in auroral zone by Nike-Tomahawk sounding rocke
A Bulk-Parallel Priority Queue in External Memory with STXXL
We propose the design and an implementation of a bulk-parallel external
memory priority queue to take advantage of both shared-memory parallelism and
high external memory transfer speeds to parallel disks. To achieve higher
performance by decoupling item insertions and extractions, we offer two
parallelization interfaces: one using "bulk" sequences, the other by defining
"limit" items. In the design, we discuss how to parallelize insertions using
multiple heaps, and how to calculate a dynamic prediction sequence to prefetch
blocks and apply parallel multiway merge for extraction. Our experimental
results show that in the selected benchmarks the priority queue reaches 75% of
the full parallel I/O bandwidth of rotational disks and and 65% of SSDs, or the
speed of sorting in external memory when bounded by computation.Comment: extended version of SEA'15 conference pape
Spatial distribution and broad-band spectral characteristics of the diffuse X-ray background, 0.1 - 1.0 keV
Preliminary maps covering more than 85 percent of the sky are presented for three energy bands: the B band, the C band, and the M band. The study was undertaken to find evidence that most of the diffuse X-ray background at energies less than 1 keV is local to the galaxy and that it is most probably due to thermal radiation from a low density plasma which fills a substantial fraction of interstellar space. A preliminary analysis of the data is provided including a report that most of the B and C band flux has a common origin, probably in a 10 to the 6th power K region surrounding the Sun, and that most of the M band flux does not originate from the same material
Limits on soft X-ray flux from distant emission regions
The all-sky soft X-ray data of McCammon et al. and the new N sub H survey (Stark et al. was used to place limits on the amount of the soft X-ray diffuse background that can originate beyond the neutral gas of the galactic disk. The X-ray data for two regions of the sky near the galactic poles are shown to be uncorrelated with 21 cm column densities. Most of the observed x-ray flux must therefore originate on the near side of the most distant neutral gas. The results from these regions are consistent with X-ray emission from a locally isotropic, unabsorbed source, but require large variations in the emission of the local region over large angular scales
The soft X-ray diffuse background
Maps of the diffuse X-ray background intensity covering essentially the entire sky with approx. 7 deg spatial resolution are presented for seven energy bands. The data were obtained on a series of ten sounding rocket flights conducted over a seven-year period. The different nature of the spatial distributions in different bands implies at least three distinct origins for the diffuse X-rays, none of which is well-understood. At energies or approx. 2000 eV, an isotropic and presumably extraglalactic 500 and 1000 eV, an origin which is at least partially galactic seems called for. At energies 284 eV, the observed intensity is anticorrelated with neutral hydrogen column density, but we find it unlikely that this anticorrelation is simply due to absorption of an extragalactic or halo source
Effects of arcing due to spacecraft charging on spacecraft survival
A quantitative assessment of the hazard associated with spacecraft charging and arcing on spacecraft systems is presented. A literature survey on arc discharge thresholds and characteristics was done and gaps in the data and requirements for additional experiments were identified. Calculations of coupling of arc discharges into typical spacecraft systems were made and the susceptibility of typical spacecraft to disruption by arc discharges was investigated. Design guidelines and recommended practices to reduce or eliminate the threat of malfunction and failures due to spacecraft charging/arcing were summarized
Redundant Arrays of IDE Drives
The next generation of high-energy physics experiments is expected to gather
prodigious amounts of data. New methods must be developed to handle this data
and make analysis at universities possible. We examine some techniques that use
recent developments in commodity hardware. We test redundant arrays of
integrated drive electronics (IDE) disk drives for use in offline high-energy
physics data analysis. IDE redundant array of inexpensive disks (RAID) prices
now equal the cost per terabyte of million-dollar tape robots! The arrays can
be scaled to sizes affordable to institutions without robots and used when fast
random access at low cost is important. We also explore three methods of moving
data between sites; internet transfers, hot pluggable IDE disks in FireWire
cases, and writable digital video disks (DVD-R).Comment: Submitted to IEEE Transactions On Nuclear Science, for the 2001 IEEE
Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, 8 pages, 1 figure,
uses IEEEtran.cls. Revised March 19, 2002 and published August 200
Invasive Wild pigs as primary nest predators for Wild turkeys
Depredation of wild turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) nests is a leading cause of reduced recruitment for the recovering and iconic game species. invasive wild pigs (Sus scrofa) are known to depredate nests, and have been expanding throughout the distributed range of wild turkeys in north America. We sought to gain better insight on the magnitude of wild pigs depredating wild turkey nests. We constructed simulated wild turkey nests throughout the home ranges of 20 GPS-collared wild pigs to evaluate nest depredation relative to three periods within the nesting season (i.e., early, peak, and late) and two nest densities (moderate = 12.5-25 nests/km2, high = 25-50 nests/km2) in south-central Texas, USA during March–June 2016. Overall, the estimated probability of nest depredation by wild pigs was 0.3, equivalent to native species of nest predators in the study area (e.g., gray fox [Urocyon cinereoargenteus], raccoon [Procyon lotor], and coyote [Canis latrans]). female wild pigs exhibited a constant rate of depredation regardless of nesting period or density of nests. However, male wild pigs increased their rate of depredation in areas with higher nest densities. Management efforts should remove wild pigs to reduce nest failure in wild turkey populations especially where recruitment is low
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