535 research outputs found
Computer mapping of LANDSAT data for environmental applications
The author has identified the following significant results. Land cover overlays and maps produced from LANDSAT are providing information on existing land use and resources throughout the 208 study area. The overlays are being used to delineate drainage areas of a predominant land cover type. Information on cover type is also being combined with other pertinent data to develop estimates of sediment and nutrients flows from the drainage area. The LANDSAT inventory of present land cover together with population projects is providing a basis for developing maps of anticipated land use patterns required to evaluate impact on water quality which may result from these patterns. Overlays of forest types were useful for defining wildlife habitat and vegetational resources in the region. LANDSAT data and computer assisted interpretation was found to be a rapid cost effective procedure for inventorying land cover on a regional basis. The entire 208 inventory which include acquisition of ground truth, LANDSAT tapes, computer processing, and production of overlays and coded tapes was completed within a period of 2 months at a cost of about 0.6 cents per acre, a significant improvement in time and cost over conventional photointerpretation and mapping techniques
University-community engagement: The Fresno story of targeted neighborhood revitalization
In this article we take a closer look at a developing university-community engagement project being undertaken between California State University, Fresno, and the City of Fresno. A history of the project is provided, along with a review of the relevant literature and a summary of what pieces of the puzzle we feel should be in place for a successful collaboration of this sort. These include what structures should be institutionalized for successful collaboration at the university, in the partnering organizations, and in the community
Critical velocity of a mobile impurity in one-dimensional quantum liquids
We study the notion of superfluid critical velocity in one spatial dimension.
It is shown that for heavy impurities with mass exceeding a critical mass
, the dispersion develops periodic metastable branches resulting
in dramatic changes of dynamics in the presence of an external driving force.
In contrast to smooth Bloch Oscillations for , a heavy impurity
climbs metastable branches until it reaches a branch termination point or
undergoes a random tunneling event, both leading to an abrupt change in
velocity and an energy loss. This is predicted to lead to a non-analytic
dependence of the impurity drift velocity on small forces.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures; New version with Supplemental Material (3 pages,
6 figures); Accepted to PR
New vector-scalar contributions to neutrinoless double beta decay and constraints on R-parity violation
We show that in minimal supersymmetric standard model (MSSM) with R-parity
breaking as well as in the left-right symmetric model, there are new observable
contributions to neutrinoless double beta decay arising from hitherto
overlooked diagrams involving the exchange of one W boson and one scalar boson.
In particular, in the case of MSSM, the present experimental bounds on
neutrinoless double beta decay lifetime improves the limits on certain R-parity
violating couplings by about two orders of magnitude. It is shown that similar
diagrams also lead to enhanced rates for conversion in
nuclei, which are in the range accessible to ongoing experiments.Comment: Latex file; 9 pages; 3 figures available on reques
Three-dimensional coherent X-ray diffraction imaging of a ceramic nanofoam: determination of structural deformation mechanisms
Ultra-low density polymers, metals, and ceramic nanofoams are valued for
their high strength-to-weight ratio, high surface area and insulating
properties ascribed to their structural geometry. We obtain the labrynthine
internal structure of a tantalum oxide nanofoam by X-ray diffractive imaging.
Finite element analysis from the structure reveals mechanical properties
consistent with bulk samples and with a diffusion limited cluster aggregation
model, while excess mass on the nodes discounts the dangling fragments
hypothesis of percolation theory.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, 30 reference
A Single Scale Theory for Cold and Hot Dark Matter
We show that a recently proposed extension of the MSSM can provide a scenario
where both the cold and hot dark matter of the universe owe their origin to a
single scale connected with the breakdown of the global B-L symmetry. The susy
partner of the majoron and the light Majorana neutrinos are the cold and hot
dark matter candidates respectively in this model and their desired relative
abundances emerge when the scale of B-L symmetry breaking is in the TeV range.Comment: UMD-PP-94-102 (latex file; 15 pages
Polybrominated Diphenyl Ether (PBDE) Levels in an Expanded Market Basket Survey of U.S. Food and Estimated PBDE Dietary Intake by Age and Sex
OBJECTIVES: Our objectives in this study were to expand a previously reported U.S. market basket survey using a larger sample size and to estimate levels of PBDE intake from food for the U.S. general population by sex and age. METHODS: We measured concentrations of 13 polybrominated diphenyl ether (PBDE) congeners in food in 62 food samples. In addition, we estimated levels of PBDE intake from food for the U.S. general population by age (birth through ≥60 years of age) and sex. RESULTS: In food samples, concentrations of total PBDEs varied from 7.9 pg/g (parts per trillion) in milk to 3,726 pg/g in canned sardines. Fish were highest in PBDEs (mean, 1,120 pg/g; median, 616 pg/g; range, 11.14–3,726 pg/g). This was followed by meat (mean, 383 pg/g; median, 190 pg/g; range, 39–1,426 pg/g) and dairy products (mean, 116 pg/g; median, 32.2 pg/g; range, 7.9–683 pg/g). However, using estimates for food consumption (excluding nursing infants), meat accounted for the highest U.S. dietary PBDE intake, followed by dairy and fish, with almost equal contributions. Adult females had lower dietary intake of PBDEs than did adult males, based on body weight. We estimated PBDE intake from food to be 307 ng/kg/day for nursing infants and from 2 ng/kg/day at 2–5 years of age for both males and females to 0.9 ng/kg/day in adult females. CONCLUSION: Dietary exposure alone does not appear to account for the very high body burdens measured. The indoor environment (dust, air) may play an important role in PBDE body burdens in addition to food
The Red Giant Branch Tip and Bump of the Leo II dwarf spheroidal galaxy
We present V and I photometry of a 9.4' X 9.4' field centered on the dwarf
spheroidal galaxy Leo II. The Tip of the Red Giant Branch is identified at
I^{TRGB}=17.83 +/- 0.03 and adopting = -1.53 +/- 0.2 from the
comparison of RGB stars with Galactic templates, we obtain a distance modulus
(m-M)_0=21.84 +/- 0.13, corresponding to a distance D=233 +/- 15 Kpc. Two
significant bumps have been detected in the Luminosity Function of the Red
Giant Branch. The fainter bump (B1, at V=21.76 +/- 0.05) is the RGB bump of the
dominant stellar population, while the actual nature of the brightest one (B2,
at V=21.35 +/- 0.05) cannot be firmly assessed on the basis of the available
data, it can be due to the Asymptotic Giant Branch Clump of the main population
or it may be a secondary RGB bump. The luminosity of the main RGB bump (B1)
suggests that the majority of RGB stars in Leo II belongs to a population that
is ~4 gyr younger than the classical Galactic globular clusters. The stars
belonging to the He-burning Red Clump are shown to be significantly more
centrally concentrated than RR Lyrae and Blue Horizontal Branch stars, probing
the existence of an age/metallicity radial gradient in this remote dwarf
spheroidal.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS. Latex, 10 pages, 8 .ps figure
Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay in Supersymmetric Seesaw model
Inspired by the recent HEIDELBERG-MOSCOW double beta decay experiment, we
discuss the neutrinoless double beta decay in the supersymmetric seesaw model.
Our numerical analysis indicates that we can naturally explain the data of the
observed neutrinoless double beta decay, as well as that of the solar and
atmospheric neutrino experiments with at least one Majorana-like sneutrino of
middle energy scale in the model.Comment: latex, 25 pages, include 5 figures, final version in Phys. Rev.
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