85,768 research outputs found
GIS Characterization of Beaver Watershed
Beaver Reservoir watershed is located in Northwest Arkansas including portions of Madison, Washington, Benton, Carroll, Franklin and Crawford counties. This watershed is important to the Northwest Arkansas region because it supplies most of the drinking water for the major towns and cities, and several rural water systems. The watershed consists of 308,971 ha with elevations ranging from approximately 341 m to 731 m above mean sea level. It includes the Springfield Plateau and the Boston Mountains provinces within the Ozark Plateau physiographic region. There are approximately 581 km of streams, 532 km of shore line, and 3712 km of roads in the watershed most of which are city streets and rural roads. The soils in the watershed vary extensively and are quite complex due to the differences in parent material, topography and time. Most parent material of the soils in the Springfield Plateau is limestone, whereas in the Boston Mountains the dominant parent material is sandstone and shale. The differences in soils have led to the differences in landuse and land cover. The near surface geology in the watershed is also divided by physiographic provinces. Most of the Springfield Plateau surface geology is limestone, whereas the Boston Mountains are primarily sandstone and shale. Spatial details of the streams, roads, soils and geology attributes in the watershed are presented in this report. The GIS database and characterization of the watershed offers an excellent beginning to future research and modeling of various water quality parameters in this and other watersheds
Investigation of the Statistical and Spatial Distributions of Mercury Contaminated Fish, Surface Waters and Soils in Arkansas
Mercury (Hg) contamination of fish is a widespread problem throughout much of the United States and the world (Louisiana WWW page, 1997). Levels ofHg in fish suffic1ent to exceed the FDA action level of 1 mg kg-1 have been found in many water bodies, including some in Arkansas and Louisiana. As a result of the serious public health ramifications for developing fetuses and for people that subsist on native fish, fish consumption advisories due to Hg contamination have been issued in 29 states. Contamination of surface water bodies by Hg results from deforestation, forest fires, fossil fuels, mining, natural emissions and commercial emissions (Armstrong, 1994). In addition, Hg has a high affinity for organic matter in soil and sediments, and therefore, long-term storage of Hg is an environmental problem. An excellent review of the integration and synthesis of recent work on Hg pollution is given in several papers edited by Watras and Huckabee (1994). The general consensus of the reports in this document seems to be that increases in Hg levels can be attributed to one or more of several mechanisms including atmospheric deposition, acidification of soils and lakes by sulfur deposition followed by an increased sulfate reduction, and transport from other source areas
Reduction of Noise from a Fan Stage for a Turbofan Engine by Use of Long-Chord Acoustically-Treated Stator Vanes
A set of acoustically-treated long-chord vanes was designed to replace the vanes in an existing fan stage to investigate the noise reduction possibilities of both increased stator chord length and a method of incorporating acoustic damping material. The vanes were tested with both active and inactive acoustic surfaces. Results of the inactive tests show significant broadband noise effects with noise reductions in the middle to high frequencies and an increase at low frequencies. No reduction in blade passage tone was observed, but decreases in the overtones were observed. Results of the tests with the active acoustic treatment show large noise reductions over a wide frequency range
Identification of Optimal Locations for Sampling Ground Water for Pesticides in the Mississippi Delta Region of Eastern Arkansas
Concerns about the presence of pesticides in the Mississippi River Valley alluvial aquifer in the Arkansas Delta have generated the need to develop a map of ground water vulnerability for this region comprised of approximately 10 million acres. Based on the availability of digital data and the scale of this study. we used a modified Pesticide DRASTIC model in a GRASS GIS environment to identify areas that were physically more sensitive to pesticide contamination than other areas within the Delta. Spatial distribution of pesticide loading was estimated from pesticide application rates in different crops and crop distribution map interpreted from satellite imagery. Relative ground water vulnerability index was expressed as a product of aquifer sensitivity index and pesticide loading index. The resulting map showing the spatial distribution of relative ground water vulnerability index values was intended for use in selecting optimal locations for sampling ground water for pesticides in the Arkansas Delta and for aid in implementing the Arkansas Agricultural Chemical Ground-Water Management Plan. The most sensitive areas in the Delta are distributed mostly along major streams where a combination of shallow depth to ground water, thin confining unit, permeable soils, and high recharge rate usually prevails. It is also in many of these areas where large acres of crops are grown, and pesticides are used. Consequently, many areas along major streams are also most vulnerable. These vulnerable areas may be targeted by planners and governmental agencies for further detailed evaluation. Uncertainties in the methodology and mapped input data, plus the dynamic nature of model factors, require continued and improved efforts in ground water vulnerability assessment for the Arkansas Delta
Planetary Transits Toward the Galactic Bulge
The primary difficulty with using transits to discover extrasolar planets is
the low probability a planet has of transiting its parent star. One way of
overcoming this difficulty is to search for transits in dense stellar fields,
such as the Galactic bulge. Here I estimate the number of planets that might be
detected from a monitoring campaign toward the bulge. A campaign lasting 10
nights on a 10 meter telescope (assuming 8 hours of observations per night and
a 5'x5' field of view) would detect about 100 planets with radius \rp=1.5
\rjup, or about 30 planets with \rp=1.0 \rjup, if the frequency and
distribution of planets in the bulge is similar to that in the solar
neighborhood. Most of these planets will be discovered around stars just below
the turn-off, i.e. slightly evolved G-dwarfs. Campaigns involving 1- or 4-m
class telescopes are unlikely to discover any planets, unless there exists a
substantial population of companions with \rp > 1.5 \rjup.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures. Submitted to ApJ Letter
Atmospheric contaminant sensor. Book 2: Appendices
Appendices containing equipment specifications and performance test data of the atmospheric contaminant sensor for submarines are presented
Negative Differential Resistivity and Positive Temperature Coefficient of Resistivity effect in the diffusion limited current of ferroelectric thin film capacitors
We present a model for the leakage current in ferroelectric thin- film
capacitors which explains two of the observed phenomena that have escaped
satisfactory explanation, i.e. the occurrence of either a plateau or negative
differential resistivity at low voltages, and the observation of a Positive
Temperature Coefficient of Resistivity (PTCR) effect in certain samples in the
high-voltage regime. The leakage current is modelled by considering a
diffusion-limited current process, which in the high-voltage regime recovers
the diffusion-limited Schottky relationship of Simmons already shown to be
applicable in these systems
General description and operation of the agro-environmental system: Crop management modeling
Input for a data management system to provide farmers with information to improve crop management practices in Virginia requires monitoring of control crops at field stations, crop surveys derived from remotely sensed aircraft data, meteorological data from synchronous satellites, and details of local agricultural conditions. Presently models are under development for determining pest problems, water balance in the soil, stages of plant maturity, and optimum planting date. The status of the Cerospora leafspot model for peanut crop management is considered. Other models under development planned relate to Cylindtocladium Blackrot and Sclerotinia blight of peanuts, cyst nematode (Globerdena solanacearum) of tobacco, and red crown rot of soybeans. A software for program for estimating precipitation and solar radiation on a statewise basis is also being developed
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Osteoblastoma in the occipital bone: A case report of a rare tumor in the calvarium
Osteoblastomas infrequently occur in the calvarium, displaying a preference for temporal and frontal bones when it does. We present an unusual case of a large, expansile osteoblastoma in the occipital bone of a 23-year-old man who presented with a nontender lump at the back of his head. Initial computed tomography scan showed a large occipital bone mass, and after additional imaging, a gross total resection was performed. Histopathological examination revealed an osteoblastoma. Although these tumors are benign, overlapping imaging characteristics of lesions affecting the calvarium often present a diagnostic dilemma. This case emphasizes the importance of imaging in the management and work-up of these patients to decrease the risk of complications and assists surgeons in their preoperative planning
Signatures of Resonant Super-Partner Production with Charged-Current Decays
Hadron collider signatures of new physics are investigated in which a primary
resonance is produced that decays to a secondary resonance by emitting a
W-boson, with the secondary resonance decaying to two jets. This topology can
arise in supersymmetric theories with R-parity violation where the lightest
supersymmetric particles are either a pair of squarks, or a slepton - sneutrino
pair. The resulting signal can have a cross section consistent with the Wjj
observation reported by the CDF collaboration, while remaining consistent with
earlier constraints. Other observables that can be used to confirm this
scenario include a significant charge asymmetry in the same channel at the LHC.
With strongly interacting resonances such as squarks, pair production
topologies additionally give rise to 4 jet and WW + 4 jet signatures, each with
two equal-mass dijet resonances within the 4 jets.Comment: Note added for recent developments concerning the Wjj final state.
Version to appear in PRD. 21 pages, 12 figure
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