11,902 research outputs found
Microwave characteristics of interdigitated photoconductors on a HEMT structure
Interdigitated photoconductive detectors of various geometries were fabricated on AlGaAs/GaAs heterostructure material. The processes used in the fabrication of these devices are described, and the results of a study of their optical and electrical characteristics are presented
Microwave characteristics of GaAs MMIC integratable optical detectors
Interdigitated photoconductive detectors were fabricated on microwave device structures, making them easily integratable with Monolithic Microwave Integrated Circuits (MMIC). Detector responsivity as high as 2.5 A/W and an external quantum efficiency of 3.81 were measured. Response speed was nearly independent of electrode geometry, and all detectors had usable response at frequencies to 6 GHz. A small signal model of the detectors based on microwave measurements was also developed
User's guide to image processing applications of the NOAA satellite HRPT/AVHRR data. Part 1: Introduction to the satellite system and its applications. Part 2: Processing and analysis of AVHRR imagery
The use of NOAA Advanced Very High Resolution Radar/High Resolution Picture Transmission (AVHRR/HRPT) imagery for earth resource applications is provided for the applications scientist for use within the various Earth science, resource, and agricultural disciplines. A guide to processing NOAA AVHRR data using the hardware and software systems integrated for this NASA project is provided. The processing steps from raw data on computer compatible tapes (1B data format) through usable qualitative and quantitative products for applications are given. The manual is divided into two parts. The first section describes the NOAA satellite system, its sensors, and the theoretical basis for using these data for environmental applications. Part 2 is a hands-on description of how to use a specific image processing system, the International Imaging Systems, Inc. (I2S) Model 75 Array Processor and S575 software, to process these data
Optical spectroscopy of radio galaxies in the 7C Redshift Survey
We present optical spectroscopy of all 49 radio galaxies in the 7C-I and
7C-II regions of the 7C Redshift Survey (7CRS). The low-frequency (151 MHz)
selected 7CRS sample contains all sources with flux-densities S_151 > 0.5 Jy in
three regions of the sky; 7C-I and 7C-II were chosen to overlap with the 5C6
and 5C7 surveys respectively, and cover a total sky area of 0.013 sr. The
sample has been completely identified and spectroscopy of the quasars and
broad-lined radio galaxies has been presented in Willott et al. (1998). Only
seven of the radio galaxies do not have redshift determinations from the
spectroscopy, giving a redshift completeness for the sample of >90%. The median
redshift of the 7CRS is 1.1. We present a composite 0.2<z<0.8 7CRS radio galaxy
spectrum and investigate the strengths of the 4000 Angstrom breaks in these
radio galaxies. We find an anti-correlation between the 4000 Angstrom break
strength and emission line luminosity, indicating that departures from old
elliptical galaxy continuum shapes are most likely due to non-stellar emission
associated with the active nucleus.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, MNRAS in pres
Application of a continuum theory to vertical vibrations of a layer of granular material
Many interesting phenomena have been observed in layers of granular materials subjected to vertical oscillations; these include the formation of a variety of standing wave patterns, and the occurrence of isolated features called oscillons, which alternately form conical heaps and craters oscillating at one-half of the forcing frequency. No continuum-based explanation of these phenomena has previously been proposed. We apply a continuum theory, termed the double-shearing theory, which has had success in analyzing various problems in the flow of granular materials, to the problem of a layer of granular material on a vertically vibrating rigid base undergoing vertical oscillations in plane strain. There exists a trivial solution in which the layer moves as a rigid body. By investigating linear perturbations of this solution, we find that at certain amplitudes and frequencies this trivial solution can bifurcate. The time dependence of the perturbed solution is governed by Mathieu’s equation, which allows stable, unstable and periodic solutions, and the observed period-doubling behaviour. Several solutions for the spatial velocity distribution are obtained; these include one in which the surface undergoes vertical velocities that have sinusoidal dependence on the horizontal space dimension, which corresponds to the formation of striped standing waves, and is one of the observed patterns. An alternative continuum theory of granular material mechanics, in which the principal axes of stress and rate-of-deformation are coincident, is shown to be incapable of giving rise to similar instabilities
Presynchronizing PGF2α and GnRH injections before timed artificial insemination CO-Synch + CIDR program
Fixed-time artificial insemination is an effective management tool that reduces the
labor associated with more conventional artificial insemination programs requiring
detection of estrus. The 7-day CO-Synch + controlled internal drug release (CIDR)
insert protocol has been shown to effectively initiate estrus and ovulation in cycling
and non-cycling suckled beef cows, producing pregnancy rates at or greater than 50%
in beef cows. The gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) injection that begins the
CO-Synch + CIDR program initiates ovulation in a large proportion of cows, particularly
anestrous cows. The CIDR, which releases progesterone intravaginally, prevents
short estrous cycles that usually follow the first postpartum ovulation in beef cows. Our
hypothesis was that inducing estrus with a prostaglandin injection followed 3 days later
with a GnRH injection, 7 days before applying the 7-day CO-Synch + CIDR protocol,
might increase the percentage of cycling cows that would exhibit synchronous follicular
waves after the onset of the CO-Synch + CIDR protocol. We also hypothesized that
the additional GnRH injection would increase the percentage of anestrous cows that
would ovulate, thereby increasing pregnancy outcomes
What have we already learned from the CMB?
The COBE satellite, and the DMR experiment in particular, was extraordinarily
successful. However, the DMR results were announced about 7 years ago, during
which time a great deal more has been learned about anisotropies in the Cosmic
Microwave Background (CMB). The CMB experiments currently being designed and
built, including long-duration balloons, interferometers, and two space
missions, promise to address several fundamental cosmological issues. We
present our evaluation of what we already know, what we are beginning to learn
now, and what the future may bring.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figures. Changes to match version accepted by PAS
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