1,794 research outputs found

    The cratering record at Uranus: Implications for satellite evolution and the origin of impacting objects

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    The crater size/frequency distributions on the major Uranian satellites show two distinctly different crater populations of different ages. Any hypothesis on the origin of the objects responsible for the period of heavy bombardment must account for the occurrence of different crater populations (size/frequency distributions) in different parts of the solar system. A computerized simulation using short-period comet impact velocities and a modified Holsapple-Schmidt crater scaling law was used to recover the size distribution of cometary nuclei from the observed cratering record. The most likely explanation for the cratering record is that the period of heavy bombardment was caused by different families of accretional remnants indigenous to the system in which the different crater populations occurred

    Including Pitch Accent Optionality in Unit Selection Text-to-Speech Synthesis

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    A significant variability in pitch accent placement is found when comparing the patterns of prosodic prominence realized by different English speakers reading the same sentences. In this paper we describe a simple approach to incorporate this variability to synthesize prosodic prominence in unit selection text-to-speech synthesis. The main motivation of our approach is that by taking into account the variability of accent placements we enlarge the set of prosodically acceptable speech units, thus increasing the chances of selecting a good quality sequence of units, both in prosodic and segmental terms. Results on a large scale perceptual test show the benefits of our approach and indicate directions for further improvements. Index Terms: speech synthesis, unit selection, prosodic prominence, pitch accent

    Glacial geology of the Hellas region on Mars

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    A glacial geologic interpretation was recently presented for Argyre, which is herein extended to Hellas. This glacial event is believed to constitute an important link in a global cryohydric epoch of Middle Amazonian age. At glacial maximum, ice apparently extended far beyond the regions of Argyre and Hellas, and formed what is termed as the Austral Ice Sheet, an agglomeration of several ice domes and lobes including the Hellas Lobe. It is concluded that Hellas was apparently heavily glaciated. Also glaciation was young by Martian standards (Middle Amazonian), and ancient by terrestrial standards. Glaciation appears to have occurred during the same period that other areas on Mars were experiencing glaciation and periglacial activity. Glaciation seems to have occurred as a geological brief epoch of intense geomorphic activity in an era characterized by long periods of relative inactivity

    Glacial and marine chronology of Mars

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    A hydrological model involving episodic oceans and ice sheets on Mars has been presented by Baker, et al. One of the main uncertainties concerning this model is the age and correlation of these events. Even more uncertain are their absolute ages. However, based on stratigraphic and cratering evidence, the most recent occurrence of these events was relatively late in Martian history. The cratering record on Mars can be divided into three general periods: (1) the period of late heavy bombardment; (2) a transition period at the end of late heavy bombardment; and (3) the post heavy bombardment era. The crater size/frequency distribution represented by the period of late heavy bombardment is characterized by a complex curve with a differential-2 slope (cumulative-1) at diameters less than about 50 km diameter, while the post heavy bombardment size distribution has a differential-3 slope (cumulative-2) over the same diameter range. An R plot is presented of the size/freqency distribution of ejecta blanket craters on the Argyre esker plains and similar craters in Hellas. The relative chronology is summarized of oceans, ice sheets, and other major events in Martian history

    The origin of planetary impactors in the inner solar system

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    New insights into the history of the inner solar system are derived from the impact cratering record of the Moon, Mars, Venus and Mercury, and from the size distributions of asteroid populations. Old craters from a unique period of heavy bombardment that ended ∌\sim3.8 billion years ago were made by asteroids that were dynamically ejected from the main asteroid belt, possibly due to the orbital migration of the giant planets. The impactors of the past ∌\sim3.8 billion years have a size distribution quite different from the main belt asteroids, but very similar to the population of near-Earth asteroids.Comment: 12 pages (including 4 figures

    Bright crater outflows: Possible emplacement mechanisms

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    Lobate features with a strong backscatter are associated with 43 percent of the impact craters cataloged in Magellan's cycle 1. Their apparent thinness and great lengths are consistent with a low-viscosity material. The longest outflow yet identified is about 600 km in length and flows from the 90-km-diameter crater Addams. There is strong evidence that the outflows are largely composed of impact melt, although the mechanisms of their emplacement are not clearly understood. High temperatures and pressures of target rocks on Venus allow for more melt to be produced than on other terrestrial planets because lower shock pressures are required for melting. The percentage of impact craters with outflows increases with increasing crater diameter. The mean diameter of craters without outflows is 14.4 km, compared with 27.8 km for craters with outflows. No craters smaller than 3 km, 43 percent of craters in the 10- to 30-km-diameter range, and 90 percent in the 80- to 100-km-diameter range have associated bright outflows. More melt is produced in the more energetic impact events that produce larger craters. However, three of the four largest craters have no outflows. We present four possible mechanisms for the emplacement of bright outflows. We believe this 'shotgun' approach is justified because all four mechanisms may indeed have operated to some degree

    Gryphon: An Information Flow Based Approach to Message Brokering

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    Gryphon is a distributed computing paradigm for message brokering, which is the transferring of information in the form of streams of events from information providers to information consumers. This extended abstract outlines the major problems in message brokering and Gryphon's approach to solving them.Comment: Two page extended abstrac

    Crater populations on Ganymede and Callisto

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    The discovery of heavily cratered surfaces on Ganymede and Callisto by Voyager 1 shows that like the inner Solar System, a period of heavy bombardment also occurred in the outer Solar System. Comparisons among the crater size/density curves of Ganymede, Callisto and the terrestrial planets show several striking features. The overall crater density of the most heavily cratered terrain on Ganymede is down by a factor of about 3 compared to Callisto, and when allowance is made for the difference in crater production rate due to the influence of Jupiter's gravity field it is down by a factor of nearly 6. This indicates that the oldest regions of Ganymede began recording the observed crater population at a later time than Callisto, and therefore Ganymede either experienced a large-scale (perhaps global) diameter-independent resurfacing event or simply developed a rigid crust capable of retaining craters later than Callisto. In either case, this process took place during the period of late heavy bombardment. Based on earlier studies of the terrestrial-planets' cratering record, neither Ganymede nor Callisto is saturated with craters. Compared to Callisto, a diameter-dependent loss of craters in the size range 10–40 km occurs on the grooved terrain of Ganymede and probably results from obliteration of small craters due to the formation of new ice. A similar but less severe loss also occurs on Ganymede's heavily cratered terrain and may be due to an earlier period of ice formation and/or the formation of arcuate troughs in this terrain. Seven different crater curves, in the diameter range of about 40–130 km, representing vastly different crater densities, different surface ages, different terrain types, and even different satellites all possess nearly the same distribution function. This together with other observational evidence strongly suggests that at least in this diameter range the curve basically represents its production function which is completely different from that on the terrestrial planets. This indicates that the population of bodies responsible for the period of late heavy bombardment in the inner Solar System was very different from that responsible for the late heavy bombardment in the outer Solar System. We can only speculate at this early stage that Ganymede and Callisto may principally record a population of bodies that never penetrated the inner Solar System in numbers great enough to leave a recognizable signature

    Ancient oceans and Martian paleohydrology

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    The global model of ocean formation on Mars is discussed. The studies of impact crater densities on certain Martian landforms show that late in Martian history there could have been coincident formation of: (1) glacial features in the Southern Hemisphere; (2) ponded water and related ice features in the northern plains; (3) fluvial runoff on Martian uplands; and (4) active ice-related mass-movement. This model of transient ocean formation ties these diverse observations together in a long-term cyclic scheme of global planetary operation
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