18,828 research outputs found
Landform identification: Lunar radar images
Three sets of polarized radar-echo images of the Moon were examined to establish the relation between radar resolution and landform-identification resolution. After comparison with lunar maps and photographs, real and apparent landforms on the radar images were grouped into one of seven classes. Results show strong relations between radar resolution and diameter or relief of landforms that are clearly identified and those that would probably be correctly identified (class 1 and class 2). Landforms are not detected (class 5) at all diameters and reliefs, but the percentage of undetected landforms decreases with increasing mean diameter and mean relief. Landforms are simply detected (class 4) at most mean diameters and reliefs. Ambiguous arrays (class 6) portrayed by the radar constitute up to about 16, 22, and 15% of the landforms at various diameters and relief values for the 3.8 cm, 70 cm high resolution, and 70 cm low resolution images, respectively. Only a few percent of the landforms portrayed by the radar images at various diameters and relief values are fictitious (class 7)
Spot activity of the RS CVn star {\sigma} Geminorum
We model the photometry of RS CVn star Geminorum to obtain new
information on the changes of the surface starspot distribution, i.e., activity
cycles, differential rotation and active longitudes. We use the previously
published Continuous Periods Search-method (CPS) to analyse V-band differential
photometry obtained between the years 1987 and 2010 with the T3 0.4 m Automated
Telescope at the Fairborn Observatory. The CPS-method divides data into short
subsets and then models the light curves with Fourier-models of variable orders
and provides estimates of the mean magnitude, amplitude, period and light curve
minima. These light curve parameters are then analysed for signs of activity
cycles, differential rotation and active longitudes. We confirm the presence of
two previously found stable active longitudes, synchronised with the orbital
period d and find eight events where the active longitudes
are disrupted. The epochs of the primary light curve minima rotate with a
shorter period d than the orbital motion. If the
variations in the photometric rotation period were to be caused by differential
rotation, this would give a differential rotation coefficient of . The presence of two slightly different periods of active regions may
indicate a superposition of two dynamo modes, one stationary in the orbital
frame and the other one propagating in the azimuthal direction. Our estimate of
the differential rotation is much higher than previous results. However,
simulations show that this can be caused by insufficient sampling in our data.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to A&
The Solar Neighborhood VIII: Discovery of New High Proper Motion Nearby Stars Using the SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey
Five new objects with proper motions between 1.0 arcsec/yr and 2.6 arcsec/yr
have been discovered via a new RECONS search for high proper motion stars
utilizing the SuperCOSMOS Sky Survey. The first portion of the search,
discussed here, is centered on the south celestial pole and covers declinations
-90 degrees to -57.5 degrees.
Photographic photometry from SuperCOSMOS and JHKs near-infrared photometry
from 2MASS for stars nearer than 10 pc are combined to provide a suite of new
M_Ks-color relations useful for estimating distances to main sequence stars.
These relations are then used to derive distances to the new proper motion
objects as well as previously known stars with mu >= 1.0 arcsec/yr (many of
which have no trigonometric parallaxes) recovered during this phase of the
survey.
Four of the five new stars have red dwarf colors, while one is a nearby white
dwarf. Two of the red dwarfs are likely to be within the RECONS 10 pc sample,
and the white dwarf probably lies between 15 and 25 pc. Among the 23 known
stars recovered during the search, there are three additional candidates for
the RECONS sample that have no trigonometric parallaxes.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy Journa
Exact solution for random walks on the triangular lattice with absorbing boundaries
The problem of a random walk on a finite triangular lattice with a single
interior source point and zig-zag absorbing boundaries is solved exactly. This
problem has been previously considered intractable.Comment: 10 pages, Latex, IOP macro
Lensing Effects on the Protogalaxy Candidate cB58 and their Implications for the Cosmological Constant
The amplification of the protogalaxy candidate cB58 due to gravitational
lensing by the foreground cluster of galaxies MS1512.4+3647 is quantified based
on recent ROSAT and ASCA X-ray observations. It is found that the amplification
is at most 25 for any reasonable cosmological model with or without
cosmological constant. It is also argued that the system may be used to place
new constraints on the value of the cosmological constant. The gas mass
fraction for this cluster is found to be about 0.2.Comment: LaTex, 9 pages, 9 figures, uses aas2pp4.sty, Accepted for publication
in Ap
STS-9 BET products
The final products generated for the STS-9, which landed on December 8, 1983 are reported. The trajectory reconstruction utilized an anchor epoch of GMT corresponding to an initial altitude of h 356 kft, selected in view of the limited tracking coverage available. The final state utilized IMU2 measurements and was based on processing radar tracking from six C-bands and a single S-band station, plus six photo-theodolite cameras in the vicinity of Runway 17 at Edwards Air Force Base. The final atmosphere (FLAIR9/UN=581199C) was based on a composite of the remote measured data and the 1978 Air Force Reference Atmosphere model. The Extended BET is available as STS9BET/UN=274885C. The AEROBET and MMLE input files created are discussed. Plots of the more relevant parameters from the AEROBET (reel number NL0624) are included. Input parameters, final residual plots, a trajectory listing, and data archival information are defined
Evidence for Non-Hydrostatic Gas from the Cluster X-ray to Lensing Mass Ratio
Using a uniform analysis procedure, we measure spatially resolved weak
gravitational lensing and hydrostatic X-ray masses for a sample of 18 clusters
of galaxies. We find a radial trend in the X-ray to lensing mass ratio: at
r2500 we obtain a ratio MX/ML=1.03+/-0.07 which decreases to MX/ML=0.78+/-0.09
at r500. This difference is significant at 3 sigma once we account for
correlations between the measurements. We show that correcting the lensing mass
for excess correlated structure outside the virial radius slightly reduces, but
does not eliminate this trend. An X-ray mass underestimate, perhaps due to
nonthermal pressure support, can explain the residual trend. The trend is not
correlated with the presence or absence of a cool core. We also examine the
cluster gas fraction and find no correlation with ML, an important result for
techniques that aim to determine cosmological parameters using the gas
fraction.Comment: 8 pages, minor modifications, accepted for publication in MNRA
An evaluation of the implementation of Georgia's Pre-k program: Report of the findings from the Georgia Early Childhood Study (2002-03)
After ten years, Georgia continues to lead the nation in providing full day, publicly subsidized Pre-K to four-year-olds whose parents choose to enroll them. In this report, we assess the extent to which differences in the way Pre-K is implemented affect children's development. Do teachers with higher levels of education have more positive impacts on children's development? Do teaching styles make a difference in terms of children's outcomes by the end of kindergarten? Do children taught using certain curricula fare better than those taught using others? Answers to questions such as these can assist Pre-K administrators in refining Georgia's program and inform those in other states who are developing or expanding their prekindergarten programs
Parasites of the Spotted Sucker, Minytrema melanops (Cypriniformes: Catostomidae) from Arkansas and Oklahoma
During October 2015, March and April 2016 and again between March and April 2017, 15 Spotted Sucker (Minytrema melanops) were collected from sites in the Ouachita (n = 5), Red (n = 1), and St. Francis (n = 5) river drainages, Arkansas, and the Arkansas River drainage, Oklahoma (n = 4), and examined for protozoan and metazoan parasites. Found were Calyptospora sp., Myxobolus sp., Pseudomurraytrema alabarrum, Biacetabulum banghami, Penarchigetes oklensis, and Acanthocephalus sp. New host and distributional records are documented for these parasites
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