16,977 research outputs found
Experimental study and evaluation of radioprotective drugs
Experimental study evaluates radioprotective drugs administered before exposure either orally or intravenously. Specifically studied are the sources of radiation, choice of radiation dose, choice of animals, administration of drugs, the toxicity of protective agents and types of protective drug
Yellowstone National Park mapping from ERTS-1 computer compatible tapes
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Terrain classification maps of Yellowstone National Park
A cooperative ERTS-1 investigation involving U. S. Geological Survey, National Park Service, and Environmental Research Institure of Michigan (ERIM) personnel has as its goal the preparation of terrain classification maps for the entire Yellowstone National Park. Excellent coverage of the park was obtained on 6 August 1972 (frame 1015-17404). Preliminary terrain classification maps have been prepared at ERIM by applying multispectral pattern recognition techniques to ERTS-MSS digital taped data. The color coded terrain maps are presented and discussed. The discussion includes qualitative and quantitative accuracy estimates and discussion of processing techniques
A simple derivation of the electromagnetic field of an arbitrarily moving charge
The expression for the electromagnetic field of a charge moving along an
arbitrary trajectory is obtained in a direct, elegant, and Lorentz invariant
manner without resorting to more complicated procedures such as differentiation
of the Lienard-Wiechert potentials. The derivation uses arguments based on
Lorentz invariance and a physically transparent expression originally due to
J.J.Thomson for the field of a charge that experiences an impulsive
acceleration.Comment: The following article has been accepted by the American Journal of
Physics. After it is published, it will be found at
http://scitation.aip.org/ajp; 12 pages, 1 figur
Active and passive multispectral scanner for earth resources applications: An advanced applications flight experiment
The development of an experimental airborne multispectral scanner to provide both active (laser illuminated) and passive (solar illuminated) data from a commonly registered surface scene is discussed. The system was constructed according to specifications derived in an initial programs design study. The system was installed in an aircraft and test flown to produce illustrative active and passive multi-spectral imagery. However, data was not collected nor analyzed for any specific application
Growth performance and metabolic changes in lambs and steers after mild nutritional restriction
Two trials investigating compensatory growth are reported in which lambs and young cattle were placed on either a continuous (C) or a discontinuous (RR) growth path. RR animals were subjected to a phase of restricted feeding and then realimented at an equivalent level of feeding to C animals over the same live-weight range. Eight 4-month-old lambs and 30 9-month-old Swiss Brown steers were used. The restriction (I) and realimentation (II) phase covered the live-weight ranges 23-32 kg and 32-44 kg respectively in tho lamb trial and 236-310 kg and 310-460 kg respectively in the steer trial. Fifty-six total energy balances were made with lambs using open-circuit respiration calorimetry. Fifty determinations of diet digestibility and N balance were made with steers. Lambs received a pelleted concentrate diet and, except for restrictively fed steers which received hay alone, steers were offered a diet based on maize silage. The restriction phase of RR lambs and RR steers was longer, and the daily ME intake and daily live-weight gains were significantly lower than those of the C animals. Compared with C lambs a marked reduction in methane production of RR lambs occurred during feed restriction which persisted throughout realimentation. During recovery realimented lambs gained non-significantly, but realimented steers significantly, more than C animals from a similar ME intake and required less ME/kg daily live-weight gain. Realimented lambs retained more protein at the start of recovery compared with C lambs but both C and realimented steeis retained similar amounts of nitrogen. Indirect evidence is presented that suggests improved utilization of ME for protein deposition, at least at the start of realimentation. Although the animals on the discontinuous growth path (RR) took longer to reach slaughter weight, their total intake of gross energy and overall energy conversion ratio (MJ ME/kg live-weight gain) was similar to those of animals on the continuous growth path (C
Calculation of Elastic Green's Functions for Lattices with Cavities
In this Brief Report, we present an algorithm for calculating the elastic
Lattice Greens Function of a regular lattice, in which defects are created by
removing lattice points. The method is computationally efficient, since the
required matrix operations are on matrices that scale with the size of the
defect subspace, and not with the size of the full lattice. This method allows
the treatment of force fields with multi-atom interactions.Comment: 3 pages. RevTeX, using epsfig.sty. One figur
Short wavelength spectrum and Hamiltonian stability of vortex rings
We compare dynamical and energetical stability criteria for vortex rings. It
is argued that vortex rings will be intrinsically unstable against
perturbations with short wavelengths below a critical wavelength, because the
canonical vortex Hamiltonian is unbounded from below for these modes. To
explicitly demonstrate this behaviour, we derive the oscillation spectrum of
vortex rings in incompressible, inviscid fluids, within a geometrical cutoff
procedure for the core. The spectrum develops an anomalous branch of negative
group velocity, and approaches the zero of energy for wavelengths which are
about six times the core diameter. We show the consequences of this dispersion
relation for the thermodynamics of vortex rings in superfluid He at low
temperatures.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, final version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Topological defect motifs in two-dimensional Coulomb clusters
The most energetically favourable arrangement of low-density electrons in an
infinite two-dimensional plane is the ordered triangular Wigner lattice.
However, in most instances of contemporary interest one deals instead with
finite clusters of strongly interacting particles localized in potential traps,
for example, in complex plasmas. In the current contribution we study
distribution of topological defects in two-dimensional Coulomb clusters with
parabolic lateral confinement. The minima hopping algorithm based on molecular
dynamics is used to efficiently locate the ground- and low-energy metastable
states, and their structure is analyzed by means of the Delaunay triangulation.
The size, structure and distribution of geometry-induced lattice imperfections
strongly depends on the system size and the energetic state. Besides isolated
disclinations and dislocations, classification of defect motifs includes defect
compounds --- grain boundaries, rosette defects, vacancies and interstitial
particles. Proliferation of defects in metastable configurations destroys the
orientational order of the Wigner lattice.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version
of an article accepted for publication in J. Phys.: Condens. Matter. IOP
Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version
of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The definitive
publisher-authenticated version is available online at
10.1088/0953-8984/23/38/38530
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