4,440 research outputs found

    Ordinary kriging for on-demand average wind interpolation of in-situ wind sensor data

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    We have developed a domain agnostic ordinary kriging algorithm accessible via a standards-based service-oriented architecture for sensor networks. We exploit the Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC) Sensor Web Enablement (SWE) standards. We need on-demand interpolation maps so runtime performance is a major priority.Our sensor data comes from wind in-situ observation stations in an area approximately 200km by 125km. We provide on-demand average wind interpolation maps. These spatial estimates can then be compared with the results of other estimation models in order to identify spurious results that sometimes occur in wind estimation.Our processing is based on ordinary kriging with automated variogram model selection (AVMS). This procedure can smooth time point wind measurements to obtain average wind by using a variogram model that reflects the wind phenomenon characteristics. Kriging is enabled for wind direction estimation by a simple but effective solution to the problem of estimating periodic variables, based on vector rotation and stochastic simulation.In cases where for the region of interest all wind directions span 180 degrees, we rotate them so they lie between 90 and 270 degrees and apply ordinary kriging with AVMS directly to the meteorological angle. Else, we transform the meteorological angle to Cartesian space, apply ordinary kriging with AVMS and use simulation to transform the kriging estimates back to meteorological angle.Tests run on a 50 by 50 grid using standard hardware takes about 5 minutes to execute backward transformation with a sample size of 100,000. This is acceptable for our on-demand processing service requirements

    Optical observational biases in the GRB redshift

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    The measured redshifts of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs), which were first detected by the Swift satellite, seem to be bigger on average than the redshifts of GRBs detected by other satellites. We analyzed the redshift distribution of GRBs triggered and observed by different satellites (Swift, HETE2, BeppoSax, Ulyssses). After considering the possible biases {significant difference was found at the p=95.70% level in the redshift distributions of GRBs measured by HETE and the Swift.Comment: 3 pages, 1 table, 2 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the Sixth Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, edited by C.A. Meegan, N. Gehrels, and C. Kouvelioto

    Anisotropy in the sky distributions of the short and intermediate gamma-ray bursts: Breakdown of the cosmological principle?

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    After the discovery of the anisotropy in the sky-distribution of intermediate gamma-ray bursts recently also the distribution of the short gamma-ray bursts is proven to be anisotropic. The impact of these behaviors on the validity of the cosmological principle is shortly discussed.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, to appear in the proceedings of the Sixth Huntsville Gamma-Ray Burst Symposium, edited by C.A. Meegan, N. Gehrels, and C. Kouvelioto

    The compact radio structure of the high-redshift blazar J1430+4204 before and after a major outburst

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    The high-redshift (z=4.72) blazar J1430+4204 produced an exceptional radio outburst in 2006. We analyzed 15-GHz radio interferometric images obtained with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) before and after the outburst, to search for possible structural changes on milli-arcsecond angular scales and to determine physical parameters of the source.Comment: Proceedings of the 5th Workshop of Young Researchers in Astronomy and Astrophysics, Budapest, 2009; to be published in J. Phys.: Conf. Series (JPCS); 4 pages, 3 figure
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