55,490 research outputs found

    Remote measurement of turbidity and chlorophyll through aerial photography

    Get PDF
    Studies were conducted utilizing six different film and filter combinations to quantitatively detect chlorophyll and turbidity in six farm ponds. The low range of turbidity from 0-35 JTU correlated well with the density readings from the green band of normal color film and the high range above 35 JTU was found to correlate with density readings in the red band of color infrared film. The effect of many of the significant variables can be reduced by using standardized procedures in taking the photography. Attempts to detect chlorophyll were masked by the turbidity. The ponds which were highly turbid also had high chlorophyll concentrations; whereas, the ponds with low turbidity also had low chlorophyll concentrations. This prevented a direct correlation for this parameter. Several suggested approaches are cited for possible future investigations

    Effect of the chemical state of pyrolysis gases on heat-shield mass

    Get PDF
    Effect of chemical properties of pyrolysis gases on heat shield mass required for lifting reentry vehicle in typical reentry trajector

    The New Economics of National Defense

    Get PDF

    Subglacial floods beneath ice sheets.

    Get PDF
    Subglacial floods (jökulhlaups) are well documented as occurring beneath present day glaciers and ice caps. In addition, it is known that massive floods have occurred from ice-dammed lakes proximal to the Laurentide ice sheet during the last ice age, and it has been suggested that at least one such flood below the waning ice sheet was responsible for a dramatic cooling event some 8000 years ago. We propose that drainage of lakes from beneath ice sheets will generally occur in a time-periodic fashion, and that such floods can be of severe magnitude. Such hydraulic eruptions are likely to have caused severe climatic disturbances in the past, and may well do so in the future

    Emittance of TD-NiCr after simulated reentry

    Get PDF
    The effects of simulated reentry heating on the emittance of TD-NiCr were investigated. Groups of specimens with three different preconditioning treatments were exposed to 6, 24, and 30 half-hour simulated reentry exposure cycles in a supersonic arc tunnel at each of three conditions intended to produce surface temperatures of 1255, 1365, and 1475 K. Emittance was determined at 1300 K on specimens which were preconditioned only and specimens after completion of reentry simulation exposure. Oxide morphology and chemistry were studied by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis. A consistent relationship was established between oxide morphology and total normal emittance. Specimens with coarser textured oxides tended to have lower emittances than specimens with finer textured oxides

    Calculation of compressible flow about three-dimensional inlets with auxiliary inlets, slats and vanes by means of a panel method

    Get PDF
    An efficient and user oriented method was constructed for calculating flow in and about complex inlet configurations. Efficiency is attained by: (1) the use of a panel method; (2) a technique of superposition for obtaining solutions at any inlet operating condition; and (3) employment of an advanced matrix iteration technique for solving large full systems of equations, including the nonlinear equations for the Kutta condition. User concerns are addressed by the provision of several novel graphical output options that yield a more complete comprehension of the flowfield than was possible previously

    Effect of composition and density on the ablative performance of phenolic-nylon

    Get PDF
    Composition and density effects on ablative performance of phenolic-nylo

    Is the number of tree species in small tropical forest plots nonrandom?

    Get PDF
    Tree species richness is remarkably high in many tropical forests, even at very fine spatial scales. However, the study of fine-scale richness is complicated by the rarefaction effect: that is, a trivial correlation between the number of individuals and the number of species. We developed null models to test whether fine-scale species richness differs from random expectation, and applied these models to a dataset of 1170 100 m2 circular plots in the old-growth portion of La Selva Biological Station in the Atlantic Lowlands of Costa Rica. Although species richness in these plots was close to its theoretical maximum, we found that it was frequently lower than null expectation. This was a result of slightly clumped distributions within species. We found no relationships between species richness at the 100 m2 scale and soil type or topography, after accounting for the effects of density
    corecore