11,184 research outputs found
Antenna induced range smearing in MST radars
There is considerable interest in developing stratosphere troposphere (ST) and mesosphere stratosphere troposphere (MST) radars for higher resolution to study small-scale turbulent structures and waves. At present most ST and MST radars have resolutions of 150 meters or larger, and are not able to distinguish the thin (40 - 100 m) turbulent layers that are known to occur in the troposphere and stratosphere, and possibly in the mesosphere. However the antenna beam width and sidelobe level become important considerations for radars with superior height resolution. The objective of this paper is to point out that for radars with range resolutions of about 150 meters or less, there may be significant range smearing of the signals from mesospheric altitudes due to the finite beam width of the radar antenna. At both stratospheric and mesospheric heights the antenna sidelobe level for lear equally spaced phased arrays may also produce range aliased signals. To illustrate this effect the range smearing functions for two vertically directed antennas have been calculated, (1) an array of 32 coaxial-collinear strings each with 48 elements that simulates the vertical beam of the Poker Flat, Glaska, MST radar; and (2) a similar, but smaller, array of 16 coaxial-collinear strings each with 24 elements
Study of guidance techniques for aerial application of agricultural compounds
Candidate systems were identified for evaluation of suitability in meeting specified accuracy requirements for a swath guidance system in an agriculture aircraft. Further examination reduced the list of potential candidates to a single category, i.e., transponder type systems, for detailed evaluation. Within this category three systems were found which met the basic accuracy requirements of the work statement. The Flying Flagman, the Electronic Flagging and the Raydist Director System. In addition to evaluating the systems against the specified requirements, each system was compared with the other two systems on a relative basis. The conclusions supported by the analyses show the Flying Flagman system to be the most suitable system currently available to meet the requirements
MF radar observations of mean winds and tides over Poker Flat, Alaska (65.1° N, 147.5° W)
International audienceMF radar wind measurements in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere over Poker Flat, Alaska (65.1° N, 147.5° W) are used to study the features of mean winds and solar tides. Continuous observation with the newly installed radar is in progress and in the present study we have analyzed a database of the first 27 months (October 1998?December 2000) of observation. The observed mean wind climatology has been compared with previous measurements and the latest empirical model values (HWM93 model). Similarly, the tidal characteristics are described and compared with the Global Scale Wave Model (GSWM00). The mean wind characteristics observed are fairly consistent with previous wind measurements by the Poker Flat MST radar. The main feature of the zonal circulation is the annual variation with summer westward flow and winter eastward flow. The annual mean zonal wind has a west-ward motion at altitudes below 90 km. The annual mean meridional circulation has mainly southward motion at 70?100 km. There is very good agreement between the radar zonal winds and the HWM93 model winds. Comparison of the meridional winds shows some discrepancy. Analysis of two years of data indicated that the year-to-year consistency is preserved in the mean circulation in the mesosphere. Tidal characteristics observed are also consistent with previous measurements. Semidiurnal tides have the largest amplitudes in summer while the weakest amplitude is observed during the winter months. The vertical wavelength is longer during the summer season compared to the winter season. Comparison with the GSWM00 produces mixed results. There is reasonable agreement between the observed and modeled phases. Diurnal tide amplitudes are comparable in magnitude with that of the semidiurnal tide. Seasonal variation is less evident in the amplitudes. Comparison of the observed tidal parameters with the GSWM00 reveals some agreement and discrepancies
Efficacy of a self-help manual in increasing resilience in carers of adults with depression in Thailand
Caring for a person with a mental illness can have adverse effects on caregivers; however, little is known about how best to help such caregivers. The aim of the present study was to examine the efficacy of a cognitive behaviour therapy-guided self-help manual in increasing resilience in caregivers of individuals with depression, in comparison to caregivers who receive routine support only. A randomized, controlled trial was conducted, following CONSORT guidelines, with 54 caregivers allocated to parallel intervention (self-help manual) (n = 27) or control (standard support) (n = 27) groups. Resilience was assessed at baseline, post-test (week 8), and follow up (week 12). Intention-to-treat analyses were undertaken. Repeated-measures ANOVA indicated a significant difference in resilience scores between the three time points, showing a large effect. Pairwise comparisons between intervention and control groups indicated resilience to be significantly different between baseline and post-test, and between baseline and follow up, but not between post-test and follow up. Overall, the intervention group showed a slightly greater increase in resilience over time than the control group; however, the time–group interaction was not significant. Guided self-help is helpful in improving caregivers’ resilience and could be used as an adjunct to the limited support provided to carers by mental health nurses and other clinicians
Searching for Planets in the Hyades. I. The Keck Radial Velocity Survey
We describe a high-precision radial velocity search for jovian-mass
companions to main sequence stars in the Hyades star cluster. The Hyades
provides an extremely well controlled sample of stars of the same age, the same
metallicity, and a common birth and early dynamical environment. This sample
allows us to explore the dependence of the process of planet formation on only
a single independent variable: the stellar mass. In this paper we describe the
survey and summarize results for the first five years.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures; To appear in the July 2002 issue of The
Astronomical Journa
Scaling in long term data sets of geomagnetic indices and solar wind ϵ as seen by WIND spacecraft
We study scaling in fluctuations of the geomagnetic indices (AE, AU, and AL) that provide a measure of magnetospheric activity and of the ε parameter which is a measure of the solar wind driver. Generalized structure function (GSF) analysis shows that fluctuations exhibit self-similar scaling up to about 1 hour for the AU index and about 2 hours for AL, AE and ε when the most extreme fluctuations over 10 standard deviations are excluded. The scaling exponents of the GSF are found to be similar for the three AE indices, and to differ significantly from that of ε. This is corroborated by direct comparison of their rescaled probability density functions
Bubble, Bubble, Flow and Hubble: Large Scale Galaxy Flow from Cosmological Bubble Collisions
We study large scale structure in the cosmology of Coleman-de Luccia bubble
collisions. Within a set of controlled approximations we calculate the effects
on galaxy motion seen from inside a bubble which has undergone such a
collision. We find that generically bubble collisions lead to a coherent bulk
flow of galaxies on some part of our sky, the details of which depend on the
initial conditions of the collision and redshift to the galaxy in question.
With other parameters held fixed the effects weaken as the amount of inflation
inside our bubble grows, but can produce measurable flows past the number of
efolds required to solve the flatness and horizon problems.Comment: 30 pages, 8 figures, pdftex, minor corrections and references adde
First Detection of Millimeter Dust Emission from Brown Dwarf Disks
We report results from the first deep millimeter continuum survey targeting
Brown Dwarfs (BDs). The survey led to the first detection of cold dust in the
disks around two young BDs (CFHT-BD-Tau 4 and IC348 613), with deep JCMT and
IRAM observations reaching flux levels of a few mJy. The dust masses are
estimated to be a few Earth masses assuming the same dust opacities as usually
applied to TTauri stars.Comment: 5 pages, accepted for ApJ
Iso-spectral deformations of general matrix and their reductions on Lie algebras
We study an iso-spectral deformation of general matrix which is a natural
generalization of the Toda lattice equation. We prove the integrability of the
deformation, and give an explicit formula for the solution to the initial value
problem. The formula is obtained by generalizing the orthogonalization
procedure of Szeg\"{o}. Based on the root spaces for simple Lie algebras, we
consider several reductions of the hierarchy. These include not only the
integrable systems studied by Bogoyavlensky and Kostant, but also their
generalizations which were not known to be integrable before. The behaviors of
the solutions are also studied. Generically, there are two types of solutions,
having either sorting property or blowing up to infinity in finite time.Comment: 25 pages, AMSLaTe
Structure and distribution of the slope fish community in the vicinity of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Archipelago
Demersal fish community structure, distribution and trophic relationships on the slope (depth range 200–1500 m) of the sub-Antarctic Prince Edward Islands and surrounding sea rises were investigated during a pilot survey conducted in April 2001 onboard fishing vessel MV Iris. A total of 56 fish taxa were collected during the survey, of which 44 were identified to the species level, seven to the genus level and five to the family level. Among the identified taxa, 36 constituted new records for the area investigated. Total catch per unit effort (cpue) during the survey ranged from 1•1 to 241•2 individuals h 1. Both average fish diversity and total cpue positively correlated with trawling depth. Overall, mean sampling depth and near-bottom temperature explained 56% of total fish cpue. Hierarchal cluster analysis identified three distinct fish assemblages with pronounced dominant species. Major shifts in fish community composition occurred at 500–600 m and 800–900 m depth strata and could probably be a result of physical and biological vertical zonation. Analysis of the diet of selected fish species showed that they were generalist feeders, consuming predominantly pelagic, including epipelagic, meso- and benthopelagic, prey. Diets of six species and nitrogen stable isotope signatures of 22 species revealed that with a few exceptions most fishes occupied the fourth trophic level and were tertiary consumers. Wide variability in carbon isotopic signatures is discussed with respect to alternative, e.g. possible importance of high Antarctic and chemoautotrophic v. photoautotrophic sub-Antarctic primary production, organic matter sources at the base of deep-sea food webs
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