46,376 research outputs found
Mathematical morphology and applications in automated sunspot detection
This presentation discusses the mathematical morphology and applications in automated sunspot detection
Bibliography on inactivation of viruses and rickettsiae by heat
Inactivation of viruses and rickettsiae by heat - bibliograph
Studies of auditory information processing emphasizing the application of signal detectability theory to the auditory sensory responses Semiannual report, 1 Dec. 1964 - 31 May 1965 and quarterly status report, 1 Mar. - 31 May 1965
Noise suppressor effect on signal detection and response speed and accuracy to sensory stimulation
Moduli Stabilization with the String Higgs Effect
We review the notion of the Higgs effect in the context of string theory. We
find that by including this effect in time dependent backgrounds, one is led to
a natural mechanism for stabilizing moduli at points of enhanced gauge
symmetry. We consider this mechanism for the case of the radion (size of the
extra dimensions) and find that as decompactification of the large spatial
dimensions takes place the radion will remain stabilized at the self dual
radius. We discuss how this mechanism can be incorporated into models of string
cosmology and brane inflation to resolve some outstanding problems. We also
address some issues regarding which string states should be included when
constructing low energy actions in string cosmology.Comment: 20 pages, references added, typos correcte
Effective Field Theory Approach to String Gas Cosmology
We derive the 4D low energy effective field theory for a closed string gas on
a time dependent FRW background. We examine the solutions and find that
although the Brandenberger-Vafa mechanism at late times no longer leads to
radion stabilization, the radion rolls slowly enough that the scenario is still
of interest. In particular, we find a simple example of the string inspired
dark matter recently proposed by Gubser and Peebles.Comment: 19 pages, 2 figures, comments adde
Annona muricata (graviola): toxic or therapeutic
This paper examines annona muricata (graviola): toxic or therapeutic
Temporal properties of short and long gamma-ray bursts
A temporal analysis was performed on a sample of 100 bright short GRBs with
T90 < 2s from the BATSE Current Catalog along with a similar analysis on 319
long bright GRBs with T90 > 2s from the same catalog. The short GRBs were
denoised using a median filter and the long GRBs were denoised using a wavelet
method. Both samples were subjected to an automated pulse selection algorithm
to objectively determine the effects of neighbouring pulses. The rise times,
fall times, FWHM, pulse amplitudes and areas were measured and their frequency
distributions are presented. The time intervals between pulses were also
measured. The frequency distributions of the pulse properties were found to be
similar and consistent with lognormal distributions for both the short and long
GRBs. The time intervals between the pulses and the pulse amplitudes of
neighbouring pulses were found to be correlated with each other. The same
emission mechanism can account for the two sub-classes of GRBs.Comment: 3 pages, 8 figures; Proceedings of "Gamma-Ray Burst and Afterglow
Astronomy 2001", Woods Hol
Registration of Heat Capacity Mapping Mission day and night images
Neither iterative registration, using drainage intersection maps for control, nor cross correlation techniques were satisfactory in registering day and night HCMM imagery. A procedure was developed which registers the image pairs by selecting control points and mapping the night thermal image to the daytime thermal and reflectance images using an affine transformation on a 1300 by 1100 pixel image. The resulting image registration is accurate to better than two pixels (RMS) and does not exhibit the significant misregistration that was noted in the temperature-difference and thermal-inertia products supplied by NASA. The affine transformation was determined using simple matrix arithmetic, a step that can be performed rapidly on a minicomputer
Effect of contrast on the perception of direction of a moving pattern
A series of experiments examining the effect of contrast on the perception of moving plaids was performed to test the hypothesis that the human visual system determines the direction of a moving plaid in a two-staged process: decomposition into component motion followed by application of the intersection-of-contraints rule. Although there is recent evidence that the first tenet of the hypothesis is correct, i.e., that plaid motion is initially decomposed into the motion of the individual grating components, the nature of the second-stage combination rule has not yet been established. It was found that when the gratings within the plaid are of different contrast the preceived direction is not predicted by the intersection-of-constraints rule. There is a strong (up to 20 deg) bias in the direction of the higher-constrast grating. A revised model, which incorporates a contrast-dependent weighting of perceived grating speed as observed for one-dimensional patterns, can quantitatively predict most of the results. The results are then discussed in the context of various models of human visual motion processing and of physiological responses of neurons in the primate visual system
Information extraction and transmission techniques for spaceborne synthetic aperture radar images
Information extraction and transmission techniques for synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery were investigated. Four interrelated problems were addressed. An optimal tonal SAR image classification algorithm was developed and evaluated. A data compression technique was developed for SAR imagery which is simple and provides a 5:1 compression with acceptable image quality. An optimal textural edge detector was developed. Several SAR image enhancement algorithms have been proposed. The effectiveness of each algorithm was compared quantitatively
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