11,017 research outputs found
Panic on the streets of London
The terrorist attacks of 7 July 2005 resulted in a very large redeployment of police officers to central London boroughs. New research by Mirko Draca, Stephen Machin and Robert Witt looks at the impact of this increased security presence on criminal activity in the weeks and months after the bomb blasts
Using HCMM Thermal Data to Improve Classification of MSS Data
Spectral overlap between urban and rural land use/land cover categories can lead to unacceptable map accuracy levels in the classification of LANDSAT multispectral scanner (MSS) data. The four MSS bands used alone are not always adequate to distinguish among various land uses and cover types having similar spectral responses. The use of thermal data from the Heat Capacity Mapping Mission (HCMM) satellite as a means of improving MSS land cover classification accuracies for urban versus rural categories was investigated. The approaches used to integrate the HCMM data are described
Use of steepest descent and various approximations for efficient computation of minimum noise aircraft landing trajectories
The following areas related to landing trajectory optimization research were discussed: (1) programming and modifying the steepest descent optimization procedure, (2) successfully iterating toward the optimum for a four-mile trajectory, (3) beginning optimization runs for a twenty-mile trajectory, and (4) adapt wind tunnel data for computer usage. Other related areas were discussed in detail in the two previous annual reports
Ion composition in a noctilucent cloud
Ion composition at mesospheric altitudes was measured and compared between high and mid-latitude sites under summer daytime conditions. Rocket-borne measurements were made with pumped quadrupole ion mass spectrometers. The mid-latitude data were obtained at Wallops Island, Virginia on June 30, 1973, at 1510 LMT. Large quantities of hydronium cluster ions were observed through 109+, with maximum concentrations at 55+ and 73+. Also, cluster ions of nitric oxide were observed through 84+. The high latitude launch occurred at Kiruna, Sweden on August 2, 1973, at 0700 LMT following visual sighting of a noctilucent cloud on the prior evening. The data near mesopause shows cluster ions, but also a preponderance of heavy ions between 90 and 145 AMU, with groupings 18 AMU apart but unrelated to the more typical cluster ions. One possible set of consistent identifications leads to iron and iron oxide hydrates. These results may suggest the presence of metallic particulates and ions which form hydrated clusters ions
Optimization and sensitivity studies of flight-path trajectories
The optimization of landing trajectories of the Boeing 737 is presented. The primary factor considered was the noise delivered to the population residing near an air terminal but passenger comfort, fuel consumption and time elapsed during the maneuver were also considered. A digital simulation of the aircraft, a noise model and a passenger comfort model, was completed. The digital simulation was made more efficient time-wise. A population model for an urban area was developed and the noise model was integrated into the population model. A steepest descent optimization algorithm was programmed. Some constant glide slope trajectories into an urban Airport were simulated and evaluated with respect to the performance index, and their ground track plotted
Quick-disconnect coupling safe transfer of hazardous fluids
Quick-disconnect coupling is used for uncoupling of plumbing during ground-to-vehicle transfer of cryogenic and hazardous fluids. The coupling allows remote positive control of liquid pressure and flow during the transfer operation, remote connection and separation capabilities, and negligible liquid spillage upon disconnection
Accurate, rapid, temperature and liquid-level sensor for cryogenic tanks
Thermopiles measure ullage gas temperatures to within plus or minus 1.65 deg K between 20 and 300 deg K, and also serve as point liquid-level sensors. Thermopile technique measures smaller temperature differences by keeping the reference junctions inside the tank and near the temperature range of the measuring junction
Analytic Time Delays and H_0 Estimates for Gravitational Lenses
We study gravitational lens time delays for a general family of lensing
potentials, which includes the popular singular isothermal elliptical potential
and singular isothermal elliptical density distribution but allows general
angular structure. Using a novel approach, we show that the time delay can be
cast in a very simple form, depending only on the observed image positions.
Including an external shear changes the time delay proportional to the shear
strength, and varying the radial profile of the potential changes the time
delay approximately linearly. These analytic results can be used to obtain
simple estimates of the time delay and the Hubble constant in observed
gravitational lenses. The naive estimates for four of five time delay lenses
show surprising agreement with each other and with local measurements of H_0;
the complicated Q 0957+561 system is the only outlier. The agreement suggests
that it is reasonable to use simple isothermal lens models to infer H_0,
although it is still important to check this conclusion by examining detailed
models and by measuring more lensing time delays.Comment: 16 pages with 2 embedded figures; submitted to Ap
Characterisation of long-term climate change by dimension estimates of multivariate palaeoclimatic proxy data
The problem of extracting climatically relevant information from multivariate geological records is tackled by characterising the eigenvalues of the temporarily varying correlation matrix. From these eigenvalues, a quantitative measure, the linear variance decay (LVD) dimension density, is derived. The LVD dimension density is shown to serve as a suitable estimate of the fractal dimension density. Its performance is evaluated by testing it for (i) systems with independent components and for (ii) subsystems of spatially extended linearly correlated systems. The LVD dimension density is applied to characterise two geological records which contain information about climate variability during the Oligocene and Miocene. These records consist of (a) abundances of different chemical trace elements and (b) grain-size distributions obtained from sediment cores offshore the East Antarctic coast. The presented analysis provides evidence that the major climate change associated with the Oligocene-Miocene transition is reflected in significant changes of the LVD dimension density. This is interpreted as a change of the interrelationships between different trace elements in the sediment and to a change of the provenance area of the deposited sediment
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