12,836 research outputs found
Emission characteristics of CO, NOx, SO2 and indications of biomass burning observed at a rural site in eastern China
Atmospheric O3, CO, SO2, and NO* y (NO* y ≈ NO + NO2 + PAN + organic nitrates + HNO3 + N2O5 + ⋯) were measured in 1999-2000 at a rural/agricultural site in the Yangtze Delta of China. In this paper we analyze the measurement results to show the emission characteristics of the measured gases and to infer relevant emission ratios. Positive correlations were found between CO and NO* y with a slope (Δ[CO]/Δ[NO* y]) of 36 (ppbv/ppbv) for the winter and nighttime measurements. The ratio is considerably larger than that (≈10 ppbv/ppbv) observed in the industrialized countries. The highest CO/NO* y ratio (30-40 ppbv/ppbv) occurred in September-December 1999 and June 2000. The good correlation between CO and the biomass burning tracer CH3Cl and the lack of correlation with the industrial tracer C2Cl4 suggests that the burning of biofuels and crop residues is a major source for the elevated CO and possibly for other trace gases as well. The average SO2 to NO* y ratio was 1.37 ppbv/ppbv, resulting from the use of relatively high-sulfur coals in China. The measured SO2/NO* y and ΔCO/ΔNO* y were compared with the respective ratios from the current emission inventories for the study region, which indicated a comparable SO2/NOx emission ratio but a large discrepancy for CO/NOx. The observed CO to NO* y ratio was more than 3 times the emission ratio derived from the inventories, indicating the need for further improvement of emission estimates for the rural/agricultural regions in China. Additional research will be needed to study the implications of rural emissions to atmospheric chemistry and climate on both regional and global scales.Department of Civil and Environmental Engineerin
Timescale Spectra in High Energy Astrophysics
A technique of timescale analysis performed directly in the time domain has
been developed recently. We have applied the technique to studying rapid
variabilities of hard X-rays from neutron star and black hole binaries,
gamma-ray bursts and terrestrial gamma-ray flashes. The results indicate that
the time domain method of spectral analysis is a powerful tool in revealing the
underlying physics in high-energy processes in objects.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures. Invited talk at the 6th Pacific Rim Conference on
Steller Astrophysic
The theory and design of recombination nonuniform filter-banks with linear-phase analysis/synthesis filters
The 47th Midwest Symposium on Circuits and Systems Conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, 25-28 July 2004This paper studies the theory and design of a class of linear-phase (LP) nonuniform filter-banks (FBs) called recombination nonuniform FBs (RNFBs). It is based on a recombination structure, where certain channels of an M-channel uniform FB are merged by synthesis filters of transmultiplexor (TMUX). It is assumed that the numbers of channels of the FB and TMUX are coprime to each other so that it is possible to obtain linear-time invariant (LTI) analysis/synthesis filters, instead of linear periodic time varying (LPTV) filters. The spectral supports of the analysis filters are analyzed, and the existence and matching conditions to obtain LP RNFBs with good frequency characteristics are then derived. The LTI representation of the analysis filters and the use of cosine-roll-off characteristics allow us to design the analysis filters by the REMEZ exchange algorithm. Design examples of LP nearly perfect reconstruction (NPR) RNFBs are given to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed method.published_or_final_versio
A new method for designing linear-phase recombination nonuniform filter-banks
The 47th Midwest Symposium on Circuits and Systems Conference, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA, 25-28 July 2004This paper proposes a new design method of linear-phase (LP) recombination nonuniform filter-banks (RNFBs), where certain channels of a uniform filter-bank (FB) are merged by sets of transmultiplexers (TMUXs). The case where the numbers of channels of the uniform FB and the TMUXs are not coprime to each other is studied in detail. By analyzing the spectrum supports of the analysis filters, it is found that the uniform FB and recombination TMUXs in the LP RNFBs can be designed separately as long as certain conditions are satisfied. This significantly simplifies the design procedure. Using this result, the design of a class of nearly PR LP RNFBs with cosine roll-off transition band based on the REMEZ algorithm is studied. Design examples show that LP RNFBs with good frequency responses and reasonably low reconstruction error can be obtained readily by the proposed method.published_or_final_versio
f16 – NAG Interface to BLAS f16rac
NAG C Library Function Document nag_dge_norm (f16rac) nag_dge_norm (f16rac) calculates the value of the 1-norm, the infinity-norm, the Frobenius norm, or the maximum absolute value of the elements, of a real m by n matrix
Indirect adaptive control for systems with an unknown dead zone
Dead-zone inverse methods have been used in adaptive control schemes to compensate for systems with an unknown dead zone. The problem with these techniques is that steady state error may still exist. It is shown in this paper that controller with integrating action can be used to remove steady state error arising from the unknown dead zone. By treating the effect of an unknown dead zone as a bounded disturbance being injected into the system, a plant parametrization that is linear in a set of unknown parameters is developed and the estimation algorithm is proposed. A novel feature of the adaptive controller proposed here is the integrating action in the controller. Stability analysis shows that the adaptive scheme ensures boundedness of all closed-loop signals and eliminates tracking errors. As illustrated in a simulation example, the proposed adaptive controller is simple to implement and accurate tracking can be achieved.published_or_final_versio
A novel two-step recombinogenic engineering method for bacterial artificial chromosome manipulation
published_or_final_versio
A rational subdivision scheme using cosine-modulated wavelets
This paper proposes a rational subdivision scheme using cosine-modulated wavelets. Subdivision schemes constructed from iterated filter banks can be used to generate wavelets and limit functions for multiresolution analysis. The proposed subdivision scheme is based on a kind of nonuniform filter banks called recombination nonuniform filterbanks (RN FB). It is shown that if the component FBs in a RNFB are wavelet FBs, then the necessary condition for convergence to limit functions in the subdivision scheme is also satisfied. Therefore, the design of different rational subdivision schemes is considerably simplified. An efficient RNFB, called RN cosine modulated FBs (CMFB), constructed from uniform CMFBs and cosinemodulated transmultiplexers (TMUX) are further investigated. Using a design technique for designing RN CMFB and cosine modulated wavelets (CMW) previously reported by the authors, very smooth limit functions can be generated from the rational subdivision scheme. A design example is given to illustrate the proposed method.published_or_final_versio
Source contributions to ambient VOCs and CO at a rural site in eastern China
Ambient data on volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and carbon monoxide (CO) obtained at a rural site in eastern China are analyzed to investigate the nature of emission sources and their relative contributions to ambient concentrations. A principal component analysis (PCA) showed that vehicle emissions and biofuel burning, biomass burning and industrial emissions were the major sources of VOCs and CO at the rural site. The source apportionments were then evaluated using an absolute principal component scores (APCS) technique combined with multiple linear regressions. The results indicated that 71%±5% (average±standard error) of the total VOC emissions were attributed to a combination of vehicle emissions and biofuel burning, and 7%±3% to gasoline evaporation and solvent emissions. Both biomass burning and industrial emissions contributed to 11%±1% and 11%±0.03% of the total VOC emissions, respectively. In addition, vehicle emissions and biomass and biofuel burning accounted for 96%±6% of the total CO emissions at the rural site, of which the biomass burning was responsible for 18%±3%. The results based on PCA/APCS are generally consistent with those from the emission inventory, although a larger relative contribution to CO from biomass burning is indicated from our analysis. © 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
Characteristics of nonmethane hydrocarbons (NMHCs) in industrial, industrial-urban, and industrial-suburban atmospheres of the Pearl River Delta (PRD) region of south China
In a study conducted in late summer 2000, a wide range of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) were measured throughout five target cities in the Pearl River Delta (PRD) region of south China. Twenty-eight nonmethane hydrocarbons (NMHCs; 13 saturated, 9 unsaturated, and 6 aromatic) are discussed. The effect of rapid industrialization was studied for three categories of landuse in the PRD: Industrial, industrial-urban, and industrial-suburban. The highest VOC mixing ratios were observed in industrial areas. Despite its relatively short atmospheric lifetime (2-3 days), toluene, which is largely emitted from industrial solvent use and vehicular emissions, was the most abundant NMHC quantified. Ethane, ethene, ethyne, propane, n-butane, i-pentane, benzene, and m-xylene were the next most abundant VOCs. Direct emissions from industrial activities were found to greatly impact the air quality in nearby neighborhoods. These emissions lead to large concentration variations for many VOCs in the five PRD study cities. Good correlations between isoprene and several short-lived combustion products were found in industrial areas, suggesting that in addition to biogenic sources, anthropogenic emissions may contribute to urban isoprene levels. This study provides a snapshot of industrial, industrial-urban, and industrial-suburban NMHCs in the five most industrially developed cities of the PRD. Increased impact of industrial activities on PRD air quality due to the rapid spread of industry from urban to suburban and rural areas, and the decrease of farmland, is expected to continue until effective emission standards are implemented. Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union
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