140,269 research outputs found
Characteristic analysis of a flash flood-affected creek catchment using LiDAR-derived DEM
Flooding occurred across a large area of southern and central Queensland in December 2010 and January 2011. Intense rainfall over the Gowrie Creek catchment caused severe flash flooding through the Toowoomba CBD (Central Business District) on the afternoon of Monday, 10 January 2011, taking lives and damaging the community. Flash floods are sudden and unexpected floods that arise from intense rainfall, generally over a small, steep catchment area. Smaller and steeper catchments have shorter critical storm
duration, and they respond more quickly to rainfall events. The resulting flood wave is characterized by very high water flows and velocities and abrupt water level rises, leading to extremely hazardous conditions. Effective flash flood forecasting for specific locations is a big challenge because of the behaviour of intense thunderstorms. A flash flood forecasting and warning system calls for accurate spatial information on catchment characteristics. A high-resolution DEM is a key spatial dataset for the characterization of a catchment to design possible flood mitigation measures. The characteristics of a catchment have a strong influence on its hydrological response. The nature of floods is dependent on both the intensity and duration of the rainfall and the catchment characteristics such as catchment area, drainage patterns and waterway steepness. Therefore, analysis of catchment characteristics is critical for hydrologic modelling and planning for flood risk mitigation. The analysis of catchment characteristics can support hydrological modelling and planning for flood risk mitigation. For example, the shape indices of sub-catchments can be used to compare the hydrological behaviour of different subcatchments. The longitudinal profiles of the creeks illustrate the slope gradients of the waterways. A hypsometric curve for each sub-catchment provides an overall view of the slope of a catchment and is closely related to ground slope characteristics of a catchment. Airborne light detection and ranging (LiDAR), also referred to as airborne laser scanning (ALS), is one of the most effective means of terrain data collection.
Using LiDAR data for generation of DEMs is becoming a standard practice in the spatial science community. This study used airborne LiDAR data to generate a high-resolution DEM for characteristic analysis of Gowrie Creek catchment in Toowoomba, Queensland, Australia, which was affected by a flash flood in January 2011. Drainage networks and sub-catchment boundaries were extracted from LiDAR-derived DEM. Catchment characteristics including sub-catchment areas and shape indices, longitudinal profiles of creeks and hypsometric curves of sub-catchments were calculated and analysed
The long-term optical behavior of MRK421
All data available in B band for the BL Lac object MRK421 from 22
publications are used to construct a historical light curve, dating back to
1900. It is found that the light curve is very complicated and consists of a
set of outbursts with very large duration. The brightness of MRK421 varies from
11.6 magnitude to more than 16 magnitude. Analyses with Jurkevich method of
computing period of cyclic phenomena reveal in the light curve two kinds of
behaviors. The first one is non-periodic with rapid, violent variations in
intensity on time scales of hours to days. The second one is periodic with a
possible period of years. Another possible period of years is not very significant. We have tested the robustness of the
Jurkevich method. The period of about one year found in the light curves of
MRK421 and of other objects is a spurious period due to the method and the
observing window. We try to explain the period of years under the
thermal instability of a slim accretion disk around a massive black hole of
mass of .Comment: Tex, 14 pages, 5 Postscript figures. Accepted for publication in A&A
Supplement Serie
Asymptotic properties of eigenmatrices of a large sample covariance matrix
Let where is a matrix
with i.i.d. complex standardized entries having finite fourth moments. Let
in which
and where
is the Mar\v{c}enko--Pastur law with parameter ; which
converges to a positive constant as , and and are unit vectors in ,
having indices and , ranging in a compact subset
of a finite-dimensional Euclidean space. In this paper, we prove that the
sequence converges weakly to a
-dimensional Gaussian process. This result provides further evidence in
support of the conjecture that the distribution of the eigenmatrix of is
asymptotically close to that of a Haar-distributed unitary matrix.Comment: Published in at http://dx.doi.org/10.1214/10-AAP748 the Annals of
Applied Probability (http://www.imstat.org/aap/) by the Institute of
Mathematical Statistics (http://www.imstat.org
Diquark effects in light baryon correlators from lattice QCD
We study the role of diquarks in light baryons through point to point baryon
correlators. We contrast results from quenched simulations with ones with two
flavors of dynamical overlap fermions. The scalar, pseudoscalar and axial
vector diquarks are combined with light quarks to form color singlets. The
quenched simulation shows large zero mode effects in correlators containing the
scalar and pseudoscalar diquark. The two scalar diquarks created by gamma_5 and
gamma_0gamma_5 lead to different behavior in baryon correlators, showing that
the interaction of diquarks with the third light quark matters: we do not see
an isolated diquark. In our quark mass range, the scalar diquark created by
gamma_5 seems to play a greater role than the others.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figure
General covariant geometric momentum, gauge potential and a Dirac fermion on a two-dimensional sphere
For a particle that is constrained on an ()-dimensional ()
curved surface, the Cartesian components of its momentum in -dimensional
flat space is believed to offer a proper form of momentum for the particle on
the surface, which is called the geometric momentum as it depends on the mean
curvature. Once the momentum is made general covariance, the spin connection
part can be interpreted as a gauge potential. The present study consists in two
parts, the first is a discussion of the general framework for the general
covariant geometric momentum. The second is devoted to a study of a Dirac
fermion on a two-dimensional sphere and we show that there is the generalized
total angular momentum whose three cartesian components form the
algebra, obtained before by consideration of dynamics of the particle, and we
demonstrate that there is no curvature-induced geometric potential for the
fermion.Comment: 8 pages, no figure. Presentation improve
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Robust filtering for gene expression time series data with variance constraints
This is the post print version of the article. The official published version can be obtained from the link below - Copyright 2007 Taylor & Francis Ltd.In this paper, an uncertain discrete-time stochastic system is employed to represent a model for gene regulatory networks from time series data. A robust variance-constrained filtering problem is investigated for a gene expression model with stochastic disturbances and norm-bounded parameter uncertainties, where the stochastic perturbation is in the form of a scalar Gaussian white noise with constant variance and the parameter uncertainties enter both the system matrix and the output matrix. The purpose of the addressed robust filtering problem is to design a linear filter such that, for the admissible bounded uncertainties, the filtering error system is Schur stable and the individual error variance is less than a prespecified upper bound. By using the linear matrix inequality (LMI) technique, sufficient conditions are first derived for ensuring the desired filtering performance for the gene expression model. Then the filter gain is characterized in terms of the solution to a set of LMIs, which can easily be solved by using available software packages. A simulation example is exploited for a gene expression model in order to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed design procedures.This work was supported in part by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) of the UK under Grants GR/S27658/01 and EP/C524586/1, the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC) of the UK under Grants BB/C506264/1 and 100/EGM17735, the Nuffield Foundation of the UK under Grant NAL/00630/G, and the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation of Germany
Large-scale Reservoir Simulations on IBM Blue Gene/Q
This paper presents our work on simulation of large-scale reservoir models on
IBM Blue Gene/Q and studying the scalability of our parallel reservoir
simulators. An in-house black oil simulator has been implemented. It uses MPI
for communication and is capable of simulating reservoir models with hundreds
of millions of grid cells. Benchmarks show that our parallel simulator are
thousands of times faster than sequential simulators that designed for
workstations and personal computers, and the simulator has excellent
scalability
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