1,471 research outputs found
LANDSAT menhaden and thread herring resources investigation, Gulf of Mexico
The author has identified the following significant results. The most significant achievements thus far include the successful charting of high probability fishing areas from LANDSAT MSS data and the successful simulation of an operational satellite system to provide tactical information for the commercial harvest of menhaden
LANDSAT menhaden and thread herring resources investigation
The author has identified the following significant results. The relationship between the distribution of menhaden and selected oceanographic parameters (water color, turbidity, and possibly chlorophyll concentrations) was established. Similar relationships for thread herring were not established nor were relationships relating to the abundance of either species. Use of aircraft and LANDSAT remote sensing instruments to measure or infer a set of basic oceanographic parameters was evaluated. Parameters which could be accurately inferred included surface water temperature, salinity, and color. Water turbidity (Secchi disk) was evaluated as marginally inferrable from the LANDSAT MSS data and chlorophyll-a concentrations as less than marginal. These evaluations considered the parameters only as experienced in the two test areas using available sensors and statistical techniques
Bar-Halo Friction in Galaxies II: Metastability
It is well-established that strong bars rotating in dense halos generally
slow down as they lose angular momentum to the halo through dynamical friction.
Angular momentum exchanges between the bar and halo particles take place at
resonances. While some particles gain and others lose, friction arises when
there is an excess of gainers over losers. This imbalance results from the
generally decreasing numbers of particles with increasing angular momentum, and
friction can therefore be avoided if there is no gradient in the density of
particles across the major resonances. Here we show that anomalously weak
friction can occur for this reason if the pattern speed of the bar fluctuates
upwards. After such an event, the density of resonant halo particles has a
local inflexion created by the earlier exchanges, and bar slowdown can be
delayed for a long period; we describe this as a metastable state. We show that
this behavior in purely collisionless N-body simulations is far more likely to
occur in methods with adaptive resolution. We also show that the phenomenon
could arise in nature, since bar-driven gas inflow could easily raise the bar
pattern speed enough to reach the metastable state. Finally, we demonstrate
that mild external, or internal, perturbations quickly restore the usual
frictional drag, and it is unlikely therefore that a strong bar in a galaxy
having a dense halo could rotate for a long period without friction.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, to appear in Ap
Anomalous lifetime distributions and topological traps in ordering dynamics
We address the role of community structure of an interaction network in
ordering dynamics, as well as associated forms of metastability. We consider
the voter and AB model dynamics in a network model which mimics social
interactions. The AB model includes an intermediate state between the two
excluding options of the voter model. For the voter model we find dynamical
metastable disordered states with a characteristic mean lifetime. However, for
the AB dynamics we find a power law distribution of the lifetime of metastable
states, so that the mean lifetime is not representative of the dynamics. These
trapped metastable states, which can order at all time scales, originate in the
mesoscopic network structure.Comment: 7 pages; 6 figure
The 2011 Mw 7.1 Van (Eastern Turkey) earthquake
[1] We use interferometric synthetic aperture radar (InSAR), body wave seismology, satellite imagery, and field observations to constrain the fault parameters of the Mw 7.1 2011 Van (Eastern Turkey) reverse-slip earthquake, in the Turkish-Iranian plateau. Distributed slip models from elastic dislocation modeling of the InSAR surface displacements from ENVISAT and COSMO-SkyMed interferograms indicate up to 9 m of reverse and oblique slip on a pair of en echelon NW 40 °–54 ° dipping fault planes which have surface extensions projecting to just 10 km north of the city of Van. The slip remained buried and is relatively deep, with a centroid depth of 14 km, and the rupture reaching only within 8–9 km of the surface, consistent with the lack of significant ground rupture. The up-dip extension of this modeled WSW striking fault plane coincides with field observations of weak ground deformation seen on the western of the two fault segments and has a dip consistent with that seen at the surface in fault gouge exposed in Quaternary sediments. No significant coseismic slip is found in the upper 8 km of the crust above the main slip patches, except for a small region on the eastern segment potentially resulting from the Mw 5.9 aftershock on the same day. We perform extensive resolution tests on the data to confirm the robustness of the observed slip deficit in the shallow crust. We resolve a steep gradient in displacement at the point where the planes of the two fault segments ends are inferred to abut at depth, possibly exerting some structural control on rupture extent
Modelling opinion formation driven communities in social networks
In a previous paper we proposed a model to study the dynamics of opinion
formation in human societies by a co-evolution process involving two distinct
time scales of fast transaction and slower network evolution dynamics. In the
transaction dynamics we take into account short range interactions as
discussions between individuals and long range interactions to describe the
attitude to the overall mood of society. The latter is handled by a uniformly
distributed parameter , assigned randomly to each individual, as
quenched personal bias. The network evolution dynamics is realized by rewiring
the societal network due to state variable changes as a result of transaction
dynamics. The main consequence of this complex dynamics is that communities
emerge in the social network for a range of values in the ratio between time
scales. In this paper we focus our attention on the attitude parameter
and its influence on the conformation of opinion and the size of the resulting
communities. We present numerical studies and extract interesting features of
the model that can be interpreted in terms of social behaviour.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures. Added references. To appear in Special Issue 2010
of Computer Physics Communication
Converting genetic network oscillations into somite spatial pattern
In most vertebrate species, the body axis is generated by the formation of
repeated transient structures called somites. This spatial periodicity in
somitogenesis has been related to the temporally sustained oscillations in
certain mRNAs and their associated gene products in the cells forming the
presomatic mesoderm. The mechanism underlying these oscillations have been
identified as due to the delays involved in the synthesis of mRNA and
translation into protein molecules [J. Lewis, Current Biol. {\bf 13}, 1398
(2003)]. In addition, in the zebrafish embryo intercellular Notch signalling
couples these oscillators and a longitudinal positional information signal in
the form of an Fgf8 gradient exists that could be used to transform these
coupled temporal oscillations into the observed spatial periodicity of somites.
Here we consider a simple model based on this known biology and study its
consequences for somitogenesis. Comparison is made with the known properties of
somite formation in the zebrafish embryo . We also study the effects of
localized Fgf8 perturbations on somite patterning.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figure
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