10,497 research outputs found
Program on stimulating operational private sector use of Earth observation satellite information
Ideas for new businesses specializing in using remote sensing and computerized spatial data systems were developd. Each such business serves as an 'information middleman', buying raw satellite or aircraft imagery, processing these data, combining them in a computer system with customer-specific information, and marketing the resulting information products. Examples of the businesses the project designed are: (1) an agricultural facility site evaluation firm; (2) a mass media grocery price and supply analyst and forecaster; (3) a management service for privately held woodlots; (4) a brokerage for insulation and roofing contractors, based on infrared imagery; (5) an expanded real estate information service. In addition, more than twenty-five other commercially attractive ideas in agribusiness, forestry, mining, real estate, urban planning and redevelopment, and consumer information were created. The commercial feasibility of the five business was assessed. This assessment included market surveys, revenue projections, cost analyses, and profitability studies. The results show that there are large and enthusiastic markets willing to pay for the services these businesses offer, and that the businesses could operate profitably
Metal-superconductor transition at zero temperature: A case of unusual scaling
An effective field theory is derived for the normal metal-to-superconductor
quantum phase transition at T=0. The critical behavior is determined exactly
for all dimensions d>2. Although the critical exponents \beta and \nu do not
exist, the usual scaling relations, properly reinterpreted, still hold. A
complete scaling description of the transition is given, and the physics
underlying the unusual critical behavior is discussed. Quenched disorder leads
to anomalously strong T_c-fluctuations which are shown to explain the
experimentally observed broadening of the transition in low-T_c thin films.Comment: 4 pp., no figs, final version as publishe
Human operator performance of remotely controlled tasks: Teleoperator research conducted at NASA's George C. Marshal Space Flight Center
The capabilities within the teleoperator laboratories to perform remote and teleoperated investigations for a wide variety of applications are described. Three major teleoperator issues are addressed: the human operator, the remote control and effecting subsystems, and the human/machine system performance results for specific teleoperated tasks
Phase diagram of glassy systems in an external field
We study the mean-field phase diagram of glassy systems in a field pointing
in the direction of a metastable state. We find competition among a
``magnetized'' and a ``disordered'' phase, that are separated by a coexistence
line as in ordinary first order phase transitions. The coexistence line
terminates in a critical point, which in principle can be observed in numerical
simulations of glassy models.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Quantum Metal--Superconductor Transition: A Local Field Theory Approach
The zero temperature, or quantum, metal-superconductor phase transition is
studied in disordered systems in dimension greater than two. A effective local
field theory is developed that keeps all soft modes or fluctuations explicitly.
A simple renormalization group analysis is used to exactly determine the
quantum critical behavior at this transition.Comment: 6 page
Tricritical Points in Random Combinatorics: the (2+p)-SAT case
The (2+p)-Satisfiability (SAT) problem interpolates between different classes
of complexity theory and is believed to be of basic interest in understanding
the onset of typical case complexity in random combinatorics. In this paper, a
tricritical point in the phase diagram of the random -SAT problem is
analytically computed using the replica approach and found to lie in the range
. These bounds on are in agreement with previous
numerical simulations and rigorous results.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figure, RevTeX, to appear in J.Phys.
Transport Anomalies and Marginal Fermi-Liquid Effects at a Quantum Critical Point
The conductivity and the tunneling density of states of disordered itinerant
electrons in the vicinity of a ferromagnetic transition at low temperature are
discussed. Critical fluctuations lead to nonanalytic frequency and temperature
dependences that are distinct from the usual long-time tail effects in a
disordered Fermi liquid. The crossover between these two types of behavior is
proposed as an experimental check of recent theories of the quantum
ferromagnetic critical behavior. In addition, the quasiparticle properties at
criticality are shown to be those of a marginal Fermi liquid.Comment: 4pp., REVTeX, no figs, final version as publishe
Manipulator system man-machine interface evaluation program
Application and requirements for remote manipulator systems for future space missions were investigated. A manipulator evaluation program was established to study the effects of various systems parameters on operator performance of tasks necessary for remotely manned missions. The program and laboratory facilities are described. Evaluation criteria and philosophy are discussed
Influence of rare regions on magnetic quantum phase transitions
The effects of quenched disorder on the critical properties of itinerant
quantum magnets are considered. Particular attention is paid to locally ordered
rare regions that are formed in the presence of quenched disorder even when the
bulk system is still in the nonmagnetic phase. It is shown that these local
moments or instantons destroy the previously found critical fixed point in the
case of antiferromagnets. In the case of itinerant ferromagnets, the critical
behavior is unaffected by the rare regions due to an effective long-range
interaction between the order parameter fluctuations.Comment: 4 pp., REVTe
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