3,877 research outputs found
Feasibility study of an Integrated Program for Aerospace vehicle Design (IPAD). Volume 3: Support of the design process
The user requirements for computer support of the IPAD design process are identified. The user-system interface, language, equipment, and computational requirements are considered
A probabilistic approach to some results by Nieto and Truax
In this paper, we reconsider some results by Nieto and Truax about generating
functions for arbitrary order coherent and squeezed states. These results were
obtained using the exponential of the Laplacian operator; more elaborated
operational identities were used by Dattoli et al. \cite{Dattoli} to extend
these results. In this note, we show that the operational approach can be
replaced by a purely probabilistic approach, in the sense that the exponential
of derivatives operators can be identified with equivalent expectation
operators. This approach brings new insight about the kinks between operational
and probabilistic calculus.Comment: 2nd versio
Fuels treatment and wildfire effects on runoff from Sierra Nevada mixed-conifer forests
We applied an eco-hydrologic model (Regional Hydro-Ecologic Simulation System [RHESSys]), constrained with spatially distributed field measurements, to assess the impacts of forest-fuel treatments and wildfire on hydrologic fluxes in two Sierra Nevada firesheds. Strategically placed fuels treatments were implemented during 2011–2012 in the upper American River in the central Sierra Nevada (43 km2) and in the upper Fresno River in the southern Sierra Nevada (24 km2). This study used the measured vegetation changes from mechanical treatments and modelled vegetation change from wildfire to determine impacts on the water balance. The well-constrained headwater model was transferred to larger catchments based on geologic and hydrologic similarities. Fuels treatments covered 18% of the American and 29% of the Lewis catchment. Averaged over the entire catchment, treatments in the wetter central Sierra Nevada resulted in a relatively light vegetation decrease (8%), leading to a 12% runoff increase, averaged over wet and dry years. Wildfire with and without forest treatments reduced vegetation by 38% and 50% and increased runoff by 55% and 67%, respectively. Treatments in the drier southern Sierra Nevada also reduced the spatially averaged vegetation by 8%, but the runoff response was limited to an increase of less than 3% compared with no treatment. Wildfire following treatments reduced vegetation by 40%, increasing runoff by 13%. Changes to catchment-scale water-balance simulations were more sensitive to canopy cover than to leaf area index, indicating that the pattern as well as amount of vegetation treatment is important to hydrologic response
On the Plants Leaves Boundary, "Jupe \`a Godets" and Conformal Embeddings
The stable profile of the boundary of a plant's leaf fluctuating in the
direction transversal to the leaf's surface is described in the framework of a
model called a "surface \`a godets". It is shown that the information on the
profile is encoded in the Jacobian of a conformal mapping (the coefficient of
deformation) corresponding to an isometric embedding of a uniform Cayley tree
into the 3D Euclidean space. The geometric characteristics of the leaf's
boundary (like the perimeter and the height) are calculated. In addition a
symbolic language allowing to investigate statistical properties of a "surface
\`a godets" with annealed random defects of curvature of density is
developed. It is found that at the surface exhibits a phase transition
with critical exponent from the exponentially growing to the flat
structure.Comment: 17 pages (revtex), 8 eps-figures, to appear in Journal of Physics
Dynamical Vacuum in Quantum Cosmology
By regarding the vacuum as a perfect fluid with equation of state p=-rho, de
Sitter's cosmological model is quantized. Our treatment differs from previous
ones in that it endows the vacuum with dynamical degrees of freedom. Instead of
being postulated from the start, the cosmological constant arises from the
degrees of freedom of the vacuum regarded as a dynamical entity, and a time
variable can be naturally introduced. Taking the scale factor as the sole
degree of freedom of the gravitational field, stationary and wave-packet
solutions to the Wheeler-DeWitt equation are found. It turns out that states of
the Universe with a definite value of the cosmological constant do not exist.
For the wave packets investigated, quantum effects are noticeable only for
small values of the scale factor, a classical regime being attained at
asymptotically large times.Comment: Latex, 19 pages, to appear in Gen. Rel. Gra
Steady-State L\'evy Flights in a Confined Domain
We derive the generalized Fokker-Planck equation associated with a Langevin
equation driven by arbitrary additive white noise. We apply our result to study
the distribution of symmetric and asymmetric L\'{e}vy flights in an infinitely
deep potential well. The fractional Fokker-Planck equation for L\'{e}vy flights
is derived and solved analytically in the steady state. It is shown that
L\'{e}vy flights are distributed according to the beta distribution, whose
probability density becomes singular at the boundaries of the well. The origin
of the preferred concentration of flying objects near the boundaries in
nonequilibrium systems is clarified.Comment: 10 pages, 1 figur
Generating multimedia presentations: from plain text to screenplay
In many Natural Language Generation (NLG) applications, the output is limited to plain text – i.e., a string of words with punctuation and paragraph breaks, but no indications for layout, or pictures, or dialogue. In several projects, we have begun to explore NLG applications in which these extra media are brought into play. This paper gives an informal account of what we have learned. For coherence, we focus on the domain of patient information leaflets, and follow an example in which the same content is expressed first in plain text, then in formatted text, then in text with pictures, and finally in a dialogue script that can be performed by two animated agents. We show how the same meaning can be mapped to realisation patterns in different media, and how the expanded options for expressing meaning are related to the perceived style and tone of the presentation. Throughout, we stress that the extra media are not simple added to plain text, but integrated with it: thus the use of formatting, or pictures, or dialogue, may require radical rewording of the text itself
Introducing willingness-to-pay for noise changes into transport appraisal: an application of benefit transfer.
Numerous research studies have elicited willingness-to-pay values for transport-related noise, however, in many industrialised countries including the UK, noise costs and benefits are still not incorporated into appraisals for most transport projects and policy changes (Odgaard et al, 2005; Grant-Muller et al, 2001). This paper describes the actions recently taken in the UK to address this issue, comprising: primary research based on the city of Birmingham; an international review of willingness-to-pay evidence; development of values using benefit transfers over time and locations; and integration with appraisal methods. Amongst the main findings are: that the willingness-to-pay estimates derived for the UK are broadly comparable with those used in appraisal elsewhere in Europe; that there is a case for a lower threshold at
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45dB(A)Leq,18hr1 rather than the more conventional 55dB(A); and that values per dB(A) increase with the noise level above this threshold. There are significant issues over the valuation of rail versus road noise, the neglect of non-residential noise and the valuation of high noise levels in different countries. Conclusions are drawn regarding the feasibility of noise valuation based on benefit transfers in the UK and elsewhere, and future research needs in this field are discussed
Laser photon merging in proton-laser collisions
The quantum electrodynamical vacuum polarization effects arising in the
collision of a high-energy proton beam and a strong, linearly polarized laser
field are investigated. The probability that laser photons merge into one
photon by interacting with the proton`s electromagnetic field is calculated
taking into account the laser field exactly. Asymptotics of the probability are
then derived according to different experimental setups suitable for detecting
perturbative and nonperturbative vacuum polarization effects. The
experimentally most feasible setup involves the use of a strong optical laser
field. It is shown that in this case measurements of the polarization of the
outgoing photon and and of its angular distribution provide promising tools to
detect these effects for the first time.Comment: 38 pages, 9 figure
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