11,239 research outputs found
A study of the break-up characteristics of Chena River Basin using ERTS imagery
The author has identified the following significant results. The Chena River Basin was selected because of the availability of ground truth data for comparison. Very good agreement for snow distribution and rates of ablation was found between the ERTS-1 imagery, the snowmelt model, and field measurements. Monitoring snowmelt rates for relatively small basins appears to be practical. The main limitation of the ERTS-1 imagery is the interval of coverage. More frequent overflights providing coverage are needed for the study of transient hydrologic events. ERTS-1 data is most useful when used in conjunction with snowmelt prediction models and existing snow course data. These results should prove very useful in preliminary assessment of hydrologic conditions in ungaged watersheds and will provide a tool for month-to-month volume forecasting
Break-up characteristics of the Chena River watershed, central Alaska
The author has identified the following significant results. The snow melt for a small watershed (5130 sq km) in Central Alaska was successfully monitored with ERTS-1 imagery. Aerial photography was used as supporting data for periods without satellite coverage. Comparison both with actual measurements and with a computer model showed good agreement
When is an alternative possibility robust?
According to some, free will requires alternative possibilities. But not any old alternative possibility will do. Sometimes, being able to bring about an alternative does not bestow any control on an agent. In order to bestow control, and so be directly relevant qua alternative to grounding the agent's moral responsibility, alternatives need to be robust. Here, I investigate the nature of robust alternatives. I argue that Derk Pereboom's latest robustness criterion is too strong, and I suggest a different criterion based on the idea that what agents need to be able to do is keep open the possibility of securing their blamelessness, rather than needing to directly ensure their own blamelessness at the time of decision
Elementary analysis of the special relativistic combination of velocities, Wigner rotation, and Thomas precession
The purpose of this paper is to provide an elementary introduction to the
qualitative and quantitative results of velocity combination in special
relativity, including the Wigner rotation and Thomas precession. We utilize
only the most familiar tools of special relativity, in arguments presented at
three differing levels: (1) utterly elementary, which will suit a first course
in relativity; (2) intermediate, to suit a second course; and (3) advanced, to
suit higher level students. We then give a summary of useful results, and
suggest further reading in this often obscure field.Comment: V1: 25 pages, 6 figures; V2: 22 pages, 5 figures. The revised version
is shortened and the arguments streamlined. Minor changes in notation and
figures. This version matches the published versio
Massive Neutrinos and (Heterotic) String Theory
String theories in principle address the origin and values of the quark and
lepton masses. Perhaps the small values of neutrino masses could be explained
generically in string theory even if it is more difficult to calculate
individual values, or perhaps some string constructions could be favored by
generating small neutrino masses. We examine this issue in the context of the
well-known three-family standard-like Z_3 heterotic orbifolds, where the theory
is well enough known to construct the corresponding operators allowed by string
selection rules, and analyze the D- and F-flatness conditions. Surprisingly, we
find that a simple see-saw mechanism does not arise. It is not clear whether
this is a property of this construction, or of orbifolds more generally, or of
string theory itself. Extended see-saw mechanisms may be allowed; more analysis
will be needed to settle that issue. We briefly speculate on their form if
allowed and on the possibility of alternatives, such as small Dirac masses and
triplet see-saws. The smallness of neutrino masses may be a powerful probe of
string constructions in general. We also find further evidence that there are
only 20 inequivalent models in this class, which affects the counting of string
vacua.Comment: 18 pages in RevTeX format. Single-column postscript version available
at http://sage.hep.upenn.edu/~bnelson/singpre.p
Is there a renormalization of the 1D conductance in Luttinger Liquid model?
Properties of 1D transport strongly depend on the proper choice of boundary
conditions. It has been frequently stated that the Luttinger Liquid (LL)
conductance is renormalized by the interaction as . To
contest this result I develop a model of 1D LL wire with the interaction
switching off at the infinities. Its solution shows that there is no
renormalization of the universal conductance while the electrons have a free
behavior in the source and drain reservoirs.Comment: 5 pages, RevTex 2.0, attempted repair of tex error
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