44 research outputs found

    Advanced radiometric and interferometric milimeter-wave scene simulations

    Get PDF
    Smart munitions and weapons utilize various imaging sensors (including passive IR, active and passive millimeter-wave, and visible wavebands) to detect/identify targets at short standoff ranges and in varied terrain backgrounds. In order to design and evaluate these sensors under a variety of conditions, a high-fidelity scene simulation capability is necessary. Such a capability for passive millimeter-wave scene simulation exists at TRW. TRW's Advanced Radiometric Millimeter-Wave Scene Simulation (ARMSS) code is a rigorous, benchmarked, end-to-end passive millimeter-wave scene simulation code for interpreting millimeter-wave data, establishing scene signatures and evaluating sensor performance. In passive millimeter-wave imaging, resolution is limited due to wavelength and aperture size. Where high resolution is required, the utility of passive millimeter-wave imaging is confined to short ranges. Recent developments in interferometry have made possible high resolution applications on military platforms. Interferometry or synthetic aperture radiometry allows the creation of a high resolution image with a sparsely filled aperture. Borrowing from research work in radio astronomy, we have developed and tested at TRW scene reconstruction algorithms that allow the recovery of the scene from a relatively small number of spatial frequency components. In this paper, the TRW modeling capability is described and numerical results are presented

    The Ursinus Weekly, January 26, 1914

    Get PDF
    Library notes • Lecture on Christianity • Will hold Valentine fete • Platform meetings • Examinations over: let us celebrate • Youth\u27s progress • Operated upon for appendicitis • Christian organizations • Final call • Modern philanthropy • An economic aspect of war • Shakespeare\u27s attitude toward history • Ch.-Bi\u27s. lose out to H.-P.\u27s • Lecturer coming • Society noteshttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/weekly/2685/thumbnail.jp

    Mantle heat drives hydrothermal fluids responsible for carbonate-hosted base metal deposits: evidence from 3He/4He of ore fluids in the Irish Pb-Zn ore district

    Get PDF
    There is little consensus on whether carbonate-hosted base metal deposits, such as the world-class Irish Zn+Pb ore field, formed in collisional or extensional tectonic settings. Helium isotopes have been analysed in ore fluids trapped in sulphides samples from the major base metal deposits of the Irish Zn-Pb ore field in order to quantify the involvement of mantle-derived volatiles, that require melting to be realised, as well as test prevailing models for the genesis of the ore fields. 3He/4He ratios range up to 0.2 Ra, indicating that a small but clear mantle helium contribution is present in the mineralising fluids trapped in galena and marcasite. Sulfides from ore deposits with the highest fluid inclusion temperatures (~200°C) also have the highest 3He/4He (> 0.15 Ra). Similar 3He/4He are recorded in fluids from modern continental regions that are undergoing active extension. By analogy we consider that the hydrothermal fluids responsible for the carbonate-hosted Irish base metal mineralization circulated in thinned continental crust, undergoing extension, and demonstrates that enhanced mantle heat flow is ultimately responsible for driving fluid convection

    InterCarb: a community effort to improve interlaboratory standardization of the carbonate clumped isotope thermometer using carbonate standards

    Get PDF
    Increased use and improved methodology of carbonate clumped isotope thermometry has greatly enhanced our ability to interrogate a suite of Earth-system processes. However, interlaboratory discrepancies in quantifying carbonate clumped isotope (Δ47) measurements persist, and their specific sources remain unclear. To address interlaboratory differences, we first provide consensus values from the clumped isotope community for four carbonate standards relative to heated and equilibrated gases with 1,819 individual analyses from 10 laboratories. Then we analyzed the four carbonate standards along with three additional standards, spanning a broad range of δ47 and Δ47 values, for a total of 5,329 analyses on 25 individual mass spectrometers from 22 different laboratories. Treating three of the materials as known standards and the other four as unknowns, we find that the use of carbonate reference materials is a robust method for standardization that yields interlaboratory discrepancies entirely consistent with intralaboratory analytical uncertainties. Carbonate reference materials, along with measurement and data processing practices described herein, provide the carbonate clumped isotope community with a robust approach to achieve interlaboratory agreement as we continue to use and improve this powerful geochemical tool. We propose that carbonate clumped isotope data normalized to the carbonate reference materials described in this publication should be reported as Δ47 (I-CDES) values for Intercarb-Carbon Dioxide Equilibrium Scale

    Separation of aerobic glycolysis from oxidative metabolism and contractility in rat anococcygeus muscle

    Full text link
    The relationship of aerobic glycolysis (JLac) and O2 utilization (JO2) to contractility and the activity of the Na+-K+ pump was investigated in rat anococcygeus smooth muscle. Removal of extracellular potassium concentration ([K+]o) caused an initial increase followed by a decrease in JLac below the resting rate. Restoration of [K+]o caused JLac to increase, and this response, but not the initial one observed in zero [K+]o, was prevented by ouabain. These changes in JLac were not related to contractility, since a similar response was observed in both phentolamine-treated and chemically denervated muscles that exhibited minimal force and no significant changes in JO2. Tension development of innervated muscles incubated in K+-free medium was related to changes in JO2. A logarithmic relationship between JLac and [K+]o suggested that changes in JLac resulted from effects on glucose transport or utilization secondary to changes in the membrane potential. In stimulated muscles JLac and JO2 were both positively correlated with isometric force and were not affected by ouabain. Separation of JLac from JO2 and force production under some conditions supports the hypothesis that a functional compartmentalization of metabolic pathways exists in anococcygeus muscle.</jats:p
    corecore