New inverse method for simultaneous reconstruction of object buried beneath rough ground and the ground surface structure using SAMM forward model

Author(s):  
Reza Firoozabadi ◽  
Eric L. Miller ◽  
Carey M. Rappaport ◽  
Ann W. Morgenthaler
1960 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 11-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ralph A. Luebben ◽  
Laurence Herold ◽  
Arthur Rohn

AbstractSite 52, a possible platform mound, is unusually situated near the bottom of a draw rather than along the ridge of Chapin Mesa. Complete excavation of the small surface structure yielded two distinct levels of construction and several architectural phenomena which previously had not been reported from San Juan Anasazi sites. A rectangle of multiple-coursed masonry was built on a sloped, irregular ground surface. An interior crosswall with a floor level opening, a raised circular floor feature, two peripheral stepped abutments on opposite sides, and a complex of masonry walls and external alignments on the third side were added to the basic rectangle. The second construction level utilized what appeared to be intentional interior and exterior fill as a base, and two alignments further subdivided the rectangle. Two rubble-filled abutments were appended externally to the fourth wall of the rectangle. Artifacts were rarely found. Solid, continuously built coursed masonry, construction techniques, and pottery types suggest that Site 52 was built during Pueblo III and may have been a platform mound of ceremonial significance.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (9) ◽  
pp. 2415
Author(s):  
Azade Jamshidi ◽  
Jamal Mohammad Vali Samani ◽  
Hossein Mohammad Vali Samani ◽  
Andrea Zanini ◽  
Maria Giovanna Tanda ◽  
...  

The paper presents a new approach to identify the unknown characteristics (release history and location) of contaminant sources in groundwater, starting from a few concentration observations at monitoring points. An inverse method that combines the forward model and an optimization algorithm is presented. To speed up the computation, the transfer function theory is applied to create a surrogate transport forward model. The performance of the developed approach is evaluated on two case studies (literature and a new one) under different scenarios and measurement error conditions. The literature case study regards a heterogeneous confined aquifer, while the proposed case study was never investigated before, it involves an aquifer-river integrated flow and transport system. In this case, the groundwater contaminant originated from a damaged tank, migrates to a river through the aquifer. The approach, starting from few concentration observations monitored at a downstream river cross-section, accurately estimates the release history at a groundwater contaminant source, even in presence of noise on observations. Moreover, the results show that the methodology is very fast, and can solve the inverse problem in much less computation time in comparison with other existing approaches.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Makiko Ohtani

<p>Following large earthquakes, postseismic crustal deformations are often observed for more than years. They include the afterslip and the viscoelastic deformation of the crust and the upper mantle, activated by the coseismic stress change. The viscoelastic deformation gives the stress change on the neighboring faults, hence affects the seismic activity of the surrounding area, for a long period after the large earthquake. So, estimating the viscoelastic deformation after the large earthquakes is important.</p><p>In order to estimate the time evolution of the viscoelastic deformation after a large earthquake, we also need to know the viscoelastic structure around the area. Recently, the Ensemble Kalman filter method (EnKF), a sequential data assimilation method, starts to be used for the crustal deformation data to estimate the physical variables (van Dinther et al., 2019, Hirahara and Nishikiori, 2019). With data assimilation, we get a more provable estimation by combining the data and the time-forward model than only using the data. Hirahara and Nishikiori (2019) used synthetic data and showed that EnKF could effectively estimate the frictional parameters on the SSE (slow slip event) fault, addition to the slip velocity. In the present study, I applied EnKF to estimate the viscosity and the inelastic strain after a large earthquake, both the physical property and the variables.</p><p>First, I constructed the forward model simulating the evolution of the viscoelastic deformation, following the equivalent body force method (Barbot and Fialko, 2010; Barbot et al., 2017). This method is appropriate for applying EnKF, because the ground surface deformation rate is represented by the inelastic strain at the moment, and the history of the strain is not required. Then, we applied EnKF based on the forward model and executed some numerical experiments using a synthetic postseismic crustal deformation data.</p><p>In this presentation, I show the result of a simple setting. I assumed the medium to be two layers with a homogeneous viscoelastic region underlying an elastic region. The synthetic data is made by giving a slip on a fault at time <em>t</em> = 0 and simulating the time evolution of the ground surface deformation. For assimilation, I assumed that the slip on the fault and the stress distribution just after the large earthquake is known. Then we executed the assimilation every 30 days after the large earthquake. I found that I can get a good estimation of the viscosity after <em>t</em> > 150 days.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 176 ◽  
pp. 03006
Author(s):  
Ghazal Farhani ◽  
R. J. Sica ◽  
Sophie Godin-Beekmann ◽  
Alexander Haefele

We use an Optimal Estimation Method (OEM) to retrieve ozone profiles from the CANDAC Stratospheric Ozone Differential Absorption Lidar in Eureka, Canada. The OEM is a well known inverse method in which a forward model (FM) is used to describe the instrument and geophysical situation. We have developed a FM and are testing its validity using synthetic measurements. We will present the advantages of using OEM retrievals over the traditional method, including a full uncertainty budget.


2014 ◽  
Vol 53 (11) ◽  
pp. 2273 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuanhe Tang ◽  
Xiaodong Duan ◽  
Haiyang Gao ◽  
Ouyang Qu ◽  
Qijie Jia ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Sanford H. Vernick ◽  
Anastasios Tousimis ◽  
Victor Sprague

Recent electron microscope studies have greatly expanded our knowledge of the structure of the Microsporida, particularly of the developing and mature spore. Since these studies involved mainly sectioned material, they have revealed much internal detail of the spores but relatively little surface detail. This report concerns observations on the spore surface by means of the transmission electron microscope.


Author(s):  
Robert M. Glaeser ◽  
Thea B. Scott

The carbon-replica technique can be used to obtain information about cell-surface structure that cannot ordinarily be obtained by thin-section techniques. Mammalian erythrocytes have been studied by the replica technique and they appear to be characterized by a pebbly or “plaqued“ surface texture. The characteristic “particle” diameter is about 200 Å to 400 Å. We have now extended our observations on cell-surface structure to chicken and frog erythrocytes, which possess a broad range of cellular functions, and to normal rat lymphocytes and mouse ascites tumor cells, which are capable of cell division. In these experiments fresh cells were washed in Eagle's Minimum Essential Medium Salt Solution (for suspension cultures) and one volume of a 10% cell suspension was added to one volume of 2% OsO4 or 5% gluteraldehyde in 0.067 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.3. Carbon replicas were obtained by a technique similar to that employed by Glaeser et al. Figure 1 shows an electron micrograph of a carbon replica made from a chicken erythrocyte, and Figure 2 shows an enlarged portion of the same cell.


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