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Nano Dust Analyzer Project
data.nasa.gov | Last Updated 2020-01-29T04:54:41.000Z<p> We propose to develop a new highly sensitive instrument to confirm the existence of the so-called nano-dust particles, characterize their impact parameters, and measure their chemical composition. Simultaneous theoretical studies will be used to derive the expected&nbsp; mass and velocity ranges of these putative particles to formulate science and measurement requirements for the future deployment of&nbsp; the proposed Nano-Dust Analyzer (NDA)&nbsp;</p> <p> Early dust instruments onboard Pioneer 8 and 9 and Helios spacecraft detected a flow of submicron sized dust particles coming from the direction of the Sun. These particles originate in the inner solar system from mutual collisions among meteoroids and move on&nbsp; hyperbolic orbits that leave the Solar System under the prevailing radiation pressure force. Later dust instruments with higher&nbsp; sensitivity had to avoid looking toward the Sun because of interference from the solar wind and UV radiation and thus contributed&nbsp; little to the characterization of the dust stream. The one exception is the Ulysses dust detector that observed escaping dust particles&nbsp; high above the solar poles, which confirm the suspicion that charged nanometer sized dust grains are carried to high heliographic&nbsp; latitudes by electromagnetic interactions with the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF). Recently, the STEREO WAVES instruments&nbsp; recorded a large number of intense electric field signals, which were interpreted as impacts from nanometer sized particles striking the&nbsp; spacecraft with velocities of about the solar wind speed. This high flux and strong spatial and/or temporal variations of nanometer&nbsp; sized dust grains at low latitude appears to be uncorrelated with the solar wind properties. This is a mystery as it would require that&nbsp; the total collisional meteoroid debris inside 1 AU is cast in nanometer sized fragments. The observed fluxes of inner-source pickup ions&nbsp; also point to the existence of a much enhanced dust population in the nanometer size range.&nbsp;</p> <p> This new heliospherical phenomenon of nano-dust streams may have consequences throughout the planetary system, but as of yet no dust instrument exists that could be used to shed light on their properties. &nbsp;We propose to develop a dust analyzer capable to detect and&nbsp; analyze these mysterious dust particles coming from the solar direction and to embark upon complementary theoretical studies to&nbsp; understand their characteristics. The instrument is based on the Cassini Dust Analyzer (CDA) that has analyzed the composition of&nbsp; nanometer sized dust particles emanating from the Jovian and Saturnian systems but could not be pointed towards the Sun. By&nbsp; applying technologies implemented in solar wind instruments and coronagraphs a highly sensitive dust analyzer will be developed and&nbsp; tested in the laboratory. The dust analyzer shall be able to characterize impact properties (impact charge and energy distribution of&nbsp; ions from which mass and speed of the impacting grains may be derived) and chemical composition of individual nanometer sized&nbsp; particles while exposed to solar wind and UV radiation. The measurements will enable us to identify the source of the dust by&nbsp; comparing their elemental composition with that of larger micrometeoroid particles of cometary and asteroid origin and will reveal&nbsp; interaction of nano-dust with the interplanetary medium by investigating the relation of the dust flux with solar wind and IMF&nbsp; properties.&nbsp;</p> <p> Complementary theoretically studies will be performed to understand the characteristics of nano-dust particles at 1 AU to answer the&nbsp; following questions:&nbsp; - What is the speed range at which nanometer sized particles impact
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CL Apartment new Bldg
data.lacity.org | Last Updated 2023-05-22T09:33:24.000ZThe Department of Building and Safety issues permits for the construction, remodeling, and repair of buildings and structures in the City of Los Angeles. Permits are categorized into building permits, electrical permits, and mechanical permits (which include plumbing, HVAC systems, fire sprinklers, elevators, and pressure vessels). Depending on the complexity of a project, a permit may be issued the same day with Express Permit or e-Permit ("No Plan Check" category), or a permit may require that the plans be reviewed ("Plan Check" category) by a Building and Safety Plan Check personnel.
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NEW HORIZONS SDC PLUTO CRUISE RAW V2.0
data.nasa.gov | Last Updated 2023-01-26T20:54:05.000ZThis data set contains Raw data taken by the New Horizons Student Dust Counter instrument during the pluto cruise mission phase. This is VERSION 2.0 of this data set. SDC collected science data intermittently during the hibernation years following the Jupiter encounter, designated as the PLUTOCRUISE phase. There were also Annual Checkouts (ACOs), STIM calibrations, Noise calibrations, and an anomaly in November, 2007. SDC's main science data collection periods were during hibernation. During ACOs, science data are taken intermittently but the user must be careful in analyzing these data since there is usually more activity on the spacecraft during hibernation. STIM and Noise refer to scheduled calibrations and are done with a regular cadence of one per year after the Jupiter encounter; they occurred sporadically in the early years of the mission. Note that some SDC data files have the same stop and start time and a zero exposure time. The reason for this is that the start and stop time for SDC data files are the event times for the first and last events in the files, so for files that contain a single event, these two values are the same. The changes in Version 2.0 were re-running of the ancillary data in the data product, updated geometry from newer SPICE kernels, minor editing of the documentation, catalogs, etc., and resolution of liens from the December, 2014 review, plus those from the May, 2016 review of the Pluto Encounter data sets. New observations added with this version (V2.0) include ongoing cruise observations from August, 2014 through January, 2015.
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GPM, DPR, GMI Level 3 Combined Precipitation V03
nasa-test-0.demo.socrata.com | Last Updated 2015-07-20T05:03:54.000ZThere are uncertainties in the interpretation of data from any one of the instruments (KuPR, KaPR, and GMI). By using data from multiple instruments, further constraints on the solution of precipitation structure improve the final product.The purpose of 3CMB is to give a daily and monthly accumulation of the 2BCMB precipitation product. The 3CMB product is a daily and monthly accumulation of the 2BCMB orbital combined product at two grid sizes, 5 x 5 degrees (G1) and 0.25 x 0.25 degrees (G2). Grid G1 contains the following physical measurements of general interest, among others. Grid G2 contains the same groups, but it is on the ltH x lnH grid and does not have the surface type (st) dimension or the histograms (see dimension definitions below). Below, conditional products represent means based upon precipitating areas only; unconditional products represent means for raining and non-raining areas combined. Probabilities represent the number of raining observations divided by the total number of raining and non-raining observations. precipTotRate (Group in G1)- Conditional mean rate for all precipitation phases (ice, liquid, mixed-phase). * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Mean, mm/h. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, mm/h. * hist (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st x bin): Histogram. precipLiqRate (Group in G1) - Conditional mean rate for liquid precipitation. * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Mean, mm/h. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, mm/h. * hist (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st x bin): Histogram. precipTotWaterContent (Group in G1) - Conditional mean water content for all precipitation phases. * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Mean, g/m3. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, g/m3. * hist (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st x bin): Histogram. precipLiqWaterContent (Group in G1) - Conditional mean liquid water content. * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Mean, g/m3. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, g/m3. * hist (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st x bin): Histogram. precipTotDm (Group in G1) - Conditional mass-weighted mean particle diameter. * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Mean, mm. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, mm. * hist (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x hgt x rt x st x bin): Histogram. precipTotRateDiurnal (Group in G1) - Conditional mean total surface precipitation rate indexed by local time. * count (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x st x tim): Count. * mean (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x st x tim): Mean, mm/h. * stdev (4-byte float, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x st x tim): Standard deviation for the monthly product. Mean of squares for the daily product, mm/h. surfPrecipTotRateDiurnalAllObs (4-byte integer, array size: ltL x lnL x ns x st x tim): Number of total observa...
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Los Angeles BusinessSource Centers "Operating Businesses (>5 Employees)" Performance Units for 01/01/17 through 12/31/17
data.lacity.org | Last Updated 2020-11-30T17:02:52.000ZThe Los Angeles BusinessSource Centers provide startup ventures and current small business owners various cost effective tools to make their business a success. Through these tools, small businesses can grow and remain competitive within the City of Los Angeles. The Operating Businesses component, defined as employing 6 or more employees, focuses on providing business assistance and training to emerging companies that will give them the highest opportunities for success. The business services provided to the clients shall include, but not be limited to, customized technical business assistance (industry specific) particular to their business needs in order to stabilize the business, increase revenues and increase operational performance which will lead to the greatest impact on their economic viability and increase profitability.
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Summer Meal Programs – Seamless Summer Option (SSO) – Contacts and Program Participation – Program Period 2016
data.texas.gov | Last Updated 2020-06-18T20:59:30.000Z<b>About the Agency</b><br> The Texas Department of Agriculture administers 12 U.S. Department of Agriculture nutrition programs in Texas including the National School Lunch and School Breakfast Programs and the Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP). TDA’s Food and Nutrition division provides technical assistance and training resources to partners operating the programs and oversees the USDA reimbursements they receive to cover part of the cost associated with serving food in their facilities. By working to ensure these partners serve nutritious meals and snacks, the division adheres to its mission — <i>Feeding the Hungry and Promoting Healthy Lifestyles.</i><p> <i><b>For more information on these programs, please visit our <a href=http://www.SquareMeals.org target="_blank">website</a>.</b></i><p> <b>About the Dataset</b><br> This data set contains <b>contact and program participation information for each site participating in the Seamless Summer Option (SSO) for summer 2016 (SNP program year 2015-2016).</b> Summer meal programs operate mid-May through the end of August. <p> For data on sites participating in the Summer Food Service Program (SFSP), please refer to the Summer Meal Programs – Summer Food Service Program (SFSP) – Contact and Program Participation datasets available on the State of Texas Open Data Portal. <p> <b>About Dataset Updates</b><br> TDA aims to post new program year data by July 15 of the active program period. Due to the short duration of the summer meal programs, dataset updates will occur monthly until 90 days after the close of the program period. After 90 days from the close of the program period, the dataset will be updated at six months and one year from the close of program period before becoming archived. Archived datasets will remain published but will not be updated. Any data posted during the active program year is subject to change.
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TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) Gridded Oceanic Rainfall Product (TRMM Product 3A11) V7
nasa-test-0.demo.socrata.com | Last Updated 2015-07-20T04:52:56.000ZThe Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) is a joint U.S.-Japan satellite mission to monitor tropical and subtropical precipitation and to estimate its associated latent heating. TRMM was successfully launched on November 27, at 4:27 PM (EST) from the Tanegashima Space Center in Japan. The TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) is a nine-channel passive microwave radiometer, which builds on the heritage of the Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I) instrument flown aboard the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) platforms. Microwave radiation is emitted by the Earth's surface and by water droplets within clouds. However, when layers of large ice particles are present in upper cloud regions - a condition highly correlated with heavy rainfall - microwave radiation tends to scatter at frequencies above 19 GHz. The TMI detects radiation at five frequencies chosen to discriminate among these processes, thus revealing the likelihood of rainfall. The key to accurate retrieval of rainfall rates by this method is the deduction of cloud precipitation consistent with the radiation measurement at each frequency. The TMI frequencies are 10.65, 19.35, 37 and 85.5 GHz (dual polarization), and 21 GHz (vertical polarization only). The TMI Gridded Oceanic Rainfall Product, also known as TMI Emission, consists of 5 degree by 5 degree monthly oceanic rainfall maps using TMI Level 1 data as input. Statistics of the monthly rainfall, including number of samples, standard deviation, goodness-of-fit (of the brightness temperature histogram to the lognormal rainfall distribution function) and rainfall probability are also included in the output for each grid box. Spatial coverage is between 40 degrees North and 40 degrees South owing to the 35 degree inclination of the TRMM satellite. TMI brightness temperature histograms at 1 degree intervals are generated based on the 19, 21 and 19-21 GHz combination channels obtained from the Level 1B (calibrated brightness temperature) TMI product. Monthly rainfall indices over the ocean are derived by statistically matching monthly histograms of brightness temperatures with model calculated rainfall Probability Distribution Functions (PDF) using the 19-21 GHz combination data. Retrieved monthly rainfall data must pass a quality test based on the quality of the PDF fit. The data are stored in the Hierarchical Data Format (HDF), which includes both core and product specific metadata applicable to the TMI measurements. A file contains 12 arrays of rainfall data and supporting information each of dimension 72 x 16, with a file size of about 40 KB (uncompressed). The HDF-EOS "grid" structure is used to accommodate the actual geophysical data arrays. There is 1 file of TMI 3A11 data produced per month.
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Building Permits Feb'15-Present
data.lacity.org | Last Updated 2023-05-22T09:33:24.000ZThe Department of Building and Safety issues permits for the construction, remodeling, and repair of buildings and structures in the City of Los Angeles. Permits are categorized into building permits, electrical permits, and mechanical permits (which include plumbing, HVAC systems, fire sprinklers, elevators, and pressure vessels). Depending on the complexity of a project, a permit may be issued the same day with Express Permit or e-Permit ("No Plan Check" category), or a permit may require that the plans be reviewed ("Plan Check" category) by a Building and Safety Plan Check personnel.
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Average Trend Percent by WRIA
data.wa.gov | Last Updated 2022-09-07T23:23:38.000ZSummer Low Flow Trend Indicator results, statewide, updated through Oct 2013. This information is updated annually with an additional year of flow data. These results are provided to the Puget Sound Partnership for their Vital Signs (http://www.psp.wa.gov/vitalsigns/summer_stream_flows.php) and to the Governor's Salmon Recovery Office for the "State of Salmon in WAtersheds" report (http://stateofsalmon.wa.gov/statewide/indicators/water-quantity). The attached document "WR Indicator Outcomes Memo - 10-24-10.pdf" describes the methodology for developing these indicators. The attached document "Low Flow Indicator Metadata.pdf" describes the contents of each column. Dept. of Ecology home page: http://www.ecy.wa.gov/ Disclaimer: Information provided by Ecology on this Web site is accurate to the best of Ecology's knowledge and is subject to change on a regular basis, without notice. Ecology cannot and does not warrant that the information on this Web site is absolutely current, although every effort is made to ensure that it is kept as current as possible. Ecology cannot and does not warrant the accuracy of these documents beyond the source documents, although every attempt is made to work from authoritative sources. Links to related sites are provided as a courtesy, but Ecology is not responsible for their availability, content or policies.
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Classification of Aeronautics System Health and Safety Documents
data.nasa.gov | Last Updated 2020-01-29T01:57:57.000ZMost complex aerospace systems have many text reports on safety, maintenance, and associated issues. The Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) spans several decades and contains over 700 000 reports. The Aviation Safety Action Plan (ASAP) contains over 12 000 reports from various airlines. Problem categorizations have been developed for both ASRS and ASAP to enable identification of system problems. However, repository volume and complexity make human analysis difficult. Multiple experts are needed, and they often disagree on classifications. Even the same person has classified the same document differently at different times due to evolving experiences. Consistent classification is necessary to support tracking trends in problem categories over time. A decision support system that performs consistent document classification quickly and over large repositories would be useful. We discuss the results of two algorithms we have developed to classify ASRS and ASAP documents. The first is Mariana---a support vector machine (SVM) with simulated annealing, which is used to optimize hyperparameters for the model. The second method is classification built on top of nonnegative matrix factorization (NMF), which attempts to find a model that represents document features that add up in various combinations to form documents. We tested both methods on ASRS and ASAP documents with the latter categorized two different ways. We illustrate the potential of NMF to provide document features that are interpretable and indicative of topics. We also briefly discuss the tool that we have incorporated Mariana into in order to allow human experts to provide feedback on the document categorizations.