Search Results - (Author, Cooperation:R. R. Rogers)
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1D. W. Krause ; S. Hoffmann ; J. R. Wible ; E. C. Kirk ; J. A. Schultz ; W. von Koenigswald ; J. R. Groenke ; J. B. Rossie ; P. M. O'Connor ; E. R. Seiffert ; E. R. Dumont ; W. L. Holloway ; R. R. Rogers ; L. J. Rahantarisoa ; A. D. Kemp ; H. Andriamialison
Nature Publishing Group (NPG)
Published 2014Staff ViewPublication Date: 2014-11-11Publisher: Nature Publishing Group (NPG)Print ISSN: 0028-0836Electronic ISSN: 1476-4687Topics: BiologyChemistry and PharmacologyMedicineNatural Sciences in GeneralPhysicsKeywords: Animals ; *Fossils ; Herbivory ; *Mammals ; Mosaicism ; *Phylogeny ; Skull/*anatomy & histology ; Species Specificity ; Tooth/anatomy & histologyPublished by: -
2Rogers, R. R. ; Cohn, S. A. ; Ecklund, W. L. ; Wilson, J. S. ; Carter, D. A.
Springer
Published 1994Staff ViewISSN: 0992-7689Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: GeosciencesPhysicsNotes: Abstract Since May 1992 a small, 915-MHz profiler has been operated continuously in downtown Montreal. It is a five-beam system employing a microstrip array antenna, located atop a 14-story office building that houses several academic departments of McGill University. The data are used for research on precipitation physics and the clear-air reflectivity in addition to wind profiling. We are especially interested in situations in which the reflectivities of the clear air and the precipitation are comparable. This permits the study of interactions between the precipitation and the clear air, a new area of research made possible by wind profilers. On clear days in the summer, 30-min consensus winds can often be measured to an altitude of 3 km, but ground clutter in the antenna sidelobes interferes with measurements below 600 m. Rain when present often permits wind profiling down to 100 m and up to 6 km or higher. On cold winter days there are some periods when the reflectivity is too weak at all levels to permit wind estimation. Falling snow, however, provides readily detectable echoes and serves as a good tracer of the wind and so allows profiling over its full altitude extent. The best conditions for observing interactions between precipitation and the clear air are when light rain falls through a reflective layer associated with a frontal surface or inversion. Unexpectedly, flocks of migrating birds sometimes completely dominate the signal at night in the spring and fall seasons.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
3Staff View
ISSN: 1436-5065Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: GeographyPhysicsNotes: Summary A wind‐profiling Doppler radar equipped with a radio acoustic sounding system (RASS) may be used to estimate the vertical profile of the vertical flux of heat in the atmosphere. Simultaneous measurements of the time‐varying temperature and vertical air velocity are combined to give the convective heat flux using the eddy‐correlation method. The accuracy of the estimates depends on the fundamental accuracy of the temperature and vertical velocity measurements. Also, in common with all eddy‐correlation methods, uncertainties are introduced by the need to define a suitable averaging time and to remove trends. A problem unique to RASS is the possible presence of ground and intermittent clutter at close ranges, which can cause errors in the vertical air velocity measurements. These considerations are discussed with particular reference to observations using a UHF radar wind profiler situated in an urban environment, where clutter is a serious problem. A Rank‐Order Signal Processing Algorithm (ROSPA) for recognizing and eliminating outliers in the vertical velocity, is introduced. It is explained how ROSPA uses both a minimum filter and a median filter on the velocity data. It is shown, using a comparison with nearly clutter free data from a rural site, that the filtering substantially improves the quality of the noisy urban data. The paper then compares RASS‐measured urban and rural heat flux profiles, along with the heat flux profile measured by an instrumented airplane. It is concluded that the main obstacles to RASS heat flux measurements are the effects of winds and turbulence in the boundary layer, rather than clutter.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
4Staff View
ISSN: 1420-9136Keywords: Radar weather echoes ; Reflectivity profiles of rain ; Rainfall statisticsSource: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000Topics: GeosciencesPhysicsNotes: Abstract A large sample of radar data from the period May–August 1976 was analyzed to provide information on the total areal coverage of precipitation echoes at 1-km steps in altitude ranging from 2 km up to 10 km. A transformation based on known statistics of surface rainfall rate was employed to express this information in terms of the probability of certain reflectivities being exceeded at a randomly chosen point at a given altitude. The same data base was used to construct a family of average vertical profiles of precipitation reflectivity. The profiles were conditioned by the reflectivity value at the lowest level (2 km), thus providing a basis for estimating the reflectivity aloft, given the low level or surface rainfall rate. Analyses of this kind have been reported for other geographical locations and for a variety of applications, such as hydrology, rain effects on earth-space radio propagation, and precipitation modeling. Similarities in the results from these two quite different analysis procedures, possibly not hitherto recognized, were found in the present study.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
5Smialowicz, R. J. ; Rogers, R. R. ; Garner, R. J. ; Riddle, M. M. ; Luebke, R. W. ; Rowe, D. G.
New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
Published 1983Staff ViewISSN: 0197-8462Keywords: 2,450 MHz ; microwaves ; natural killer cells ; macrophages ; mice ; lymphocytes ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Occupational Health and Environmental ToxicologySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: BiologyPhysicsNotes: The effect of 2,450-MHz CW microwaves on natural killer (NK) cell activity and lymphocyte responsiveness to mitogen stimulation was studied in mice. Groups of mice were irradiated at power densities of 5, 15, or 30 mW/cm2 (SAR = 3.5, 10.5, and 21 W/kg respectively) for 1.5 h on 2 or 9 consecutive days. NK cell activity was determined using an in vitro 51Cr release cytotoxicity assay and an in vivo tumor-cell clearance assay. No consistent change was observed in the mitogen response of spleen cells from sham compared with irradiated mice. A significant suppression of NK cell activity measured in vitro was observed for mice irradiated at 30 mW/cm2, but not at 15 or 5 mW/cm2. A significant suppression of NK cell activity, as determined using the in vivo tumor clearance assay, was also observed at 30 mW/cm2. NK cell activity, as determined using the in vitro assay, returned to normal within 24 h following the last irradiation. Treatment of mice with hydrocortisone caused suppression of NK cell activity measured in vitro and in vivo. Paradoxically, peritoneal macrophage phagocytosis was enhanced following irradiation at 30 mW/cm2, the power density at which NK activity was suppressed. The possible role that microwave heating plays in producing these effects is discussed.Additional Material: 2 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
6Smialowicz, R. J. ; Compton, K. L. ; Riddle, M. M. ; Rogers, R. R. ; Brugnolotti, P. L.
New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
Published 1980Staff ViewISSN: 0197-8462Keywords: endotoxin ; hypothermia ; rats ; 2450 MHz ; microwaves ; heating ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Occupational Health and Environmental ToxicologySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: BiologyPhysicsNotes: The parenteral administration of bacterial endotoxin to rats causes a hypothermia that is maximal after approximately 90 minutes. When endotoxin-injected rats were held in a controlled environment at 22°C and 50% relative humidity and exposed for 90 minutes to microwaves (2450 MHz, CW) at 1 mW/cm2, significant increases were observed in body temperature compared with endotoxintreated, sham-irradiated rats. The magnitude of the response was related to power density (10 mW/cm2 〉 5 mW/cm2 〉 1 mW/cm2). Saline-injected rats exposed for 90 minutes at 5 mW/cm2 (specific absorption rate approximately 1.0 mW/g) showed no significant increase in body temperature compared with saline-injected, sham-irradiated rats. The hypothermia induced by endotoxin in rats was also found to be affected by ambient temperature alone. Increases in ambient temperature above 22°C in the absence of microwaves caused a concomitant increase in body temperature. This study reveals that subtle microwave heating is detectable in endotoxin-treated rats that have an impaired thermoregulatory capability. These results indicate that the interpretation of microwave-induced biological effects observed in animals at comparable rates and levels of energy absorption should include a consideration of the thermogenic potential of microwaves.Additional Material: 4 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: -
7Smialowicz, R. J. ; Weil, C. M. ; Marsh, P. ; Riddle, M. M. ; Rogers, R. R. ; Rehnberg, B. F.
New York, NY [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
Published 1981Staff ViewISSN: 0197-8462Keywords: 970 MHz ; rats ; long-term exposure ; serum chemistry ; hematology ; lymphocytes ; Life and Medical Sciences ; Occupational Health and Environmental ToxicologySource: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000Topics: BiologyPhysicsNotes: Rats (N = 16) exposed individually in circularly polarized waveguides to 970-MHz electromagnetic radiation (SAR=2.5 mW/g, 22 h daily for 70 consecutive days) had significantly higher serum levels of triglycerides, albumin, and total protein compared with sham-irradiated controls. No difference was observed in the weights, hematologic profile, or in vitro lymphocyte responses to mitogens between these two groups. The higher serum levels of triglycerides in radiofrequency-radiation-exposed rats suggest a non-specific stress reaction.Additional Material: 1 Ill.Type of Medium: Electronic ResourceURL: