PROBDIST : probability distributions for modeling and simulation in the absence of data, Part B - Executable program

1990 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Crovelli ◽  
Richard H. Balay
Author(s):  
Hamid Khayyam ◽  
Abbas Z. Kouzani ◽  
Hamid Abdi ◽  
Saeid Nahavandi

This paper presents a method that can be used to produce authentic highway height data using a set of probability distributions. A highway is considered as a complex road which can have any kind of possible geometrical variations. The presented method models highway heights by Rayleigh probabilistic distribution function. The proposed model is then used to produce a random road whose 3D representation is presented. The random roads generated using the proposed method can be used as input for vehicle modeling and simulation applications.


1997 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 197-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duncan Steel

AbstractWhilst lithopanspermia depends upon massive impacts occurring at a speed above some limit, the intact delivery of organic chemicals or other volatiles to a planet requires the impact speed to be below some other limit such that a significant fraction of that material escapes destruction. Thus the two opposite ends of the impact speed distributions are the regions of interest in the bioastronomical context, whereas much modelling work on impacts delivers, or makes use of, only the mean speed. Here the probability distributions of impact speeds upon Mars are calculated for (i) the orbital distribution of known asteroids; and (ii) the expected distribution of near-parabolic cometary orbits. It is found that cometary impacts are far more likely to eject rocks from Mars (over 99 percent of the cometary impacts are at speeds above 20 km/sec, but at most 5 percent of the asteroidal impacts); paradoxically, the objects impacting at speeds low enough to make organic/volatile survival possible (the asteroids) are those which are depleted in such species.


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