COMPUTER SOFTWARE
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Geoscience Australia's World Wind Viewer is an application developed using NASA's World Wind Java Software Development Kit (SDK) to display Australia's continental data sets. The viewer allows you to compare national data sets such as the radioelements, the gravity and magnetic anomalies, and other mapping layers, and show the data draped over the Australian terrain in three dimensions.
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Program PRINSAS (PRocessing and INterpretation of Small Angle Scattering data) takes raw SANS, SAXS, USANS and USAXS data, stores the data, and allows the user to further process and interpret the data. Although any small angle scattering data can be accepted, PRINSAS has been specifically designed for the processing and interpretation of SAS data for rocks and other media with a wide distribution of scatterer sizes.
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Program PRINSAS (PRocessing and INterpretation of Small Angle Scattering data) takes raw SANS, SAXS, USANS and USAXS data, stores the data, and allows the user to further process and interpret the data. Although any small angle scattering data can be accepted, PRINSAS has been specifically designed for the processing and interpretation of SAS data for rocks and other media with a wide distribution of scatterer sizes.
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RICS (Rapid Inventory Collection System) is a vehicular data collection system. It collects geo-tagged imagery and user added property damage-level information. The system consists of Ethernet cameras, tripods, circuitry and the RICS software that runs on a laptop. It was successfully deployed following the 2009 Victorian Bushfires, the 2010 Kalgoorlie and Christchurch Earthquakes, the 2011 Brisbane floods and TC Yassi.
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The Quick Attribute Calculator v.1.0 is a toolbar developed for use with ArcGIS 9.3 on Windows XP. It enables a user to select an attribute from a drop-down list and change the value of a sub-set for bulk updates.
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Geoscience Australia and the ANU Mathematical Science Institute have developed a new modelling tool called ANUGA for simulation of inundation and impact from hydrological disasters. The capability is based on a sophisticated mathematical model initially developed at the ANU and implemented to production standard at GA. It can model the process of wetting and drying as water enters a coastal community; it can model arbitrary geometries; it has unprecedented accuracy and it has a novel and easy-to-use interface
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No abstract available
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Turned off due to lack of metadata, custodian and product is un-locatable
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This software supports GeoSCiML and was developed by GA and is called Fullmoon. This software will hosted on CSIRO's SEEGRID Site.
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This relates to the release of ANUGA as open-source software. No abstract required. See http://sourceforge.net/projects/anuga/