3,391 research outputs found
Greenstone belts: Their boundaries, surrounding rock terrains and interrelationships
Greenstone belts are an important part of the fragmented record of crustal evolution, representing samples of the magmatic activity that formed much of the Earth's crust. Most belts developed rapidly, in less than 100 Ma, leaving large gaps in the geological record. Surrounding terrains provide information on the context of greenstone belts. The effects of tectonic setting, structural geometry and evolution, associated plutonic activity and sedimentation are discussed
Damped Lyman alpha systems and disk galaxies: number density, column density distribution and gas density
We present a comparison between the observed properties of damped Lyman alpha
systems (DLAs) and the predictions of simple models for the evolution of
present day disk galaxies, including both low and high surface brightness
galaxies. We focus in particular on the number density, column density
distribution and gas density of DLAs, which have now been measured in
relatively large samples of absorbers. From the comparison we estimate the
contribution of present day disk galaxies to the population of DLAs, and how it
varies with redshift. Based on the differences between the models and the
observations, we also speculate on the nature of the fraction of DLAs which
apparently do not arise in disk galaxies.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted in MNRA
A mapping approach to synchronization in the "Zajfman trap". II: the observed bunch
We extend a recently introduced mapping model, which explains the bunching
phenomenon in an ion beam resonator for two ions [Geyer, Tannor, J. Phys. B 37
(2004) 73], to describe the dynamics of the whole ion bunch. We calculate the
time delay of the ions from a model of the bunch geometry and find that the
bunch takes on a spherical form at the turning points in the electrostatic
mirrors. From this condition we derive how the observed bunch length depends on
the experimental parameters. We give an interpretation of the criteria for the
existence of the bunch, which were derived from the experimental observations
by Pedersen et al [Pedersen etal, Phys. Rev. A 65 042704].Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures; added new section 5 and clarified text;
submitted to J. Phys.
Friedmann Equation for Brans Dicke Cosmology
In the context of Brans-Dicke scalar tensor theory of gravitation, the
cosmological Friedmann equation which relates the expansion rate of the
universe to the various fractions of energy density is analyzed rigorously. It
is shown that Brans-Dicke scalar tensor theory of gravitation brings a
negligible correction to the matter density component of Friedmann equation.
Besides, in addition to and in standard
Einstein cosmology, another density parameter, , is
expected by the theory. This implies that if is found to
be nonzero, data will favor this model instead of the standard Einstein
cosmological model with cosmological constant and will enable more accurate
predictions for the rate of change of Newtonian gravitational constant in the
future.Comment: minor reference change
A Force-Balanced Control Volume Finite Element Method for Multi-Phase Porous Media Flow Modelling
Dr D. Pavlidis would like to acknowledge the support from the following research grants: Innovate UK âOctopusâ, EPSRC âReactor Core-Structure Re-location Modelling for Severe Nuclear Accidentsâ) and Horizon 2020 âIn-Vessel Melt Retentionâ. Funding for Dr P. Salinas from ExxonMobil is gratefully acknowledged. Dr Z. Xie is supported by EPSRC âMulti-Scale Exploration of Multi-phase Physics in Flowsâ. Part funding for Prof Jackson under the TOTAL Chairs programme at Imperial College is also acknowledged. The authors would also like to acknowledge Mr Y. Debbabi for supplying analytic solutions.Peer reviewedPublisher PD
Home range and habitat use by Kemp's Ridley turtles in West-Central Florida
The Kemp's ridley turtle (Lepidochelys kempii) is an endangered species whose recovery depends in part on
the identification and protection of required habitats. We used radio and sonic telemetry on subadult Kemp's ridley
turtles to investigate home-range size and habitat use in the coastal waters of west-central Florida from 1994 to
1996. We tracked 9 turtles during May-August up to 70 days after release and fou.ld they occupied 5-30 km2 foraging
ranges. Compositional analyses indicated that turtles used rock outcroppings in their foraging ranges at a
significantly higher proportion than expected. based on availability within the study area. Additionally. turtles used
live bottom (e.g .âą sessile invertebrates) and green macroalgae habitats significantly more than seagrass habitat. Similar
studies are needed through'mt the Kemp's ridley turtles' range to investigate regional and stage-specific differences
in habitat use. which can then be used to conserve important foraging areas
Higher-order conservative interpolation between control-volume meshes: Application to advection and multiphase flow problems with dynamic mesh adaptivity
© 2016 .A general, higher-order, conservative and bounded interpolation for the dynamic and adaptive meshing of control-volume fields dual to continuous and discontinuous finite element representations is presented. Existing techniques such as node-wise interpolation are not conservative and do not readily generalise to discontinuous fields, whilst conservative methods such as Grandy interpolation are often too diffusive. The new method uses control-volume Galerkin projection to interpolate between control-volume fields. Bounded solutions are ensured by using a post-interpolation diffusive correction. Example applications of the method to interface capturing during advection and also to the modelling of multiphase porous media flow are presented to demonstrate the generality and robustness of the approach
The Archean crust in the Wawa-Chapleau-Timmins region. A field guidebook prepared for the 1983 Archean Geochemistry-Early Crustal Genesis Field Conference
This guidebook describes the characteristics and interrelationships of Archean greenstone-granite and high-grade gneiss terrains of the Superior Province. A 300-km long west to east transect between Wawa and Timmins, Ontario will be used to illustrate regional-scale relationships. The major geological features of the Superior Province are described
Predictability sieve, pointer states, and the classicality of quantum trajectories
We study various measures of classicality of the states of open quantum
systems subject to decoherence. Classical states are expected to be stable in
spite of decoherence, and are thought to leave conspicuous imprints on the
environment. Here these expected features of environment-induced superselection
(einselection) are quantified using four different criteria: predictability
sieve (which selects states that produce least entropy), purification time
(which looks for states that are the easiest to find out from the imprint they
leave on the environment), efficiency threshold (which finds states that can be
deduced from measurements on a smallest fraction of the environment), and
purity loss time (that looks for states for which it takes the longest to lose
a set fraction of their initial purity). We show that when pointer states --
the most predictable states of an open quantum system selected by the
predictability sieve -- are well defined, all four criteria agree that they are
indeed the most classical states. We illustrate this with two examples: an
underdamped harmonic oscillator, for which coherent states are unanimously
chosen by all criteria, and a free particle undergoing quantum Brownian motion,
for which most criteria select almost identical Gaussian states (although, in
this case, predictability sieve does not select well defined pointer states.)Comment: 10 pages, 13 figure
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