5,401 research outputs found
Metamorphism and plutonism in the Quetico Belt, Superior Province, N.W. Ontario
The Quetico Belt lies between the metavolcanic Wawa-Shebandowan and Wabigoon Belts. It consists of marginal metasedimentary rocks and central pelitic, gneissic and plutonic rocks. Metamorphism is Barrovian, at depths less than 10 km, and grade increases from margins to core of the belt: the outermost pelites are at chlorite-muscovite grade; inward a garnet-andalusite zone formed throughout the inner margin; and the central zone ranges form garnet-andalusite in the west and garnet-sillimanite-muscovite to garnet-sillimanite-cordierite and rare kyanite 6 to 150 km to the east. This increase is correlated with granitic intrusives. Migmatites in the core have intrusive leucosomes in the west and locally derived ones in the east. Isograd surfaces are steep where the belt is narrow and dip gently where it is wide. The Quetico Park intrusive complex of the central region of the Quetico Belt shows a zonation across it 20 to 50 km width from older, medium grained biotite composition to younger, coarse to pegmatitic granitic composition. Sediment of the Quetico basin had its source in the bordering metavolcanic belts and was deposited ca. 2.75 to 2.70 Ga ago. Boundaries of the belt dip inward, so it essentially is a graben of inter-arc or back-arc type
Accretionary origin for the late Archean Ashuanipi Complex of Canada
The Ashuanipi complex is one of the largest massif granulite terrains of the Canadian Shield. It makes up the eastern end of the 2000 km long, lower-grade, east-west belts of the Archean Superior Province, permitting lithological, age and tectonic correlation. Numerous lithological, geochemical and metamorphic similarities to south Indian granulites suggest common processes and invite comparison of tectonic evolution. The Ashuanipi granulite terrain of the Cannadian Superior Province was studied in detail, and an origin through self-melting of a 55 km thick accretionary wedge seems possible
Fourier analysis of luminosity-dependent galaxy clustering
We extend the Fourier transform based method for the analysis of galaxy
redshift surveys of Feldman, Kaiser & Peacock (1994: FKP) to model
luminosity-dependent clustering. In a magnitude limited survey, galaxies at
high redshift are more luminous on average than galaxies at low redshift.
Galaxy clustering is observed to increase with luminosity, so the inferred
density field is effectively multiplied by an increasing function of radius.
This has the potential to distort the shape of the recovered power spectrum. In
this paper we present an extension of the FKP analysis method to incorporate
this effect, and present revised optimal weights to maximize the precision of
such an analysis. The method is tested and its accuracy assessed using mock
catalogues of the 2-degree field galaxy redshift survey (2dFGRS). We also show
that the systematic effect caused by ignoring luminosity-dependent bias was
negligible for the initial analysis of the 2dFGRS of Percival et al. (2001).
However, future surveys, sensitive to larger scales, or covering a wider range
of galaxy luminosities will benefit from this refined method.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
An analytic model for the epoch of halo creation
In this paper we describe the Bayesian link between the cosmological mass
function and the distribution of times at which isolated halos of a given mass
exist. By assuming that clumps of dark matter undergo monotonic growth on the
time-scales of interest, this distribution of times is also the distribution of
`creation' times of the halos. This monotonic growth is an inevitable aspect of
gravitational instability. The spherical top-hat collapse model is used to
estimate the rate at which clumps of dark matter collapse. This gives the prior
for the creation time given no information about halo mass. Applying Bayes'
theorem then allows any mass function to be converted into a distribution of
times at which halos of a given mass are created. This general result covers
both Gaussian and non-Gaussian models. We also demonstrate how the mass
function and the creation time distribution can be combined to give a joint
density function, and discuss the relation between the time distribution of
major merger events and the formula calculated. Finally, we determine the
creation time of halos within three N-body simulations, and compare the link
between the mass function and creation rate with the analytic theory.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, submitted to MNRA
Quantum state diffusion with a moving basis: computing quantum-optical spectra
Quantum state diffusion (QSD) as a tool to solve quantum-optical master
equations by stochastic simulation can be made several orders of magnitude more
efficient if states in Hilbert space are represented in a moving basis of
excited coherent states. The large savings in computer memory and time are due
to the localization property of the QSD equation. We show how the method can be
used to compute spectra and give an application to second harmonic generation.Comment: 8 pages in RevTeX, 1 uuencoded postscript figure, submitted to Phys.
Rev.
Age constraints on the evolution of the Quetico belt, Superior Province, Ontario
Much attention has been focused on the nature of Archean tectonic processes and the extent to which they were different from modern rigid-plate tectonics. The Archean Superior Province has linear metavolcanic and metasediment-dominated subprovinces of similar scale to cenozoic island arc-trench systems of the western Pacific, suggesting an origin by accreting arcs. Models of the evolution of metavolcanic belts in parts of the Superior Province suggest an arc setting but the tectonic environment and evolution of the intervening metasedimentary belts are poorly understood. In addition to explaining the setting giving rise to a linear sedimentary basin, models must account for subsequent shortening and high-temperature, low-pressure metamorphism. Correlation of rock units and events in adjacent metavolcanic and metasedimentary belts is a first step toward understanding large-scale crustal interactions. To this end, zircon geochronology has been applied to metavolcanic belts of the western Superior Province; new age data for the Quetico metasedimentary belt is reported, permitting correlation with the adjacent Wabigoon and Wawa metavolcanic subprovinces
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
Tunable Whispering Gallery Mode Resonators for Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics
We theoretically study the properties of highly prolate shaped dielectric
microresonators. Such resonators sustain whispering gallery modes that exhibit
two spatially well separated regions with enhanced field strength. The field
per photon on the resonator surface is significantly higher than e.g. for
equatorial whispering gallery modes in microsphere resonators with a comparable
mode volume. At the same time, the frequency spacing of these modes is much
more favorable, so that a tuning range of several free spectral ranges should
be attainable. We discuss the possible application of such resonators for
cavity quantum electrodynamics experiments with neutral atoms and reveal
distinct advantages with respect to existing concepts.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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