65 research outputs found

    Tide Predictions Using Satellite Constituents

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    Conventional harmonic tide predictions for the last century have used/factors to modify the amplitudes of lunar constituents and u's to correct the constituent equilibrium phases (V0) as a means of approximating for a given period (one year or less) the effect of the 18.61 year cycle of the revolution of the moon’s node. Historically, there was little choice; friction in geared mechanical tidepredicting machines imposed finite limits on the number of constituents used. Doodson (1921) clearly identified and evaluated satellite constituents; his study was updated using the latest astronomical constants by Cartwright and Tayler (1971) and by Cartwright and Edden (1973). Nevertheless, satellite constituents, now readily usable on modern computers, have not been used for tide predictions. As a result, predictions have really been quasi-harmonic, requiring modifying amplitudes and phases periodically, at present every year for U.S. predictions, every two months for Canadian, and every 30 days for U.K. predictions. With satellite constituents, nineteen years of hourly tide predictions for Seattle (1921-1939) were computed from initial settings for 1 January 1921. It was not to be expected that the accuracy of harmonic tide predictions would be improved significantly by the new procedure; comparisons of annual residual variances for predictions by U.S. and Canadian procedures indicate that any improvements are small. Nevertheless, this new method removes the need for rather contrived (however clever) procedures, in particular that of constituents modifying M1 and L2 by cycles per 8.85 years (revolution of lunar perigee) in the f and u corrections for these constituents

    Methods for removal of unwanted signals from gravity time-series : comparison using linear techniques complemented with analysis of system dynamics

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    We thanks the participants of the 35th General Assembly of the European Seismological Commission for comments on preliminary results. The authors are grateful to all IGETS contributors, particularly to the station operators and to ISDC/GFZ-Potsdam for providing the original gravity data used in this study. We also thank the developers of ATLANTIDA3.1 and UTide. Part of this work was performed using the ICSMB High Performance Computing Cluster, University of Aberdeen. We also thanks M. Thiel and A. Moura for reviewing a preliminary version and making comments on the methods section and M.A. Ara´ujo for comments on Lyapunov exponents. Funding: A. Valencio is supported by CNPq, Brazil [206246/2014-5]; and received a travel grant from the School of Natural and Computing Sciences, University of Aberdeen [PO2073498], for a presentation including preliminary results.Peer reviewedPostprintPublisher PD

    Persistent Hyperdopaminergia Decreases the Peak Frequency of Hippocampal Theta Oscillations during Quiet Waking and REM Sleep

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    Long-term changes in dopaminergic signaling are thought to underlie the pathophysiology of a number of psychiatric disorders. Several conditions are associated with cognitive deficits such as disturbances in attention processes and learning and memory, suggesting that persistent changes in dopaminergic signaling may alter neural mechanisms underlying these processes. Dopamine transporter knockout (DAT-KO) mice exhibit a persistent five-fold increase in extracellular dopamine levels. Here, we demonstrate that DAT-KO mice display lower hippocampal theta oscillation frequencies during baseline periods of waking and rapid-eye movement sleep. These altered theta oscillations are not reversed via treatment with the antidopaminergic agent haloperidol. Thus, we propose that persistent hyperdopaminergia, together with secondary alterations in other neuromodulatory systems, results in lower frequency activity in neural systems responsible for various cognitive processes

    Geographic variation in plant community structure of salt marshes: species, functional and phylogenetic perspectives.

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    In general, community similarity is thought to decay with distance; however, this view may be complicated by the relative roles of different ecological processes at different geographical scales, and by the compositional perspective (e.g. species, functional group and phylogenetic lineage) used. Coastal salt marshes are widely distributed worldwide, but no studies have explicitly examined variation in salt marsh plant community composition across geographical scales, and from species, functional and phylogenetic perspectives. Based on studies in other ecosystems, we hypothesized that, in coastal salt marshes, community turnover would be more rapid at local versus larger geographical scales; and that community turnover patterns would diverge among compositional perspectives, with a greater distance decay at the species level than at the functional or phylogenetic levels. We tested these hypotheses in salt marshes of two regions: The southern Atlantic and Gulf Coasts of the United States. We examined the characteristics of plant community composition at each salt marsh site, how community similarity decayed with distance within individual salt marshes versus among sites in each region, and how community similarity differed among regions, using species, functional and phylogenetic perspectives. We found that results from the three compositional perspectives generally showed similar patterns: there was strong variation in community composition within individual salt marsh sites across elevation; in contrast, community similarity decayed with distance four to five orders of magnitude more slowly across sites within each region. Overall, community dissimilarity of salt marshes was lowest on the southern Atlantic Coast, intermediate on the Gulf Coast, and highest between the two regions. Our results indicated that local gradients are relatively more important than regional processes in structuring coastal salt marsh communities. Our results also suggested that in ecosystems with low species diversity, functional and phylogenetic approaches may not provide additional insight over a species-based approach

    Some Comparative Tests of Tidal Analytical Processes

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    Tests have been conducted on five analytical processes and the results have been examined by statistical and power spectral techniques. Tide observations at Atlantic City (small range and large low-frequency noise), Swansea (large range and noise primarily in tidal frequencies), and San Francisco (small range and moderate low frequency noise) were used in the study. Residuals were obtained by subtracting the predicted hourly heights from observations and were evaluated for total energy (variance) and energy per frequency band. The latter calculation was found to be useful in comparing residual energy for particular portions of the frequency spectrum
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