8,029 research outputs found
A prototype system for observing the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation - scientific basis, measurement and risk mitigation strategies, and first results
The Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (MOC) carries up to one quarter of the global northward heat transport in the Subtropical North Atlantic. A system monitoring the strength of the MOC volume transport has been operating since April 2004. The core of this system is an array of moored sensors measuring density, bottom pressure and ocean currents. A strategy to mitigate risks of possible partial failures of the array is presented, relying on backup and complementary measurements. The MOC is decomposed into five components, making use of the continuous moored observations, and of cable measurements across the Straits of Florida, and wind stress data. The components compensate for each other, indicating that the system is working reliably. The year-long average strength of the MOC is 18.7Ā±5.6 Sv, with wind-driven and density-inferred transports contributing equally to the variability. Numerical simulations suggest that the surprisingly fast density changes at the western boundary are partially linked to westward propagating planetary wave
Measurement of the B0s Lifetime in the Flavor-Specific Decay Channel B0sāDāsĪ¼+Ī½X
We present an updated measurement of the B0s lifetime using the semileptonic decays B0sāDāsĪ¼+Ī½X, with DāsāĻĻā and ĻāK+Kā (and the charge conjugate process). This measurement uses the full Tevatron Run II sample of proton-antiproton collisions at sā=1.96āāTeV, comprising an integrated luminosity of 10.4āāfbā1. We find a flavor-specific lifetime Ļfs(B0s)=1.479Ā±0.010(stat)Ā±0.021(syst)āāps. This technique is also used to determine the B0 lifetime using the analogous B0āDāĪ¼+Ī½X decay with DāāĻĻā and ĻāK+Kā, yielding Ļ(B0)=1.534Ā±0.019(stat)Ā±0.021(syst)āāps. Both measurements are consistent with the current world averages, and the B0s lifetime measurement is one of the most precise to date. Taking advantage of the cancellation of systematic uncertainties, we determine the lifetime ratio Ļfs(B0s)/Ļ(B0)=0.964Ā±0.013(stat)Ā±0.007(syst)
Using Argo data to investigate the Meridional Overturning Circulation in the North Atlantic
Author Posting. Ā© The Author(s), 2009. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier B.V. for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Deep Sea Research Part I: Oceanographic Research Papers 57 (2010): 29-36, doi:10.1016/j.dsr.2009.10.003.Using a variety of oceanographic data, including direct volume transports in the Florida
19 Strait, and Argo float profiles and drift velocities at 24 and 36N in the North Atlantic, inverse
calculations are presented in which the net meridional transport, 20 down to a depth of
approximately 1600 m, is estimated at both latitudes for a five year period 2003-2007. The
upper ocean is divided into 7 layers using neutral density, and mass conservation constraints
have been applied to a closed box bounded by these latitudes, including the Florida Strait.
Ekman layer transports have been included in the top-most layer, and the inverse
calculation has solved for changes from the initial reference velocities, Ekman and Florida
Strait transports, given a priori estimates on the accuracy of each of these quantities.
Solutions with and without transformations due to Mediterranean Water (MW) formation
are made. Our results indicate that 1) time-averaged transport estimates derived from Argo
have significant less eddy noise than individual hydrographic sections, 2) Argo drift velocities
provide information to the inverse solution for the ocean interior, and 3) comparison of the
total integrated interior mass transports in the thermocline waters for the period 2003-2007
with the previous estimates based on trans-ocean hydrographic sections shows that the
Meridional Overturning Circulation has not significantly changed since 1957.TJ would like to
acknowledge support from NSF Grant OCE-0241354 and NOAA/CICOR grant NA17RJ1223
Interannual variability of the South Atlantic Ocean heat content in a high-resolution versus a low-resolution general circulation model
High- and low-resolution coupled climate model simulations are analyzed to investigate the impact of model resolution on South Atlantic Ocean Heat Content (OHC) variability at interannual time scale and the associated physical mechanisms. In both models, ocean heat transport convergence is the main driver of OHC variability on interannual time scales. However, the origin of the meridional heat transport (MHT) convergence anomalies differs in the two models. In the high-resolution model, OHC variability is dominated by MHT from the south. This is in contrast to the low-resolution model, where OHC variability is largely controlled by MHT from the north. In the low-resolution simulation, both the Ekman and geostrophic transports contribute to the OHC variability, whereas in the high-resolution model, the geostrophic transport dominates. These differences highlight the importance of model resolution to appropriately represent ocean dynamics in the South Atlantic Ocean and associated impacts on regional and global climate. Ā© 2020. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved
Performance of an Operating High Energy Physics Data Grid: D0SAR-Grid
The D0 experiment at Fermilab's Tevatron will record several petabytes of
data over the next five years in pursuing the goals of understanding nature and
searching for the origin of mass. Computing resources required to analyze these
data far exceed capabilities of any one institution. Moreover, the widely
scattered geographical distribution of D0 collaborators poses further serious
difficulties for optimal use of human and computing resources. These
difficulties will exacerbate in future high energy physics experiments, like
the LHC. The computing grid has long been recognized as a solution to these
problems. This technology is being made a more immediate reality to end users
in D0 by developing a grid in the D0 Southern Analysis Region (D0SAR),
D0SAR-Grid, using all available resources within it and a home-grown local task
manager, McFarm. We will present the architecture in which the D0SAR-Grid is
implemented, the use of technology and the functionality of the grid, and the
experience from operating the grid in simulation, reprocessing and data
analyses for a currently running HEP experiment.Comment: 3 pages, no figures, conference proceedings of DPF04 tal
The present and future system for measuring the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation and heat transport
of the global combined atmosphere-ocean heat flux and
so is important for the mean climate of the Atlantic
sector of the Northern Hemisphere. This meridional heat
flux is accomplished by both the Atlantic Meridional
Overturning Circulation (AMOC) and by basin-wide
horizontal gyre circulations. In the North Atlantic
subtropical latitudes the AMOC dominates the meridional heat flux, while in subpolar latitudes and in the subtropical South Atlantic the gyre circulations are
also important. Climate models suggest the AMOC will
slow over the coming decades as the earth warms, causing widespread cooling in the Northern hemisphere and additional sea-level rise. Monitoring systems for selected components of the AMOC have been in place in some areas for decades, nevertheless the present observational network provides only a partial view of the AMOC, and does not unambiguously resolve the full variability of the circulation. Additional observations, building on existing measurements, are required to more completely quantify the Atlantic meridional heat transport. A basin-wide monitoring
array along 26.5Ā°N has been continuously measuring the strength and vertical structure of the AMOC and meridional heat transport since March 31, 2004. The array has demonstrated its ability to observe the AMOC variability at that latitude and also a variety of surprising variability that will require substantially longer time series to understand fully. Here we propose monitoring the Atlantic meridional heat transport throughout the Atlantic at selected critical latitudes that have already been identified as regions of interest for the study of deep water formation and the strength of the subpolar gyre, transport variability of the Deep Western Boundary Current (DWBC) as well as the upper limb of the AMOC, and inter-ocean and intrabasin exchanges with the ultimate goal of determining regional and global controls for the AMOC in the North and South Atlantic Oceans. These new arrays will
continuously measure the full depth, basin-wide or choke-point circulation and heat transport at a number
of latitudes, to establish the dynamics and variability at
each latitude and then their meridional connectivity.
Modeling studies indicate that adaptations of the 26.5Ā°N
type of array may provide successful AMOC monitoring at other latitudes. However, further analysis and the development of new technologies will be needed to optimize cost effective systems for providing long term monitoring and data recovery at climate time scales. These arrays will provide benchmark observations of the AMOC that are fundamental for assimilation, initialization, and the verification of coupled hindcast/forecast climate models
Search for minimal supergravity in single-electron events with jets and large missing transverse energy in pp-bar collisions at sā=1.8TeV
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.66.112001.We describe a search for evidence of minimal supergravity (MSUGRA) in 92.7pb(-1) of data collected with the DĆ detector at the Fermilab Tevatron pp-bar collider at sā=1.8TeV. Events with a single electron, four or more jets, and large missing transverse energy were used in this search. The major backgrounds are from W+jets, misidentified multijet, tt-bar, and WW production. We observe no excess above the expected number of background events in our data. A new limit in terms of MSUGRA model parameters is obtained
Mixing and entrainment in the Red Sea outflow plume. Part I : plume structure
Author Posting. Ā© American Meteorological Society, 2005. This article is posted here by permission of American Meteorological Society for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Physical Oceanography 35 (2005): 569ā583, doi:10.1175/JPO2679.1.When the salty and heavy water of the Red Sea exits from the Strait of Bab el Mandeb, it continues downslope into the Gulf of Aden mainly along two channels. The 130-km-long āNorthern Channelā (NC) is topographically confined and is typically only 5 km wide. In it, the Red Sea plume shows unanticipated patterns of vertical structure, turbulent mixing, and entrainment. Above the seafloor a 25ā120-m-thick weakly stratified layer shows little dilution along the channel. Hence this bottom layer undergoes only weak entrainment. In contrast, a 35ā285-m-thick interfacial layer shows stronger entrainment and is shown in a companion paper to undergo vigorous turbulent mixing. It is thus the interface that exhibits the bulk of entrainment of the Red Sea plume in the NC. The interfacial layer also carries most of the overall plume transport, increasingly so with downstream distance. The āSouthern Channelā (SC) is wider than the NC and is accessed from the latter by a sill about 33 m above the floor of the NC. Entrainment into the bottom layer of the SC is diagnosed to be strong near the entry into the SC such that the near-bottom density and salinity are smaller in the SC than in the NC at the same distance from Bab el Mandeb. In comparison with winter conditions, the authors encountered weaker outflow with shallower equilibration depths during the summer cruise. Bulk Froude numbers computed for the whole plume varied within the range 0.2ā1. Local maxima occurred in relatively steep channel sections and coincided with locations of significant entrainment.The Red Sea Outflow Experiment
was funded by the National Science Foundation
under Contracts OCE-9819506 and OCE-9818464. Additional
support was provided to the āClimate Process
Team Gravity Currentsā under OCE-0336799
Measurement of the top quark mass in the lepton+jets channel using the ideogram method
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://journals.aps.org/prd/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevD.75.092001
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