5,655 research outputs found
ECMWF - ten years of European meteorological co-operation.
An account is given of the objectives of the Centre which was formally established in 1975, its organization and control by the various countries that support it (the Member States), the forecasting model and data-assimilation system, the computer system, the schedule of operational forecasts, and the way the forecast products are disseminated. There has been a steady increase in forecast skill over the past six years with a corresponding increase in use of the products by the Member States, and further progress is expected. -Autho
Unveiling the origin of shape coexistence in lead isotopes
The shape coexistence in the nuclei Pb is analyzed within the
Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov approach with the effective Gogny force. A good
agreement with the experimental energies is found for the coexisting spherical,
oblate and prolate states. Contrary to the established interpretation, it is
found that the low-lying prolate and oblate states observed in this mass
region are predominantly characterized by neutron correlations whereas the
protons behave as spectators rather than playing an active role.Comment: 5 pages, 6 postscript figure
TarTar: A Timed Automata Repair Tool
We present TarTar, an automatic repair analysis tool that, given a timed
diagnostic trace (TDT) obtained during the model checking of a timed automaton
model, suggests possible syntactic repairs of the analyzed model. The suggested
repairs include modified values for clock bounds in location invariants and
transition guards, adding or removing clock resets, etc. The proposed repairs
are guaranteed to eliminate executability of the given TDT, while preserving
the overall functional behavior of the system. We give insights into the design
and architecture of TarTar, and show that it can successfully repair 69% of the
seeded errors in system models taken from a diverse suite of case studies.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figure
Prediction of a typhoon using a fine-mesh NWP model.
The ECMWF operational grid point model (with a resolution of 1.875o of latitude and longitude) and its limited area version (with a resolution of approximately 0.47o of latitude and longitude) with boundary values from the global model have been used to study the simulation of the typhoon Tip. The fine-mesh model was capable of simulating the main structural features of the typhoon and predicting a fall in central pressure of 60 mb in 3 days. The structure of the forecast typhoon, with a warm core (maximum potential temperature anomaly 17 K), intense swirling wind (maximum 55 m s-1 at 850 mb) and spiralling precipitation patterns is characteristic of a tropical cyclone. -from Author
A study of separability criteria for mixed three-qubit states
We study the noisy GHZ-W mixture. We demonstrate some necessary but not
sufficient criteria for different classes of separability of these states. It
turns out that the partial transposition criterion of Peres and the criteria of
G\"uhne and Seevinck dealing with matrix elements are the strongest ones for
different separability classes of this 2 parameter state. As a new result we
determine a set of entangled states of positive partial transpose.Comment: 18 pages, 10 figures, PRA styl
Causal structure and degenerate phase boundaries
Timelike and null hypersurfaces in the degenerate space-times in the Ashtekar
theory are defined in the light of the degenerate causal structure proposed by
Matschull. Using the new definition of null hypersufaces, the conjecture that
the "phase boundary" separating the degenerate space-time region from the
non-degenerate one in Ashtekar's gravity is always null is proved under certain
circumstances.Comment: 13 pages, Revte
Dipolar particles in a double-trap confinement: Response to tilting the dipolar orientation
We analyze the microscopic few-body properties of dipolar particles confined
in two parallel quasi-one-dimensional harmonic traps. In particular, we show
that an adiabatic rotation of the dipole orientation about the trap axes can
drive an initially non-localized few-fermion state into a localized state with
strong inter-trap pairing. For an instant, non-adiabatic rotation, however,
localization is inhibited and a highly excited state is reached. This state may
be interpreted as the few-body analog of a super-Tonks-Girardeau state, known
from one-dimensional systems with contact interactions
A trick for passing degenerate points in Ashtekar formulation
We examine one of the advantages of Ashtekar's formulation of general
relativity: a tractability of degenerate points from the point of view of
following the dynamics of classical spacetime. Assuming that all dynamical
variables are finite, we conclude that an essential trick for such a continuous
evolution is in complexifying variables. In order to restrict the complex
region locally, we propose some `reality recovering' conditions on spacetime.
Using a degenerate solution derived by pull-back technique, and integrating the
dynamical equations numerically, we show that this idea works in an actual
dynamical problem. We also discuss some features of these applications.Comment: 9 pages by RevTeX or 16 pages by LaTeX, 3 eps figures and epsf-style
file are include
Stratospheric climate and variability from a general circulation model and observations. Part II: Results for March-May, June-August and September-November.
The climate and natural variability of the large-scale stratospheric circulation simulated by a newly developed general circulation model are evaluated against available global observations. The simulation consisted of a 30-year annual cycle integration performed with a comprehensive model of the troposphere and stratosphere. The observations consisted of a 15-year dataset from global operational analyses of the troposphere and stratosphere. The model evaluation concentrates on the simulation of the evolution of the extratropical stratospheric circulation in both hemispheres. The December-February climatology of the observed zonal mean winter circulation is found to be reasonably well captured by the model, although in the Northern Hemisphere upper stratosphere the simulated westerly winds are systematically stronger and a cold bias is apparent in the polar stratosphere. This Northern Hemisphere stratospheric cold bias virtually disappears during spring (March-May), consistent with a realistic simulation of the spring weakening of the mean westerly winds in the model. A considerable amount of monthly interannual variability is also found in the simulation in the Northern Hemisphere in late winter and early spring. The simulated interannual variability is predominantly caused by polar warmings of the stratosphere, in agreement with observations. The breakdown of the Northern Hemisphere stratospheric polar vortex appears therefore to occur in a realistic way in the model. However, in early winter the model severely underestimates the interannual variability, especially in the upper troposphere. The Southern Hemisphere winter (June-August) zonal mean temperature is systematically colder in the model, and the simulated winds are somewhat too strong in the upper stratosphere. Contrary to the results for the Northern Hemisphere spring, this model cold bias worsens during the Southern Hemisphere spring (September-November). Significant discrepancies between the model results and the observations are therefore found during the breakdown of the Southern Hemisphere polar vortex. For instance, the simulated Southern Hemisphere stratospheric westerly jet continuously decreases in intensity more or less in situ from June to November, while the observed stratospheric jet moves downward and poleward
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