649 research outputs found
Complex seismic sources in volcanic environments: Radiation modelling and moment tensor inversions
Long period (LP) signals are special seismic events observed at volcanoes, which comprise both a high frequency onset due to brittle failure and a more energetic low frequency part due to resonance in a fluid-filled conduit. They are critical for volcano monitoring since they can be used as a volcanic forecasting tool. Classic seismology assumes planar faults for seismic sources; however, there is increasing evidence that suggests different fault shapes such as dyke faults and ring faults. We consider in this study narrow dykes and conduits rather than large calderas, hence, we model these complex sources by superposing vertical single double couple (DC) sources arranged along narrow fault structures with inner upward movement. We calculate seismic radiation patterns and synthetic seismograms for a rupture along a dyke, three different partial ring ruptures and a full-ring rupture. Results show that planar faults are the most effective at radiating energy. The more the source geometry deviates from a planar fault the smaller become the amplitudes and therefore the Moment Magnitudes. For example, the amplitudes decrease to 2.4% of the planar radiation for a full-ring rupture and to 0.7% for a dyke rupture. The waveforms produced by partial ring ruptures are in accordance to what is expected in the far field, representing the derivative of the source displacement and emulating radiation of a DC with different azimuths; however, the dyke and full-ring sources produce waveforms that appear to represent the second derivative of the source displacement and negative first onset polarisations. Moment Tensor Inversions support similarities between DC ruptures and partial ring ruptures; however, they show ambiguous solutions for the other sources. This point source assumption can lead to misinterpretations of slip history on the fault and a consistent underestimation of magnitudes which has direct implications for magma ascent estimations derived from seismic amplitudes
Analysis of magma flux and eruption intensity during the 2021 explosive activity at the Soufrière of St Vincent, West Indies
Seismic RSAM signals and eruption cloud height measurements were used to estimate peak intensities of 40 explosive events during the 8-22 April 2021 activity of the Soufrière volcano. We estimated magma supply rates and erupted volumes in each explosion, characterized uncertainty by stochastic modelling and identified four eruptive stages. Stage 1 included an intense period of 9.5 hours with 11 explosive events with peak eruption intensity between 2000 and 4000 m3/s and magma supply rate reaching 828 m3/s. 12 high intensity explosions (∼4000 m3/s) occurred in Stage 2 with average magma supply rate of 251 m3/s. Stage 3 involved declining intensity, magma supply rate and lengthening repose periods between explosions. Stage 4 involved 3 much weaker explosions. The total erupted volume of magma is estimated at 38.5 × 106 m3 (90% credible interval: [22.0 .. 61.9] × 106 m3) consistent with independent estimates from analysis of tephra deposits and volcano subsidence sourced at ∼6 km depth. The 150-fold increase in magma supply rate, from the preceding effusive phase to Stage 1 of the explosive phase, is attributed to replacement of very high viscosity degassed magma occupying the shallow conduit system with new lower viscosity volatile-rich magma from the magma chamber. Supplementary material at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.655800
Unbinned Deep Learning Jet Substructure Measurement in High ep collisions at HERA
The radiation pattern within high energy quark- and gluon-initiated jets (jet
substructure) is used extensively as a precision probe of the strong force as
well as an environment for optimizing event generators with numerous
applications in high energy particle and nuclear physics. Looking at
electron-proton collisions is of particular interest as many of the
complications present at hadron colliders are absent. A detailed study of
modern jet substructure observables, jet angularities, in electron-proton
collisions is presented using data recorded using the H1 detector at HERA. The
measurement is unbinned and multi-dimensional, using machine learning to
correct for detector effects. All of the available reconstructed object
information of the respective jets is interpreted by a graph neural network,
achieving superior precision on a selected set of jet angularities. Training
these networks was enabled by the use of a large number of GPUs in the
Perlmutter supercomputer at Berkeley Lab. The particle jets are reconstructed
in the laboratory frame, using the jet clustering algorithm.
Results are reported at high transverse momentum transfer GeV,
and inelasticity . The analysis is also performed in sub-regions
of , thus probing scale dependencies of the substructure variables. The
data are compared with a variety of predictions and point towards possible
improvements of such models.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures, 8 table
Impact of jet-production data on the next-to-next-to-leading-order determination of HERAPDF2.0 parton distributions
The HERAPDF2.0 ensemble of parton distribution functions (PDFs) was introduced in 2015. The final stage is presented, a next-to-next-to-leading-order (NNLO) analysis of the HERA data on inclusive deep inelastic ep scattering together with jet data as published by the H1 and ZEUS collaborations. A perturbative QCD fit, simultaneously of αs(M2Z) and the PDFs, was performed with the result αs(M2Z)=0.1156±0.0011 (exp) +0.0001−0.0002 (model +parameterisation) ±0.0029 (scale). The PDF sets of HERAPDF2.0Jets NNLO were determined with separate fits using two fixed values of αs(M2Z), αs(M2Z)=0.1155 and 0.118, since the latter value was already chosen for the published HERAPDF2.0 NNLO analysis based on HERA inclusive DIS data only. The different sets of PDFs are presented, evaluated and compared. The consistency of the PDFs determined with and without the jet data demonstrates the consistency of HERA inclusive and jet-production cross-section data. The inclusion of the jet data reduced the uncertainty on the gluon PDF. Predictions based on the PDFs of HERAPDF2.0Jets NNLO give an excellent description of the jet-production data used as input
Search for a common baryon source in high-multiplicity pp collisions at the LHC
We report on the measurement of the size of the particle-emitting source from two-baryon correlations with ALICE in high-multiplicity pp collisions at s=13 TeV. The source radius is studied with low relative momentum p–p, p‾–p‾, p–Λ, and p‾–Λ‾ pairs as a function of the pair transverse mass mT considering for the first time in a quantitative way the effect of strong resonance decays. After correcting for this effect, the radii extracted for pairs of different particle species agree. This indicates that protons, antiprotons, Λ s, and Λ‾ s originate from the same source. Within the measured mT range (1.1–2.2) GeV/c2the invariant radius of this common source varies between 1.3 and 0.85 fm. These results provide a precise reference for studies of the strong hadron–hadron interactions and for the investigation of collective properties in small colliding systems. © 2020 CERN for the benefit of the ALICE CollaborationPeer reviewe
Long- and short-range correlations and their event-scale dependence in high-multiplicity pp collisions at 1as = 13 TeV
Two-particle angular correlations are measured in high-multiplicity proton-proton collisions at s = 13 TeV by the ALICE Collaboration. The yields of particle pairs at short-( 06\u3b7 3c 0) and long-range (1.6 < | 06\u3b7| < 1.8) in pseudorapidity are extracted on the near-side ( 06\u3c6 3c 0). They are reported as a function of transverse momentum (pT) in the range 1 < pT< 4 GeV/c. Furthermore, the event-scale dependence is studied for the first time by requiring the presence of high-pT leading particles or jets for varying pT thresholds. The results demonstrate that the long-range \u201cridge\u201d yield, possibly related to the collective behavior of the system, is present in events with high-pT processes as well. The magnitudes of the short- and long-range yields are found to grow with the event scale. The results are compared to EPOS LHC and PYTHIA 8 calculations, with and without string-shoving interactions. It is found that while both models describe the qualitative trends in the data, calculations from EPOS LHC show a better quantitative agreement for the pT dependency, while overestimating the event-scale dependency. [Figure not available: see fulltext.
Global baryon number conservation encoded in net-proton fluctuations measured in Pb–Pb collisions at √sNN = 2.76 TeV
Experimental results are presented on event-by-event net-proton fluctuation measurements in Pb–Pb collisions at √SNN=2.76 TeV, recorded by the ALICE detector at the CERN LHC. These measurements have as their ultimate goal an experimental test of Lattice QCD (LQCD) predictions on second and higher order cumulants of net-baryon distributions to search for critical behavior near the QCD phase boundary. Before confronting them with LQCD predictions, account has to be taken of correlations stemming from baryon number conservation as well as fluctuations of participating nucleons. Both effects influence the experimental measurements and are usually not considered in theoretical calculations. For the first time, it is shown that event-by-event baryon number conservation leads to subtle long-range correlations arising from very early interactions in the collisions.publishedVersio
Evidence of Spin-Orbital Angular Momentum Interactions in Relativistic Heavy-Ion Collisions
The first evidence of spin alignment of vector mesons (K^{*0} and ϕ) in heavy-ion collisions at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is reported. The spin density matrix element ρ_{00} is measured at midrapidity (|y|<0.5) in Pb-Pb collisions at a center-of-mass energy (sqrt[s_{NN}]) of 2.76 TeV with the ALICE detector. ρ_{00} values are found to be less than 1/3 (1/3 implies no spin alignment) at low transverse momentum (p_{T}<2 GeV/c) for K^{*0} and ϕ at a level of 3σ and 2σ, respectively. No significant spin alignment is observed for the K_{S}^{0} meson (spin=0) in Pb-Pb collisions and for the vector mesons in pp collisions. The measured spin alignment is unexpectedly large but qualitatively consistent with the expectation from models which attribute it to a polarization of quarks in the presence of angular momentum in heavy-ion collisions and a subsequent hadronization by the process of recombination
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