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Introduction
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Bristol Record Society via the DOI in this record Archived with permission of the Bristol Record SocietyBristol Record Society's publications vol. 6
Diffusion of passive scalar in a finite-scale random flow
We consider a solvable model of the decay of scalar variance in a
single-scale random velocity field. We show that if there is a separation
between the flow scale k_flow^{-1} and the box size k_box^{-1}, the decay rate
lambda ~ (k_box/k_flow)^2 is determined by the turbulent diffusion of the
box-scale mode. Exponential decay at the rate lambda is preceded by a transient
powerlike decay (the total scalar variance ~ t^{-5/2} if the Corrsin invariant
is zero, t^{-3/2} otherwise) that lasts a time t~1/\lambda. Spectra are sharply
peaked at k=k_box. The box-scale peak acts as a slowly decaying source to a
secondary peak at the flow scale. The variance spectrum at scales intermediate
between the two peaks (k_box0). The mixing
of the flow-scale modes by the random flow produces, for the case of large
Peclet number, a k^{-1+delta} spectrum at k>>k_flow, where delta ~ lambda is a
small correction. Our solution thus elucidates the spectral make up of the
``strange mode,'' combining small-scale structure and a decay law set by the
largest scales.Comment: revtex4, 8 pages, 4 figures; final published versio
The interaction between transpolar arcs and cusp spots
Transpolar arcs and cusp spots are both auroral phenomena which occur when
the interplanetary magnetic field is northward. Transpolar arcs are associated
with magnetic reconnection in the magnetotail, which closes magnetic flux and
results in a "wedge" of closed flux which remains trapped, embedded in the
magnetotail lobe. The cusp spot is an indicator of lobe reconnection at the
high-latitude magnetopause; in its simplest case, lobe reconnection
redistributes open flux without resulting in any net change in the open flux
content of the magnetosphere. We present observations of the two phenomena
interacting--i.e., a transpolar arc intersecting a cusp spot during part of its
lifetime. The significance of this observation is that lobe reconnection can
have the effect of opening closed magnetotail flux. We argue that such events
should not be rare
Model of two-fluid reconnection
A theoretical model of quasi-stationary, two-dimensional magnetic
reconnection is presented in the framework of incompressible two-fluid
magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). The results are compared with recent numerical
simulations and experiment.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, accepted to Physical Review Letter
Two and Three Dimensional Incommensurate Modulation in Optimally-Doped BiSrCaCuO
X-ray scattering measurements on optimally-doped single crystal samples of
the high temperature superconductor BiSrCaCuO reveal
the presence of three distinct incommensurate charge modulations, each
involving a roughly fivefold increase in the unit cell dimension along the {\bf
b}-direction. The strongest scattering comes from the well known (H, K
0.21, L) modulation and its harmonics. However, we also observe broad
diffraction which peak up at the L values complementary to those which
characterize the known modulated structure. These diffraction features
correspond to correlation lengths of roughly a unit cell dimension,
20 in the {\bf c} direction, and of 185
parallel to the incommensurate wavevector. We interpret these features as
arising from three dimensional incommensurate domains and the interfaces
between them, respectively. In addition we investigate the recently discovered
incommensuate modulations which peak up at (1/2, K 0.21, L) and related
wavevectors. Here we explicitly study the L-dependence of this scattering and
see that these charge modulations are two dimensional in nature with weak
correlations on the scale of a bilayer thickness, and that they correspond to
short range, isotropic correlation lengths within the basal plane. We relate
these new incommensurate modulations to the electronic nanostructure observed
in BiSrCaCuO using STM topography.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figure
Origin of electron cyclotron maser-induced radio emissions at ultra-cool dwarfs: magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling currents
A number of ultra-cool dwarfs emit circularly polarised radio waves generated
by the electron cyclotron maser instability. In the solar system such radio is
emitted from regions of strong auroral magnetic field-aligned currents. We thus
apply ideas developed for Jupiter's magnetosphere, being a well-studied
rotationally-dominated analogue in our solar system, to the case of
fast-rotating UCDs. We explain the properties of the radio emission from UCDs
by showing that it would arise from the electric currents resulting from an
angular velocity shear in the fast-rotating magnetic field and plasma, i.e. by
an extremely powerful analogue of the process which causes Jupiter's auroras.
Such a velocity gradient indicates that these bodies interact significantly
with their space environment, resulting in intense auroral emissions. These
results strongly suggest that auroras occur on bodies outside our solar system.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Comparison of ionospheric electric currents and plasma convection patterns observed during substorms
Abstract. The effect of magnetospheric substorms on the global ionospheric convection pattern is widely debated. Discussed here, is a study made of ionospheric electric currents, co-incident with plasma convection at the time of substorm onset, using the HF radars of the Super Dual Auroral Radar Network (SuperDARN), and the global array of ground magnetometers. Preliminary results are presented, which utilise an ionospheric potential mapping model to produce plasma convection vectors and electric potential contours, with corresponding ionospheric currents being derived from magnetic perturbations. Clear indications of a relationship between the substorm current system and the plasma convection patterns are seen. 1
First simultaneous observations of flux transfer events at the high-latitude magnetopause by the cluster spacecraft and pulsed radar signatures in the conjugate ionosphere by the CUTLASS and EISCAT radars
Cluster magnetic field data are studied during an outbound pass through the post-noon high-latitude magnetopause region on 14 February 2001. The onset of several minute perturbations in the magnetospheric field was observed in conjunction with a southward turn of the interplanetary magnetic field observed upstream by the ACE spacecraft and lagged to the subsolar magnetopause. These perturbations culminated in the observation of four clear magnetospheric flux transfer events (FTEs) adjacent to the magnetopause, together with a highly-structured magnetopause boundary layer containing related field features. Furthermore, clear FTEs were observed later in the magnetosheath. The magnetospheric FTEs were of essentially the same form as the original “flux erosion events” observed in HEOS-2 data at a similar location and under similar interplanetary conditions by Haerendel et al. (1978). We show that the nature of the magnetic perturbations in these events is consistent with the formation of open flux tubes connected to the northern polar ionosphere via pulsed reconnection in the dusk sector magnetopause. The magnetic footprint of the Cluster spacecraft during the boundary passage is shown to map centrally within the fields-of-view of the CUTLASS SuperDARN radars, and to pass across the field-aligned beam of the EISCAT Svalbard radar (ESR) system. It is shown that both the ionospheric flow and the backscatter power in the CUTLASS data pulse are in synchrony with the magnetospheric FTEs and boundary layer structures at the latitude of the Cluster footprint. These flow and power features are subsequently found to propagate poleward, forming classic “pulsed ionospheric flow” and “poleward-moving radar auroral form” structures at higher latitudes. The combined Cluster-CUTLASS observations thus represent a direct demonstration of the coupling of momentum and energy into the magnetosphere-ionosphere system via pulsed magnetopause reconnection. The ESR observations also reveal the nature of the structured and variable polar ionosphere produced by the structured and time-varying precipitation and flow
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Mononuclear and multinuclear phosphido, arsenido, and stibido complexes of aluminum, gallium and indium
" The present invention involves chemical compounds particularly useful for the preparation of thin films or layers of group 3/group 5 materials by MOCVD and other techniques. Such compounds may be represented as having the formulas [M(ER'R"").sub.3 ].sub.n or [RM(ER'R"").sub.2 ].sub.n or [R.sub.2 M(ER'R"")].sub.n wherein M is aluminum, gallium or indium; E is phosphorus, arsenic or antimony; R, R', and R"" are one or more of hydrogen, alkyl, aryl, alkyl-substituted aryl, cyclic alkyl, halide or other anionic group; and n is between about 1 and about 6. "Board of Regents, University of Texas Syste
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