198 research outputs found
Casimir-Polder shifts on quantum levitation states
An ultracold atom above a horizontal mirror experiences quantum reflection
from the attractive Casimir-Polder interaction, which holds it against gravity
and leads to quantum levitation states. We analyze this system by using a
Liouville transformation of the Schr\"odinger equation and a Langer coordinate
adapted to problems with a classical turning point. Reflection on the
Casimir-Polder attractive well is replaced by reflection on a repulsive wall
and the problem is then viewed as an ultracold atom trapped inside a cavity
with gravity and Casimir-Polder potentials acting respectively as top and
bottom mirrors. We calculate numerically Casimir-Polder shifts of the energies
of the cavity resonances and propose a new approximate treatment which is
precise enough to discuss spectroscopy experiments aiming at tests of the weak
equivalence principle on antihydrogen. We also discuss the lifetimes by
calculating complex energies associated with cavity resonances.Comment: Accepted in PR
Quantum reflection of antihydrogen from a liquid helium film
We study the quantum reflection of ultracold antihydrogen atoms bouncing on
the surface of a liquid helium film. The Casimir-Polder potential and quantum
reflection are calculated for different thicknesses of the film supported by
different substrates. Antihydrogen can be protected from anni- hilation for as
long as 1.3s on a bulk of liquid 4He, and 1.7s for liquid 3He. These large
lifetimes open interesting perspectives for spectroscopic measurements of the
free fall acceleration of antihydrogen. Variation of the scattering length with
the thickness of a film of helium shows interferences which we interpret
through a Liouville transformation of the quantum reflection problem
High resolution numerical study of the Algiers 2001 flash flood: sensitivity to the upper-level potential vorticity anomaly
From 9 to 11 November 2001, intense cyclogenesis affected the northern coasts of Africa and more particularly the densely populated city of Algiers. During the morning of 10 November, more than 130 mm of precipitation was recorded at Bouzareah and resulted in mudslides which devastated the Bab-el-Oued district. This disaster caused more than 700 casualties and catastrophic damage. Like many other heavy rainstorms in the western Mediterranean, this event was associated with the presence of an upper-level trough materialized by a deep stratospheric intrusion and characterized by high potential vorticity values. In this study, the impact of this synoptic structure on the localization and intensity of the precipitation which affected Algiers is investigated using a potential vorticity (PV) inversion method coupled for the first time with the French non-hydrostatic MESO-NH model. A set of perturbed synoptic environments was designed by slightly modifying the extent and the intensity of the coherent potential vorticity structures in the operational ARPEGE analysis. It is shown that such modifications may have a strong impact on the fine-scale precipitation forecast in the Algiers region, thereby demonstrating the fundamental role played by the potential vorticity anomaly during this exceptional meteorological event
Review of the research knowledge and gaps on fish populations, fisheries and linked ecosystems in the Central Arctic Ocean (CAO)
This report presents a review of the research knowledge and gaps on fish populations, fisheries and linked ecosystems in the Central Arctic Ocean (CAO). The CAO comprises the deep basins of the Arctic Ocean beyond the shelf break, which largely overlap with the High Seas of the Arctic Ocean, i.e. the marine areas outside the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) of the Arctic coastal nations. The authors of the report are members of the European Fisheries Inventory in the Central Arctic Ocean (EFICA) Consortium. This study was funded by the European Commission as an EU contribution to the international cooperation within the Agreement to Prevent Unregulated High Seas Fisheries in the Central Arctic Ocean.
The report contains desk-based research, using scientific research data bases as well as any available research performed by the EFICA Consortium partners and EU institutions or others. In Chapters 2-8 the authors review the literature and identify specific knowledge gaps. The gap analyses involve comparisons of actual knowledge with desired knowledge on the fish stocks of the CAO to be able to evaluate possibilities for future sustainable fisheries in the area. Chapter 1 is an introductory chapter, and Chapter 9 presents a holistic gap analysis based on Chapters 2-8 and recommendations for research priorities and the next steps.
The critical gap analysis highlights that the knowledge gaps for the CAO are enormous and obstruct any quantitative analyses of its fish stocks. This agrees with the conclusions from the Fifth FiSCAO Report (FiSCAO 2018). While data for the physical environment in the CAO (oceanography, bottom topography and ice-cover dynamics) would be sufficient for fish stock modelling and assessment, there is a massive lack of biological and ecological data. The CAO is not a closed system and some aspects of the shelf seas are of high relevance for the CAO, notably connectivity of fish stocks and fish species moving north with climate warming. Scientific research and monitoring programs are established in the shelf seas, and new data are constantly being produced.
Fish stock data are available from scientific projects and monitoring programs for some of the shelf seas (Barents Sea, Bering Sea, and to a lesser extent for the Beaufort Sea and the Chukchi Sea). Data exist also for the Russian shelf seas (Kara Sea, Laptev Sea, East Siberian Sea), but these data are not internationally available, while for the areas north of Canada/Greenland data are missing; they do not exist because of the severe ice conditions there. More data from all shelf seas may be hidden in reports that are not publicly accessible. We recommend to make current knowledge generally available by translating key publications and identification of valuable data reports.
Research priorities comprise the collection and analysis of primary data in the CAO, and â to a limited extent â from adjacent waters through collaborations with other Signatories of the Agreement (e.g. on population genetics). Further research priorities include an evaluation of ecosystem vulnerability, social-ecological analyses, i.e. recognizing the close and often complex interactions between humans and nature, and recommendations for governance of the CAO. Fulfilling the 14 specific research priorities mentioned in Chapter 9 to âsufficient knowledge availableâ could enable the potential, future application of an Ecosystem Approach to Management for the CAO
The Dynamics of Ecosystems, Biodiversity Management and Social Institutions at High Northern Latitudes
Ecosystems at high latitudes are highly dynamic, influenced
by a multitude of large-scale disturbances. Due to global
change processes these systems may be expected to be
particularly vulnerable, affecting the sustained production
of renewable wood resources and abundance of plants
and animals on which local cultures depend. In this paper,
we assess the implications of new understandings of high
northern latitude ecosystems and what must be done to
manage systems for resilience. We suggest that the focus
of land management should shift from recovery from local
disturbance to sustaining ecosystem functions in the face
of change and disruption. The role of biodiversity as insurance
for allowing a system to reorganize and develop during
the disturbance and reorganization phases needs to be
addressed in management and policy. We emphasize that
the current concepts of ecological reserves and protected
areas need to be reconsidered to developp dynamic tools
for sustainable management of ecosystems in face of
change. Characteristics of what may be considered as customary
reserves at high latitudes are often consistent with
a more dynamic view of reserves. We suggest new directions
for addressing biodiversity management in dynamic
landscapes at high latitudes, and provide empirical examples
of insights from unconventional perspectives that may
help improve the potential for sustainable management of
biodiversity and the generation of ecosystem services
Delamination of pipeline steels: determination of an anisotropic cleavage criterion
Cette Ă©tude concerne lâeffet de lâanisotropie de la rupture par clivage appliquĂ©e Ă deux tĂŽles dâacier faiblement alliĂ©, ferrito-bainitiques, pour gazoducs. La rupture de la tĂŽle par dĂ©laminage est Ă©tudiĂ©e en fonction de la microstructure et du chargement mĂ©canique, afin dâoptimiser les propriĂ©tĂ©s de ces aciers et notamment leur rĂ©silience mesurĂ©e par essais Battelle et Charpy. Des essais mĂ©caniques ont Ă©tĂ© effectuĂ©s sur des mini-Ă©prouvettes axisymĂ©triques entaillĂ©es, dimensionnĂ©es Ă cette intention et prĂ©levĂ©es dans les directions principales de la tĂŽle, y compris dans la direction travers court. Des essais de traction ont permis de tracer une courbe de transition ductile-fragile sur ces Ă©prouvettes entaillĂ©es, dans une gamme de tempĂ©ratures comprise entre +20°C et -140°C. Les mĂ©canismes de rupture et les sites dâamorçage de la rupture par clivage ont Ă©tĂ© identifiĂ©s au microscope Ă©lectronique Ă balayage. Lâanalyse mĂ©canique de ces essais a Ă©tĂ© menĂ©e aux diffĂ©rentes tempĂ©ratures, le comportement mĂ©canique Ă©tant identifiĂ© sur Ă©prouvettes lisses sollicitĂ©es dans les mĂȘmes directions que les Ă©prouvettes entaillĂ©es. Des simulations par Ă©lĂ©ments finis des essais sur Ă©prouvettes entaillĂ©es ont Ă©tĂ© effectuĂ©es afin dâanalyser les champs de contrainte et de dĂ©formation Ă rupture et dâen extraire une valeur de contrainte critique de clivage, en fonction de la direction de sollicitation. Lâimpact du modĂšle de comportement choisi (critĂšre de plasticitĂ© isotrope ou non) sur la valeur de la contrainte critique de clivage a Ă©tĂ© Ă©valuĂ©. Le critĂšre de rupture proposĂ© tient compte des paramĂštres microstructuraux des aciers Ă©tudiĂ©s
- âŠ