689 research outputs found
Effect of Adiabatic Deceleration on the Focused Transport of Solar Cosmic Rays
In the framework of focused transport theory, adiabatic deceleration arises
from adiabatic focusing in the solar wind frame and from differential solar
wind convection. An explicit formula is given for the deceleration of
individual particles as a function of the pitch angle. Deceleration and other
first-order effects of the solar wind, including convection, are incorporated
into a numerical code for simulating the transport of energetic particles along
the interplanetary magnetic field. We use this code to model the transport of
solar flare protons. We find that including deceleration can increase the decay
rate of the near-Earth intensity by 75\% more than would be expected based on
advection from higher momenta, due to an interplay with diffusive processes.
Improved response functions are derived for the impulsive injection of
particles near the Sun, and it is found that neglecting deceleration leads to
incorrect estimates of the scattering mean free path based on the intensity
decay alone, especially for lower-energy particles.Comment: accepted for publication in Astrophys. J., 17 pp. plain TEX + 7
uuencoded-compressed-tarred PostScript figures, 1 non-PostScript figure
available from [email protected]
Formation, Propagation, and Decay of Coherent Pulses of Solar Cosmic Rays
We have performed numerical simulations of the interplanetary transport of
solar cosmic rays. The particles form a coherent pulse within AU
after their injection. The gradual decrease of a pulse's speed and anisotropy
can be understood in terms of an equilibrium between pitch-angle scattering and
focusing. The results should be useful for estimating times of particle
injection.Comment: 4 pages (LaTeX) + 4 uuencoded-tarred-compressed postscript figures,
uses agupp.sty (available from ftp://xxx.lanl.gov/macros or
ftp://kosmos.agu.org/agutex), one 3D surface plot FAXed upon request.
Accepted by Geophysical Research Letter
The potential mechanism of black crust development on the historic buildings in Cairo and Venice
The development of black crusts on natural stones of historic buildings is mainly related to the surrounded polluted atmosphere. The blackening of surfaces is caused, in fact, by the accumulation of air pollutants produced by human activity, especially carbon particles originating from the incomplete combustion of fossil fuel. Investigations of the chemical composition of such layers in the monuments can be the basis for planning suitable strategies for the protection and conservation of the built cultural heritage. Cairo (Egypt) and Venice (Italy) are two cities with a large amount of cultural heritage buildings; moreover, they suffer high level of air pollution. Black crust with the hosted stones from different sites in Historic Cairo, as well as samples of different archaeological sites in Venice city, were collected and analyzed by using several techniques: polarizing optical microscopy (OM), scanning electron microscopy coupled with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (SEM-EDS), infrared spectroscopic techniques (FT-IR) and laser ablation inductively coupled mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS).
The characterization of such samples provided information on the chemical composition of black crusts, the state of conservation of the substrates and the crust-stone interactions. The chemical study highlighted a different pattern of elements within the two cities.
Regarding the black crusts of Cairo, results suggest that the air pollution in Cairo is mainly related to vehicular traffic. Indeed, in the city there is high vehicular traffic almost 24 h a day and the direct impact of vehicle emissions is particularly severe.
Samples from the Venice show different composition in terms of heavy metals with respect to Cairo that can be explained with the emission from several industries sited in the near industrial center of Porto Marghera and Island of Murano. Moreover, the fuels used for marine transportation, which is abundant into the area, have a slight different fingerprinting in terms of metals with respect to the vehicles
A Generalized Diffusion Tensor for Fully Anisotropic Diffusion of Energetic Particles in the Heliospheric Magnetic Field
The spatial diffusion of cosmic rays in turbulent magnetic fields can, in the
most general case, be fully anisotropic, i.e. one has to distinguish three
diffusion axes in a local, field-aligned frame. We reexamine the transformation
for the diffusion tensor from this local to a global frame, in which the Parker
transport equation for energetic particles is usually formulated and solved.
Particularly, we generalize the transformation formulas to allow for an
explicit choice of two principal local perpendicular diffusion axes. This
generalization includes the 'traditional' diffusion tensor in the special case
of isotropic perpendicular diffusion. For the local frame, we motivate the
choice of the Frenet-Serret trihedron which is related to the intrinsic
magnetic field geometry. We directly compare the old and the new tensor
elements for two heliospheric magnetic field configurations, namely the hybrid
Fisk and the Parker field. Subsequently, we examine the significance of the
different formulations for the diffusion tensor in a standard 3D model for the
modulation of galactic protons. For this we utilize a numerical code to
evaluate a system of stochastic differential equations equivalent to the Parker
transport equation and present the resulting modulated spectra. The computed
differential fluxes based on the new tensor formulation deviate from those
obtained with the 'traditional' one (only valid for isotropic perpendicular
diffusion) by up to 60% for energies below a few hundred MeV depending on
heliocentric distance.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, accepted in Ap
Self-Reported Long COVID in the General Population: Sociodemographic and Health Correlates in a Cross-National Sample.
We aimed to gain knowledge of possible sociodemographic predictors of long COVID and whether long COVID was associated with health outcomes almost two years after the pandemic outbreak. There were 1649 adults who participated in the study by completing a cross-sectional online survey disseminated openly in Norway, the UK, the USA, and Australia between November 2021 and January 2022. Participants were defined as having long COVID based on self-reports that they had been infected by COVID-19 and were experiencing long-lasting COVID symptoms. Logistic regression analyses were used to examine possible sociodemographic predictors, and multivariate analysis of variance was used to examine whether long COVID status was associated with health outcomes. None of the sociodemographic variables was significantly associated with reporting long COVID. Having long COVID was associated with higher levels of psychological distress, fatigue, and perceived stress. The effect of long COVID on health outcomes was greater among men than among women. In conclusion, long COVID appeared across sociodemographic groups. People with long COVID reported worsened health outcomes compared to those who had had COVID-19 but without long-term symptoms. Men experiencing long COVID appear to be particularly vulnerable to experiencing poorer health outcomes; health services may pay extra attention to potentially unnoticed needs for support among men experiencing long COVID
Deconvolution of Interplanetary Transport of Solar Energetic Particles
We address the problem of deconvolving the effects of interplanetary
transport on observed intensity and anisotropy profiles of solar energetic
particles with the goal of determining the time profile and spectrum of
particle injection near the Sun as well as the interplanetary scattering mean
free path. Semi-automated techniques have been developed to quantitatively
determine the best fit injection profile, assuming (1) a general piecewise
linear profile or (2) a Reid profile of the form
[C/(t-t_0)]exp[-A/(t-t_0)-(t-t_0)/B]. The two assumptions for the form of the
injection profile yielded similar results when we tested the techniques using
ISEE 3 proton data from the solar flare events of July 20, 1981 (gradual
flare), and January 2, 1982 (impulsive flare). For the former event, the
duration of injection was much shorter for protons of higher energy (75-147
MeV), which may be interpreted as indicating that the coronal mass
ejection-driven shock lost the ability to accelerate protons to 100 MeV
after traveling beyond a certain distance from the Sun.Comment: 14 pages + 5 figures, LaTeX style files included, to appear in J.
Geophys. Re
Energetic particle transport across the mean magnetic field: before diffusion
Current particle transport models describe the propagation of charged particles across the mean field direction in turbulent plasmas as diffusion. However, recent studies suggest that at short time- scales, such as soon after solar energetic particle (SEP) injection, particles remain on turbulently meandering field lines, which results in non-diffusive initial propagation across the mean magnetic field. In this work, we use a new technique to investigate how the particles are displaced from their original field lines, and quantify the parameters of the transition from field-aligned particle propagation along meandering field lines to particle diffusion across the mean magnetic field. We show that the initial decoupling of the particles from the field lines is slow, and particles remain within a Larmor radius from their initial meandering field lines for tens to hundreds of Larmor periods, for 0.1-10 MeV protons in turbulence conditions typical of the solar wind at 1 AU. Subsequently, particles decouple from their initial field lines and after hundreds to thousands of Larmor periods reach time-asymptotic diffusive behaviour consistent with particle diffusion across the mean field caused by the meandering of the field lines. We show that the typical duration of the pre-diffusive phase, hours to tens of hours for 10 MeV protons in 1 AU solar wind turbulence conditions, is significant for SEP propagation to 1 AU and must be taken into account when modelling SEP propagation in the interplanetary space
Kolmogorov-Sinai entropy in field line diffusion by anisotropic magnetic turbulence
The Kolmogorov-Sinai (KS) entropy in turbulent diffusion of magnetic field
lines is analyzed on the basis of a numerical simulation model and theoretical
investigations. In the parameter range of strongly anisotropic magnetic
turbulence the KS entropy is shown to deviate considerably from the earlier
predicted scaling relations [Rev. Mod. Phys. {\bf 64}, 961 (1992)]. In
particular, a slowing down logarithmic behavior versus the so-called Kubo
number (, where is the ratio of the rms magnetic fluctuation field to the magnetic field
strength, and and are the correlation lengths in respective
dimensions) is found instead of a power-law dependence. These discrepancies are
explained from general principles of Hamiltonian dynamics. We discuss the
implication of Hamiltonian properties in governing the paradigmatic
"percolation" transport, characterized by , associating it with the
concept of pseudochaos (random non-chaotic dynamics with zero Lyapunov
exponents). Applications of this study pertain to both fusion and astrophysical
plasma and by mathematical analogy to problems outside the plasma physics.
This research article is dedicated to the memory of Professor George M.
ZaslavskyComment: 15 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication on Plasma Physics and
Controlled Fusio
- …