2,210 research outputs found
Mesoscale subduction at the Almeria-Oran front. Part 1: ageostrophic flow
This paper presents a detailed diagnostic analysis of hydrographic and current meter data from three, rapidly repeated, fine-scale surveys of the Almeria-Oran front. Instability of the frontal boundary, between surface waters of Atlantic and Mediterranean origin, is shown to provide a mechanism for significant heat transfer from the surface layers to the deep ocean in winter. The data were collected during the second observational phase of the EU funded OMEGA project on RRS Discovery cruise 224 during December 1996. High resolution hydrographic measurements using the towed undulating CTD vehicle, SeaSoar,. traced the subduction of Mediterranean Surface Water across the Almeria-Oran front. This subduction is shown to result from a significant baroclinic component to the instability of the frontal jet. The Q-vector formulation of the omega equation is combined with a scale analysis to quantitatively diagnose vertical transport resulting from mesoscale ageostrophic circulation. The analyses are presented and discussed in the presence of satellite and airborne remotely sensed data; which provide the basis for a thorough and novel approach to the determination of observational error
Report on estimating the size of dolphin schools, based on data obtained during a charter cruise of the M/V Gina Anne, October 11 -November 25, 1979
Estimates of dolphin school sizes made by observers and crew
members aboard tuna seiners or by observers on ship or aerial surveys are important components of population estimates of dolphins which are involved in the yellowfin tuna fishery in the eastern Pacific. Differences in past estimates made from tuna seiners and research ships and aircraft have been noted by Brazier (1978). To compare various methods of estimating dolphin school sizes a research cruise was undertaken with the following major objectives:
1) compare estimates made by observers aboard a tuna seiner and in the ship's helicopter, from aerial photographs, and from counts made at the backdown channel,
2) compare estimates of observers who are told the count of the school size after making their estimate to the observer who is not aware of the count to determine if observers can learn to estimate more accurately, and
3) obtain movie and still photographs of dolphin schools of known size at various stages of chase, capture and release to be used for observer training.
The secondary objectives of the cruise were to:
1) obtain life history specimens and data from any dolphins that were killed incidental to purse seining. These specimens and data were to be analyzed by the U.S. National Marine Fisheries Service ( NMFS ) ,
2) record evasion tactics of dolphin schools by observing them from the helicopter while the seiner approached the school,
3) examine alternative methods for estimating the distance and bearing of schools where they were first sighted,
4) collect the Commission's standard cetacean sighting, set log and daily activity data and expendable bathythermograph data.
(PDF contains 31 pages.
The Growth of Black Holes and Bulges at the Cores of Cooling Flows
Central cluster galaxies (cDs) in cooling flows are growing rapidly through
gas accretion and star formation. At the same time, AGN outbursts fueled by
accretion onto supermassive black holes are generating X-ray cavity systems and
driving outflows that exceed those in powerful quasars. We show that the
resulting bulge and black hole growth follows a trend that is roughly
consistent with the slope of the local (Magorrian) relation between bulge and
black hole mass for nearby quiescent ellipticals. However, a large scatter
suggests that cD bulges and black holes do not always grow in lock-step. New
measurements made with XMM, Chandra, and FUSE of the condensation rates in
cooling flows are now approaching or are comparable to the star formation
rates, alleviating the need for an invisible sink of cold matter. We show that
the remaining radiation losses can be offset by AGN outbursts in more than half
of the systems in our sample, indicating that the level of cooling and star
formation is regulated by AGN feedback.Comment: 3 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "Heating vs.
Cooling in Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies," edited by H. Boehringer, P.
Schuecker, G. W. Pratt, and A. Finogueno
Anderson transition and thermal effects on electron states in amorphous silicon
I discuss the properties of electron states in amorphous Si based on large
scale calculations with realistic several thousand atom models. A relatively
simple model for the localized to extended (Anderson) transition is reviewed.
Then, the effect of thermal disorder on localized electron states is
considered. It is found that under readily accessible conditions, localized
(midgap or band tail) states and their conjugate energies may fluctuate
dramatically. The possible importance of non-adiabatic atomic dynamics to doped
or photo-excited systems is briefly discussed.Comment: Was presented at ICAMS18, Snowbird UT, August 1999. Submitted to J.
of Non-Cryst. Solid
Group delay in Bragg grating with linear chirp
An analytic solution for Bragg grating with linear chirp in the form of
confluent hypergeometric functions is analyzed in the asymptotic limit of long
grating. Simple formulas for reflection coefficient and group delay are
derived. The simplification makes it possible to analyze irregularities of the
curves and suggest the ways of their suppression. It is shown that the increase
in chirp at fixed other parameters decreases the oscillations in the group
delay, but gains the oscillations in the reflection spectrum. The conclusions
are in agreement with numerical calculations.Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, submitted to Opt. Com
Polaronic Signatures in Mid-Infrared Spectra: Prediction for LaMnO3 and CaMnO3
Hole-doped LaMnO3 and electron-doped CaMnO3 form self-trapped electronic
states. The spectra of these states have been calculated using a two orbital
(Mn eg Jahn-Teller) model, from which the non-adiabatic optical conductivity
spectra are obtained. In both cases the optical spectrum contains weight in the
gap region, whose observation will indicate the self-trapped nature of the
carrier states. The predicted spectra are proportional to the concentration of
the doped carriers in the dilute regime, with coefficients calculated with no
further model parameters.Comment: 6 pages with 3 figures imbedde
Selection, transmission, and reversion of an antigen-processing cytotoxic T-lymphocyte escape mutation in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1 infection
Numerous studies now support that human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) evolution is influenced by immune selection pressure, with population studies showing an association between specific HLA alleles and mutations within defined cytotoxic T-lymphocyte epitopes. Here we combine sequence data and functional studies of CD8 T-cell responses to demonstrate that allele-specific immune pressures also select for mutations flanking CD8 epitopes that impair antigen processing. In persons expressing HLA-A3, we demonstrate consistent selection for a mutation in a C-terminal flanking residue of the normally immunodominant Gag KK9 epitope that prevents its processing and presentation, resulting in a rapid decline in the CD8 T-cell response. This single amino acid substitution also lies within a second HLA-A3-restricted epitope, with the mutation directly impairing recognition by CD8 T cells. Transmission of the mutation to subjects expressing HLA-A3 was shown to prevent the induction of normally immunodominant acute-phase responses to both epitopes. However, subsequent in vivo reversion of the mutation was coincident with delayed induction of new CD8 T-cell responses to both epitopes. These data demonstrate that mutations within the flanking region of an HIV-1 epitope can impair recognition by an established CD8 T-cell response and that transmission of these mutations alters the acute-phase CD8+ T-cell response. Moreover, reversion of these mutations in the absence of the original immune pressure reveals the potential plasticity of immunologically selected evolutionary changes
Interaction of quasilocal harmonic modes and boson peak in glasses
The direct proportionality relation between the boson peak maximum in
glasses, , and the Ioffe-Regel crossover frequency for phonons,
, is established. For several investigated materials . At the frequency the mean free path of the
phonons becomes equal to their wavelength because of strong resonant
scattering on quasilocal harmonic oscillators. Above this frequency phonons
cease to exist. We prove that the established correlation between
and holds in the general case and is a direct consequence of
bilinear coupling of quasilocal oscillators with the strain field.Comment: RevTex, 4 pages, 1 figur
Lattice-switch Monte Carlo
We present a Monte Carlo method for the direct evaluation of the difference
between the free energies of two crystal structures. The method is built on a
lattice-switch transformation that maps a configuration of one structure onto a
candidate configuration of the other by `switching' one set of lattice vectors
for the other, while keeping the displacements with respect to the lattice
sites constant. The sampling of the displacement configurations is biased,
multicanonically, to favor paths leading to `gateway' arrangements for which
the Monte Carlo switch to the candidate configuration will be accepted. The
configurations of both structures can then be efficiently sampled in a single
process, and the difference between their free energies evaluated from their
measured probabilities. We explore and exploit the method in the context of
extensive studies of systems of hard spheres. We show that the efficiency of
the method is controlled by the extent to which the switch conserves correlated
microstructure. We also show how, microscopically, the procedure works: the
system finds gateway arrangements which fulfill the sampling bias
intelligently. We establish, with high precision, the differences between the
free energies of the two close packed structures (fcc and hcp) in both the
constant density and the constant pressure ensembles.Comment: 34 pages, 9 figures, RevTeX. To appear in Phys. Rev.
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