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Observations of wind speed profiles over Greater London, UK, using a Doppler lidar
To calculate the potential wind loading on a tall building in an urban area, an accurate representation of the wind speed profile is required. However, due to a lack of observations, wind engineers typically estimate the characteristics of the urban boundary layer by translating the measurements from a nearby reference rural site. This study presents wind speed profile data obtained from a Doppler lidar in central London, UK, during an 8 month observation period. Used in conjunction with wind speed data measured at a nearby airport, the data have been used to assess the accuracy of the predictions made by the wind engineering tools currently available.
When applied to multiple changes in surface roughness identified from morphological parameters, the non-equilibrium wind speed profile model developed by Deaves (1981) provides a good representation of the urban wind speed profile. For heights below 500 m, the predicted wind speed remains within the 95% confidence interval of the measured data. However, when the surface roughness is estimated using land use as a proxy, the model tends to overestimate the wind speed, particularly for very high wind speed periods. These results highlight the importance of a detailed assessment of the nature of the surface when estimating the wind speed above an urban surface
Cold homes in Australia: Questioning our assumptions about prevalence
Australia is considered by many to be a warm climate country and hence winter cold and its health effects are often overlooked. The majority of the Australian population live in temperate climate regions, which are heatingdominated and experience cold wintertime conditions. The prevalence of cold in Australian homes has to date been rarely measured or estimated, and the few studies that do are based on proxy data that estimate a low prevalence (around 5 %). This paper tests these proxy measures, using high resolution temperature data on indoor temperature from 100 homes across temperate Australia. The data were assessed using the World Health Organization's Housing and Health guideline for minimum indoor temperature (18 ◦C), which provides an internationally recognised benchmark for defining cold in homes. Across the sampled homes, 81 % were below 18 ◦C on average across the whole of winter (June–August 2022). Average winter indoor temperatures were 16.5 ± 2.7 ◦C across all homes, with no significant difference between locations. These early findings suggest that the problem of unhealthily cold homes in Australia is likely to be significantly more prevalent than previously estimated. Far from affecting 5 % of Australian households, the affected population may be 10 times this value. These initial findings have important implications for how we model health impacts and develop policy. This early release data from a recently commenced large environmental monitoring project is of timely importance. It challenges our understanding of the prevalence of cold housing in Australia context, flagging the pressing need to increase policy attention in advance of winter.Cynthia Faye Barlow, Lyrian Daniel, Emma Bake
Methane from UV-irradiated carbonaceous chondrites under simulated Martian conditions
A UV photolytic process was studied for the production of methane from carbonaceous chondrites under simulated Martian conditions. Methane evolution rates from carbonaceous chondrites were found to be positively correlated to temperature (−80 to 20°C) and the concentration of carbon in the chondrites (0.2 to 1.69 wt%); and decreased over time with Murchison samples exposed to Martian conditions. The amount of evolved methane (EM) per unit of UV energy was 7.9 × 10−13 mol J−1 for UV irradiation of Murchison (1.69 wt%) samples tested under Martian conditions (6.9 mbar and 20°C). Using a previously described Mars UV model (Moores et al., 2007), and the EM given above, an annual interplanetary dust particle (IDP) accreted mass of 2.4 × 105 kg carbon per year yields methane abundances between 2.2 to 11 ppbv for model scenarios in which 20 to 100% of the accreted carbon is converted to methane, respectively. The UV/CH4 model for accreted IDPs can explain a portion of the globally averaged methane abundance on Mars, but cannot easily explain seasonal, temporal, diurnal, or plume fluctuations of methane. Several impact processes were modeled to determine if periodic emplacement of organics from carbonaceous bolides could be invoked to explain the occurrence of methane plumes produced by the UV/CH4process. Modeling of surface impacts of high-density bolides, single airbursts of low-density bolides, and multiple airbursts of a cascading breakup of a low-density rubble-pile comet were all unable to reproduce a methane plume of 45 ppbv, as reported by Mumma et al
High-Resolution Observations of Interstellar Ca I Absorption -- Implications for Depletions and Electron Densities in Diffuse Clouds
We present high-resolution (FWHM ~ 0.3-1.5 km/s) spectra of interstellar Ca I
absorption toward 30 Galactic stars. Comparisons of the column densities of Ca
I, Ca II, K I, and other species -- for individual components identified in the
line profiles and also when integrated over entire lines of sight -- yield
information on relative electron densities and depletions. There is no obvious
relationship between the ratio N(Ca I)/N(Ca II) [equal to n_e/(Gamma/alpha_r)
for photoionization equilibrium] and the fraction of hydrogen in molecular form
f(H2) (often taken to be indicative of the local density n_H). For a smaller
sample of sightlines for which the thermal pressure (n_H T) and local density
can be estimated via analysis of the C I fine-structure excitation, the average
electron density inferred from C, Na, and K (assuming photoionization
equilibrium) seems to be independent of n_H and n_H T. While the n_e obtained
from the ratio N(Ca I)/N(Ca II) is often significantly higher than the values
derived from other elements, the patterns of relative n_e derived from
different elements show both similarities and differences for different lines
of sight -- suggesting that additional processes besides photoionization and
radiative recombination commonly and significantly affect the ionization
balance of heavy elements in diffuse IS clouds. Such additional processes may
also contribute to the (apparently) larger than expected fractional ionizations
(n_e/n_H) found for some lines of sight with independent determinations of n_H.
In general, inclusion of ``grain-assisted'' recombination does reduce the
inferred n_e, but it does not reconcile the n_e estimated from different
elements. The depletion of calcium may have a much weaker dependence on density
than was suggested by earlier comparisons with CH and CN.Comment: aastex, 70 pages, accepted to ApJ
The Water Vapor Abundance in Orion KL Outflows
We present the detection and modeling of more than 70 far-IR pure rotational
lines of water vapor, including the 18O and 17O isotopologues, towards Orion
KL. Observations were performed with the Long Wavelength Spectrometer
Fabry-Perot (LWS/FP; R~6800-9700) on board the Infrared Space Observatory (ISO)
between ~43 and ~197 um. The water line profiles evolve from P-Cygni type
profiles (even for the H2O18 lines) to pure emission at wavelengths above ~100
um. We find that most of the water emission/absorption arises from an extended
flow of gas expanding at 25+-5 kms^-1. Non-local radiative transfer models show
that much of the water excitation and line profile formation is driven by the
dust continuum emission. The derived beam averaged water abundance is
2-3x10^-5. The inferred gas temperature Tk=80-100 K suggests that: (i) water
could have been formed in the "plateau" by gas phase neutral-neutral reactions
with activation barriers if the gas was previously heated (e.g. by shocks) to
>500 K and/or (ii) H2O formation in the outflow is dominated by in-situ
evaporation of grain water-ice mantles and/or (iii) H2O was formed in the
innermost and warmer regions (e.g. the hot core) and was swept up in ~1000 yr,
the dynamical timescale of the outflow.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ letters [2006 August 7] (5 pages 2,
figures, not edited
Characteristics of patients with chronic back pain who benefit from acupuncture
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although many clinicians believe there are clinically important subgroups of persons with "non-specific" low back pain, such subgroups have not yet been clearly identified. As part of a large trial evaluating acupuncture for chronic low back pain, we sought to identify subgroups of participants that were particularly responsive to acupuncture.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>We performed a secondary analysis of data for the 638 participants in our clinical trial comparing different types of acupuncture to usual care to identify baseline characteristics that predicted responses to individualized, standardized, or simulated acupuncture treatments. After identifying factors that predicted improvements in back-related function or symptoms, we determined if these factors were more likely to predict improvement for those receiving the acupuncture treatments than for those receiving usual care. This was accomplished by testing for an interaction between the prognostic factors and treatment group in four models: functional outcomes (measured by the Roland-Morris Disability Scale) at 8 and 52 weeks post-randomization and symptom outcomes (measured with a numerical rating scale) at 8 and 52 weeks.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Overall, the strongest predictors of improvement in back function and symptoms were higher baseline levels of these measures, receipt of an acupuncture treatment, and non-use of narcotic analgesics. Benefit from acupuncture compared to usual care was greater with worse pre-treatment levels of back dysfunction (interaction p < 0.004 for the functional outcome, Roland Morris Disability Scale at 8 weeks). No other consistent interactions were observed.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>This secondary analysis found little evidence for the existence of subgroups of patients with chronic back pain that would be especially likely to benefit from acupuncture. However, persons with chronic low back pain who had more severe baseline dysfunction had the most short-term benefit from acupuncture.</p
Time Variability of Molecular Line Emission in IRC+10216
We present the results of monitoring the molecular emission of the C-rich AGB star IRC+10216 over 3 years with the Herschel Space Observatory. Observations of rotational transitions of various vibrational levels of CO, 13CO, CS, CCH, H2O, SiO, SiS, SiC2, HCN and HNC have been collected with the HIFI, PACS and SPIRE instruments over multiple epochs. The intensity monitoring shows strong and periodic variations of most of the observed molecules, often with differential behavior depending on the transition level (larger variation at higher J), and generally enhanced modulations in the vibrational modes of some of these molecules (e.g. HCN). These results show that the effect of IR pumping through the different vibrational levels on the emergent line profiles of a given transition can be really significant. This implies that the IR radiation field of the circumstellar envelope and its time variation has to be taken into account in any radiative transfer model in order to derive accurately the physico-chemical structure of the envelope
Time Variability of Molecular Line Emission in IRC+10216
We present the results of monitoring the molecular emission of the C-rich AGB star IRC+10216 over 3 years with the Herschel Space Observatory. Observations of rotational transitions of various vibrational levels of CO, ^(13)CO, CS, CCH, H_2O, SiO, SiS, SiC_2, HCN and HNC have been collected with the HIFI, PACS and SPIRE instruments over multiple epochs. The intensity monitoring shows strong and periodic variations of most of the observed molecules, often with differential behavior depending on the transition level (larger variation at higher J), and generally enhanced modulations in the vibrational modes of some of these molecules (e.g. HCN). These results show that the effect of IR pumping through the different vibrational levels on the emergent line profiles of a given transition can be really significant. This implies that the IR radiation field of the circumstellar envelope and its time variation has to be taken into account in any radiative transfer model in order to derive accurately the physico-chemical structure of the envelope
A high resolution line survey of IRC+10216 with Herschel. First results: Detection of warm silicon dicarbide SiC2
We present the first results of a high-spectral-resolution survey of the
carbon-rich evolved star IRC+10216 that was carried out with the HIFI
spectrometer onboard Herschel. This survey covers all HIFI bands, with a
spectral range from 488 to 1901GHz. In this letter we focus on the band-1b
spectrum, in a spectral range 554.5-636.5GHz, where we identified 130 spectral
features with intensities above 0.03 K and a signal-to-noise ratio >5. Detected
lines arise from HCN, SiO, SiS, CS, CO, metal-bearing species and,
surprisingly, silicon dicarbide (SiC2). We identified 55 SiC2 transitions
involving energy levels between 300 and 900 K. By analysing these rotational
lines, we conclude that SiC2 is produced in the inner dust formation zone, with
an abundance of ~2x10^-7 relative to molecular hydrogen. These SiC2 lines have
been observed for the first time in space and have been used to derive an SiC2
rotational temperature of ~204 K and a source-averaged column density of
~6.4x10^15 cm^-2. Furthermore, the high quality of the HIFI data set was used
to improve the spectroscopic rotational constants of SiC2.Comment: A&A HIFI Special Issue, 201
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