6,551 research outputs found
Remote sensing observatory validation of surface soil moisture using Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer E, Common Land Model, and ground based data: Case study in SMEX03 Little River Region, Georgia, U.S.
Optimal soil moisture estimation may be characterized by intercomparisons among remotely sensed measurements, groundâbased measurements, and land surface models. In this study, we compared soil moisture from Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer E (AMSRâE), groundâbased measurements, and a SoilâVegetationâAtmosphere Transfer (SVAT) model for the Soil Moisture Experiments in 2003 (SMEX03) Little River region, Georgia. The Common Land Model (CLM) reasonably replicated soil moisture patterns in dry down and wetting after rainfall though it had modest wet biases (0.001â0.054 m3/m3) as compared to AMSRâE and ground data. While the AMSRâE average soil moisture agreed well with the other data sources, it had extremely low temporal variability, especially during the growing season from May to October. The comparison results showed that highest mean absolute error (MAE) and root mean squared error (RMSE) were 0.054 and 0.059 m3/m3 for short and long periods, respectively. Even if CLM and AMSRâE had complementary strengths, low MAE (0.018â0.054 m3/m3) and RMSE (0.023â0.059 m3/m3) soil moisture errors for CLM and soil moisture low biases (0.003â0.031 m3/m3) for AMSRâE, care should be taken prior to employing AMSRâE retrieved soil moisture products directly for hydrological application due to its failure to replicate temporal variability. AMSRâE error characteristics identified in this study should be used to guide enhancement of retrieval algorithms and improve satellite observations for hydrological sciences
Laplacian Distribution and Domination
Let denote the number of Laplacian eigenvalues of a graph in an
interval , and let denote its domination number. We extend the
recent result , and show that isolate-free graphs also
satisfy . In pursuit of better understanding Laplacian
eigenvalue distribution, we find applications for these inequalities. We relate
these spectral parameters with the approximability of , showing that
. However, for -cyclic graphs, . For trees ,
Macro Dark Matter
Dark matter is a vital component of the current best model of our universe,
CDM. There are leading candidates for what the dark matter could be
(e.g. weakly-interacting massive particles, or axions), but no compelling
observational or experimental evidence exists to support these particular
candidates, nor any beyond-the-Standard-Model physics that might produce such
candidates. This suggests that other dark matter candidates, including ones
that might arise in the Standard Model, should receive increased attention.
Here we consider a general class of dark matter candidates with characteristic
masses and interaction cross-sections characterized in units of grams and
cm, respectively -- we therefore dub these macroscopic objects as Macros.
Such dark matter candidates could potentially be assembled out of Standard
Model particles (quarks and leptons) in the early universe. A combination of
Earth-based, astrophysical, and cosmological observations constrain a portion
of the Macro parameter space. A large region of parameter space remains, most
notably for nuclear-dense objects with masses in the range g and
g, although the lower mass window is closed
for Macros that destabilize ordinary matter.Comment: 13 pages, 1 table, 4 figures. Submitted to MNRAS. v3: corrected small
errors and a few points were made more clear, v4: included CMB bounds on dark
matter-photon coupling from Wilkinson et al. (2014) and references added.
Final revision matches published versio
Relativistic Ritz approach to hydrogen-like atoms I: theoretical considerations
The Rydberg formula along with the Ritz quantum defect ansatz has been a
standard theoretical tool used in atomic physics since before the advent of
quantum mechanics, yet this approach has remained limited by its
non-relativistic foundation. Here I present a long-distance relativistic
effective theory describing hydrogen-like systems with arbitrary mass ratios,
thereby extending the canonical Ritz-like approach. Fitting the relativistic
theory to the hydrogen energy levels predicted by bound-state QED indicates
that it is superior to the canonical, nonrelativistic approach. An analytic
analysis reveals nonlinear consistency relations within the bound-state QED
level predictions that relate higher-order corrections to those at lower order,
providing guideposts for future perturbative calculations as well as insights
into the asymptotic behavior of Bethe logarithms. Applications of the approach
include fitting to atomic spectroscopic data, allowing for the determination
the fine-structure constant from large spectral data sets and also to check for
internal consistency of the data independently from bound-state QED.Comment: v2: 11 pages of main text, 14 figures, 2 appendice
A perturbative method for resolving contact interactions in quantum mechanics
Long-range effective methods are ubiquitous in physics and in quantum theory,
in particular. Furthermore, the reliability of such methods is higher when the
nature of short-ranged interactions need not be modeled explicitly. This may be
necessary for two reasons: (1) there are interactions that occur over a short
range that cannot be accurately modeled with a potential function and/or (2)
the entire Hamiltonian loses its reliability when applied at short distances.
This work is an investigation of the utility and consequences of omitting a
finite region of space from quantum mechanical analysis, accomplished by
imposition of an artificial boundary behind which obscured short-ranged
physical effects may operate. With this method, a free function of integration
that depends on momentum is interpreted as a function encoding information
needed to match a long-distance wavefunction to an appropriate state function
on the other side of the boundary. Omitting part of the space from analysis
implies that the strict unitarity requirement of quantum mechanics must be
relaxed, since particles can actually propagate beyond the boundary. Strict
orthogonality of eigenmodes and hermiticity of the Hamiltonian must also be
relaxed in this method; however, all of these canonical relations are obeyed
when averaged over sufficiently long times. What is achieved, therefore,
appears to be an effective long-wavelength theory, at least for stationary
systems. As examples, the quantum defect theory of the one-dimensional Coulomb
interaction is recovered, as well as a new perspective of the inverse-square
potential and the free particle, as well as the Wigner time delay associated
with contact interactions. Potential applications of this method may include
three-dimensional atomic systems and two-dimensional systems, such as graphene.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, Phys. Rev. A accepted (12/02/19
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