92 research outputs found

    Impact of Po Valley emissions on the highest glacier of the Eastern European Alps

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    Abstract. In June 2009, we conducted the first extensive glaciological survey of Alto dell'Ortles, the uppermost glacier of Mt. Ortles (3905 m a.s.l.), the highest summit of the Eastern European Alps. This section of the Alps is located in a rain shadow and is characterized by the lowest precipitation rate in the entire Alpine arc. Mt. Ortles offers a unique opportunity to test deposition mechanisms of chemical species that until now were studied only in the climatically-different western sector. We analyzed snow samples collected on Alto dell'Ortles from a 4.5 m snow-pit at 3830 m a.s.l., and we determined a large suite of trace elements and ionic compounds that comprise the atmospheric deposition over the past two years. Trace element concentrations measured in snow samples are extremely low with mean concentrations at pg g−1 levels. Only Al and Fe present median values of 1.8 and 3.3 ng g−1, with maximum concentrations of 21 and 25 ng g−1. The median crustal enrichment factor (EFc) values for Be, Rb, Sr, Ba, U, Li, Al, Ca, Cr, Mn, Fe, Co, Ga and V are lower than 10 suggesting that these elements originated mainly from soil and mineral aerosol. EFc higher than 100 are reported for Zn (118), Ag (135), Bi (185), Sb (401) and Cd (514), demonstrating the predominance of non-crustal depositions and suggesting an anthropogenic origin. Our data show that the physical stratigraphy and the chemical signals of several species were well preserved in the uppermost snow of the Alto dell'Ortles glacier. A clear seasonality emerges from the data as the summer snow is more affected by anthropogenic and marine contributions while the winter aerosol flux is dominated by crustal sources. For trace elements, the largest mean EFc seasonal variations are displayed by V (with a factor of 3.8), Sb (3.3), Cu (3.3), Pb (2.9), Bi (2.8), Cd (2.1), Zn (1.9), Ni (1.8), Ag (1.8), As (1.7) and Co (1.6). When trace species ratios in local and Po Valley emissions are compared with those in Alto dell'Ortles snow, the deposition on Mt. Ortles is clearly linked with Po Valley summer emissions. Despite climatic differences between the Eastern and Western Alps, trace element ratios from Alto dell'Ortles are comparable with those obtained from high-altitude glaciers in the Western Alps, suggesting similar sources and transport processes at seasonal time scales in these two distinct areas. In particular, the large changes in trace element concentrations both in the Eastern and Western Alps appear to be more related to the regional vertical structure of the troposphere rather than the synoptic weather patterns

    Modeling Single Electron Transfer in Si:P Double Quantum Dots

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    Solid-state systems such as P donors in Si have considerable potential for realization of scalable quantum computation. Recent experimental work in this area has focused on implanted Si:P double quantum dots (DQDs) that represent a preliminary step towards the realization of single donor charge-based qubits. This paper focuses on the techniques involved in analyzing the charge transfer within such DQD devices and understanding the impact of fabrication parameters on this process. We show that misalignment between the buried dots and surface gates affects the charge transfer behavior and identify some of the challenges posed by reducing the size of the metallic dot to the few donor regime.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Nanotechnolog

    Age of the Mt. Ortles ice cores, the Tyrolean Iceman and glaciation of the highest summit of South Tyrol since the Northern Hemisphere Climatic Optimum

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    In 2011 four ice cores were extracted from the summit of Alto dell'Ortles (3859 m), the highest glacier of South Tyrol in the Italian Alps. This drilling site is located only 37 km southwest from where the Tyrolean Iceman, similar to 5.3 kyrs old, was discovered emerging from the ablating ice field of Tisenjoch (3210 m, near the Italian-Austrian border) in 1991. The excellent preservation of this mummy suggested that the Tyrolean Iceman was continuously embedded in prehistoric ice and that additional ancient ice was likely preserved elsewhere in South Tyrol. Dating of the ice cores from Alto dell'Ortles based on Pb-210, tritium, beta activity and C-14 determinations, combined with an empirical model (COPRA), provides evidence for a chronologically ordered ice stratigraphy from the modern glacier surface down to the bottom ice layers with an age of similar to 7 kyrs, which confirms the hypothesis. Our results indicate that the drilling site has continuously been glaciated on frozen bedrock since similar to 7 kyrs BP. Absence of older ice on the highest glacier of South Tyrol is consistent with the removal of basal ice from bedrock during the Northern Hemisphere Climatic Optimum (6-9 kyrs BP), the warmest interval in the European Alps during the Holocene. Borehole inclinometric measurements of the current glacier flow combined with surface ground penetration radar (GPR) measurements indicate that, due to the sustained atmospheric warming since the 1980s, an acceleration of the glacier Alto dell'Ortles flow has just recently begun. Given the stratigraphic-chronological continuity of the Mt. Ortles cores over millennia, it can be argued that this behaviour has been unprecedented at this location since the Northern Hemisphere Climatic Optimum

    A Data Driven Vector Field Oscillator with Arbitrary Limit Cycle Shape

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    Cyclic motions in vertebrates, including heart beating, breathing and walking, are derived by a network of biological oscillators having fascinating features such as entrainment, environment adaptation, and robustness. These features encouraged engineers to use oscillators for generating cyclic motions. To this end, it is crucial to have oscillators capable of characterizing any periodic signal via a stable limit cycle. In this paper, we propose a 2-dimensional oscillator whose limit cycle can be matched to any periodic signal depicting a non-self-intersecting curve in the state space. In particular, the proposed oscillator is designed as an autonomous vector field directed toward the desired limit cycle. To this purpose, the desired reference signal is parameterized with respect to a state-dependent phase variable, then the oscillator's states track the parameterized signal. We also present a state transformation technique to bound the oscillator's output and its first time derivative. The soundness of the proposed oscillator has been verified by carrying out a few simulations.Comment: 58th IEEE Conference on Decision and Control (CDC2019

    Institutional Interdependency: Explaining the Relationship between Female Labour Force Participation and Fertility Rates in Post-Industrial Nations

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    The central research question of the thesis is: “Why was the relationship between female labour force participation and fertility rates positive in post-industrial nations in the period 1990–2009?” Scholarship has sought to explain the emergence of a positive relationship between female labour force participation and fertility rates through gender equity-based explanations. However, this literature has primarily focused on gender equity in family-oriented institutions. It has paid less attention to other dimensions of female constraint and opportunity that exist across multiple spheres of women’s lives, including explanations centred on industrial relations institutions, welfare state institutions and social policies, and the household as a social institution. Existing institutional explanations have been siloed from each other, rather than being incorporated into a model that encompasses their interdependency, as this thesis argues. Using a ‘most different systems’ comparative approach, a qualitative case study analysis of four countries with distinct institutional arrangements – the U.S., Australia, Denmark and Germany – was conducted. Qualitative data including policy documents and legislative provisions were analysed for the four nations to generate hypotheses. These hypotheses serve the purpose of developing more general theoretical propositions, which were then tested using a larger-N sample of 17 nations through pooled time-series analysis using Prais–Winsten regression estimation to empirically test the impact of identified institutions on female labour force participation and fertility rates. This thesis conceptualises a new theoretically and empirically informed comprehensive ‘institutional interdependency model’ based on women’s limitations and opportunity structures in reconciling paid employment and motherhood which are contingent on three main spheres: 1) industrial relations institutions (including skilling systems and wage determination regimes), 2) welfare state institutions (including employment protection legislation, family policy, active labour market programmes and public sector employment), and 3) the household as a social institution to answer the central research question
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