2,399 research outputs found
Future impacts of fresh water resource management: sensitivity of coastal deltas
We present an assessment of contemporary and future effective sealevel rise (ESLR) using a sample of 40 deltas distributed worldwide. For any delta, ESLR is a net rate defined by eustatic sea-level rise, natural gross rates of fluvial sediment deposition and subsidence, and accelerated subsidence due to groundwater and hydrocarbon extraction. Present-day ESLR, estimated from geospatial data and a simple model of deltaic dynamics, ranges from 0.5 to 12.5 mm year-1. Reduced accretion of fluvial sediment from upstream siltation of reservoirs and freshwater consumptive irrigation losses are primary determinants of ESLR in nearly 70% of the deltas, while for only 12% eustatic sea-level rise predominates. Future scenarios indicate a much larger impact on deltas than previously estimated. Serious challenges to human occupancy of deltas worldwide are conveyed by upland watershed factors, which have been studied less comprehensively than the climate change and sea-level rise question
Unusual statistics of interference effects in neutron scattering from compound nuclei
We consider interference effects between p-wave resonance scattering
amplitude and background s-wave amplitude in low-energy neutron scattering from
a heavy nucleus which goes through the compound nucleus stage. The first effect
is in the difference between the forward and backward scattering cross
sections. Because of the chaotic nature of the compound states, this effect is
a random variable with zero mean. However, a statistical consideration shows
that the probability distribution of this effect does not obey the standard
central limit theorem. That is, the probability density for the effect averaged
over n resonances does not become a Gaussian distribution with the variance
decreasing as 1/sqrt(n) (``violation'' of the theorem!). We derive the
probability distribution of the effect and the limit distribution of the
average. It is found that the width of this distribution does not decrease with
the increase of n, i.e., fluctuations are not suppressed by averaging.
Furthermore, we consider the correlation between the neutron spin and the
scattering plane and find that this effect, although much smaller, shows
fluctuations which actually increase upon averaging over many measurements.
Limits of the effects due to finite resonance widths are also considered. In
the appendix we present a simple derivation of the limit theorem for the
average of random variables with infinite variances.Comment: 15 pages, RevTeX, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Level density of a Fermi gas: average growth and fluctuations
We compute the level density of a two--component Fermi gas as a function of
the number of particles, angular momentum and excitation energy. The result
includes smooth low--energy corrections to the leading Bethe term (connected to
a generalization of the partition problem and Hardy--Ramanujan formula) plus
oscillatory corrections that describe shell effects. When applied to nuclear
level densities, the theory provides a unified formulation valid from
low--lying states up to levels entering the continuum. The comparison with
experimental data from neutron resonances gives excellent results.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figur
Flight Speeds among Bird Species: Allometric and Phylogenetic Effects
Flight speed is expected to increase with mass and wing loading among flying animals and aircraft for fundamental aerodynamic reasons. Assuming geometrical and dynamical similarity, cruising flight speed is predicted to vary as (body mass)1/6 and (wing loading)1/2 among bird species. To test these scaling rules and the general importance of mass and wing loading for bird flight speeds, we used tracking radar to measure flapping flight speeds of individuals or flocks of migrating birds visually identified to species as well as their altitude and winds at the altitudes where the birds were flying. Equivalent airspeeds (airspeeds corrected to sea level air density, Ue) of 138 species, ranging 0.01–10 kg in mass, were analysed in relation to biometry and phylogeny. Scaling exponents in relation to mass and wing loading were significantly smaller than predicted (about 0.12 and 0.32, respectively, with similar results for analyses based on species and independent phylogenetic contrasts). These low scaling exponents may be the result of evolutionary restrictions on bird flight-speed range, counteracting too slow flight speeds among species with low wing loading and too fast speeds among species with high wing loading. This compression of speed range is partly attained through geometric differences, with aspect ratio showing a positive relationship with body mass and wing loading, but additional factors are required to fully explain the small scaling exponent of Ue in relation to wing loading. Furthermore, mass and wing loading accounted for only a limited proportion of the variation in Ue. Phylogeny was a powerful factor, in combination with wing loading, to account for the variation in Ue. These results demonstrate that functional flight adaptations and constraints associated with different evolutionary lineages have an important influence on cruising flapping flight speed that goes beyond the general aerodynamic scaling effects of mass and wing loading
Phylogeny of Passerida (Aves: Passeriformes) based on nuclear and mitochondrial sequence data.
Abstract Passerida is a monophyletic group of oscine passerines that includes almost 3500 species (about 36%) of all bird species in the world. . Monophyly of their Sylvioidea could not be corroborated-these taxa falls either into a clade with wrens, gnatcatchers, and nuthatches, or one with, e.g., warblers, bulbuls, babblers, and white-eyes. The tits, penduline tits, and waxwings belong to Passerida but have no close relatives among the taxa studied herein
Meson-induced correlations of nucleons in nuclear Compton scattering
The non-resonant (seagull) contribution to the nuclear Compton amplitude at
low energies is strongly influenced by nucleon correlations arising from meson
exchange. We study this problem in a modified Fermi gas model, where nuclear
correlation functions are obtained with the help of perturbation theory. The
dependence of the mesonic seagull amplitude on the nuclear radius is
investigated and the influence of a realistic nuclear density on this amplitude
is dicussed. We found that different form factors appear for the static part
(proportional to the enhancement constant ) of the mesonic seagull
amplitude and for the parts, which contain the contribution from
electromagnetic polarizabilities.Comment: 15 pages, Latex, epsf.sty, 9 eps figures
A Perturbative Calculation of the Electromagnetic Form Factors of the Deuteron
Making use of the effective field theory expansion recently developed by the
authors, we compute the electromagnetic form factors of the deuteron
analytically to next-to-leading order (NLO). The computation is rather simple,
and involves calculating several Feynman diagrams, using dimensional
regularization. The results agree well with data and indicate that the
expansion is converging. They do not suffer from any ambiguities arising from
off-shell versus on-shell amplitudes.Comment: 22 pages, 8 figures. Discussion of effective range theory added,
typos correcte
Self-consistent Approach to Off-Shell Transport
The properties of two forms of the gradient expanded Kadanoff--Baym
equations, i.e. the Kadanoff--Baym and Botermans-Malfliet forms, suitable to
describe the transport dynamics of particles and resonances with broad spectral
widths, are discussed in context of conservation laws, the definition of a
kinetic entropy and the possibility of numerical realization. Recent results on
exact conservations of charge and energy-momentum within Kadanoff-Baym form of
quantum kinetics based on local coupling schemes are extended to two cases
relevant in many applications. These concern the interaction via a finite range
potential, and, relevant in nuclear and hadron physics, e.g. for the
pion--nucleon interaction, the case of derivative coupling.Comment: 35 pages, submitted to issue of Phys. Atom. Nucl. dedicated to S.T.
Belyaev on the occasion of his 80th birthday. Few references are adde
A Light Front Treatment of the Nucleus-Implications for Deep Inelastic Scattering
A light front treatment of the nuclear wave function is developed and
applied, using the mean field approximation, to infinite nuclear matter. The
nuclear mesons are shown to carry about a third of the nuclear plus momentum,
p+; but their momentum distribution has support only at p+ =0, and the mesons
do not contribute to nuclear deep inelastic scattering. This zero mode effect
occurs because the meson fields are independent of space-time position.Comment: 11 pages, revtex, 1 figur
Quantum Graphs: A simple model for Chaotic Scattering
We connect quantum graphs with infinite leads, and turn them to scattering
systems. We show that they display all the features which characterize quantum
scattering systems with an underlying classical chaotic dynamics: typical
poles, delay time and conductance distributions, Ericson fluctuations, and when
considered statistically, the ensemble of scattering matrices reproduce quite
well the predictions of appropriately defined Random Matrix ensembles. The
underlying classical dynamics can be defined, and it provides important
parameters which are needed for the quantum theory. In particular, we derive
exact expressions for the scattering matrix, and an exact trace formula for the
density of resonances, in terms of classical orbits, analogous to the
semiclassical theory of chaotic scattering. We use this in order to investigate
the origin of the connection between Random Matrix Theory and the underlying
classical chaotic dynamics. Being an exact theory, and due to its relative
simplicity, it offers new insights into this problem which is at the fore-front
of the research in chaotic scattering and related fields.Comment: 28 pages, 13 figures, submitted to J. Phys. A Special Issue -- Random
Matrix Theor
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