2,630 research outputs found
Conditional probability of distributed surface rupturing during normal-faulting earthquakes
Coseismic surface faulting is a significant source of hazard for critical plants and distributive infrastructure; it may occur either on the principal fault or as distributed rupture on nearby faults. Hazard assessment for distributed faulting is based on empirical relations which, in the case of normal faults, were derived almost 15 years ago using a dataset of US earthquakes. We collected additional case histories worldwide, for a total of 21 earthquakes, and calculated the conditional probability of distributed faulting as a function of distance from the principal fault. We found no clear dependency on the magnitude nor the time of occurrence of the earthquakes, but our data consistently show a higher probability of rupture when compared with the scaling relations currently adopted in engineering practice. We derive updated empirical regressions and show that the results are strongly conditioned by the averaging of earthquakes effectively generating distributed faulting at a given distance and those which did not generate faulting; thus, we introduce a more conservative scenario that can be included in a logic tree approach to consider the full spectrum of potential ruptures. Our results can be applied in the framework of probabilistic assessment of fault displacement hazard
WD1953-011 - a magnetic white dwarf with peculiar field structure
We present H-alpha spectra of the magnetic white dwarf star WD1953-011 which
confirm the presence of the broad Zeeman components corresponding to a field
strength of about 500kG found by Maxted & Marsh (1999). We also find that the
line profile is variable over a timescale of a day or less. The core of the
H-alpha line also shows a narrow Zeeman triplet corresponding to a field
strength of of about 100kG which appears to be almost constant in shape. These
observations suggest that the magnetic field on WD1953-011 has a complex
structure and that the star has a rotational period of hours or days which
causes the observed variability of the spectra. We argue that neither an offset
dipole model nor a double-dipole model are sufficient to explain our
observations. Instead, we propose a two component model consisting of a high
field region of magnetic field strength of about 500kG covering about 10% of
the surface area of the star superimposed on an underlying dipolar field of
mean field strength of about 70kG. Radial velocity measurements of the narrow
Zeeman triplet show that the radial velocity is constant to within a few km/s
so this star is unlikely to be a close binary.Comment: Accpeted for publication in MNRAS. 4 pages, 2 figure
Hydrogen vs. Battery in the long-term operation. A comparative between energy management strategies for hybrid renewable microgrids
The growth of the world’s energy demand over recent decades in relation to energy intensity and demography is clear. At the same time, the use of renewable energy sources is pursued to address decarbonization targets, but the stochasticity of renewable energy systems produces an increasing need for management systems to supply such energy volume while guaranteeing, at the same time, the security and reliability of the microgrids. Locally distributed energy storage systems (ESS) may provide the capacity to temporarily decouple production and demand. In this sense, the most implemented ESS in local energy districts are small–medium-scale electrochemical batteries. However, hydrogen systems are viable for storing larger energy quantities thanks to its intrinsic high mass-energy density. To match generation, demand and storage, energy management systems (EMSs) become crucial. This paper compares two strategies for an energy management system based on hydrogen-priority vs. battery-priority for the operation of a hybrid renewable microgrid. The overall performance of the two mentioned strategies is compared in the long-term operation via a set of evaluation parameters defined by the unmet load, storage efficiency, operating hours and cumulative energy. The results show that the hydrogen-priority strategy allows the microgrid to be led towards island operation because it saves a higher amount of energy, while the battery-priority strategy reduces the energy efficiency in the storage round trip. The main contribution of this work lies in the demonstration that conventional EMS for microgrids’ operation based on battery-priority strategy should turn into hydrogen-priority to keep the reliability and independence of the microgrid in the long-term operation
Statistical properties of stochastic 2D Navier-Stokes equations from linear models
A new approach to the old-standing problem of the anomaly of the scaling
exponents of nonlinear models of turbulence has been proposed and tested
through numerical simulations. This is achieved by constructing, for any given
nonlinear model, a linear model of passive advection of an auxiliary field
whose anomalous scaling exponents are the same as the scaling exponents of the
nonlinear problem. In this paper, we investigate this conjecture for the 2D
Navier-Stokes equations driven by an additive noise. In order to check this
conjecture, we analyze the coupled system Navier-Stokes/linear advection system
in the unknowns . We introduce a parameter which gives a
system ; this system is studied for any
proving its well posedness and the uniqueness of its invariant measure
.
The key point is that for any the fields and
have the same scaling exponents, by assuming universality of the
scaling exponents to the force. In order to prove the same for the original
fields and , we investigate the limit as , proving that
weakly converges to , where is the only invariant
measure for the joint system for when .Comment: 23 pages; improved versio
Earthquake-triggered landslides and Environmental Seismic Intensity: insights from the 2018 Papua New Guinea earthquake (Mw 7.5)
On the 25 February 2018, an earthquake of magnitude M(w)7.5 struck the region of Porgera in Papua New Guinea (PNG), triggering numerous landslides. Planetscope images are used to derive a partial inventory of 2941 landslides in a cloud-free area of 2686 km(2). The average area of landslides in the study area is 18,500 m(2). We use the Environmental Seismic Intensity (ESI) scale to assess the damage due to the triggered landslides. Local intensity values are assigned to individual landslides by calculating their volume using various area-volume relations. We observe that different empirical relations yield similar volume values for individual landslides (local ESI intensity & GE; X). The spatial variation of landslide density and areal coverage within the study area in cells of 1 km(2) is investigated and compared to the probability predicted by the USGS model. We observe that high probability corresponds to a significant number of landslides. An ESI epicentral intensity of XI is estimated based on primary and secondary effects. This study represents the first application of the ESI scale to an earthquake in PNG. The Porgera earthquake fits well with past case studies worldwide in terms of ESI scale epicentral intensity and triggered landslide number as a function of earthquake magnitude
Oral malodor in Special Care Patients: current knowledge
Epidemiological studies report that about 50% of the population may have oral malodor
with a strong social and psychological impact in their daily life. When intra-oral causes are
excluded, referral to an appropriate medical specialist is paramount for management and
treatment of extra-oral causes. The intra-oral causes of halitosis are highly common, and the
dentist is the central clinician to diagnose and treat them. Pseudohalitosis or halitophobia
may occur and an early identification of these conditions by the dentist is important in order
to avoid unnecessary dental treatments for patients who need psychological or psychiatric
therapy. The organoleptic technique is still considered the most reliable examination method
to diagnose genuine halitosis. Special needs patients are more prone than others to have
oral malodor because of concurrent systemic or metabolic diseases, and medications.
The present report reviews halitosis, its implications, and the management in special care
dentistry
Characterization of self-injected electron beams from LWFA experiments at SPARC_LAB
The plasma-based acceleration is an encouraging technique to overcome the
limits of the accelerating gradient in the conventional RF acceleration. A
plasma accelerator is able to provide accelerating fields up to hundreds of
, paving the way to accelerate particles to several MeV over a short
distance (below the millimetre range). Here the characteristics of preliminary
electron beams obtained with the self-injection mechanism produced with the
FLAME high-power laser at the SPARC_LAB test facility are shown. In detail,
with an energy laser on focus of and a pulse temporal length (FWHM) of
, we obtained an electron plasma density due to laser ionization of
about , electron energy up to and beam
charge in the range .Comment: 6 pages, 11 figures, conference EAAC201
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