897 research outputs found
Existence of axially symmetric static solutions of the Einstein-Vlasov system
We prove the existence of static, asymptotically flat non-vacuum spacetimes
with axial symmetry where the matter is modeled as a collisionless gas. The
axially symmetric solutions of the resulting Einstein-Vlasov system are
obtained via the implicit function theorem by perturbing off a suitable
spherically symmetric steady state of the Vlasov-Poisson system.Comment: 32 page
Nuclear spin coherence in a quantum wire
We have observed millisecond-long coherent evolution of nuclear spins in a
quantum wire at 1.2 K. Local, all-electrical manipulation of nuclear spins is
achieved by dynamic nuclear polarization in the breakdown regime of the Integer
Quantum Hall Effect combined with pulsed Nuclear Magnetic Resonance. The
excitation thresholds for the breakdown are significantly smaller than what
would be expected for our sample and the direction of the nuclear polarization
can be controlled by the voltage bias. As a four-level spin system, the device
is equivalent to two qubits.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
A nonhomogeneous boundary value problem in mass transfer theory
We prove a uniqueness result of solutions for a system of PDEs of
Monge-Kantorovich type arising in problems of mass transfer theory. The results
are obtained under very mild regularity assumptions both on the reference set
, and on the (possibly asymmetric) norm defined in
. In the special case when is endowed with the Euclidean
metric, our results provide a complete description of the stationary solutions
to the tray table problem in granular matter theory.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figure
Ongoing methane discharge at well site 22/4b (North Sea)and discovery of a spiral vortex bubble plume motion
Highlights
• Mega ebullition of biogenic methane from an abandoned offshore gas well, North Sea.
• Evidence for midwater bubble plume intrusion, fallback, and short-circuiting of the plume.
• Effective trapping of seabed released methane underneath the thermocline.
• First observation of a spiral vortex methane plume and marginal turbulences.
• Megaplumes appear less efficient in terms of vertical methane transport than previously thought.
Abstract
First direct evidence for ongoing gas seepage activity on the abandoned well site 22/4b (Northern North Sea, 57°55′ N, 01°38′ E) and discovery of neighboring seepage activity is provided from observations since 2005. A manned submersible dive in 2006 discovered several extraordinary intense seepage sites within a 60 m wide and 20 m deep crater cut into the flat 96 m deep seafloor. Capture and (isotope) chemical analyses of the gas bubbles near the seafloor revealed in situ concentrations of methane between 88 and 90%Vol. with δ13C–CH4 values around −74‰ VPDB, indicating a biogenic origin. Bulk methane concentrations throughout the water column were assessed by 120 Niskin water samples showing up to 400.000 nM CH4 in the crater at depth. In contrast, concentrations above the thermocline were orders of magnitude lower, with a median value of 20 nM. A dye tracer injection into the gas seeps revealed upwelling bubble and water motion with gas plume rise velocities up to ∼1 ms−1 (determined near the seabed). However, the dissolved dye did not pass the thermocline, but returned down to the seabed. Measurements of direct bubble-mediated atmospheric flux revealed low values of 0.7 ± 0.3 kty−1, much less than current state-of-the-art bubble dissolution models would predict for such a strong and upwelling in situ gas bubble flux at shallow water depths (i.e. ∼100 m). Acoustic multibeam water column imaging data indicate a pronounced 200 m lateral intrusion at the thermocline together with high methane concentration at this layer. A partly downward-orientated bubble plume motion is also visible in the acoustic data with potential short-circuiting in accordance to the dye experiment. This observation could partly explain the observed trapping of most of the released gas below the well-established thermocline in the North Sea. Moreover, 3D analyses of the multibeam water column data reveal that the upwelling plume transforms into a spiral expanding vortex while rising through the water column. Such a spiral vortex motion has never been reported before for marine gas seepage and might represent an important process with strong implication on plume dynamics, dissolution behavior, gas escape to the atmosphere, and is considered very important for respective modeling approaches
Dynamical elastic bodies in Newtonian gravity
Well-posedness for the initial value problem for a self-gravitating elastic
body with free boundary in Newtonian gravity is proved. In the material frame,
the Euler-Lagrange equation becomes, assuming suitable constitutive properties
for the elastic material, a fully non-linear elliptic-hyperbolic system with
boundary conditions of Neumann type. For systems of this type, the initial data
must satisfy compatibility conditions in order to achieve regular solutions.
Given a relaxed reference configuration and a sufficiently small Newton's
constant, a neigborhood of initial data satisfying the compatibility conditions
is constructed
On a classical spectral optimization problem in linear elasticity
We consider a classical shape optimization problem for the eigenvalues of
elliptic operators with homogeneous boundary conditions on domains in the
-dimensional Euclidean space. We survey recent results concerning the
analytic dependence of the elementary symmetric functions of the eigenvalues
upon domain perturbation and the role of balls as critical points of such
functions subject to volume constraint. Our discussion concerns Dirichlet and
buckling-type problems for polyharmonic operators, the Neumann and the
intermediate problems for the biharmonic operator, the Lam\'{e} and the
Reissner-Mindlin systems.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the workshop `New Trends in Shape
Optimization', Friedrich-Alexander Universit\"{a}t Erlangen-Nuremberg, 23-27
September 201
Long-term deglacial permafrost carbon dynamics in MPI-ESM
We have developed a
new module to calculate soil organic carbon (SOC) accumulation in perennially
frozen ground in the land surface model JSBACH. Running this offline version
of MPI-ESM we have modelled long-term permafrost carbon accumulation and
release from the Last Glacial Maximum (LGM) to the pre-industrial (PI) age.
Our simulated near-surface PI permafrost extent of
16.9  ×  106 km2 is close to observational estimates.
Glacial boundary conditions, especially ice sheet coverage, result in
profoundly different spatial patterns of glacial permafrost extent. Deglacial
warming leads to large-scale changes in soil temperatures, manifested in
permafrost disappearance in southerly regions, and permafrost aggregation in
formerly glaciated grid cells. In contrast to the large spatial shift in
simulated permafrost occurrence, we infer an only moderate increase in total
LGM permafrost area (18.3  ×  106 km2) – together with
pronounced changes in the depth of seasonal thaw. Earlier empirical
reconstructions suggest a larger spread of permafrost towards more southerly
regions under glacial conditions, but with a highly uncertain extent of
non-continuous permafrost.Compared to a control simulation without describing the transport of SOC into perennially
frozen ground, the implementation of our newly developed module for simulating permafrost
SOC accumulation leads to a doubling of simulated LGM permafrost SOC storage (amounting
to a total of ∼  150 PgC). Despite LGM temperatures favouring a larger permafrost
extent, simulated cold glacial temperatures – together with low precipitation and low
CO2 levels – limit vegetation productivity and therefore prevent a larger
glacial SOC build-up in our model. Changes in physical and biogeochemical boundary
conditions during deglacial warming lead to an increase in mineral SOC storage towards
the Holocene (168 PgC at PI), which is below observational estimates (575 PgC in
continuous and discontinuous permafrost). Additional model experiments clarified the
sensitivity of simulated SOC storage to model parameters, affecting long-term soil carbon
respiration rates and simulated ALDs. Rather than a steady increase in carbon release
from the LGM to PI as a consequence of deglacial permafrost degradation, our results
suggest alternating phases of soil carbon accumulation and loss as an effect of dynamic
changes in permafrost extent, ALDs, soil litter input, and heterotrophic respiration.</p
On the structure of the set of bifurcation points of periodic solutions for multiparameter Hamiltonian systems
This paper deals with periodic solutions of the Hamilton equation with many
parameters. Theorems on global bifurcation of solutions with periods
from a stationary point are proved. The Hessian matrix of the
Hamiltonian at the stationary point can be singular. However, it is assumed
that the local topological degree of the gradient of the Hamiltonian at the
stationary point is nonzero. It is shown that (global) bifurcation points of
solutions with given periods can be identified with zeros of appropriate
continuous functions on the space of parameters. Explicit formulae for such
functions are given in the case when the Hessian matrix of the Hamiltonian at
the stationary point is block-diagonal. Symmetry breaking results concerning
bifurcation of solutions with different minimal periods are obtained. A
geometric description of the set of bifurcation points is given. Examples of
constructive application of the theorems proved to analytical and numerical
investigation and visualization of the set of all bifurcation points in given
domain are provided.
This paper is based on a part of the author's thesis [W. Radzki, ``Branching
points of periodic solutions of autonomous Hamiltonian systems'' (Polish), PhD
thesis, Nicolaus Copernicus University, Faculty of Mathematics and Computer
Science, Toru\'{n}, 2005].Comment: 35 pages, 4 figures, PDFLaTe
Dynamical Systems Gradient method for solving nonlinear equations with monotone operators
A version of the Dynamical Systems Gradient Method for solving ill-posed
nonlinear monotone operator equations is studied in this paper. A discrepancy
principle is proposed and justified. A numerical experiment was carried out
with the new stopping rule. Numerical experiments show that the proposed
stopping rule is efficient. Equations with monotone operators are of interest
in many applications.Comment: 2 figure
Cosmological post-Newtonian expansions to arbitrary order
We prove the existence of a large class of one parameter families of
solutions to the Einstein-Euler equations that depend on the singular parameter
\ep=v_T/c (0<\ep < \ep_0), where is the speed of light, and is a
typical speed of the gravitating fluid. These solutions are shown to exist on a
common spacetime slab M\cong [0,T)\times \Tbb^3, and converge as \ep
\searrow 0 to a solution of the cosmological Poisson-Euler equations of
Newtonian gravity. Moreover, we establish that these solutions can be expanded
in the parameter \ep to any specified order with expansion coefficients that
satisfy \ep-independent (nonlocal) symmetric hyperbolic equations
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