8,993 research outputs found
New geochemical and isotopic constraints on the genesis of the Oliveira Azeméis granitoid melts (Porto-Tomar Shear Zone, Iberian Variscan Chain, Central-Western Portugal).
The Porto-Tomar Shear Zone (PTSZ) is a very important tectonic structure that separates, in central-western
Portugal, two of the major tectonic units of the Iberian Variscan Chain: the Ossa-Morena Zone, to the west,
and the Central Iberian Zone, to the east. The Oliveira de Azeméis area lies in the northern sector of the PTZC
and it is characterized by the occurrence of strongly deformed granitoids. Country rocks are dominantly pelitic
metasediments which, according to recent geological mapping (Pereira et al., 2007), belong to the Precambrian
Lourosa Formation and the Ordovician São João de Ver Formation. Using Rb-Sr whole-rock isotopic data, Pinto
(1979) proposed an age of 379 12 Ma for the Oliveira de Azeméis granitoids.
In this work, new results were obtained on these granitoids in the area between the villages of Travanca and Curval,
especially in the Sacramento quarry. In this critical outcrop, strongly deformed two-mica granite (displaying S-C
structures, with dextral NNW-SSE shear planes) pass into diatexites and metatexites with garnet, cordierite and
sillimanite-bearing melanosomes. Leucosomes seem to have mainly granitic s.s. compositions, but cm-thick bands
of leucotonalite were also found.
Major element geochemistry of granite samples shows the following ranges: 71.4% SiO2 74.2%; 0.74%
Fe2O3t 2.48%; 0.35% MgO 0.60%; 0.49% CaO 1.32%; 2.90% Na2O 3.11%; 4.70% K2O
5.47%; 1.17 ASI 1.36. Trace element data reveal a strong fractionation between highly incompatible LILE
and less incompatible HFSE (248 PM normalized Rb/Y 671) and between LREE and HREE (18.6 PM
normalized La/Lu 54.7). These features, in particular the peraluminous composition, the high K contents and
the distinct rare-earth fractionation suggest that the Oliveira de Azeméis granites are mostly the result of partial
melting of metasediments with a large pelitic component and that garnet is a likely residual phase.
Isotope geochemistry data show that the previously reported isochron should not correspond to a true age since
the 87Sr/86Sr(380Ma) obtained in the granite samples analysed in the present work are very low, varying from
0.6978 to 0.7063, with an average value of 0.7023, which are unrealistic in S-type granitic melts. Probably, the
380 Ma date is the consequence of mixing of different melt source components in the samples used in its
calculation. Using the granite whole-rock samples collected in this work, a 328 28 Ma errorchron (MSWD=4.0;
initial 87Sr/86Sr=0,7106 0.0045) is now obtained.
Assuming a typical syn-tectonic Variscan age of 320 Ma for the studied granites, 87Sr/86Sr and "Nd range
from 0.7100 to 0.7133 and from -6.5 to -7.9, respectively. A micaschist sample collected in this area displays
87Sr/86Sr(320Ma) = 0.7146 and "Nd(320Ma) = -9.2. Therefore, the Sr and Nd isotope composition agrees with
the clearly dominance of a melt component derived by anatexis of a metapelitic source.
Two samples of a garnet-bearing (and comparatively zircon-rich) diatexite show 87Sr/86Sr(320Ma) values (0.7120
and 0.7102) similar to those found in granites, but have higher "Nd(320Ma): -2.0 and -1.6. This may be explained
by either (a) the involvement of a different source in the genesis of this diatexite or (b) the occurrence of Nd
isotope disequilibrium during the melting process, with the preservation of high 143Nd/144Nd ratios in refractory
phases such as garnet and/or zircon.
A Rb-Sr wr-feldspar-biotite-muscovite isochron of 301.2 5.6 Ma (MSWD=0.42; initial
87Sr/86Sr=0,71516 0.00074) in a granite sample is interpreted as recording the final stage of the operation
of the shear zone, which was accompanied by mica recrystallization.
Funding: projects Petrochron (PTDC/CTE-GIX/112561/2009) and Geobiotec (PEst-C/CTE/UI4035/2011).
References
Pereira E. et allia (2007) – Carta Geológica 1/50000 de Oliveira de Azeméis. INETI, Lisboa.
Pinto M.S. (1979) – PhD Thesis. Univ. Leed
Photoproduction of mesons in ultraperipheral heavy ion collisions at energies available at the BNL Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) and CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC)
We investigate the photoproduction of mesons in ultraperipheral heavy
ion collisions at RHIC and LHC energies in the dipole approach and within two
phenomenological models based on the the Color Glass Condensate (CGC)
formalism. We estimate the integrated cross section and rapidity distribution
for meson production and compare our predictions with the data from the STAR
collaboration. In particular, we demonstrate that the total cross section at
RHIC is strongly dependent on the energy behavior of the dipole-target cross
section at low energies, which is not well determined in the dipole approach.
In contrast, the predictions at midrapidities at RHIC and in the full rapidity
at LHC are under theoretical control and can be used to test the QCD dynamics
at high energies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. Improved version to be published in
Physical Review
Vector Meson Production in Coherent Hadronic Interactions: An update on predictions for RHIC and LHC
In this letter we update our predictions for the photoproduction of vector
mesons in coherent and collisions at RHIC and LHC energies using the
color dipole approach and the Color Glass Condensate (CGC) formalism. In
particular, we present our predictions for the first run of the LHC at half
energy and for the rapidity dependence of the ratio between the and
cross sections at RHIC energies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Gluon saturation and the Froissart bound: a simple approach
At very high energies we expect that the hadronic cross sections satisfy the
Froissart bound, which is a well-established property of the strong
interactions. In this energy regime we also expect the formation of the Color
Glass Condensate, characterized by gluon saturation and a typical momentum
scale: the saturation scale . In this paper we show that if a saturation
window exists between the nonperturbative and perturbative regimes of Quantum
Chromodynamics (QCD), the total cross sections satisfy the Froissart bound.
Furthermore, we show that our approach allows us to describe the high energy
experimental data on total cross sections.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures. Includes additional figures, discussion and
reference
Software-defined networking: guidelines for experimentation and validation in large-scale real world scenarios
Part 1: IIVC WorkshopInternational audienceThis article thoroughly details large-scale real world experiments using Software-Defined Networking in the testbed setup. More precisely, it provides a description of the foundation technology behind these experiments, which in turn is focused around OpenFlow and on the OFELIA testbed. In this testbed preliminary experiments were performed in order to tune up settings and procedures, analysing the encountered problems and their respective solutions. A methodology consisting of five large-scale experiments is proposed in order to properly validate and improve the evaluation techniques used in OpenFlow scenarios
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