46,772 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Investigating the impact of remotely sensed precipitation and hydrologic model uncertainties on the ensemble streamflow forecasting
In the past few years sequential data assimilation (SDA) methods have emerged as the best possible method at hand to properly treat all sources of error in hydrological modeling. However, very few studies have actually implemented SDA methods using realistic input error models for precipitation. In this study we use particle filtering as a SDA method to propagate input errors through a conceptual hydrologic model and quantify the state, parameter and streamflow uncertainties. Recent progress in satellite-based precipitation observation techniques offers an attractive option for considering spatiotemporal variation of precipitation. Therefore, we use the PERSIANN-CCS precipitation product to propagate input errors through our hydrologic model. Some uncertainty scenarios are set up to incorporate and investigate the impact of the individual uncertainty sources from precipitation, parameters and also combined error sources on the hydrologic response. Also probabilistic measure are used to quantify the quality of ensemble prediction. Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union
Comment on ``Quantum Statistical Mechanics of an Ideal Gas with Fractional Exclusion Statistics in Arbitrary Dimension"
It is mentioned that anyon thermodynamic potential could not
be factorized in terms characteristic of the ideal boson and
fermion gases by the relation in which , that claimed in Phys. Rev. Lett. 78,
3233 (1997). Our analyses indicate that the thermodynamic quantities of anyon
gas may be factorized as only in
the two-dimension system
Spontaneous phase oscillation induced by inertia and time delay
We consider a system of coupled oscillators with finite inertia and
time-delayed interaction, and investigate the interplay between inertia and
delay both analytically and numerically. The phase velocity of the system is
examined; revealed in numerical simulations is emergence of spontaneous phase
oscillation without external driving, which turns out to be in good agreement
with analytical results derived in the strong-coupling limit. Such
self-oscillation is found to suppress synchronization and its frequency is
observed to decrease with inertia and delay. We obtain the phase diagram, which
displays oscillatory and stationary phases in the appropriate regions of the
parameters.Comment: 5 pages, 6 figures, to pe published in PR
Visualizing urban microclimate and quantifying its impact on building energy use in San Francisco
Weather data at nearby airports are usually used in building energy simulation to estimate energy use in buildings or evaluate building design or retrofit options. However, due to urbanization and geography characteristics, local weather conditions can differ significantly from those at airports. This study presents the visualization of 10-year hourly weather data measured at 27 sites in San Francisco, aiming to provide insights into the urban microclimate and urban heat island effect in San Francisco and how they evolve during the recent decade. The 10-year weather data are used in building energy simulations to investigate its influence on energy use and electrical peak demand, which informs the city's policy making on building energy efficiency and resilience. The visualization feature is implemented in CityBES, an open web-based data and computing platform for urban building energy research
Effects of Domain Wall on Electronic Transport Properties in Mesoscopic Wire of Metallic Ferromagnets
We study the effect of the domain wall on electronic transport properties in
wire of ferromagnetic 3 transition metals based on the linear response
theory. We considered the exchange interaction between the conduction electron
and the magnetization, taking into account the scattering by impurities as
well. The effective electron-wall interaction is derived by use of a local
gauge transformation in the spin space. This interaction is treated
perturbatively to the second order. The conductivity contribution within the
classical (Boltzmann) transport theory turns out to be negligiblly small in
bulk magnets, due to a large thickness of the wall compared with the fermi
wavelength. It can be, however, significant in ballistic nanocontacts, as
indicated in recent experiments. We also discuss the quantum correction in
disordered case where the quantum coherence among electrons becomes important.
In such case of weak localization the wall can contribute to a decrease of
resistivity by causing dephasing. At lower temperature this effect grows and
can win over the classical contribution, in particular in wire of diameter
, being the inelastic diffusion
length. Conductance change of the quantum origin caused by the motion of the
wall is also discussed.Comment: 30 pages, 4 figures. Detailed paper of Phys. Rev. Lett. 78, 3773
(1997). Submitted to J. Phys. Soc. Jp
Dynamics of Vortex Core Switching in Ferromagnetic Nanodisks
Dynamics of magnetic vortex core switching in nanometer-scale permalloy disk,
having a single vortex ground state, was investigated by micromagnetic
modeling. When an in-plane magnetic field pulse with an appropriate strength
and duration is applied to the vortex structure, additional two vortices, i.e.,
a circular- and an anti-vortex, are created near the original vortex core.
Sequentially, the vortex-antivortex pair annihilates. A spin wave is created at
the annihilation point and propagated through the entire element; the relaxed
state for the system is the single vortex state with a switched vortex core.Comment: to appear in Appl. Phys. Let
- …