954 research outputs found
Pattern scaling using ClimGen: monthly-resolution future climate scenarios including changes in the variability of precipitation
Development, testing and example applications of the pattern-scaling approach for generating future climate change projections are reported here, with a focus on a particular software application called “ClimGen”. A number of innovations have been implemented, including using exponential and logistic functions of global-mean temperature to represent changes in local precipitation and cloud cover, and interpolation from climate model grids to a finer grid while taking into account land-sea contrasts in the climate change patterns. Of particular significance is a new approach for incorporating changes in the inter-annual variability of monthly precipitation simulated by climate models. This is achieved by diagnosing simulated changes in the shape of the gamma distribution of monthly precipitation totals, applying the pattern-scaling approach to estimate changes in the shape parameter under a future scenario, and then perturbing sequences of observed precipitation anomalies so that their distribution changes according to the projected change in the shape parameter. The approach cannot represent changes to the structure of climate timeseries (e.g. changed autocorrelation or teleconnection patterns) were they to occur, but is shown here to be more successful at representing changes in low precipitation extremes than previous pattern-scaling methods
Global Superdiffusion of Weak Chaos
A class of kicked rotors is introduced, exhibiting accelerator-mode islands
(AIs) and {\em global} superdiffusion for {\em arbitrarily weak} chaos. The
corresponding standard maps are shown to be exactly related to generalized web
maps taken modulo an ``oblique cylinder''. Then, in a case that the web-map
orbit structure is periodic in the phase plane, the AIs are essentially {\em
normal} web islands folded back into the cylinder. As a consequence, chaotic
orbits sticking around the AI boundary are accelerated {\em only} when they
traverse tiny {\em ``acceleration spots''}. This leads to chaotic flights
having a quasiregular {\em steplike} structure. The global weak-chaos
superdiffusion is thus basically different in nature from the strong-chaos one
in the usual standard and web maps.Comment: REVTEX, 4 Figures: fig1.jpg, fig2.ps, fig3.ps, fig4.p
Suppression of quantum oscillations and the dependence on site energies in electronic excitation transfer in the Fenna-Matthews-Olson trimer
Energy transfer in the photosynthetic complex of the Green Sulfur Bacteria
known as the Fenna-Matthews-Olson (FMO) complex is studied theoretically taking
all three subunits (monomers) of the FMO trimer and the recently found eighth
bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) molecule into account. We find that in all
considered cases there is very little transfer between the monomers. Since it
is believed that the eighth BChl is located near the main light harvesting
antenna we look at the differences in transfer between the situation when BChl
8 is initially excited and the usually considered case when BChl 1 or 6 is
initially excited. We find strong differences in the transfer dynamics, both
qualitatively and quantitatively. When the excited state dynamics is
initialized at site eight of the FMO complex, we see a slow exponential-like
decay of the excitation. This is in contrast to the oscillations and a
relatively fast transfer that occurs when only seven sites or initialization at
sites 1 and 6 is considered. Additionally we show that differences in the
values of the electronic transition energies found in the literature lead to a
large difference in the transfer dynamics
The Physical Basis for Long-lived Electronic Coherence in Photosynthetic Light Harvesting Systems
The physical basis for observed long-lived electronic coherence in
photosynthetic light-harvesting systems is identified using an analytically
soluble model. Three physical features are found to be responsible for their
long coherence lifetimes: i) the small energy gap between excitonic states, ii)
the small ratio of the energy gap to the coupling between excitonic states, and
iii) the fact that the molecular characteristics place the system in an
effective low temperature regime, even at ambient conditions. Using this
approach, we obtain decoherence times for a dimer model with FMO parameters of
160 fs at 77 K and 80 fs at 277 K. As such, significant
oscillations are found to persist for 600 fs and 300 fs, respectively, in
accord with the experiment and with previous computations. Similar good
agreement is found for PC645 at room temperature, with oscillations persisting
for 400 fs. The analytic expressions obtained provide direct insight into the
parameter dependence of the decoherence time scales.Comment: 5 figures; J. Phys. Chem. Lett. (2011
Non-Markovian stochastic description of quantum transport in photosynthetic systems
We analyze several aspects of the transport dynamics in the LH1-RC core of
purple bacteria, which consists basically in a ring of antenna molecules that
transport the energy into a target molecule, the reaction center, placed in the
center of the ring. We show that the periodicity of the system plays an
important role to explain the relevance of the initial state in the transport
efficiency. This picture is modified, and the transport enhanced for any
initial state, when considering that molecules have different energies, and
when including their interaction with the environment. We study this last
situation by using stochastic Schr{\"o}dinger equations, both for Markovian and
non-Markovian type of interactions.Comment: 21 pages, 5 figure
A self-consistent quantum master equation approach to molecular transport
We propose a self-consistent generalized quantum master equation (GQME) to
describe electron transport through molecular junctions. In a previous study
[M.Esposito and M.Galperin. Phys. Rev. B 79, 205303 (2009)], we derived a
time-nonlocal GQME to cure the lack of broadening effects in Redfield theory.
To do so, the free evolution used in the Born-Markov approximation to close the
Redfield equation was replaced by a standard Redfield evolution. In the present
paper, we propose a backward Redfield evolution leading to a time-local GQME
which allows for a self-consistent procedure of the GQME generator. This
approach is approximate but properly reproduces the nonequilibrium steady state
density matrix and the currents of an exactly solvable model. The approach is
less accurate for higher moments such as the noise.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Movement disorder and neuronal migration disorder due to ARFGEF2 mutation
We report a child with a severe choreadystonic movement disorder, bilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia (BPNH), and secondary microcephaly based on compound heterozygosity for two new ARFGEF2 mutations (c.2031_2038dup and c.3798_3802del), changing the limited knowledge about the phenotype. The brain MRI shows bilateral hyperintensity of the putamen, BPNH, and generalized atrophy. Loss of ARFGEF2 function affects vesicle trafficking, proliferation/apoptosis, and neurotransmitter receptor function. This can explain BPNH and microcephaly. We hypothesize that the movement disorder and the preferential damage to the basal ganglia, specifically to the putamen, may be caused by an increased sensitivity to degeneration, a dynamic dysfunction due to neurotransmitter receptor mislocalization or a combination of both
On-orbit Operations and Offline Data Processing of CALET onboard the ISS
The CALorimetric Electron Telescope (CALET), launched for installation on the
International Space Station (ISS) in August, 2015, has been accumulating
scientific data since October, 2015. CALET is intended to perform long-duration
observations of high-energy cosmic rays onboard the ISS. CALET directly
measures the cosmic-ray electron spectrum in the energy range of 1 GeV to 20
TeV with a 2% energy resolution above 30 GeV. In addition, the instrument can
measure the spectrum of gamma rays well into the TeV range, and the spectra of
protons and nuclei up to a PeV.
In order to operate the CALET onboard ISS, JAXA Ground Support Equipment
(JAXA-GSE) and the Waseda CALET Operations Center (WCOC) have been established.
Scientific operations using CALET are planned at WCOC, taking into account
orbital variations of geomagnetic rigidity cutoff. Scheduled command sequences
are used to control the CALET observation modes on orbit. Calibration data
acquisition by, for example, recording pedestal and penetrating particle
events, a low-energy electron trigger mode operating at high geomagnetic
latitude, a low-energy gamma-ray trigger mode operating at low geomagnetic
latitude, and an ultra heavy trigger mode, are scheduled around the ISS orbit
while maintaining maximum exposure to high-energy electrons and other
high-energy shower events by always having the high-energy trigger mode active.
The WCOC also prepares and distributes CALET flight data to collaborators in
Italy and the United States.
As of August 31, 2017, the total observation time is 689 days with a live
time fraction of the total time of approximately 84%. Nearly 450 million events
are collected with a high-energy (E>10 GeV) trigger. By combining all operation
modes with the excellent-quality on-orbit data collected thus far, it is
expected that a five-year observation period will provide a wealth of new and
interesting results.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, published online 27 February 201
Search for GeV Gamma-ray Counterparts of Gravitational Wave Events by CALET
We present results on searches for gamma-ray counterparts of the LIGO/Virgo
gravitational-wave events using CALorimetric Electron Telescope ({\sl CALET})
observations. The main instrument of {\sl CALET}, CALorimeter (CAL), observes
gamma-rays from GeV up to 10 TeV with a field of view of nearly 2 sr.
In addition, the {\sl CALET} gamma-ray burst monitor (CGBM) views 3 sr
and sr of the sky in the 7 keV -- 1 MeV and the 40 keV -- 20 MeV
bands, respectively, by using two different crystal scintillators. The {\sl
CALET} observations on the International Space Station started in October 2015,
and here we report analyses of events associated with the following
gravitational wave events: GW151226, GW170104, GW170608, GW170814 and GW170817.
Although only upper limits on gamma-ray emission are obtained, they correspond
to a luminosity of erg s in the GeV energy band
depending on the distance and the assumed time duration of each event, which is
approximately the order of luminosity of typical short gamma-ray bursts. This
implies there will be a favorable opportunity to detect high-energy gamma-ray
emission in further observations if additional gravitational wave events with
favorable geometry will occur within our field-of-view. We also show the
sensitivity of {\sl CALET} for gamma-ray transient events which is the order of
~erg\,cm\,s for an observation of 100~s duration.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Accepted for publication in
Astrophysical Journa
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Nonlinear regional warming with increasing CO₂ concentration
When considering adaptation measures and global climate mitigation goals, stakeholders need regional-scale climate projections, including the range of plausible warming rates. To assist these stakeholders, it is important to understand whether some locations may see disproportionately high or low warming from additional forcing above targets such as 2 K (ref. 1). There is a need to narrow uncertainty2 in this nonlinear warming, which requires understanding how climate changes as forcings increase from medium to high levels. However, quantifying and understanding regional nonlinear processes is challenging. Here we show that regional-scale warming can be strongly superlinear to successive CO2 doublings, using five different climate models. Ensemble-mean warming is superlinear over most land locations. Further, the inter-model spread tends to be amplified at higher forcing levels, as nonlinearities grow—especially when considering changes per kelvin of global warming. Regional nonlinearities in surface warming arise from nonlinearities in global-mean radiative balance, the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation, surface snow/ice cover and evapotranspiration. For robust adaptation and mitigation advice, therefore, potentially avoidable climate change (the difference between business-as-usual and mitigation scenarios) and unavoidable climate change (change under strong mitigation scenarios) may need different analysis methods
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