9 research outputs found
SunSat Design Competition 2014-2015 Third Place Winner – Team Martian: Space Solar Power Test Bed
We propose a four-stage plan to demonstrate the effectiveness and safety of Space Solar Power (SSP) for use on Earth. Our project goal is to achieve Technology Readiness Level (TRL) by means of: 1) a test mission in low Earth orbit using a small spacecraft; 2) that will support a manned mission to Mars; 3) that includes a bent pipe experiment (power supplied from Earth, to a spacecraft and back to Earth), and 4) to complete system deployment.
The primary impediment to SSP implementation is thought to be the acceptance of the system by those on Earth who may be afraid of the by-products of its use (e.g., radiation) or its misuse (e.g., targeting areas with high levels of radiation). By gaining operating experience and raising the TRL in ways that are less objectionable, it is believed that the Space Solar Power technology may gain greater acceptance for use on Earth.
Click here to see this team video: Team Martian - Test Bed for Space Solar Power on Eart
Thallium as a tracer of fluid–rock interaction in the shallow Mariana forearc
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2015. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Elsevier for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Earth and Planetary Science Letters 430 (2015): 416-426, doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2015.09.001.Fluids driven off the subducting Pacific plate infiltrate the shallow Mariana 26 forearc and lead to
extensive serpentinization of mantle peridotite. However, the sources, pathways, and chemical
modifications of ascending, slab-derived fluids remain poorly constrained and controversial. In this study,
we use thallium (Tl) concentrations and isotopic ratios of serpentinized peridotite and rodingitized
diabase from the South Chamorro and Conical Seamounts to discriminate between potential fluid sources
with distinct Tl isotope compositions. Serpentinite samples from the Mariana forearc all display ε205Tl > -
0.5 (where ε205Tl = 10,000 x (205Tl/203Tlsample-205Tl/203TlSRM 997)/(205Tl/203TlSRM 997)), which is significantly
enriched in 205Tl compared to the normal mantle (ε205Tl = -2). Given that high temperature hydrothermal
processes do not impart significant Tl isotope fractionation, the isotope compositions of the serpentinites
must reflect that of the serpentinizing fluid. Pelagic sediments are the only known slab component that
consistently display ε205Tl > -0.5 and, therefore, we interpret the heavy Tl isotope signatures as signifying
that the serpentinizing fluids were derived from subducting pelagic sediments. A rodingitized diabase
from Conical Seamount was found to have an ε205Tl of 0.8, suggesting that sediment-sourced
serpentinization fluids could also affect diabase and other mafic lithologies in the shallow Mariana
forearc. Forearc rodingitization of diabase led to a strong depletion in Tl content and a virtually complete
loss of K, Na and Rb. The chemical composition of hybrid fluids resulting from serpentinization of
harzburgite with concomitant rodingitization of diabase can be highly alkaline, depleted in Si, yet
enriched in Ca, Na, K, and Rb, which is consistent with the composition of fluids emanating from mud
volcanoes in the Mariana forearc. Our study suggests that fluid-rock interactions between sedimentary,
mafic, and ultramafic lithologies are strongly interconnected even in the shallowest parts of subduction
zones. We conclude that transfer of fluids and dissolved elements at temperatures and pressures below
400°C and 1GPa, respectively, must be taken into account when elemental budgets and mass transfer
between the subducting plate, the forearc, the deep mantle and the ocean are evaluated.This study was funded by NSF grants EAR-1119373 and -1427310 to SGN, NSF grant
OCE-1059534 to FK and a grant from the WHOI Deep Ocean Exploration Institute to FK and SGN
Tracking along-arc sediment inputs to the Aleutian arc using thallium isotopes.
Sediment transport from the subducted slab to the mantle wedge is an important process in understanding the chemical and physical conditions of arc magma generation. The Aleutian arc offers an excellent opportunity to study sediment transport processes because the subducted sediment flux varies systematically along strike (Kelemen et al., 2003) and many lavas exhibit unambiguous signatures of sediment addition to the sub-arc mantle (Morris et al., 1990). However, the exact sediment contribution to Aleutian lavas and how these sediments are transported from the slab to the surface are still debated. Thallium (Tl) isotope ratios have great potential to distinguish sediment fluxes in subduction zones because pelagic sediments and low-temperature altered oceanic crust are highly enriched in Tl and display heavy and light Tl isotope compositions, respectively, compared with the upper mantle and continental crust.
Here, we investigate the Tl isotope composition of lavas covering almost the entire Aleutian arc a well as sediments outboard of both the eastern (DSDP Sites 178 and 183) and central (ODP Hole 886C) portions of the arc. Sediment Tl isotope compositions change systematically from lighter in the Eastern to heavier in the Central Aleutians reflecting a larger proportion of pelagic sediments when distal from the North American continent. Lavas in the Eastern and Central Aleutians mirror this systematic change to heavier Tl isotope compositions to the west, which shows that the subducted sediment composition is directly translated to the arc east of Kanaga Island. Moreover, quantitative mixing models of Tl and Pb, Sr and Nd isotopes reveal that bulk sediment transfer of ∼0.6–1.0% by weight in the Eastern Aleutians and ∼0.2–0.6% by weight in the Central Aleutians can account for all four isotope systems. Bulk mixing models, however, require that fractionation of trace element ratios like Ce/Pb, Cs/Tl, and Sr/Nd in the Central and Eastern Aleutians occurs after the sediment component was mixed with the mantle wedge. Models of Sr and Nd isotopes that involve sediment melting require either high degrees of sediment melting (>50%), in which case trace element ratios like Ce/Pb, Cs/Tl, and Sr/Nd of Aleutian lavas need to be produced after mixing with the mantle, or significant fluid additions from the underlying oceanic crust with Sr and Nd isotope compositions indistinguishable from the mantle wedge as well as high Sr/Nd ratios similar to that of low (<20%) degree sediment melts.
Thallium isotope data from Western Aleutian lavas exhibit compositions slightly lighter than the upper mantle, which implies a negligible sediment flux at this location and probably involvement of low-temperature altered oceanic crust in the generation of these lavas. In general, the lightest Tl isotope compositions are observed for the highest Sr/Y ratios and most unradiogenic Sr and Pb isotope compositions, which is broadly consistent with derivation of these lavas via melting of eclogitized altered oceanic crust
Distribution of thiols in the northwest Atlantic Ocean
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution February 2013Thiol substances can form stable complexes with metals (especially copper and
mercury) in the surface ocean that can impact cycling and bioavailability of those
elements. In this study, I present seven concentration profiles of cysteine and glutathione,
two low-molecular weight thiols, from the coastal northwest Atlantic Ocean and the
Bermuda Atlantic Time Series (BATS) sampling site in the Sargasso Sea, a first for these
regions. These two thiols were found in the upper 200 meters of the ocean at all sites, and
the total thiol concentration varied from 0.2 to 3.2 nM. The highest concentration of both
thiols was found at the deep chlorophyll maximum in most samples. Thiol
concentrations were higher on the continental shelf than in the open ocean. The observed
distribution of cysteine and glutathione and thermodynamic stability of copper complexes
suggests that Cu(I)-dithiol complexes may be the dominant surface ocean copper and
thiol species. Mercury-thiol complexes were also present in thermodynamically modeled
seawater, which may provide a vector for mercury uptake in the surface ocean.The work in this thesis was funded by NSF OCE grant 1132515 and NSF EAR
grant 1119373. Funding was also provided by an internal source at WHOI for the first
year of this work
Wading in Quinnipiac Mud Guides Career Path for Beth Owen
Beth Owen is just one of many Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies graduate students and alumni to participate in an independent research project through the support of Connecticut Sea Grant. The internships have been as ambitious as they are diverse, and all have given participants a new perspective on the role of research in their future. The program is based at Yale’s Center for Coastal and Watershed Systems. Beth sampled and analyzed sediments for heavy metals from the lower Quinnipiac River
Clean Up Sound and Harbor (CUSH): ONe Community\u27s Solution to Water Quality Issues
CUSH in Stonington aims to improve local water qualit
Mercury Speciation and Mobilization in a Wastewater-Contaminated Groundwater Plume
We measured the concentration and
speciation of mercury (Hg) in
groundwater down-gradient from the site of wastewater infiltration
beds operated by the Massachusetts Military Reservation, western Cape
Cod, Massachusetts. Total mercury concentrations in oxic, mildly acidic,
uncontaminated groundwater are 0.5–1 pM, and aquifer sediments
have 0.5–1 ppb mercury. The plume of impacted groundwater created
by the wastewater disposal is still evident, although inputs ceased
in 1995, as indicated by anoxia extending at least 3 km down-gradient
from the disposal site. Solutes indicative of a progression of anaerobic
metabolisms are observed vertically and horizontally within the plume,
with elevated nitrate concentrations and nitrate reduction surrounding
a region with elevated iron concentrations indicating iron reduction.
Mercury concentrations up to 800 pM were observed in shallow groundwater
directly under the former infiltration beds, but concentrations decreased
with depth and with distance down-gradient. Mercury speciation showed
significant connections to the redox and metabolic state of the groundwater,
with relatively little methylated Hg within the iron reducing sector
of the plume, and dominance of this form within the higher nitrate/ammonium
zone. Furthermore, substantial reduction of HgÂ(II) to Hg<sup>0</sup> within the core of the anoxic zone was observed when iron reduction
was evident. These trends not only provide insight into the biogeochemical
factors controlling the interplay of Hg species in natural waters,
but also support hypotheses that anoxia and eutrophication in groundwater
facilitate the mobilization of natural and anthropogenic Hg from watersheds/aquifers,
which can be transported down-gradient to freshwaters and the coastal
zone