1,087 research outputs found
Coastal Altimetry: A Promising Technology for the Coastal Oceanography Community
Satellite altimetry has been one of the most important implements for physical oceanographers. The conventional altimeter is best performed over open ocean surface, yet there are many attempts to exploit the potential of altimetry in coastal zone in the last decade. To achieve a high performance for coastal altimetry is a multi-fold effort: the more sophisticated instrument concepts, the smarter onboard trackers, the more expert data editing criteria, the more specific retracking algorithms, the more advanced error correction methods, etc. In this chapter, each of the above aspects is described in detail, and some representative works in the altimetry community are reviewed. Particularly, the coastal altimetry offshore Hong Kong is addressed as a case study to demonstrate the potential of the new technology. In the conclusive session, some prospects for the coastal oceanography community are presented
Freedericksz-like positional transition of a micro-droplet suspended in a nematic cell
In this paper, a Freedericksz-like positional transition is found for a
spherical micro-droplet suspended in a nematic liquid crystal cell in the
presence of an external electric field. Based on the numerical calculation of
elastic energy using Green function method, the equilibrium position of
micro-droplet is decided through a competition between the buoyant force and
the effective force built by the elastic energy gradient existing inside the
nematic liquid crystal(NLC) cell. It is shown that the elastic energy dominates
the kinetics of micro-droplet until the external field applied reaches a
critical value large enough to flatten the elastic energy contour in the
central region, which enables the asymmetric buoyant force to drive the liquid
droplet abruptly from the cell midplane to a new equilibrium position. It is
also found that such a threshold value of external field, which triggers
positional transition, depends on thickness and Frank elastic constant ,
in a Freedericksz-like manner, but multiplied by a factor of . An
explicit formula proposed for the critical electric field agrees extremely well
with the numerical calculation
Spin Dependence of Interfacial Reflection Phase Shift at Cu/Co Interface
The spin dependent reflection at the interface is the key element to
understand the spin transport. By completely solving the scattering problem
based on first principles method, we obtained the spin resolved reflectivity
spectra. The comparison of our theoretical results with experiment is good in a
large energy scale from Fermi level to energy above vacuum level. It is found
that interfacial distortion is crucial for understanding the spin dependence of
the phase gain at the CuCo interface. Near the Fermi level, image state
plays an important role to the phase accumulation in the copper film.Comment: 6 papges, 3 figures, accepted by Physical Review
Direct observation of magnon-phonon coupling in yttrium iron garnet
The magnetic insulator yttrium iron garnet (YIG) with a ferrimagnetic
transition temperature of 560 K has been widely used in microwave and
spintronic devices. Anomalous features in the spin Seeback effect (SSE)
voltages have been observed in Pt/YIG and attributed to the magnon-phonon
coupling. Here we use inelastic neutron scattering to map out low-energy spin
waves and acoustic phonons of YIG at 100 K as a function of increasing magnetic
field. By comparing the zero and 9.1 T data, we find that instead of splitting
and opening up gaps at the spin wave and acoustic phonon dispersion
intersecting points, magnon-phonon coupling in YIG enhances the hybridized
scattering intensity. These results are different from expectations of
conventional spin-lattice coupling, calling for new paradigms to understand the
scattering process of magnon-phonon interactions and the resulting
magnon-polarons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, PRB in pres
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