554 research outputs found
Environmental effects of large impacts on the earth; relation to extinction mechanisms
Since Alvarez et al., discovered a worldwide approx. cm-thick layer of fine sediments laden with platinum group elements in approximately chondritic proportions exactly at the Cretaceous-Tertiary (C-T) boundary, and proposed bolide-impact as triggering mass extinctions, many have studied this hypothesis and the layer itself with its associated spherules and shocked quartz. At issue is whether the mass extinctions, and this horizon has an impact versus volcanic origin. A critical feature of the Alvarez hypothesis is the suggestion that the bolide or possibly a shower of objects delivered to the earth approx. 0.6 x 10 to the 18th power g of material which resulted in aerosol-sized ejecta such that global insolation was drastically reduced for significant periods. Such an event would lower temperatures on continents and halt photosynthesis in the upper 200 m of th eocean. The latter would strangle the marine food chain and thus produce the major marine faunal extinctions which mark the C-T boundary. Crucial issues examined include: What are the dynamics of atmospheric flow occurring upon impact of a large bolide with the earth; What is the size distributions of the very fine impact ejecta and how do these compare to the models of ejecta which are used to model the earth's radiative thermal balance. The flow field due to passage of a 10 km diameter bolide through an exponential atmosphere and the interaction of the gas flow and bolide with the solid ear was calculated. The CO2 released upon impact onto shallow marine carbonate sections was modeled and found that the mass of CO2 released exceeds the present 10 to the 18th power g CO2 budget of the earth's atmosphere by several times. Using the calculations of Kasting and Toon it was found that to compute the temperature rise of the earth's surface as a function of CO2 content, it was found that sudden and prolonged global increases are induced from impact of 20 to 50 km radius projectiles and propose that sudden terrestrial greenhouse-induced heating, not cooling, produced the highly variable extinctions seen at the C-T boundary
Wide-angle perfect absorber/thermal emitter in the THz regime
We show that a perfect absorber/thermal emitter exhibiting an absorption peak
of 99.9% can be achieved in metallic nanostructures that can be easily
fabricated. The very high absorption is maintained for large angles with a
minimal shift in the center frequency and can be tuned throughout the visible
and near-infrared regime by scaling the nanostructure dimensions. The stability
of the spectral features at high temperatures is tested by simulations using a
range of material parameters.Comment: Submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
Constraining the Physical Properties of Meteor Stream Particles by Light Curve Shapes Using the Virtual Meteor Observatory
Different authors have produced models for the physical properties of meteoroids based on the shape of a meteor's light curve, typically from short observing campaigns. We here analyze the height profiles and light curves of approx.200 double-station meteors from the Leonids and Perseids using data from the Virtual Meteor Observatory, to demonstrate that with this web-based meteor database it is possible to analyze very large datasets from different authors in a consistent way. We compute the average heights for begin point, maximum luminosity, and end heights for Perseids and Leonids. We also compute the skew of the light curve, usually called the F-parameter. The results compare well with other author's data. We display the average light curve in a novel way to assess the light curve shape in addition to using the F-parameter. While the Perseids show a peaked light curve, the average Leonid light curve has a more flat peak. This indicates that the particle distribution of Leonid meteors can be described by a Gaussian distribution; the Perseids can be described with a power law. The skew for Leonids is smaller than for Perseids, indicating that the Leonids are more fragile than the Perseids
Optical anisotropic metamaterials: Negative refraction and focusing
We design three-dimensional (3D) metallic nanowire media with different
structures and numerically demonstrate that they can be homogeneous effective
indefinite anisotropic media by showing that their dispersion relations are
hyperbolic. For a finite slab, a nice fitting procedure is exploited to obtain
the dispersion relations from which we retrieve the effective permittivities.
The pseudo focusing for the real 3D wire medium agrees very well with the
homogeneous medium having the effective permittivity tensor of the wire medium.
Studies also show that in the long-wavelength limit, the hyperbolic dispersion
relation of the 3D wire medium can be valid even for evanescent modes.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figure
Negative refractive index due to chirality
We demonstrate experimentally and numerically that metamaterials based on
bilayer cross wires give giant optical activity, circular dichroism, and
negative refractive index. The presented chiral design offers a much simpler
geometry and more efficient way to realize negative refractive index at any
frequency. We also developed a retrieval procedure for chiral materials which
works successfully for circularly polarized waves
Levitation of the quantum Hall extended states in the 0 limit
We investigate the fate of the quantum Hall extended states within a
continuum model with spatially correlated disorder potentials. The model can be
projected onto a couple of the lowest Landau bands. Levitation of the
critical states is observed if at least the two lowest Landau bands are
considered. The dependence on the magnetic length and
on the correlation length of the disorder potential is combined into a
single dimensionless parameter . This enables us to study
the behavior of the critical states for vanishing magnetic field. In the two
Landau band limit, we find a disorder dependent saturation of the critical
states' levitation which is in contrast to earlier propositions, but in accord
with some experiments.Comment: 7 pages, 9 figures. Replaced with published versio
Tunable terahertz frequency comb generation using time-dependent graphene sheets
We investigate the interaction between electromagnetic pulses and two-dimensional current sheets whose conductivity is controlled as a function of time by the generation of photocarriers, and we discuss its applicability to tunable frequency comb generation. To this aim, we develop an analytical model that permits the calculation of the scattered waves off a thin sheet with time-dependent, dispersive sheet conductivity. We evaluate the transmitted spectrum as a function of the dispersive behavior and the modulation frequency of the number of photocarriers. We conclude that such active materials, e.g., time-dependent graphene sheets, open up the possibility to manipulate the frequency of incident pulses and, hence, could lead to highly tunable, miniaturized frequency comb generation
Chiral metamaterials with negative refractive index based on four "U" split ring resonators
A uniaxial chiral metamaterial is constructed by double-layered four "U"
split ring resonators mutually twisted by 90 degrees. It shows a giant optical
activity and circular dichroism. The retrieval results reveal that a negative
refractive index is realized for circularly polarized waves due to the large
chirality. The experimental results are in good agreement with the numerical
results.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Published as cover on AP
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