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Evolution of mixing state of black carbon particles: Aircraft measurements over the western Pacific in March 2004
We report the evolution of the mixing state of black carbon (BC) particles in urban plumes measured by an airborne single particle soot photometer. The aircraft observations were conducted over the ocean near the coast of Japan in March 2004. The number fiaction of coated BC particles with a core diameter of 180 mn increased from 0.35 to 0.63 within 12 hours (h), namely 2.3% h-1, after being emitted from the Nagoya urban area in Japan. BC particles with a core diameter of 250 nm increased at the slower rate of 1.0% h-1. The increase in coated BC particles was associated with increases in non-sea salt sulfate and water-soluble organic carbon by a factor of approximately two, indicating that these compounds contributed to the coating on the BC particles. These results give direct evidence that BC particles become internally mixed on a time scale of 12 h in urban plumes. Copyright 2007 by the American Geophysical Union
Disorder-induced topological change of the superconducting gap structure in iron pnictides
In superconductors with unconventional pairing mechanisms, the energy gap in
the excitation spectrum often has nodes, which allow quasiparticle excitations
at low energies. In many cases, e.g. -wave cuprate superconductors, the
position and topology of nodes are imposed by the symmetry, and thus the
presence of gapless excitations is protected against disorder. Here we report
on the observation of distinct changes in the gap structure of iron-pnictide
superconductors with increasing impurity scattering. By the successive
introduction of nonmagnetic point defects into BaFe(AsP)
crystals via electron irradiation, we find from the low-temperature penetration
depth measurements that the nodal state changes to a nodeless state with fully
gapped excitations. Moreover, under further irradiation the gapped state
evolves into another gapless state, providing bulk evidence of unconventional
sign-changing -wave superconductivity. This demonstrates that the topology
of the superconducting gap can be controlled by disorder, which is a strikingly
unique feature of iron pnictides.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Trends in antimicrobial-drug resistance in Japan.
Multidrug resistance in gram-positive bacteria has become common worldwide. In Japan until recently, gram-negative bacteria such as Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Klebsiella pneumoniae, and Serratia marcescens were controlled by carbapenems, fluoroquinolones, and aminoglycosides. However, several of these microorganisms have recently developed resistance against many antimicrobial drugs
Evaluating regional emission estimates using the TRACE-P observations
Measurements obtained during the NASA Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE-P) experiment are used in conjunction with regional modeling analysis to evaluate emission estimates for Asia. A comparison between the modeled values and the observations is one method to evaluate emissions. Based on such analysis it is concluded that the inventory performs well for the light alkanes, CO, ethyne, SO2, and NOₓ. Furthermore, based on model skill in predicting important photochemical species such as O₃, HCHO, OH, HO₂, and HNO₃, it is found that the emissions inventories are of sufficient quality to support preliminary studies of ozone production. These are important finding in light of the fact that emission estimates for many species (such as speciated NMHCs and BC) for this region have only recently been estimated and are highly uncertain. Using a classification of the measurements built upon trajectory analysis, we compare observed species distributions and ratios of species to those modeled and to ratios estimated from the emissions inventory. It is shown that this technique can reconstruct a spatial distribution of propane/benzene that looks remarkably similar to that calculated from the emissions inventory. A major discrepancy between modeled and observed behavior is found in the Yellow Sea, where modeled values are systematically underpredicted. The integrated analysis suggests that this may be related to an underestimation of emissions from the domestic sector. The emission is further tested by comparing observed and measured species ratios in identified megacity plumes. Many of the model derived ratios (e.g., BC/CO, SOₓ/C₂H₂) fall within ∼25% of those observed and all fall outside of a factor of 2.5. (See Article file for details of the abstract.)Department of Civil and Environmental EngineeringAuthor name used in this publication: Wang, T
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