327 research outputs found

    Monitoring the flow of Atlantic water through the Faroe-Shetland Channel

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    This report presents results from an experiment, carried out in 2011-2012 within the EU-THOR project to investigate whether future monitoring of the Atlantic water transport through the Faroe-Shetland Channel might be more efficiently achieved on another section than the traditional Munken-Fair Isle section. The new section is less affected by meso-scale activity and narrower, allowing better horizontal resolution of the mooring array, but the experiment revealed that moving to the new section involved other drawbacks. The experiment also confirmed an earlier conjecture that data from satellite altimetry might provide better estimates of transport variations than estimates based on in situ measurements, solely. Previous efforts to determine the average volume transport of Atlantic water through the channel and its variations have been hampered by lack of information on the thickness variations of the Atlantic layer. Re-evaluating the historical data set, we find that the transport estimates are not significantly affected by assuming that the lower boundary of the Atlantic layer is fixed, equal to the average 5°C-isotherm. Based on the conclusions of this report, we recommend that future in situ monitoring in the channel is re-focused

    Compositional verification of real-time systems using Ecdar

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    Ocean-rafted pumice constrains postglacial relative sea-level and supports Holocene ice cap survival

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    Distally deposited tephra from explosive volcanic eruptions can be a powerful tool for precise dating and correlation of sedimentary archives and landforms. However, the morphostratigraphic and chronological potential of ocean-rafted pumice has been under-utilized considering its long observational history and widespread distribution on modern and palaeo-shorelines around the world. Here we analyze the geochemical composition and elevation data of 60 samples of ocean-rafted pumice collected since 1958 from raised beaches on Svalbard. Comparison of pumice data with postglacial relative sea-level history suggests eight distinct pumice rafting events throughout the North Atlantic during the Middle and Late Holocene. Analyzed ocean-rafted pumice exhibit consistent silicic composition characteristic of deposits from Iceland’s volcanic system, Katla. Eruption-triggered jökulhlaups are key drivers of the transport of pumice from the Katla caldera to beyond the coast of Iceland and into the surface currents of the North Atlantic Ocean. Thus, the correlation of distinct, high-concentration pumice horizons from Katla deposited along raised Middle Holocene beach ridges in Svalbard further advocates for the persistence of the Mýrdalsjökull ice cap through the Holocene thermal maximum

    Effect of bulk inversion asymmetry on the Datta-Das transistor

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    A model of the Datta-Das spin field-effect transistor is presented which, in addition to the Rashba interaction, takes into account the influence of bulk inversion asymmetry of zinc-blende semiconductors. In the presence of bulk inversion asymmetry, the conductance is found to depend significantly on the crystallographic orientation of the channel. We determine the channel direction optimal for the observation of the Datta-Das effect in GaAs and InAs-based devices.Comment: 4 pages, Revtex4, 4 EPS figure

    Spin transport of electrons through quantum wires with spatially-modulated strength of the Rashba spin-orbit interaction

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    We study ballistic transport of spin-polarized electrons through quantum wires in which the strength of the Rashba spin-orbit interaction (SOI) is spatially modulated. Subband mixing, due to SOI, between the two lowest subbands is taken into account. Simplified approximate expressions for the transmission are obtained for electron energies close to the bottom of the first subband and near the value for which anticrossing of the two lowest subbands occurs. In structures with periodically varied SOI strength, {\it square-wave} modulation on the spin transmission is found when only one subband is occupied and its possible application to the spin transistor is discussed. When two subbands are occupied the transmission is strongly affected by the existence of SOI interfaces as well as by the subband mixing
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