1,739 research outputs found
'But I thought we were friends?' Life cycles and research relationships
This chapter is concerned with a relatively under-explored aspect of ‘engaged research’ – the nature of friendship relations between researchers and practitioners, and the ethical dilemmas that arise in such relationships. Attention has been paid to the relational aspects of research in the methodology literature, but this chapter focuses more closely on friendship in particular. The chapter is framed around two guiding concerns: how do friendships, formed in and around research, change over time; and in view of friendship conceived in this dynamic fashion, what ethical questions and dilemmas arise for the ‘friends’
Exoplanet Detection Techniques
We are still in the early days of exoplanet discovery. Astronomers are
beginning to model the atmospheres and interiors of exoplanets and have
developed a deeper understanding of processes of planet formation and
evolution. However, we have yet to map out the full complexity of multi-planet
architectures or to detect Earth analogues around nearby stars. Reaching these
ambitious goals will require further improvements in instrumentation and new
analysis tools. In this chapter, we provide an overview of five observational
techniques that are currently employed in the detection of exoplanets: optical
and IR Doppler measurements, transit photometry, direct imaging, microlensing,
and astrometry. We provide a basic description of how each of these techniques
works and discuss forefront developments that will result in new discoveries.
We also highlight the observational limitations and synergies of each method
and their connections to future space missions.Comment: 24 pages, 19 figures, PPVI proceedings. Appears as 2014, Protostars
and Planets VI, Henrik Beuther, Ralf S. Klessen, Cornelis P. Dullemond, and
Thomas Henning (eds.), University of Arizona Press, Tucson, 914 pp.,
p.715-73
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Radiative forcing and climate metrics for ozone precursor emissions: the impact of multi-model averaging
Multi-model ensembles are frequently used to assess understanding of the response of ozone and methane lifetime to changes in emissions of ozone precursors such as NOx, VOCs (volatile organic compounds) and CO. When these ozone changes are used to calculate radiative forcing (RF) (and climate metrics such as the global warming potential (GWP) and global temperature-change potential (GTP)) there is a methodological choice, determined partly by the available computing resources, as to whether the mean ozone (and methane) concentration changes are input to the radiation code, or whether each model's ozone and methane changes are used as input, with the average RF computed from the individual model RFs. We use data from the Task Force on Hemispheric Transport of Air Pollution source–receptor global chemical transport model ensemble to assess the impact of this choice for emission changes in four regions (East Asia, Europe, North America and South Asia).
We conclude that using the multi-model mean ozone and methane responses is accurate for calculating the mean RF, with differences up to 0.6% for CO, 0.7% for VOCs and 2% for NOx. Differences of up to 60% for NOx 7% for VOCs and 3% for CO are introduced into the 20 year GWP. The differences for the 20 year GTP are smaller than for the GWP for NOx, and similar for the other species.
However, estimates of the standard deviation calculated from the ensemble-mean input fields (where the standard deviation at each point on the model grid is added to or subtracted from the mean field) are almost always substantially larger in RF, GWP and GTP metrics than the true standard deviation, and can be larger than the model range for short-lived ozone RF, and for the 20 and 100 year GWP and 100 year GTP. The order of averaging has most impact on the metrics for NOx, as the net values for these quantities is the residual of the sum of terms of opposing signs. For example, the standard deviation for the 20 year GWP is 2–3 times larger using the ensemble-mean fields than using the individual models to calculate the RF. The source of this effect is largely due to the construction of the input ozone fields, which overestimate the true ensemble spread.
Hence, while the average of multi-model fields are normally appropriate for calculating mean RF, GWP and GTP, they are not a reliable method for calculating the uncertainty in these fields, and in general overestimate the uncertainty
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