384 research outputs found
On the parameterisation of the urban atmospheric sublayer in meteorological models
International audienceThe increased resolution of numerical weather prediction models allows nowadays addressing more specifically urban meteorology and air pollution processes and forecasts. This has triggered new interest in modelling and describing experimentally the specific features and processes of urban areas. Recent developments and results performed within the EU-funded project FUMAPEX on integrated systems for forecasting urban meteorology and air pollution are reported here. Issues of optimum resolution, parameterising urban roughness and surface exchange fluxes and the role of the urban soil layers are addressed with advanced meso- or sub-meso meteorological models. Recommendations, especially with respect to advanced urban air quality forecasting and information systems, are given together with an assessment of the needed further research and data
Towards improving the simulation of meteorological fields in urban areas through updated/advanced surface fluxes description
International audienceThe increased resolution of numerical weather prediction models allows nowadays addressing more realistically urban meteorology and air pollution processes. This has triggered new interest in modelling and describing experimentally the specific features and processes of urban areas. Recent developments and results performed within the EU-funded project FUMAPEX on integrated systems for forecasting urban meteorology and air pollution are reported here. Sensitivity studies with respect to optimum resolution, parametrisation of urban roughness and surface exchange fluxes and the role of urban soil layers are carried out with advanced meso- or sub-meso meteorological models. They show that sensible improvements can be achieved by higher model resolution that is accompanied with better description of urban surface features. Recommendations, especially with respect to advanced urban air quality forecasting and information systems, are given together with an assessment of the needed further research and data
Large eddy simulation of urban features for Copenhagen metropolitan area
International audienceThe large eddy simulations employing the SUBMESO model with the urban soil layer model SM2-U were performed for the model domain covering the Danish Island of Sealand and including the Copenhagen metropolitan area. Monthly and diurnal cycle variability were studied for the net radiation, sensible and storage heat fluxes, surface's temperatures, and others. These were evaluated for selected urban vs. non urban related types of covers/surfaces and urban districts such as city center, high buildings, industrial, and residential. Results showed strong effects of urban features on temporal and spatial variability. They are useful and applicable for verification of numerical weather prediction models and development of urban canopy parameterizations
Universality and saturation of intermittency in passive scalar turbulence
The statistical properties of a scalar field advected by the non-intermittent
Navier-Stokes flow arising from a two-dimensional inverse energy cascade are
investigated. The universality properties of the scalar field are directly
probed by comparing the results obtained with two different types of injection
mechanisms. Scaling properties are shown to be universal, even though
anisotropies injected at large scales persist down to the smallest scales and
local isotropy is not fully restored. Scalar statistics is strongly
intermittent and scaling exponents saturate to a constant for sufficiently high
orders. This is observed also for the advection by a velocity field rapidly
changing in time, pointing to the genericity of the phenomenon. The persistence
of anisotropies and the saturation are both statistical signatures of the
ramp-and-cliff structures observed in the scalar field.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figure
Comment on the narrow structure reported by Amaryan et al
The CLAS Collaboration provides a comment on the physics interpretation of
the results presented in a paper published by M. Amaryan et al. regarding the
possible observation of a narrow structure in the mass spectrum of a
photoproduction experiment.Comment: to be published in Physical Review
Differential cross section and recoil polarization measurements for the gamma p to K+ Lambda reaction using CLAS at Jefferson Lab
We present measurements of the differential cross section and Lambda recoil
polarization for the gamma p to K+ Lambda reaction made using the CLAS detector
at Jefferson Lab. These measurements cover the center-of-mass energy range from
1.62 to 2.84 GeV and a wide range of center-of-mass K+ production angles.
Independent analyses were performed using the K+ p pi- and K+ p (missing pi -)
final-state topologies; results from these analyses were found to exhibit good
agreement. These differential cross section measurements show excellent
agreement with previous CLAS and LEPS results and offer increased precision and
a 300 MeV increase in energy coverage. The recoil polarization data agree well
with previous results and offer a large increase in precision and a 500 MeV
extension in energy range. The increased center-of-mass energy range that these
data represent will allow for independent study of non-resonant K+ Lambda
photoproduction mechanisms at all production angles.Comment: 22 pages, 16 figure
Towards a resolution of the proton form factor problem: new electron and positron scattering data
There is a significant discrepancy between the values of the proton electric
form factor, , extracted using unpolarized and polarized electron
scattering. Calculations predict that small two-photon exchange (TPE)
contributions can significantly affect the extraction of from the
unpolarized electron-proton cross sections. We determined the TPE contribution
by measuring the ratio of positron-proton to electron-proton elastic scattering
cross sections using a simultaneous, tertiary electron-positron beam incident
on a liquid hydrogen target and detecting the scattered particles in the
Jefferson Lab CLAS detector. This novel technique allowed us to cover a wide
range in virtual photon polarization () and momentum transfer
() simultaneously, as well as to cancel luminosity-related systematic
errors. The cross section ratio increases with decreasing at . This measurement is consistent with the size of the form
factor discrepancy at GeV and with hadronic calculations
including nucleon and intermediate states, which have been shown to
resolve the discrepancy up to GeV.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, submitted to PR
Light Vector Mesons in the Nuclear Medium
The light vector mesons (, , and ) were produced in
deuterium, carbon, titanium, and iron targets in a search for possible
in-medium modifications to the properties of the meson at normal nuclear
densities and zero temperature. The vector mesons were detected with the CEBAF
Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) via their decays to . The rare
leptonic decay was chosen to reduce final-state interactions. A combinatorial
background was subtracted from the invariant mass spectra using a
well-established event-mixing technique. The meson mass spectrum was
extracted after the and signals were removed in a nearly
model-independent way. Comparisons were made between the mass spectra
from the heavy targets () with the mass spectrum extracted from the
deuterium target. With respect to the -meson mass, we obtain a small
shift compatible with zero. Also, we measure widths consistent with standard
nuclear many-body effects such as collisional broadening and Fermi motion.Comment: 15 pages, 18 figures, 3 table
Q^2 Dependence of the S_{11}(1535) Photocoupling and Evidence for a P-wave resonance in eta electroproduction
New cross sections for the reaction are reported for total
center of mass energy =1.5--2.3 GeV and invariant squared momentum transfer
=0.13--3.3 GeV. This large kinematic range allows extraction of new
information about response functions, photocouplings, and coupling
strengths of baryon resonances. A sharp structure is seen at 1.7 GeV.
The shape of the differential cross section is indicative of the presence of a
-wave resonance that persists to high . Improved values are derived for
the photon coupling amplitude for the (1535) resonance. The new data
greatly expands the range covered and an interpretation of all data with
a consistent parameterization is provided.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figure
Search for pentaquark in high statistics measurement of at CLAS
The exclusive reaction was studied in the
photon energy range between 1.6-3.8 GeV searching for evidence of the exotic
baryon . The decay to requires the assignment of
strangeness to any observed resonance. Data were collected with the CLAS
detector at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility corresponding to
an integrated luminosity of 70 . No evidence for the
pentaquark was found. Upper limits were set on the production cross section as
function of center-of-mass angle and mass. The 95% CL upper limit on the
total cross section for a narrow resonance at 1540 MeV was found to be 0.8 nb.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letter
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