11,882 research outputs found
Rare earth elements in Andaman Island surface water : geochemical tracers for the monsoon
The Asian summer monsoon affects the lives of billions of people. With the aim of identifying geochemical tracers for the monsoon related freshwater input from the major rivers draining into the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea we have taken surface seawater samples from various locations up and down the Andaman Islands during 2011. Importantly, in some locations samples have been taken in March, July and November, covering most of a seasonal cycle and different monsoon phases. Samples were collected from the side of small wooden boats or while swimming and were filtered within a few hours at 0.45 or 0.22 microns using the vacuum produced by a water jet or a hand operated peristaltic pump. Filtered and unfiltered samples were acidified to < pH 2 and analysed for Y and the REEs with an automated online preconcentration ICP-MS technique [1].
The local input of REEs from streams and sediment rich areas such as mangrove environments is clearly identified by middle REE enrichments in the shale normalised patterns of some samples. These middle REE bulges accompany large increases in dissolved REE concentrations at some locations, especially for the July samples obtained during the peak monsoon season with frequent storms. Y/Ho fractionation aslo occurs during the local input of dissolved REEs with affected samples having lower Y/Ho ratios. Conversly, some samples, in particular those taken after heavy rainfall in March, show strong REE scavenging accompanied by the prefferential removal of dissolved light REEs and higher Y/Ho ratios.
The time series at a location away from local input sources shows remarkably similar REE patterns and concentraions in March and July. Then in October-November, following the peak in monsoon river discharge, the dissolved REE concentration increases by almost a factor of 2. The notable exception to this seasonal pattern is the Ce anomally which is around 0.3 in March and November but 0.6 in July, implying less oxidative removal of Ce(IV) during the peak summer monsoon rains. With the exception of elevated dissolved Ce concentrations, the North Pacific Deep Water normalised REE patterns are similar to those reported for offshore samples from the Bay of Bengal and Andaman Sea [2]. These seawater normalised patterns are distinctive having a middle REE enriched arc with similar light and heavy REE values suggesting the input from large rivers in the region is traceable using seawater REE chemistry.
[1] Hathorne et al. (2012), Online preconcentration ICP-MS analysis of rare earth elements in seawater, Geochem. Geophys. Geosyst., 13, Q01020, doi:10.1029/2011GC003907.
[2] Amakawa et al. (2000), Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 64, 1715-1727
Continuous quantum error correction by cooling
We describe an implementation of quantum error correction that operates
continuously in time and requires no active interventions such as measurements
or gates. The mechanism for carrying away the entropy introduced by errors is a
cooling procedure. We evaluate the effectiveness of the scheme by simulation,
and remark on its connections to some recently proposed error prevention
procedures.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures. Published version. Minor change in conten
SDSS J092712.64+294344.0: recoiling black hole or merging galaxies?
We report long-slit spectroscopic observations of SDSS J092712+294344
carried-out at the recently commissioned 2m telescope in IUCAA Girawali
Observatory, India. This AGN-like source is known to feature three sets of
emission lines at zem = 0.6972, 0.7020 and 0.7128. Different scenarios such as
a recoiling black hole after asymmetric emission of gravitational waves, binary
black holes and possible merging systems are proposed for this object. We test
these scenarios by comparing our spectra with that from the Sloan Digital Sky
Survey (SDSS), obtained 4 years prior to our observations. Comparing the
redshifts of [OIII]4960,5008 we put a 3 sigma limit on the relative
acceleration to be less than 32 km s^-1 yr^-1 between different emitting
regions. Using the 2D spectra obtained at different position angles we show
that the [OIII]5008 line from the zem = 0.7128 component is extended beyond the
spectral point spread function. We infer the linear extent of this line
emitting region is ~8 kpc. We also find a tentative evidence for an offset
between the centroid of the [OIII]5008 line at zem = 0.7128 and the QSO trace
when the slit is aligned at a position angle of 299 degrees. This corresponds
to the zem = 0.7128 system being at an impact parameter of ~1 kpc with respect
to the zem = 0.6972 in the north west direction. Based on our observations we
conclude that the binary black hole model is most unlikely. The spatial extent
and the sizes are consistent with both black hole recoil and merging scenarios.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
Estuarine Clam Resources of Dakshina Kannada District
The estuarine clam resources of Netravathi-Gurupur, Mulki, Udayavara and Coondapur
estuaries were estimated based on a study on the distributin of clams in space and time. T he
three commercially important species were Meretrix meretrix, M. casta, and Katelysia opima
Probing the time variability of five Fe low broad absorption line quasars
We study the time variability of five Fe Low ionization Broad Absorption Line
(FeLoBAL) QSOs using repeated spectroscopic observations with the 2m telescope
at IUCAA Girawali observatory (IGO) spanning an interval of upto 10 years. We
report a dramatic variation in Al III and Fe III fine-structure lines in the
spectra of SDSS J221511.93-004549.9 (z_em ~ 1.478). However, there is no such
strong variability shown by the C IV absorption. This source is known to be
unusual with (i) the continuum emission dominated by Fe emission lines, (ii) Fe
III absorption being stronger than Fe II and (iii) the apparent ratio of Fe III
UV 48 to Fe III UV 34 absorption suggesting an inverted population ratio. This
is the first reported detection of time variability in the Fe III
fine-structure lines in QSO spectra. There is a strong reduction in the
absorption strength of these lines between year 2000 and 2008. Using the
template fitting techniques, we show that the apparent inversion of strength of
UV lines could be related to the complex spectral energy distribution of this
QSO. The observed variability can be related to change in the ionization state
of the gas or due to transverse motion of this absorbing gas. The shortest
variability timescale of Al III line gives a lower limit on the electron
density of the absorbing gas as n_e >= 1.1 x 10^4 cm^-3. The remaining 4
FeLoBALs do not show any changes beyond the measurement uncertainties either in
optical depth or in the velocity structure. We present the long-term
photometric light curve for all of our sources. Among them only SDSS
J221511.93-004549.9 shows significant (>= 0.2 mag) variability.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables, Accepted for publication in MNRA
Annual reproductive cycle of the Rock Oyster Saccostrea cucullata (von Born)
The annual reproductive cycle of the rock oyster, Saccostrea cuculata (von Born) inhabiting Someshwar coast near Mangalore was investigated. The reproductive cycle commences with gametogenic activity during January - February, followed by gonadal development and maturation
during March - May. Spawning is continuous from June to December, with two peaks, the first during late June to early September and the second during November to December
Larval development of the Rock Oyster Saccostrea cucullata (von Born)
The development of artificially fertilised eggs of the rock oyster,
Saccostrea cucullata (von Born) was studied in the laboratory. The
morphological and behavioural characteristics of the developing larvae
were observed. A mixed diet of single celled algae consisting of Isochrysis
galbana and Tetraselmis gracilis was fed to the larvae. The larval
developmental stages observed include trochophore, D-veliger, late
veliger, umbone stage, pediveJiger and plantigrade
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