1,374 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
EVIDENCE FOR COMET STORMS IN METEORITE AGES
Clustering of cosmic-ray exposure ages of H chondritic meteorites occurs at 7 {+-} 3 and 30 {+-} 6 Myr ago. There is independent evidence that comet storms have occurred at the same times, based on the fossil record of family and genus extinctions, impact craters and glass, and geomagnetic reversals. We suggest that H chondrites were formed by the impact of shower comets on asteroids. The duration of the most recent comet shower was {le} 4 Myr, in agreement with storm theory
Origin of the Glacial Cycles: A Collection of Articles
This collection of articles describes a new theory of glacial cycles and its application to a number of data sets that represent conditions during glacial times. The widely held conventional theory of glacial cycles, which is due to Milankovitch, attributes cycles in the earth's ice cover to perturbations in the motion of the earth and the resulting changes of insolation (solar heating) in the Northern Hemisphere. The strongest effects are expected to come from changes in the earth's obliquity (tilt of the earth's spin axis with respect to its orbit) and from the precession term that accounts for the delay between summer solstice (when the pole faces the sun) and perihelion (when the earth is closest to the sun). Perturbations of the earth's motion come from gravitational effects of the planets and the moon, and can be calculated with precision back at least 10 million years.
Another parameter describing the motion of the earth is the inclination i of the earth's orbital plane with respect to the invariable plane of the planetary systems. The invariable plane of the solar system is a plane perpendicular to the total angular momentum vector of the planets. Over the past one million years, the inclination has varied from about half a degree to about 3 degrees. During the time of low inclination, the earth accretes interplanetary dust at a greater rate than at times of high inclination. The dust particles, under the gravitational pull of the perturbing planets, tend to be concentrated in the invariable plane.
Dust particles can affect climate by altering the amount of solar radiation reaching the lower part of the atmosphere. At the high altitudes where the dust particles enter the atmosphere, the particles themselves can attenuate the incoming solar radiation, can sweep up water vapor which is a warming greenhouse gas, and can nucleate water particles to form high-altitude (noctilucent) clouds. The clouds would themselves reflect radiation.
While the detailed mechanisms of how astronomical dust can influence climate have not been completely worked out, this collection of articles shows that variation in inclination provides a better match for data sets on climate proxies than do variations of eccentricity. The theory also requires that density of dust in the vicinity of the variable plane varies with time. Beginning about one million years ago, the 100-kyr cycle became the dominating feature of variations in the total volume of ice covering the earth. Before that time, weaker variations are seen with 40-kyr and 20-kyr periods, consistent with variations in obliquity and precession
Spectrum of 100-kyr glacial cycle: Orbital inclination, not eccentricity
Spectral analysis of climate data shows a strong narrow peak with period ≈100 kyr, attributed by the Milankovitch theory to changes in the eccentricity of the earth’s orbit. The narrowness of the peak does suggest an astronomical origin; however the shape of the peak is incompatible with both linear and nonlinear models that attribute the cycle to eccentricity or (equivalently) to the envelope of the precession. In contrast, the orbital inclination parameter gives a good match to both the spectrum and bispectrum of the climate data. Extraterrestrial accretion from meteoroids or interplanetary dust is proposed as a mechanism that could link inclination to climate, and experimental tests are described that could prove or disprove this hypothesis
Recommended from our members
ELECTRONIC PROCESSES IN LIQUID XENON
Several basic errors appeared in an article recently published by Prunier et al. entitled, 'Some Properties of Xenon Liquid-Filled Nuclear Detectors'. The article describes an experiment to measure electronic phenomena in liquid xenon using single wire cylindrical chambers. The author here describes some errors made in their interpretation of their experimental observations
Compounded perturbations in coastal areas: contrasting responses to nutrient enrichment and the regime of storm-related disturbance depend on life-history traits
1. Natural systems are exposed to compounded perturbations, whose changes in temporal
variance can be as important as those in mean intensity for shaping the structure of assemblages.
Specifically, climate-related physical disturbances and nutrient inputs due to natural
and/or anthropogenic activities occur concomitantly, but experimental tests of the simultaneous
effects of changes in the regime of more than one perturbation are generally lacking.
Filling this gap is the key to understand ecological responses of natural assemblages to
climate-related change in the intensity and temporal patterning of physical disturbance combined
with other global stressors.
2. Responses to factorial manipulations of nutrient enrichment, mean intensity and temporal
variability in storm-like mechanical disturbance were examined, using benthic assemblages of
tide-pools as model system.
3. Response variables were mean abundance values and temporal variances of taxa with different
life-traits. Consistent negative effects of disturbance intensity were observed for the mean
cover of long-living taxa (algal canopies and the polychaete Sabellaria alveolata), whose temporal
fluctuations were also reduced by more severe mechanical stress. More resilient taxa
(ephemeral algae, mostly green of the genus Ulva) increased under enriched conditions, particularly
when low-intensity events were irregularly applied over time. Opposite effects of disturbance
intensity depending on nutrient availability occurred on filamentous algae (e.g. red of
the genus Ceramium). This was probably due to the fact that, although nutrient enrichment
stimulated the abundance of both algal groups, when this condition was combined with relatively
mild physical disturbance the competitively superior ephemeral green algae tended to
become dominant over filamentous red algae. The same did not occur under high intensity of
disturbance since it likely damaged large, foliose fronds of Ulva-like forms more than small, filamentous
fronds of Ceramium-like forms. Grazers were positively affected by nutrients, likely
responding indirectly to more food available.
4. A direct relationship between the mean abundance of most organisms and their temporal
fluctuations was documented. However, all organisms persisted throughout the study, even
under experimental conditions associated to the largest temporal variation in their abundance,
likely due to their ability to resist to/quickly recover from, the applied perturbations. Therefore,
in systems with great recovery abilities of dominant organisms (e.g. rocky intertidal,
grasslands), effects of traits of the regime of disturbance and nutrient enrichment may modulate the fluctuations of populations not through the elimination and substitution of species,
but through changes in relative abundances of the same species. This contrasts with the
theory that temporal variation in abundance would be directly related to the risk of local
extinction. Present findings enable more accurate predictions of the consequences of climatic
and non-climatic scenarios on the biodiversity of marine and terrestrial systems sharing analogous
functional traits of organisms. Future more intense physical disturbances are expected to
exert negative effects on slow-growing/recovering species (e.g. habitat-formers) irrespectively of
the temporal patterning of the same disturbances and nutrient inputs. On the contrary, more
resistant species (e.g. encrusting algae on rocky shores or below-ground vegetation in grasslands)
are expected to benefit from intense physical disturbance. Species whose abundance is
more directly related to the availability of nutrients (e.g. filamentous and ephemeral algae or
herbs) are expected to generally increase under enriched conditions, but their ability to eventually
become dominant would depend on their ability to grow fast and attain cover large
enough to overwhelm any possible control of concomitant disturbance intensity on their abundance.
If, such as in the present examined system, virtually all organisms can persist, over the
temporal scale of the experiment, under any combination of physical disturbance and nutrient
availability, the resulting overall diversity is not predicted to change drastically. Nevertheless,
low-intensity events evenly distributed and high-intensity events irregularly distributed appear
as the conditions supporting the highest richness of taxa, independently of the availability of
nutrients
Can a supernova be located by its neutrinos?
A future core-collapse supernova in our Galaxy will be detected by several
neutrino detectors around the world. The neutrinos escape from the supernova
core over several seconds from the time of collapse, unlike the electromagnetic
radiation, emitted from the envelope, which is delayed by a time of order
hours. In addition, the electromagnetic radiation can be obscured by dust in
the intervening interstellar space. The question therefore arises whether a
supernova can be located by its neutrinos alone. The early warning of a
supernova and its location might allow greatly improved astronomical
observations. The theme of the present work is a careful and realistic
assessment of this question, taking into account the statistical significance
of the various neutrino signals. Not surprisingly, neutrino-electron forward
scattering leads to a good determination of the supernova direction, even in
the presence of the large and nearly isotropic background from other reactions.
Even with the most pessimistic background assumptions, SuperKamiokande (SK) and
the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) can restrict the supernova direction to
be within circles of radius and , respectively. Other
reactions with more events but weaker angular dependence are much less useful
for locating the supernova. Finally, there is the oft-discussed possibility of
triangulation, i.e., determination of the supernova direction based on an
arrival time delay between different detectors. Given the expected statistics
we show that, contrary to previous estimates, this technique does not allow a
good determination of the supernova direction.Comment: 11 pages including 2 figures. Revised version corrects typos, adds
some brief comment
Inner ear tissue preservation by rapid freezing: improving fixation by high-pressure freezing and hybrid methods
In the preservation of tissues in as ‘close to life’ state as possible, rapid freeze fixation has many benefits over conventional chemical fixation. One technique by which rapid freeze-fixation can be achieved, high pressure freezing (HPF), has been shown to enable ice crystal artefact-free freezing and tissue preservation to greater depths (more than 40μm) than other quick-freezing methods. Despite increasingly becoming routine in electron microscopy, the use of HPF for the fixation of inner ear tissue has been limited. Assessment of the quality of preservation showed routine HPF techniques were suitable for preparation of inner ear tissues in a variety of species. Good preservation throughout the depth of sensory epithelia was achievable. Comparison to chemically fixed tissue indicated that fresh frozen preparations exhibited overall superior structural preservation of cells. However, HPF fixation caused characteristic artefacts in stereocilia that suggested poor quality freezing of the actin bundles. The hybrid technique of pre-fixation and high pressure freezing was shown to produce cellular preservation throughout the tissue, similar to that seen in HPF alone. Pre-fixation HPF produced consistent high quality preservation of stereociliary actin bundles. Optimising the preparation of samples with minimal artefact formation allows analysis of the links between ultrastructure and function in inner ear tissues
One-Way Entangled-Photon Autocompensating Quantum Cryptography
A new quantum cryptography implementation is presented that combines one-way
operation with an autocompensating feature that has hitherto only been
available in implementations that require the signal to make a round trip
between the users. Using the concept of advanced waves, it is shown that this
new implementation is related to the round-trip implementations in the same way
that Ekert's two-particle scheme is related to the original one-particle scheme
of Bennett and Brassard. The practical advantages and disadvantages of the
proposed implementation are discussed in the context of existing schemes.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure; Minor edits--conclusions unchanged; accepted for
publication in Physical Review
Economic Fluctuations and Diffusion
Stock price changes occur through transactions, just as diffusion in physical
systems occurs through molecular collisions. We systematically explore this
analogy and quantify the relation between trading activity - measured by the
number of transactions - and the price change ,
for a given stock, over a time interval . To this end, we
analyze a database documenting every transaction for 1000 US stocks over the
two-year period 1994-1995. We find that price movements are equivalent to a
complex variant of diffusion, where the diffusion coefficient fluctuates
drastically in time. We relate the analog of the diffusion coefficient to two
microscopic quantities: (i) the number of transactions in
, which is the analog of the number of collisions and (ii) the local
variance of the price changes for all transactions in , which is the analog of the local mean square displacement between
collisions. We study the distributions of both and , and find that they display power-law tails. Further, we find that
displays long-range power-law correlations in time, whereas
does not. Our results are consistent with the interpretation
that the pronounced tails of the distribution of w_{\Delta t}|
G_{\Delta t} |N_{\Delta t}$.Comment: RevTex 2 column format. 6 pages, 36 references, 15 eps figure
A Derivation of Three-Dimensional Inertial Transformations
The derivation of the transformations between inertial frames made by
Mansouri and Sexl is generalised to three dimensions for an arbitrary direction
of the velocity. Assuming lenght contraction and time dilation to have their
relativistic values, a set of transformations kinematically equivalent to
special relativity is obtained. The ``clock hypothesis'' allows the derivation
to be extended to accelerated systems. A theory of inertial transformations
maintaining an absolute simultaneity is shown to be the only one logically
consistent with accelerated movements. Algebraic properties of these
transformations are discussed. Keywords: special relativity, synchronization,
one-way velocity of light, ether, clock hypothesis.Comment: 16 pages (A5), Latex, one figure, to be published in Found. Phys.
Lett. (1997
- …