631 research outputs found
Data-based estimates of the ocean carbon sink variability â First results of the Surface Ocean pCO2 Mapping intercomparison (SOCOM)
Using measurements of the surface-ocean CO2 partial pressure (pCO2) and 14 different pCO2 mapping methods recently collated by the Surface Ocean pCO2 Mapping intercomparison (SOCOM) initiative, variations in regional and global seaâair CO2 fluxes are investigated. Though the available mapping methods use widely different approaches, we find relatively consistent estimates of regional pCO2 seasonality, in line with previous estimates. In terms of interannual variability (IAV), all mapping methods estimate the largest variations to occur in the eastern equatorial Pacific. Despite considerable spread in the detailed variations, mapping methods that fit the data more closely also tend to agree more closely with each other in regional averages. Encouragingly, this includes mapping methods belonging to complementary types â taking variability either directly from the pCO2 data or indirectly from driver data via regression. From a weighted ensemble average, we find an IAV amplitude of the global seaâair CO2 flux of 0.31 PgC yrâ1 (standard deviation over 1992â2009), which is larger than simulated by biogeochemical process models. From a decadal perspective, the global ocean CO2 uptake is estimated to have gradually increased since about 2000, with little decadal change prior to that. The weighted mean net global ocean CO2 sink estimated by the SOCOM ensemble is â1.75 PgC yrâ1 (1992â2009), consistent within uncertainties with estimates from ocean-interior carbon data or atmospheric oxygen trend
Torsion pairs and rigid objects in tubes
We classify the torsion pairs in a tube category and show that they are in
bijection with maximal rigid objects in the extension of the tube category
containing the Pruefer and adic modules. We show that the annulus geometric
model for the tube category can be extended to the larger category and
interpret torsion pairs, maximal rigid objects and the bijection between them
geometrically. We also give a similar geometric description in the case of the
linear orientation of a Dynkin quiver of type A.Comment: 25 pages, 13 figures. Paper shortened. Minor errors correcte
Multiband optical variability of the blazar OJ 287 during its outbursts in 2015 -- 2016
We present recent optical photometric observations of the blazar OJ 287 taken
during September 2015 -- May 2016. Our intense observations of the blazar
started in November 2015 and continued until May 2016 and included detection of
the large optical outburst in December 2016 that was predicted using the binary
black hole model for OJ 287. For our observing campaign, we used a total of 9
ground based optical telescopes of which one is in Japan, one is in India,
three are in Bulgaria, one is in Serbia, one is in Georgia, and two are in the
USA. These observations were carried out in 102 nights with a total of ~ 1000
image frames in BVRI bands, though the majority were in the R band. We detected
a second comparably strong flare in March 2016. In addition, we investigated
multi-band flux variations, colour variations, and spectral changes in the
blazar on diverse timescales as they are useful in understanding the emission
mechanisms. We briefly discuss the possible physical mechanisms most likely
responsible for the observed flux, colour and spectral variability.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables; Accepted for publication in MNRA
Polarized emission of GaN/AlN quantum dots : single dot spectroscopy and symmetry-based theory
We report micro-photoluminescence studies of single GaN/AlN quantum dots
grown along the (0001) crystal axis by molecular beam epitaxy on Si(111)
substrates. The emission lines exhibit a linear polarization along the growth
plane, but with varying magnitudes of the polarization degree and with
principal polarization axes that do not necessarily correspond to
crystallographic directions. Moreover, we could not observe any splitting of
polarized emission lines, at least within the spectral resolution of our setup
(1 meV). We propose a model based on the joint effects of electron-hole
exchange interaction and in-plane anisotropy of strain and/or quantum dot
shape, in order to explain the quantitative differences between our
observations and those previously reported on, e.g. CdTe- or InAs-based quantum
dots
Distorted wave impulse approximation analysis for spin observables in nucleon quasi-elastic scattering and enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response
We present a formalism of distorted wave impulse approximation (DWIA) for
analyzing spin observables in nucleon inelastic and charge exchange reactions
leading to the continuum. It utilizes response functions calculated by the
continuum random phase approximation (RPA), which include the effective mass,
the spreading widths and the \Delta degrees of freedom. The Fermi motion is
treated by the optimal factorization, and the non-locality of the
nucleon-nucleon t-matrix by an averaged reaction plane approximation. By using
the formalism we calculated the spin-longitudinal and the spin-transverse cross
sections, ID_q and ID_p, of 12C, 40Ca (\vec{p},\vec{n}) at 494 and 346 MeV. The
calculation reasonably reproduced the observed ID_q, which is consistent with
the predicted enhancement of the spin-longitudinal response function R_L.
However, the observed ID_p is much larger than the calculated one, which was
consistent with neither the predicted quenching nor the spin-transverse
response function R_T obtained by the (e,e') scattering. The Landau-Migdal
parameter g'_N\Delta for the N\Delta transition interaction and the effective
mass at the nuclear center m^*(r=0) are treated as adjustable parameters. The
present analysis indicates that the smaller g'_{N\Delta}(\approx 0.3) and
m^*(0) \approx 0.7 m are preferable. We also investigate the validity of the
plane wave impulse approximation (PWIA) with the effective nucleon number
approximation for the absorption, by means of which R_L and R_T have
conventionally been extracted.Comment: RevTex 3, 29 pages, 2 tables, 8 figure
- âŠ