22,939 research outputs found
Lidar measurements of thermal structure
Rayleigh backscatter observations at 532 nm and 355 nm of relative atmospheric density above Aberystwyth on a total of 93 nights between Dec. 1982 and Feb. 1985 were used to derive the height variation of temperature in the upper stratosphere and mesosphere. Preliminary results for height up to about 25 km were also obtained from observations of Raman backscattering from nitrogen molecules. Comparisons were carried out for stratospheric heights with satellite borne measurements; good agreement was found between equivalent black body temperatures derived from the lidar observations and those obtained from nadir measurements in three channels of the stratosphere sounder units on NOAA satellites; the lidar based atmospheric temperatures have shown general agreement with but a greater degree of structure than the limb sounding measurements obtained using the SAMS experiment on the NOAA-7 satellite. In summer, stratospheric and mesospheric temperatures showed a smooth height variation similar to that of the CIRA model atmosphere. In contrast, the winter data showed a great variability with height, and marked temperature changes both from night to night and within a given night
Lower thermosphere densities of N2, O and Ar under high latitude winter conditions
Measurements of the neutral thermosphere were conducted in northern Scandinavia during the Energy Budget Campaign. These measurements included determinations of N2, O, and Ar densities using rocket-borne experiments. The results obtained in the experiments are presented, taking into account also details regarding the employed experimental methods, and an evaluation of the significance of the data. It is found that there are striking differences in thermospheric distributions of the neutral constituents under different geomagnetic conditions. Under quiet geomagnetic conditions there was reasonable agreement with the United States Standard Atmosphere. The concentrations of N2 and Ar were about 70 percent of the predicted values, while the O concentration was about 2.5 times greater
Terahertz Kerr and Reflectivity Measurements on the Topological Insulator Bi2Se3
We report the first terahertz Kerr measurements on bulk crystals of the
topological insulator Bi2Se3. At T=10K and fields up to 8T, the real and
imaginary Kerr angle and reflectance measurements utilizing both linearly and
circularly polarized incident radiation were measured at a frequency of
5.24meV. A single fluid free carrier bulk response can not describe the
line-shape. Surface states with a small mass and surprisingly large associated
spectral weight quantitatively fit all data. However, carrier concentration
inhomogeneity has not been ruled out. A method employing a gate is shown to be
promising for separating surface from bulk effects.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Terahertz Hall Measurements On Optimally Doped Single Crystal Bi-2212
The infrared Hall angle in optimally doped single crystal was measured from 3.05 to 21.75 meV as a continuous function of
temperature from 25 to 300\,K. In the normal state, the temperature dependence
of the real part of the cotangent of the infrared Hall angle obeys the same
power law as dc measurements. The measured Hall frequency is
significantly larger than the expected value based upon ARPES data analyzed in
terms of the relaxation time approximation. This discrepancy as well as the
temperature dependence of and is well
described by a Fermi liquid theory in which current vertex corrections produced
by electron-magnon scattering are included.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
Electromagnetic Moments of the Baryon Decuplet
We compute the leading contributions to the magnetic dipole and electric
quadrupole moments of the baryon decuplet in chiral perturbation theory. The
measured value for the magnetic moment of the is used to determine
the local counterterm for the magnetic moments. We compare the chiral
perturbation theory predictions for the magnetic moments of the decuplet with
those of the baryon octet and find reasonable agreement with the predictions of
the large-- limit of QCD. The leading contribution to the quadrupole
moment of the and other members of the decuplet comes from one--loop
graphs. The pionic contribution is shown to be proportional to (and so
will not contribute to the quadrupole moment of nuclei), while the
contribution from kaons has both isovector and isoscalar components. The chiral
logarithmic enhancement of both pion and kaon loops has a coefficient that
vanishes in the limit. The third allowed moment, the magnetic octupole,
is shown to be dominated by a local counterterm with corrections arising at two
loops. We briefly mention the strange counterparts of these moments.Comment: Uses harvmac.tex, 15 pages with 3 PostScript figures packed using
uufiles. UCSD/PTH 93-22, QUSTH-93-05, Duke-TH-93-5
Near-surface remote sensing of spatial and temporal variation in canopy phenology
There is a need to document how plant phenology is responding to global change factors, particularly warming trends. âNear-surfaceâ remote sensing, using radiometric instruments or imaging sensors, has great potential to improve phenological monitoring because automated observations can be made at high temporal frequency. Here we build on previous work and show how inexpensive, networked digital cameras (âwebcamsâ) can be used to document spatial and temporal variation in the spring and autumn phenology of forest canopies. We use two years of imagery from a deciduous, northern hardwood site, and one year of imagery from a coniferous, boreal transition site. A quantitative signal is obtained by splitting images into separate red, green, and blue color channels and calculating the relative brightness of each channel for âregions of interestâ within each image. We put the observed phenological signal in context by relating it to seasonal patterns of gross primary productivity, inferred from eddy covariance measurements of surfaceâatmosphere CO2 exchange. We show that spring increases, and autumn decreases, in canopy greenness can be detected in both deciduous and coniferous stands. In deciduous stands, an autumn red peak is also observed. The timing and rate of spring development and autumn senescence varies across the canopy, with greater variability in autumn than spring. Interannual variation in phenology can be detected both visually and quantitatively; delayed spring onset in 2007 compared to 2006 is related to a prolonged cold spell from day 85 to day 110. This work lays the foundation for regional- to continental-scale camera-based monitoring of phenology at network observatory sites, e.g., National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON) or AmeriFlux
forall x (UBC Edition)
This is an open-access introductory logic textbook, prepared by Jonathan Ichikawa, based on P.D. Magnus's forallx. This (v2.0, July 2020) is intended as a stable, ready-for-teaching edition
Universal velocity distributions in an experimental granular fluid
We present experimental results on the velocity statistics of a uniformly
heated granular fluid, in a quasi-2D configuration. We find the base state, as
measured by the single particle velocity distribution , to be universal
over a wide range of filling fractions and only weakly dependent on all other
system parameters. There is a consistent overpopulation in the distribution's
tails, which scale as . More
importantly, the high probability central region of , at low velocities,
deviates from a Maxwell-Boltzmann by a second order Sonine polynomial with a
single adjustable parameter, in agreement with recent theoretical analysis of
inelastic hard spheres driven by a stochastic thermostat. To our knowledge,
this is the first time that Sonine deviations have been measured in an
experimental system.Comment: 13 pages, 15 figures, with minor corrections, submitted to Phys. Rev.
On the structure of large N cancellations in baryon chiral perturbation theory
We show how to compute loop graphs in heavy baryon chiral perturbation theory
including the full functional dependence on the ratio of the Delta--nucleon
mass difference to the pion mass, while at the same time automatically
incorporating the 1/N cancellations that follow from the large-N spin-flavor
symmetry of baryons in QCD. The one-loop renormalization of the baryon axial
vector current is studied to demonstrate the procedure. A new cancellation is
identified in the one-loop contribution to the baryon axial vector current. We
show that loop corrections to the axial vector currents are exceptionally
sensitive to deviations of the ratios of baryon-pion axial couplings from SU(6)
values
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