58,178 research outputs found
Venusian tectonics: Convective coupling to the lithosphere?
The relationship between the dominant global heat loss mechanism and planetary size has motivated the search for tectonic style on Venus. Prior to the American and Soviet mapping missions of the past eight years, it was thought that terrestrial style plate tectonics was operative on Venus because this planet is approximately the size of the Earth and is conjectured to have about the same heat source content per unit mass. However, surface topography mapped by the altimeter of the Pioneer Venus spacecraft did not show any physiographic expression of terrestrial style spreading ridges, trenches, volcanic arcs or transform faults, although the horizontal resolution was questionable for detection of at least some of these features. The Venera 15 and 16 radar missions mapped the northern latitudes of Venus at 1 to 2 km resolution and showed that there are significant geographic areas of deformation seemingly created by large horizontal stresses. These same high resolution images show no evidence for plate tectonic features. Thus a fundamental problem for venusian tectonics is the origin of large horizontal stresses near the surface in the apparent absence of plate tectonics
Martian tectonics: A review
It is concluded that Mars was dominated by vertical tectonism more than any of the other terrestrial planets. The structural imprint of the Tharsis and Elysium provinces extends over half the planet, and despite 15 years of debate over the cause of the elevation, volcanic activity, and tectonic style of Tharsis, no uniform theory of Tharsis evolution has been generally agreed upon. Although several theories have been suggested for the origin of the north-south planetary dichotomy, there is also a lack of a testable, plausible model for that major unknown in Mars' evolution
Tectonic connections to interior processes on Venus
The ultimate goal of geophysical/geological exploration of Venus is to relate the present tectonic (and volcanic) state of the lithosphere to interior processes, particularly mantle convection, operating both now and in the past. The Magellan mission has provided a spectacular view of the surface, and upcoming gravity measurements, particularly if the Magellan orbit is circularized, will provide significant constraints on the state of the interior. This extended abstract focuses on several controversial issues regarding venusian tectonics and its relationship to geodynamic mechanisms in the planet's interior. The origin of highlands, coronae diapir structures, and trenches and subduction are discussed
Search for Physics Beyond the Standard Model
We survey some recent ideas and progress in looking for particle physics
beyond the Standard Model, connected by the theme of Supersymmetry (SUSY). We
review the success of SUSY-GUT models, the expected experimental signatures and
present limits on SUSY partner particles, and Higgs phenomenology in the
minimal SUSY model.Comment: Standard Latex file. 18 pages without figures. (Calls to postscript
figure files blocked out. Full 32 page version with 37 in-text figures
available via regular mail.) MAD/PH/75
A covariant gauge-invariant three-dimensional description of relativistic bound-states
A formalism is presented which allows covariant three-dimensional bound-state
equations to be derived systematically from four-dimensional ones without the
use of delta-functions. The amplitude for the interaction of a bound state
described by these equations with an electromagnetic probe is constructed. This
amplitude is shown to be gauge invariant if the formalism is truncated at the
same coupling-constant order in both the interaction kernel of the integral
equation and the electromagnetic current operator.Comment: 17 pages, RevTeX, uses BoxedEPS.te
The longitudinal response function of the deuteron in chiral effective field theory
We use chiral effective field theory (EFT) to make predictions for the
longitudinal electromagnetic response function of the deuteron, f_L, which is
measured in d(e,e'N) reactions. In this case the impulse approximation gives
the full chiral EFT result up to corrections that are of O(P^4) relative to
leading. By varying the cutoff in the chiral EFT calculations between 0.6 and 1
GeV we conclude that the calculation is accurate to better than 10 % for values
of q^2 within 4 fm^{-2} of the quasi-free peak, up to final-state energies
E_{np}=60 MeV. In these regions chiral EFT is in reasonable agreement with
predictions for f_L obtained using the Bonn potential. We also find good
agreement with existing experimental data on f_L, albeit in a more restricted
kinematic domain.Comment: 33 pages, 10 figures. Accepted for publication in EPJA, with a few
further correction
Breakup of meteoroids in the Venusian atmosphere and its effects on crater formation
Early results of the Magellan mission to Venus show that almost all of the observed impact craters appear to be unaffected by erosion, burial, and tectonic deformation. Therefore it is reasonable to assume that the observed paucity of small craters in the cumulative size-frequency distribution (SFD) relative to the simple power laws observed on airless planets is most likely due to atmospheric effects on the incoming meteoroids. A model was developed earlier for travel and breakup of a meteoroid in an atmosphere, but this model was never used to estimate a SFD. An attempt is made to match the cumulative SFD and the number and size distribution of multiple-floored craters and crater fields using this model
Satellite magnetic modeling of north African hot spots
The primary objectives of the MAGSAT mission was to measure the intensity and direction of magnetization of the Earth's crust. A significant effort was directed to the large crustal anomalies first delineated by the POGO mission. The MAGSAT data are capable of spatial resolution of the crustal field to 250 km wavelength with reliability limits to less than 1 nT in the mean. The difficulties of dealing with less than the most robust of the MAGSAT anomalies is that often there is no more than the magnetic fields themselves to constrain geophysical models of the interior, and no independent means of assessing the quality of the crustal anomaly data in interpreting the subsurface are available
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