1,276 research outputs found
EUV spectra of highly-charged ions W-W relevant to ITER diagnostics
We report the first measurements and detailed analysis of extreme ultraviolet
(EUV) spectra (4 nm to 20 nm) of highly-charged tungsten ions W to
W obtained with an electron beam ion trap (EBIT). Collisional-radiative
modelling is used to identify strong electric-dipole and magnetic-dipole
transitions in all ionization stages. These lines can be used for impurity
transport studies and temperature diagnostics in fusion reactors, such as ITER.
Identifications of prominent lines from several W ions were confirmed by
measurement of isoelectronic EUV spectra of Hf, Ta, and Au. We also discuss the
importance of charge exchange recombination for correct description of
ionization balance in the EBIT plasma.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figure
Neutron cross sections for He-3 at epithermal energies
High accuracy, absolute measurements of the neutron total cross section for He-3 are reported for incident neutron energies 0.1-400 eV. The measurements were performed at the LANSCE short-pulse neutron spallation source. Using the previously determined cross section for neutron elastic scattering, 3.367+/-0.019 b, we extract a new value for the energy dependence of the He-3(n,p)He-3 reaction cross section, sigma(np)=(849.77+/-0.14+/-1.02)E-1/2-(1.253+/-0.00+/-(+0.008)(-0.049))b, where the neutron energy is expressed in eV. The first uncertainty is statistical, the second systematic
Summary Document
This summary is based on the following larger document:
Sauchyn, Dave; Barrow, Elaine; Fang, X; Henderson, Norm; Johnston, Mark; Pomeroy, John; Thorpe, Jeff; Wheaton, Elaine; Williams, B. 2009. Saskatchewan’s Natural Capital in a Changing Climate: An Assessment of Impacts and Adaptation, PARC, Regina, 162pp. The full report is viewable on the PARC website at www.parc.caSummary edited by Dave Sauchyn and Norm Henderson.PARC acknowledges the funding support of Saskatchewan Environment.Non-Peer ReviewedClimate change impacts in Saskatchewan are already evident and will become increasing significant over time. This report draws on the expertise of top climate change researchers and a large body of previous work to create a state-of-knowledge synthesis of key biophysical impacts and adaptation options specific to Saskatchewan. The focus is Saskatchewan’s ecosystems and water resources and the sectors of our economy, agriculture, and forestry, which are most dependent on these natural resources. The purpose of this report is to 1) document the expected impacts of climate change on Saskatchewan’s natural resources and dependent industries, and 2) outline options for adaptation of resource management practices, policies and infrastructure to minimize the risks associated with the impacts of climate change and to take advantage of opportunities provided by a warming climate
Can auditors be independent? – Experimental evidence on the effects of client type
Recent regulatory initiatives stress that an independent oversight board, rather than the management board, should be the client of the auditor. In an experiment, we test whether the type of client affects auditors’ independence. Unique features of the German institutional setting enable us to realistically vary the type of auditors’ client as our treatment variable: we portray the client either as the management preferring aggressive accounting or the oversight board preferring conservative accounting. We measure auditors’ perceived client retention incentives and accountability pressure in a post-experiment questionnaire to capture potential threats to independence. We find that the type of auditors’ client affects auditors’ behaviour contingent on the degree of the perceived threats to independence. Our findings imply that both client retention incentives and accountability pressure represent distinctive threats to auditors’ independence and that the effectiveness of an oversight board in enhancing auditors’ independence depends on the underlying threat
The effect of tidal forcing on biogeochemical processes in intertidal salt marsh sediments
<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Early diagenetic processes involved in natural organic matter (NOM) oxidation in marine sediments have been for the most part characterized after collecting sediment cores and extracting porewaters. These techniques have proven useful for deep-sea sediments where biogeochemical processes are limited to aerobic respiration, denitrification, and manganese reduction and span over several centimeters. In coastal marine sediments, however, the concentration of NOM is so high that the spatial resolution needed to characterize these processes cannot be achieved with conventional sampling techniques. In addition, coastal sediments are influenced by tidal forcing that likely affects the processes involved in carbon oxidation.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>In this study, we used in situ voltammetry to determine the role of tidal forcing on early diagenetic processes in intertidal salt marsh sediments. We compare ex situ measurements collected seasonally, in situ profiling measurements, and in situ time series collected at several depths in the sediment during tidal cycles at two distinct stations, a small perennial creek and a mud flat. Our results indicate that the tides coupled to the salt marsh topography drastically influence the distribution of redox geochemical species and may be responsible for local differences noted year-round in the same sediments. Monitoring wells deployed to observe the effects of the tides on the vertical component of porewater transport reveal that creek sediments, because of their confinements, are exposed to much higher hydrostatic pressure gradients than mud flats.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our study indicates that iron reduction can be sustained in intertidal creek sediments by a combination of physical forcing and chemical oxidation, while intertidal mud flat sediments are mainly subject to sulfate reduction. These processes likely allow microbial iron reduction to be an important terminal electron accepting process in intertidal coastal sediments.</p
Wolf Creek Cold Regions Model Set-up, Parameterisation and Modelling Summary
Non-Peer ReviewedWolf Creek Research Basin is in the Upper Yukon River Basin near Whitehorse, Yukon
and is representative of headwaters in the northern Coast Mountains. It was established
in 1993 to better develop northern hydrological models, and related hydrological process,
ecosystem and climate science. Yukon Environment maintains Wolf Creek
hydrometeorological and hydrometric stations and conducts regular snow surveys in the
basin. A number of hydrological models have been tested on Wolf Creek and all have
had great difficulty in simulating the cold regions hydrological processes that dominate
its streamflow response to snowmelt and rainfall events. Developments in understanding
hydrological processes and their interaction with terrestrial ecosystems and climate at
Wolf Creek have lead to the development of the Cold Regions Hydrological Model
(CRHM) by a consortium of scientists led by the University of Saskatchewan and
Environment Canada. CRHM comprehensively incorporates the blowing snow,
intercepted snow, sublimation, melt energetics, infiltration to frozen soils, organic terrain
runoff and other cold regions hydrological phenomenon and discretizes the catchment on
a hydrological response unit basis for applying water and energy balance calculations.
The model is intended for prediction of ungauged basins with parameter selection from
physically measurable properties of the river basin or regional transference of calibrated
values. In Russia, a long tradition of cold regions hydrological research has led to the
development of the Hydrograph model by the State Hydrological Institute, St. Petersburg.
The Hydrograph model contains several promising innovations regarding the formation
and routing of runoff, discretizes the basin using hydrological response units and
addresses some (but not all) cold regions hydrological processes. Hydrograph parameter
selection is made from both physically measured properties and those that are calibrated,
but the calibrations can be easily regionalized.
Test simulations of runoff processes using CRHM and Hydrograph for Wolf Creek
Research Basin was undertaken using data archives that had been assembled and cleaned
up in a related project by the University of Saskatchewan. The test simulations are a
demonstration of model capabilities and a way to gain familiarity with the basin, its
characteristics and data and to better compare model features. Data available included a
GIS database of basin characteristics (topography and vegetation distribution) and the
hydrometeorological and hydrometric observational dataset from Yukon Environment.
The sub-surface hydrology presented a formidable unknown in parameterising the model. Hydrograph performed well in initial simulations of the basin hydrograph for multi-year runs. Several issues with observational data quality created substantial uncertainty in evaluating the
model runs
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