734 research outputs found
Representation of tropical deep convection in atmospheric models - Part 1 : Meteorology and comparison with satellite observations
Published under Creative Commons Licence 3.0. Original article can be found at : http://www.atmospheric-chemistry-and-physics.net/ "The author's copyright for this publication is transferred to University of Hertfordshire".Fast convective transport in the tropics can efficiently redistribute water vapour and pollutants up to the upper troposphere. In this study we compare tropical convection characteristics for the year 2005 in a range of atmospheric models, including numerical weather prediction (NWP) models, chemistry transport models (CTMs), and chemistry-climate models (CCMs). The model runs have been performed within the framework of the SCOUT-O3 (Stratospheric-Climate Links with Emphasis on the Upper Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere) project. The characteristics of tropical convection, such as seasonal cycle, land/sea contrast and vertical extent, are analysed using satellite observations as a benchmark for model simulations. The observational datasets used in this work comprise precipitation rates, outgoing longwave radiation, cloud-top pressure, and water vapour from a number of independent sources, including ERA-Interim analyses. Most models are generally able to reproduce the seasonal cycle and strength of precipitation for continental regions but show larger discrepancies with observations for the Maritime Continent region. The frequency distribution of high clouds from models and observations is calculated using highly temporally-resolved (up to 3-hourly) cloud top data. The percentage of clouds above 15 km varies significantly between the models. Vertical profiles of water vapour in the upper troposphere-lower stratosphere (UTLS) show large differences between the models which can only be partly attributed to temperature differences. If a convective plume reaches above the level of zero net radiative heating, which is estimated to be ~15 km in the tropics, the air detrained from it can be transported upwards by radiative heating into the lower stratosphere. In this context, we discuss the role of tropical convection as a precursor for the transport of short-lived species into the lower stratosphere.Peer reviewe
Strings on type IIB pp-wave backgrounds with interacting massive theories on the worldsheet
We consider superstring theories on pp-wave backgrounds which result in an
integrable supersymmetric Landau-Ginzburg theory on the
worldsheet. We obtain exact eigenvalues of the light-cone gauge superstring
hamiltonian in the massive and interacting world-sheet theory with
superpotential . We find the modes of the supergravity part of the
string spectrum, and their space-time interpretation. Because the system is
effectively at strong coupling on the worldsheet, these modes are not in
one-to-one correspondence with the usual type IIB supergravity modes in the
limit. However, the above correspondence holds in the limit.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure; minor changes, comments adde
Branes in the plane wave background with gauge field condensates
Supersymmetric branes in the plane wave background with additional constant
magnetic fields are studied from the world-sheet point of view. It is found
that in contradistinction to flat space, boundary condensates on some maximally
supersymmetric branes necessarily break at least some supersymmetries. The
maximally supersymmetric cases with condensates are shown to be in one to one
correspondence with the previously classified class II branes.Comment: LaTeX, 31 pages, no figures; v2: references added, some typos
correcte
Non-perturbative contributions to the plane-wave string mass matrix
D-instanton contributions to the mass matrix of arbitrary excited string
states of type IIB string theory in the maximally supersymmetric plane-wave
background are calculated to leading order in the string coupling using a
supersymmetric light-cone boundary state formalism. The explicit
non-perturbative dependence of the mass matrix on the complex string coupling,
the plane-wave mass parameter and the mode numbers of the excited states is
determined.Comment: 25 pages, 1 figure. v3: corrected minor typos, added referenc
Rebirth of X-ray Emission from the Born-Again Planetary Nebula A 30
The planetary nebula (PN) A30 is believed to have undergone a very late
thermal pulse resulting in the ejection of knots of hydrogen-poor material.
Using HST images we have detected the angular expansion of these knots and
derived an age of 850+280-150 yr. To investigate the spectral and spatial
properties of the soft X-ray emission detected by ROSAT, we have obtained
Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of A30. The X-ray emission from A30 can be
separated into two components: a point-source at the central star and diffuse
emission associated with the hydrogen-poor knots and the cloverleaf structure
inside the nebular shell. To help us assess the role of the current stellar
wind in powering this X-ray emission, we have determined the stellar parameters
of the central star of A 30 using a non-LTE model fit to its optical and UV
spectrum. The spatial distribution and spectral properties of the diffuse X-ray
emission is suggestive that it is generated by the post-born-again and present
fast stellar winds interacting with the hydrogen-poor ejecta of the born-again
event. This emission can be attributed to shock-heated plasma, as the
hydrogen-poor knots are ablated by the stellar winds, under which circumstances
the efficient mass-loading of the present fast stellar wind raises its density
and damps its velocity to produce the observed diffuse soft X-rays. Charge
transfer reactions between the ions of the stellar winds and material of the
born-again ejecta has also been considered as a possible mechanism for the
production of diffuse X-ray emission, and upper limits on the expected X-ray
production by this mechanism have been derived. The origin of the X-ray
emission from the central star of A 30 is puzzling: shocks in the present fast
stellar wind and photospheric emission can be ruled out, while the development
of a new, compact hot bubble confining the fast stellar wind seems implausible.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, 4 tables; accepted for publication by Ap
Adding flavor to the gravity dual of non-commutative gauge theories
We study the addition of flavor degrees of freedom to the supergravity dual
of the non-commutative deformation of the maximally supersymmetric gauge
theories. By considering D7 flavor branes in the probe approximation and
studying their fluctuations we extract the spectrum of scalar and vector mesons
as a function of the non-commutativity. We find that the spectrum for very
large non-commutative parameter is equal to the one in the commutative theory,
while for some intermediate values of the non-commutativity some of the modes
disappear from the discrete spectrum. We also study the semiclassical dynamics
of rotating open strings attached to the D7-brane, which correspond to mesons
with large spin. Under the effect of the non-commutativity the open strings get
tilted. However, at small(large) distances they display the same Regge-like
(Coulombic) behaviour as in the commutative theory. We also consider the
addition of D5-flavor branes to the non-commutative deformation of the N=1
supersymmetric Maldacena-Nunez background.Comment: 50 pages, 9 figures, LaTeX; v2: minor improvements, references added;
v3: typos correcte
Hawking Radiation as Tunneling through the Quantum Horizon
Planck-scale corrections to the black-hole radiation spectrum in the
Parikh-Wilczek tunneling framework are calculated. The corrective terms arise
from modifications in the expression of the surface gravity in terms of the
mass-energy of the black hole-emitted particle system. The form of the new
spectrum is discussed together with the possible consequences for the fate of
black holes in the late stages of evaporation.Comment: 13 pages; the contents of this paper overlap somewhat with the
earlier submissions hep-th/0504188 and gr-qc/0505015; (v2) references added
and various cosmetic (but no physics) changes, to appear in JHE
Penrose Limits of Orbifolds and Orientifolds
We study the Penrose limit of various AdS_p X S^q orbifolds. The limiting
spaces are waves with parallel rays and singular wave fronts. In particular, we
consider the orbifolds AdS_3 X S^3/\Gamma, AdS_5 X S^5/\Gamma and AdS_{4,7} X
S^{7,4}/\Gamma where \Gamma acts on the sphere and/or the AdS factor. In the
pp-wave limit, the wave fronts are the orbifolds C^2/\Gamma, C^4/\Gamma and R
XC^4/\Gamma, respectively. When desingularization is possible, we get
asymptotically locally pp-wave backgrounds (ALpp). The Penrose limit of
orientifolds are also discussed. In the AdS_5 X RP^5 case, the limiting
singularity can be resolved by an Eguchi-Hanson gravitational instanton. The
pp-wave limit of D3-branes near singularities in F-theory is also presented.
Finally, we give the embedding of D-dimensional pp-waves in flat M^{2,D} space.Comment: 20 pages, references adde
On Supergravity Solutions of Branes in Melvin Universes
We study supergravity solutions of type II branes wrapping a Melvin universe.
These solutions provide the gravity description of non-commutative field
theories with non-constant non-commutative parameter. Typically these theories
are non-supersymmetric, though they exhibit some feature of their corresponding
supersymmetric theories. An interesting feature of these non-commutative
theories is that there is a critical length in the theory in which for
distances larger than this length the effects of non-commutativity become
important and for smaller distances these effects are negligible. Therefore we
would expect to see this kind of non-commutativity in large distances which
might be relevant in cosmology. We also study M5-brane wrapping on
11-dimensional Melvin universe and its descendant theories upon compactifying
on a circle.Comment: 25 pages, latex file; v2: typos corrected, Refs. adde
N=1* in 5 dimensions: Dijkgraaf-Vafa meets Polchinski-Strassler
One of the powerful techniques to analyze the 5 dimensional Super Yang Mills
theory with a massive hypermultiplet (N=1*) is provided by the AdS/CFT
correspondence. It predicts that, for certain special values of the
hypermultiplet mass, this theory develops nonperturbative branches of the
moduli space as well as new light degrees of freedom.
We use the higher dimensional generalization of the matrix model/gauge theory
correspondence and recover all the prediction of the supergravity analysis. We
construct the map between the four dimensional holomorphic superpotential and
the five dimensional action and explicitly show that the superpotential is flat
along the nonperturbative branches. This is the first instance in which the
Dijkgraaf-Vafa method is used to analyze intrinsically higher dimensional
phenomena.Comment: 28 pages, Late
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