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Effects of Hydroelectric Dam Operations on the Restoration Potential of Snake River Fall Chinook Salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) Spawning Habitat Final Report, October 2005 - September 2007.
This report describes research conducted by the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory for the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA) as part of the Fish and Wildlife Program directed by the Northwest Power and Conservation Council. The study evaluated the restoration potential of Snake River fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat within the impounded lower Snake River. The objective of the research was to determine if hydroelectric dam operations could be modified, within existing system constraints (e.g., minimum to normal pool levels; without partial removal of a dam structure), to increase the amount of available fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the lower Snake River. Empirical and modeled physical habitat data were used to compare potential fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Snake River, under current and modified dam operations, with the analogous physical characteristics of an existing fall Chinook salmon spawning area in the Columbia River. The two Snake River study areas included the Ice Harbor Dam tailrace downstream to the Highway 12 bridge and the Lower Granite Dam tailrace downstream approximately 12 river kilometers. These areas represent tailwater habitat (i.e., riverine segments extending from a dam downstream to the backwater influence from the next dam downstream). We used a reference site, indicative of current fall Chinook salmon spawning areas in tailwater habitat, against which to compare the physical characteristics of each study site. The reference site for tailwater habitats was the section extending downstream from the Wanapum Dam tailrace on the Columbia River. Fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat use data, including water depth, velocity, substrate size and channelbed slope, from the Wanapum reference area were used to define spawning habitat suitability based on these variables. Fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat suitability of the Snake River study areas was estimated by applying the Wanapum reference reach habitat suitability criteria to measured and modeled habitat data from the Snake River study areas. Channel morphology data from the Wanapum reference reach and the Snake River study areas were evaluated to identify geomorphically suitable fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat. The results of this study indicate that a majority of the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite study areas contain suitable fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat under existing hydrosystem operations. However, a large majority of the currently available fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite study areas is of low quality. The potential for increasing, through modifications to hydrosystem operations (i.e., minimum pool elevation of the next downstream dam), the quantity or quality of fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat appears to be limited. Estimates of the amount of potential fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Ice Harbor study area decreased as the McNary Dam forebay elevation was lowered from normal to minimum pool elevation. Estimates of the amount of potential fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Lower Granite study area increased as the Little Goose Dam forebay elevation was lowered from normal to minimum pool elevation; however, 97% of the available habitat was categorized within the range of lowest quality. In both the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite study areas, water velocity appears to be more of a limiting factor than water depth for fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat, with both study areas dominated by low-magnitude water velocity. The geomorphic suitability of both study areas appears to be compromised for fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat, with the Ice Harbor study area lacking significant bedforms along the longitudinal thalweg profile and the Lower Granite study area lacking cross-sectional topographic diversity. To increase the quantity of available fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite study area, modifications to hydroelectric dam operations beyond those evaluated in this study likely would be necessary. Modifications may include operational and structural changes, such as lowering downstream dam forebay elevations to less than minimum pool. There is a large amount of uncertainty as to whether or not such modifications could increase the quantity of available fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat in the Ice Harbor and Lower Granite study area. The results from this study provide some certainty that the quantity and quality of fall Chinook salmon spawning habitat within the lower Snake River are not likely to be increased within the existing hydroelectric dam operations
Observations and analysis of two type IIP supernovae: the intrinsically faint object SN 2005cs and the ambiguous object SN 2005ay
Aims: To derive observational properties and physical parameters of the
progenitor stars of type IIP supernovae SN 2005ay and SN 2005cs from their
U,B,V,R,I CCD photometry, and to define their velocity behaviour. Methods:
Light curves are analysed, and the velocities and spectral characteristics of
SN 2005cs are obtained using synthetic spectra modeling. Results: Both
supernovae are found to be fainter than the average
SN IIP, with SN 2005cs being more subluminous and showing slight brightening
in the second half of plateau stage in the
V,R,I bands and a low expansion velocity.
The effects of two different plausible distance moduli on the derived
physical parameters of SN 2005ay are considered.
Two approaches are used to recover the amounts of the ejected 56Ni,
indicating masses of the order of
0.02 Msun, although late luminosities might indicate a higher amount for SN
2005ay, especially for the large distance case.
Constraints on the progenitor properties are also presented, based on
empirical analytical models. Two approaches are used to estimate the expansion
velocities at the middle of the plateau phase. SN 2005cs represents an example
of where all 3 physical parameters, velocity, energy and 56Ni mass are lower
than average, a correlation not always observed in SNe IIP. SN 2005ay may
belong to the same class if the shorter distance possibility is adopted.
Furthermore, the estimated mass range for SN 2005cs is in agreement with limits
established by using pre-supernova imaging.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, to be published in A&A vol.460, issue 3, December
200
Optically Selected BL Lacertae Candidates from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release Seven
We present a sample of 723 optically selected BL Lac candidates from the SDSS
DR7 spectroscopic database encompassing 8250 deg^2 of sky; our sample
constitutes one of the largest uniform BL Lac samples yet derived. Each BL Lac
candidate has a high-quality SDSS spectrum from which we determine
spectroscopic redshifts for ~60% of the objects. Redshift lower limits are
estimated for the remaining objects utilizing the lack of host galaxy flux
contamination in their optical spectra; we find that objects lacking
spectroscopic redshifts are likely at systematically higher redshifts.
Approximately 80% of our BL Lac candidates match to a radio source in
FIRST/NVSS, and ~40% match to a ROSAT X-ray source. The homogeneous
multiwavelength coverage allows subdivision of the sample into 637 radio-loud
BL Lac candidates and 86 weak-featured radio-quiet objects. The radio-loud
objects broadly support the standard paradigm unifying BL Lac objects with
beamed radio galaxies. We propose that the majority of the radio-quiet objects
may be lower-redshift (z<2.2) analogs to high-redshift weak line quasars (i.e.,
AGN with unusually anemic broad emission line regions). These would constitute
the largest sample of such objects, being of similar size and complementary in
redshift to the samples of high-redshift weak line quasars previously
discovered by the SDSS. However, some fraction of the weak-featured radio-quiet
objects may instead populate a rare and extreme radio-weak tail of the much
larger radio-loud BL Lac population. Serendipitous discoveries of unusual white
dwarfs, high-redshift weak line quasars, and broad absorption line quasars with
extreme continuum dropoffs blueward of rest-frame 2800 Angstroms are also
briefly described.Comment: 24 pages, 14 figures, 8 tables. Accepted for publication in A
Evanescence in Coined Quantum Walks
In this paper we complete the analysis begun by two of the authors in a
previous work on the discrete quantum walk on the line [J. Phys. A 36:8775-8795
(2003) quant-ph/0303105 ]. We obtain uniformly convergent asymptotics for the
"exponential decay'' regions at the leading edges of the main peaks in the
Schr{\"o}dinger (or wave-mechanics) picture. This calculation required us to
generalise the method of stationary phase and we describe this extension in
some detail, including self-contained proofs of all the technical lemmas
required. We also rigorously establish the exact Feynman equivalence between
the path-integral and wave-mechanics representations for this system using some
techniques from the theory of special functions. Taken together with the
previous work, we can now prove every theorem by both routes.Comment: 32 pages AMS LaTeX, 5 figures in .eps format. Rewritten in response
to referee comments, including some additional references. v3: typos fixed in
equations (131), (133) and (134). v5: published versio
Nonlinear Magneto-Optics of Fe Monolayers from first principles: Structural dependence and spin-orbit coupling strength
We calculate the nonlinear magneto-optical response of free-standing fcc
(001), (110) and (111) oriented Fe monolayers. The bandstructures are
determined from first principles using a full-potential LAPW method with the
additional implementation of spin-orbit coupling. The variation of the
spin-orbit coupling strength and the nonlinear magneto-optical spectra upon
layer orientation are investigated. We find characteristic differences which
indicate an enhanced sensitivity of nonlinear magneto-optics to surface
orientation and variation of the in-plane lattice constants. In particular the
crossover from onedimensional stripe structures to twodimensional films of
(111) layers exhibits a clean signature in the nonlinear Kerr-spectra and
demonstrates the versatility of nonlinear magneto-optics as a tool for in situ
thin-film analysis.Comment: 28 pages, RevTeX, psfig, submitted to PR
Scaling functions from q-deformed Virasoro characters
We propose a renormalization group scaling function which is constructed from
q-deformed fermionic versions of Virasoro characters. By comparison with
alternative methods, which take their starting point in the massive theories,
we demonstrate that these new functions contain qualitatively the same
information. We show that these functions allow for RG-flows not only amongst
members of a particular series of conformal field theories, but also between
different series such as N=0,1,2 supersymmetric conformal field theories. We
provide a detailed analysis of how Weyl characters may be utilized in order to
solve various recurrence relations emerging at the fixed points of these flows.
The q-deformed Virasoro characters allow furthermore for the construction of
particle spectra, which involve unstable pseudo-particles.Comment: 31 pages of Latex, 5 figure
Breakdown of superfluidity of an atom laser past an obstacle
The 1D flow of a continuous beam of Bose-Einstein condensed atoms in the
presence of an obstacle is studied as a function of the beam velocity and of
the type of perturbing potential (representing the interaction of the obstacle
with the atoms of the beam). We identify the relevant regimes:
stationary/time-dependent and superfluid/dissipative; the absence of drag is
used as a criterion for superfluidity. There exists a critical velocity below
which the flow is superfluid. For attractive obstacles, we show that this
critical velocity can reach the value predicted by Landau's approach. For
penetrable obstacles, it is shown that superfluidity is recovered at large beam
velocity. Finally, enormous differences in drag occur when switching from
repulsive to attractive potential.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figure
Evidence for Supernova Signatures in the Spectrum of the Late-time Bump of the Optical Afterglow of GRB 021211
We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of the gamma-ray burst
GRB 021211 obtained during the late stages of its afterglow. The light curve
shows a rebrightening occurring ~25 days after the GRB. The analysis of a VLT
spectrum obtained during the bump (27 days after the GRB) reveals a suggestive
resemblance with the spectrum of the prototypical type-Ic SN 1994I, obtained
about ~10 days past maximum light. Particularly we have measured a strong,
broad absorption feature at 3770 A, which we have identified with Ca II
blueshifted by ~14400 km/s, thus indicating that a supernova (SN) component is
indeed powering the `bump' in the afterglow decay. Assuming SN 1994I as a
template, the spectroscopic and photometric data together indicate that the SN
and GRB explosions were at most separated by a few days. Our results suggest
that GRBs might be associated also to standard type-Ic supernovae.Comment: 6 pages, 4 color figures. Accepted for publication in A&A Letters.
Fig. 4 does not appair in the A&A version due to space restrictions. Includes
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