268 research outputs found
Feasibility study of launch vehicle ground cloud neutralization
The distribution of hydrogen chloride in the cloud was analyzed as a function of launch pad geometry and rate of rise of the vehicle during the first 24 sec of burn in order to define neutralization requirements. Delivery systems of various types were developed in order to bring the proposed chemical agents in close contact with the hydrogen chloride. Approximately one-third of the total neutralizing agent required can be delivered from a ground installed system at the launch pad; concentrated sodium carbonate solution is the preferred choice of agent for this launch pad system. Two-thirds of the neutralization requirement appears to need delivery by aircraft. Only one chemical agent (ammonia) may be reasonably considered for delivery by aircraft, because weight and bulk of all other agents are too large
Preface: Impacts of extreme climate events and disturbances on carbon dynamics
The impacts of extreme climate events and disturbances (ECE&D) on the carbon cycle have received growing attention in recent
years. This special issue showcases a collection of recent advances in
understanding the impacts of ECE&D on carbon cycling. Notable advances
include quantifying how harvesting activities impact forest structure,
carbon pool dynamics, and recovery processes; observed drastic increases of
the concentrations of dissolved organic carbon and dissolved methane in
thermokarst lakes in western Siberia during a summer warming event;
disentangling the roles of herbivores and fire on forest carbon dioxide
flux; direct and indirect impacts of fire on the global carbon balance; and
improved atmospheric inversion of regional carbon sources and sinks by
incorporating disturbances. Combined, studies herein indicate several major
research needs. First, disturbances and extreme events can interact with one
another, and it is important to understand their overall impacts and also
disentangle their effects on the carbon cycle. Second, current ecosystem
models are not skillful enough to correctly simulate the underlying
processes and impacts of ECE&D (e.g., tree mortality and carbon
consequences). Third, benchmark data characterizing the timing, location,
type, and magnitude of disturbances must be systematically created to
improve our ability to quantify carbon dynamics over large areas. Finally,
improving the representation of ECE&D in regional climate/earth system
models and accounting for the resulting feedbacks to climate are essential
for understanding the interactions between climate and ecosystem dynamics
Quantifying energy use efficiency via entropy production: a case study from longleaf pine ecosystems
Ecosystems are open systems that exchange matter and energy with their
environment. They differ in their efficiency in doing so as a result of their
location on Earth, structure and disturbance, including anthropogenic legacy.
Entropy has been proposed to be an effective metric to describe these
differences as it relates energy use efficiencies of ecosystems to their
thermodynamic environment (i.e., temperature) but has rarely been studied to
understand how ecosystems with different disturbance legacies respond when
confronted with environmental variability. We studied three sites in a
longleaf pine ecosystem with varying levels of anthropogenic legacy and plant
functional diversity, all of which were exposed to extreme drought. We
quantified radiative (effrad), metabolic and overall entropy
changes – as well as changes in exported to imported entropy
(effflux) in response to drought disturbance and environmental
variability using 24 total years of eddy covariance data (8 years per site).
We show that structural and functional characteristics contribute to
differences in energy use efficiencies at the three study sites. Our results
demonstrate that ecosystem function during drought is modulated by decreased
absorbed solar energy and variation in the partitioning of energy and entropy
exports owing to differences in site enhanced vegetation index and/or soil
water content. Low effrad and metabolic entropy as well as slow
adjustment of effflux at the anthropogenically altered site
prolonged its recovery from drought by approximately 1 year. In contrast,
stands with greater plant functional diversity (i.e., the ones that included
both C3 and C4 species) adjusted their entropy exports when faced
with drought, which accelerated their recovery. Our study provides a path
forward for using entropy to determine ecosystem function across different
global ecosystems.</p
Convective suppression before and during the United States Northern Great Plains flash drought of 2017
Flash droughts tend to be disproportionately destructive because they
intensify rapidly and are difficult to prepare for. We demonstrate that the
2017 US Northern Great Plains (NGP) flash drought was preceded by a
breakdown of land–atmosphere coupling. Severe drought conditions in the NGP
were first identified by drought monitors in late May 2017 and rapidly
progressed to exceptional drought in July. The likelihood of convective
precipitation in May 2017 in northeastern Montana, however, resembled that of
a typical August when rain is unlikely. Based on the lower tropospheric
humidity index (HIlow), convective rain was suppressed by the
atmosphere on nearly 50 % of days during March in NE Montana and central
North Dakota, compared to 30 % during a normal year. Micrometeorological
variables, including potential evapotranspiration (ETp), were neither anomalously
high nor low before the onset of drought. Incorporating convective likelihood
to drought forecasts would have noted that convective precipitation in the
NGP was anomalously unlikely during the early growing season of 2017. It may
therefore be useful to do so in regions that rely on convective
precipitation.</p
Three Dimensional Electrical Impedance Tomography
The electrical resistivity of mammalian tissues varies widely and is correlated with physiological
function. Electrical impedance tomography (EIT) can be used to probe such variations in vivo, and offers a
non-invasive means of imaging the internal conductivity distribution of the human body. But the
computational complexity of EIT has severe practical limitations, and previous work has been restricted to
considering image reconstruction as an essentially two-dimensional problem. This simplification can limit
significantly the imaging capabilities of EIT, as the electric currents used to determine the conductivity variations will not in general be confined to a two-dimensional plane. A few studies have attempted three-dimensional EIT image reconstruction, but have not yet succeeded in generating images of a quality suitable for clinical applications. Here we report the development of a three-dimensional EIT system with greatly improved imaging capabilities, which combines our 64-electrode data-collection apparatus with customized matrix inversion techniques. Our results demonstrate the practical potential of EIT for clinical applications, such as lung or brain imaging and diagnostic screening
Carbon dioxide and water vapor exchange in a warm temperate grassland
Grasslands cover about 40% of the ice-free global terrestrial surface, but their contribution to local and regional water and carbon fluxes and sensitivity to climatic perturbations such as drought remains uncertain. Here, we assess the direction and magnitude of net ecosystem carbon exchange (NEE) and its components, ecosystem carbon assimilation ( A c ) and ecosystem respiration ( R E ), in a southeastern United States grassland ecosystem subject to periodic drought and harvest using a combination of eddy-covariance measurements and model calculations. We modeled A c and evapotranspiration (ET) using a big-leaf canopy scheme in conjunction with ecophysiological and radiative transfer principles, and applied the model to assess the sensitivity of NEE and ET to soil moisture dynamics and rapid excursions in leaf area index (LAI) following grass harvesting. Model results closely match eddy-covariance flux estimations on daily, and longer, time steps. Both model calculations and eddy-covariance estimates suggest that the grassland became a net source of carbon to the atmosphere immediately following the harvest, but a rapid recovery in LAI maintained a marginal carbon sink during summer. However, when integrated over the year, this grassland ecosystem was a net C source (97 g C m −2 a −1 ) due to a minor imbalance between large A c (−1,202 g C m −2 a −1 ) and R E (1,299 g C m −2 a −1 ) fluxes. Mild drought conditions during the measurement period resulted in many instances of low soil moisture ( θ <0.2 m 3 m −3 ), which influenced A c and thereby NEE by decreasing stomatal conductance. For this experiment, low θ had minor impact on R E . Thus, stomatal limitations to A c were the primary reason that this grassland was a net C source. In the absence of soil moisture limitations, model calculations suggest a net C sink of −65 g C m −2 a −1 assuming the LAI dynamics and physiological properties are unaltered. These results, and the results of other studies, suggest that perturbations to the hydrologic cycle are key determinants of C cycling in grassland ecosystems.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/47701/1/442_2003_Article_1388.pd
Whitepaper: Understanding land-atmosphere interactions through tower-based flux and continuous atmospheric boundary layer measurements
Executive summary
● Target audience: AmeriFlux community, AmeriFlux Science Steering Committee & Department of Energy (DOE) program managers [ARM/ASR (atmosphere), TES (surface), and SBR (subsurface)]
● Problem statement: The atmospheric boundary layer mediates the exchange of energy and matter between the land surface and the free troposphere integrating a range of physical, chemical, and biological processes. However, continuous atmospheric boundary layer observations at AmeriFlux sites are still scarce. How can adding measurements of the atmospheric boundary layer enhance the scientific value of the AmeriFlux network?
● Research opportunities: We highlight four key opportunities to integrate tower-based flux measurements with continuous, long-term atmospheric boundary layer measurements: (1) to interpret surface flux and atmospheric boundary layer exchange dynamics at flux tower sites, (2) to support regionalscale modeling and upscaling of surface fluxes to continental scales, (3) to validate land-atmosphere coupling in Earth system models, and (4) to support flux footprint modelling, the interpretation of surface fluxes in heterogeneous terrain, and quality control of eddy covariance flux measurements.
● Recommended actions: Adding a suite of atmospheric boundary layer measurements to eddy covariance flux tower sites would allow the Earth science community to address new emerging research questions, to better interpret ongoing flux tower measurements, and would present novel opportunities for collaboration between AmeriFlux scientists and atmospheric and remote sensing scientists. We therefore recommend that (1) a set of instrumentation for continuous atmospheric boundary layer observations be added to a subset of AmeriFlux sites spanning a range of ecosystem types and climate zones, that (2) funding agencies (e.g., Department of Energy, NASA) solicit research on land-atmosphere processes where the benefits of fully integrated atmospheric boundary layer observations can add value to key scientific questions, and that (3) the AmeriFlux Management Project acquires loaner instrumentation for atmospheric boundary layer observations for use in experiments and short-term duration campaigns
Improving land surface models with FLUXNET data
There is a growing consensus that land surface models (LSMs) that simulate terrestrial biosphere exchanges of matter and energy must be better constrained with data to quantify and address their uncertainties. FLUXNET, an international network of sites that measure the land surface exchanges of carbon, water and energy using the eddy covariance technique, is a prime source of data for model improvement. Here we outline a multi-stage process for "fusing" (i.e. linking) LSMs with FLUXNET data to generate better models with quantifiable uncertainty. First, we describe FLUXNET data availability, and its random and systematic biases. We then introduce methods for assessing LSM model runs against FLUXNET observations in temporal and spatial domains. These assessments are a prelude to more formal model-data fusion (MDF). MDF links model to data, based on error weightings. In theory, MDF produces optimal analyses of the modelled system, but there are practical problems. We first discuss how to set model errors and initial conditions. In both cases incorrect assumptions will affect the outcome of the MDF. We then review the problem of equifinality, whereby multiple combinations of parameters can produce similar model output. Fusing multiple independent and orthogonal data provides a means to limit equifinality. We then show how parameter probability density functions (PDFs) from MDF can be used to interpret model validity, and to propagate errors into model outputs. Posterior parameter distributions are a useful way to assess the success of MDF, combined with a determination of whether model residuals are Gaussian. If the MDF scheme provides evidence for temporal variation in parameters, then that is indicative of a critical missing dynamic process. A comparison of parameter PDFs generated with the same model from multiple FLUXNET sites can provide insights into the concept and validity of plant functional types (PFT) – we would expect similar parameter estimates among sites sharing a single PFT. We conclude by identifying five major model-data fusion challenges for the FLUXNET and LSM communities: (1) to determine appropriate use of current data and to explore the information gained in using longer time series; (2) to avoid confounding effects of missing process representation on parameter estimation; (3) to assimilate more data types, including those from earth observation; (4) to fully quantify uncertainties arising from data bias, model structure, and initial conditions problems; and (5) to carefully test current model concepts (e.g. PFTs) and guide development of new concepts
Thermal adaptation of net ecosystem exchange
Thermal adaptation of gross primary production and ecosystem respiration has been well documented over broad thermal gradients. However, no study has examined their interaction as a function of temperature, i.e. the thermal responses of net ecosystem exchange of carbon (NEE). In this study, we constructed temperature response curves of NEE against temperature using 380 site-years of eddy covariance data at 72 forest, grassland and shrubland ecosystems located at latitudes ranging from ~29° N to 64° N. The response curves were used to define two critical temperatures: transition temperature (<i>T</i><sub>b</sub>) at which ecosystem transfer from carbon source to sink and optimal temperature (<i>T</i><sub>o</sub>) at which carbon uptake is maximized. <i>T</i><sub>b</sub> was strongly correlated with annual mean air temperature. <i>T</i><sub>o</sub> was strongly correlated with mean temperature during the net carbon uptake period across the study ecosystems. Our results imply that the net ecosystem exchange of carbon adapts to the temperature across the geographical range due to intrinsic connections between vegetation primary production and ecosystem respiration
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer Calibrator Catalog
The Palomar Testbed Interferometer (PTI) archive of observations between 1998
and 2005 is examined for objects appropriate for calibration of optical
long-baseline interferometer observations - stars that are predictably
point-like and single. Approximately 1,400 nights of data on 1,800 objects were
examined for this investigation. We compare those observations to an
intensively studied object that is a suitable calibrator, HD217014, and
statistically compare each candidate calibrator to that object by computing
both a Mahalanobis distance and a Principal Component Analysis. Our hypothesis
is that the frequency distribution of visibility data associated with
calibrator stars differs from non-calibrator stars such as binary stars.
Spectroscopic binaries resolved by PTI, objects known to be unsuitable for
calibrator use, are similarly tested to establish detection limits of this
approach. From this investigation, we find more than 350 observed stars
suitable for use as calibrators (with an additional being
rejected), corresponding to sky coverage for PTI. This approach
is noteworthy in that it rigorously establishes calibration sources through a
traceable, empirical methodology, leveraging the predictions of spectral energy
distribution modeling but also verifying it with the rich body of PTI's on-sky
observations.Comment: 100 pages, 7 figures, 7 tables; to appear in the May 2008ApJS, v176n
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