3,009 research outputs found
Universality of rain event size distributions
We compare rain event size distributions derived from measurements in
climatically different regions, which we find to be well approximated by power
laws of similar exponents over broad ranges. Differences can be seen in the
large-scale cutoffs of the distributions. Event duration distributions suggest
that the scale-free aspects are related to the absence of characteristic scales
in the meteorological mesoscale.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figure
Relaxation of classical many-body hamiltonians in one dimension
The relaxation of Fourier modes of hamiltonian chains close to equilibrium is
studied in the framework of a simple mode-coupling theory. Explicit estimates
of the dependence of relevant time scales on the energy density (or
temperature) and on the wavenumber of the initial excitation are given. They
are in agreement with previous numerical findings on the approach to
equilibrium and turn out to be also useful in the qualitative interpretation of
them. The theory is compared with molecular dynamics results in the case of the
quartic Fermi-Pasta-Ulam potential.Comment: 9 pag. 6 figs. To appear in Phys.Rev.
Contemplative Science: An Insider's Prospectus
This chapter describes the potential far‐reaching consequences of contemplative higher education for the fields of science and medicine
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Aluminum Canning of Nickel-Plated, Hanford Four-Inch Uranium Fuel Slugs by Hot-Pressing
Conditions of time, temperature, and pressure for hotpress bonding of aluminum-nickel and uranium-nickel disks were determined experimentally. A process for jacketing Hanford four-inch slugs, coated with nonporous nickel electroplates, in aluminum cans by cold-sizing and hot-pressing was developed and conditions of time, temperature, and pressure required for the actual canning process were determined. (auth
Are Coronal Loops Isothermal or Multithermal? Yes!
Surprisingly few solar coronal loops have been observed simultaneously with
TRACE and SOHO/CDS, and even fewer analyses of these loops have been conducted
and published. The SOHO Joint Observing Program 146 was designed in part to
provide the simultaneous observations required for in-depth temperature
analysis of active region loops and determine whether these loops are
isothermal or multithermal. The data analyzed in this paper were taken on 2003
January 17 of AR 10250. We used TRACE filter ratios, emission measure loci, and
two methods of differential emission measure analysis to examine the
temperature structure of three different loops. TRACE and CDS observations
agree that Loop 1 is isothermal with Log T 5.85, both along the line of
sight as well as along the length of the loop leg that is visible in the CDS
field of view. Loop 2 is hotter than Loop 1. It is multithermal along the line
of sight, with significant emission between 6.2 Log T 6.4, but the loop
apex region is out of the CDS field of view so it is not possible to determine
the temperature distribution as a function of loop height. Loop 3 also appears
to be multithermal, but a blended loop that is just barely resolved with CDS
may be adding cool emission to the Loop 3 intensities and complicating our
results. So, are coronal loops isothermal or multithermal? The answer appears
to be yes
Coronal Temperature Diagnostic Capability of the Hinode/X-Ray Telescope Based on Self-Consistent Calibration
The X-Ray Telescope (XRT) onboard the Hinode satellite is an X-ray imager
that observes the solar corona with unprecedentedly high angular resolution
(consistent with its 1" pixel size). XRT has nine X-ray analysis filters with
different temperature responses. One of the most significant scientific
features of this telescope is its capability of diagnosing coronal temperatures
from less than 1 MK to more than 10 MK, which has never been accomplished
before. To make full use of this capability, accurate calibration of the
coronal temperature response of XRT is indispensable and is presented in this
article. The effect of on-orbit contamination is also taken into account in the
calibration. On the basis of our calibration results, we review the
coronal-temperature-diagnostic capability of XRT
High-resolution Observations of the Shock Wave Behavior for Sunspot Oscillations with the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph
We present the first results of sunspot oscillations from observations by the
Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph. The strongly nonlinear oscillation is
identified in both the slit-jaw images and the spectra of several emission
lines formed in the transition region and chromosphere. We first apply a single
Gaussian fit to the profiles of the Mgii 2796.35 {\AA}, Cii 1335.71 {\AA}, and
Si iv 1393.76 {\AA} lines in the sunspot. The intensity change is about 30%.
The Doppler shift oscillation reveals a sawtooth pattern with an amplitude of
about 10 km/s in Si iv. In the umbra the Si iv oscillation lags those of Cii
and Mgii by about 3 and 12 s, respectively. The line width suddenly increases
as the Doppler shift changes from redshift to blueshift. However, we
demonstrate that this increase is caused by the superposition of two emission
components. We then perform detailed analysis of the line profiles at a few
selected locations on the slit. The temporal evolution of the line core is
dominated by the following behavior: a rapid excursion to the blue side,
accompanied by an intensity increase, followed by a linear decrease of the
velocity to the red side. The maximum intensity slightly lags the maximum
blueshift in Si iv, whereas the intensity enhancement slightly precedes the
maximum blueshift in Mgii. We find a positive correlation between the maximum
velocity and deceleration, a result that is consistent with numerical
simulations of upward propagating magnetoacoustic shock waves.Comment: 5 figures, in ApJ. Correction of time lags (correct values are 3 and
12s) made on June 17 201
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