28 research outputs found
Modeling the Young Sun's Solar Wind and its Interaction with Earth's Paleomagnetosphere
We present a focused parameter study of solar wind - magnetosphere
interaction for the young Sun and Earth, Ga ago, that relies on
magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations for both the solar wind and the
magnetosphere. By simulating the quiescent young Sun and its wind we are able
to propagate the MHD simulations up to Earth's magnetosphere and obtain a
physically realistic solar forcing of it. We assess how sensitive the young
solar wind is to changes in the coronal base density, sunspot placement and
magnetic field strength, dipole magnetic field strength and the Sun's rotation
period. From this analysis we obtain a range of plausible solar wind conditions
the paleomagnetosphere may have been subject to. Scaling relationships from the
literature suggest that a young Sun would have had a mass flux different from
the present Sun. We evaluate how the mass flux changes with the aforementioned
factors and determine the importance of this and several other key solar and
magnetospheric variables with respect to their impact on the
paleomagnetosphere. We vary the solar wind speed, density, interplanetary
magnetic field strength and orientation as well as Earth's dipole magnetic
field strength and tilt in a number of steady-state scenarios that are
representative of young Sun-Earth interaction. This study is done as a first
step of a more comprehensive effort towards understanding the implications of
Sun-Earth interaction for planetary atmospheric evolution.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Fashioning Entitlements: A Comparative Law and Economic Analysis of the Judicial Role in Environmental Centralization in the U.S. and Europe
This paper identifies and evaluates, from an economic point of view, the role of the judiciary the steady shift of environmental regulatory authority to higher, more centralized levels of government in both the U.S. and Europe. We supply both a positive analysis of how the decisions made by judges have affected the incentives of both private and public actors to pollute the natural environment, and normative answers to the question of whether judges have acted so as to create incentives that move levels of pollution in an efficient direction, toward their optimal, cost-minimizing (or net-benefit-maximizing) levels. Highlights of the analysis include the following points: 1) Industrial-era local (state or national) legislation awarding entitlements to pollute was almost certainly inefficient due to a fundamental economic obstacle faced by those who suffer harm from the over-pollution of publicly owned natural resources: the inability to monetize and credibly commit to repay the future economic value of reducing pollution. 2) When industrial era pollution spilled across state lines in the US, the federal courts, in particular the Supreme Court, fashioned a federal common law of interstate nuisance that set up essentially the same sort of blurry, uncertain entitlements to pollute or be free of pollution that had been created by the state courts in resolving local pollution disputes. We argue that for the typical pollution problem, a legal regime of blurry interstate entitlements - with neither jurisdiction having a clear right either to pollute or be free of pollution from the other - is likely to generate efficient incentives for interjursidictional bargaining, even despite the public choice problems besetting majority-rule government. Interestingly, a very similar system of de facto entitlements arose and often stimulated interjursidictional bargaining in Europe as well as in the U.S. 3) The US federal courts have generally interpreted the federal environmental statutes in ways that give clear primacy to federal regulators. Through such judicial interpretation, state and local regulators face a continuing risk of having their decisions overridden by federal regulators. This reduces the incentives for regulatory innovation at the state and local level. Judicial authorization of federal overrides has thus weakened the economic rationale for cooperative federalism suggested by economic models of principal-agent relationships. As a result of the principle of attribution, there is less risk in Europe that (like in the US) courts would enlarge the federal purview and thereby limit the powers of the Member States. Despite this principle, the power of the European bureaucracy (that is, the European Commission) has steadily increased and led to a steady shift of environmental regulatory competencies to the European level. This shift is only sometimes normatively desirable, and yet there is little that the ECJ can or will do to slow it
Study of FK Comae Berenices
We study the connection between the chromospheric and photospheric behaviour
of the active late-type star FK Comae. We use spot temperature modelling, light
curve inversion based on narrow- and wide-band photometric measurements, Halpha
observations from 1997-2010, and Doppler maps from 2004-2010 to compare the
behaviour of chromospheric and photospheric features. Investigating
low-resolution Halpha spectra we find that the changes in the chromosphere seem
to happen mainly on a time scale longer than a few hours, but shorter
variations were also observed. According to the Halpha measurements prominences
are often found in the chromosphere that reach to more than a stellar radius
and are stable for weeks, and which seem to be often, but not every time
connected with dark photospheric spots. The rotational modulation of the Halpha
emission seems to typically be anticorrelated with the light curve, but we did
not find convincing evidence of a clear connection in the long-term trends of
the Halpha emission and the brightness of the star. In addition, FK Com seems
to be in an unusually quiet state in 2009-2010 with very little chromospheric
activity and low spot contrast, that might indicate the long-term decrease of
activity.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, 1 table; accepted for publication in A&