2,235 research outputs found
Links between topography, wind, deflation, lakes and dust: The case of the Bodélé Depression, Chad
The Bodélé Depression, Chad is the planet's largest single source of dust. Deflation from the Bodélé could be seen as a simple coincidence of two key prerequisites: strong surface winds and a large source of suitable sediment. But here we hypothesise that long term links between topography, winds, deflation and dust ensure the maintenance of the dust source such that these two apparently coincidental key ingredients are connected by land-atmosphere processes with topography acting as the overall controlling agent. We use a variety of observational and numerical techniques, including a regional climate model, to show that: 1) contemporary deflation from the Bodélé is delineated by topography and a surface wind stress maximum; 2) the Tibesti and Ennedi mountains play a key role in the generation of the erosive winds in the form of the Bodélé Low Level Jet (LLJ); 3) enhanced deflation from a stronger Bodélé LLJ during drier phases, for example, the Last Glacial Maximum, was probably sufficient to create the shallow lake in which diatoms lived during wetter phases, such as the Holocene pluvial. Winds may therefore have helped to create the depression in which erodible diatom material accumulated. Instead of a simple coincidence of nature, dust from the world's largest source may result from the operation of long term processes on paleo timescales which have led to ideal conditions for dust generation in the world's largest dust source. Similar processes plausibly operate in other dust hotspots in topographic depressions
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Modelling soil dust aerosol in the Bodélé depression during the BoDEx campaign
We present regional model simulations of the dust emission events during the BodĂ©lĂ© Dust Experiment (BoDEx) that was carried out in February and March 2005 in Chad. A box model version of the dust emission model is used to test different input parameters for the emission model, and to compare the dust emissions computed with observed wind speeds to those calculated with wind speeds from the regional model simulation. While field observations indicate that dust production occurs via self-abrasion of saltating diatomite flakes in the BodĂ©lĂ©, the emission model based on the assumption of dust production by saltation and using observed surface wind speeds as input parameters reproduces observed dust optical thicknesses well. Although the peak wind speeds in the regional model underestimate the highest wind speeds occurring on 10â12 March 2005, the spatio-temporal evolution of the dust cloud can be reasonably well reproduced by this model. Dust aerosol interacts with solar and thermal radiation in the regional model; it is responsible for a decrease in maximum daytime temperatures by about 5 K at the beginning the dust storm on 10 March 2005. This direct radiative effect of dust aerosol accounts for about half of the measured temperature decrease compared to conditions on 8 March. Results from a global dust model suggest that the dust from the BodĂ©lĂ© is an important contributor to dust crossing the African Savannah region towards the Gulf of Guinea and the equatorial Atlantic, where it can contribute up to 40% to the dust optical thickness
Rule-Based Machine Translation From Kazakh To Turkish
This paper presents a shallow-transfer machine translation (MT) system for translating from Kazakh to Turkish. Background on the differences between the languages is presented, followed by how the system was designed to handle some of these differences. The system is based on the Apertium free/open-source machine translation platform. The structure of the system and how it works is described, along with an evaluation against two competing systems. Linguistic components were developed, including a Kazakh-Turkish bilingual dictionary, Constraint Grammar disambiguation rules, lexical selection rules, and structural transfer rules. With many known issues yet to be addressed, our RBMT system has reached performance comparable to publicly-available corpus-based MT systems between the languages
Direct Analysis of the Broad-Line SN 2019ein: Connection with the Core-Normal SN 2011fe
Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) are important cosmological probes and
contributors to galactic nucleosynthesis, particularly of the iron group
elements. To improve both their reliability as cosmological probes and to
understand galactic chemical evolution, it is vital to understand the binary
progenitor system and explosion mechanism. The classification of SNe Ia into
Branch groups has led to some understanding of the similarities and differences
among the varieties of observed SNe Ia. However, partly due to small sample
size, little work has been done on the broad-line or 02bo group. We perform
direct spectral analysis on the pre-maximum spectra of the broad-line SN
2019ein and compare and contrast it to the core-normal SN~2011fe. Both SN
2019ein and SN 2011fe were first observed spectroscopically within two days of
discovery, allowing us to follow the spectroscopic evolution of both supernovae
in detail. We find that the optical depths of the primary features of both the
CN and BL supernovae are very similar, except that there is a velocity shift
between them. We further examine the SN 2002bo-like subclass and show that for
nine objects with pre-maximum spectra in the range -6 -- -2 days with respect
to B-maximum all the emission peaks of the Si II {\lambda}6355 line of BL are
blueshifted pre-maximum, making this a simple classification criterion.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
On The spectrum of a Noncommutative Formulation of the D=11 Supermembrane with Winding
A regularized model of the double compactified D=11 supermembrane with
nontrivial winding in terms of SU(N) valued maps is obtained. The condition of
nontrivial winding is described in terms of a nontrivial line bundle introduced
in the formulation of the compactified supermembrane. The multivalued
geometrical objects of the model related to the nontrivial wrapping are
described in terms of a SU(N) geometrical object which in the
limit, converges to the symplectic connection related to the area preserving
diffeomorphisms of the recently obtained non-commutative description of the
compactified D=11 supermembrane.(I. Martin, J.Ovalle, A. Restuccia. 2000,2001)
The SU(N) regularized canonical lagrangian is explicitly obtained. In the limit it converges to the lagrangian in (I.Martin, J.Ovalle,
A.Restuccia. 2000,2001) subject to the nontrivial winding condition. The
spectrum of the hamiltonian of the double compactified D=11 supermembrane is
discussed.
Generically, it contains local string like spikes with zero energy.
However the sector of the theory corresponding to a principle bundle
characterized by the winding number , described by the SU(N) model we
propose, is shown to have no local string-like spikes and hence the spectrum of
this sector should be discrete.Comment: 16 pages.Latex2
Renormalized Equilibria of a Schloegl Model Lattice Gas
A lattice gas model for Schloegl's second chemical reaction is described and
analyzed. Because the lattice gas does not obey a semi-detailed-balance
condition, the equilibria are non-Gibbsian. In spite of this, a self-consistent
set of equations for the exact homogeneous equilibria are described, using a
generalized cluster-expansion scheme. These equations are solved in the
two-particle BBGKY approximation, and the results are compared to numerical
experiment. It is found that this approximation describes the equilibria far
more accurately than the Boltzmann approximation. It is also found, however,
that spurious solutions to the equilibrium equations appear which can only be
removed by including effects due to three-particle correlations.Comment: 21 pages, REVTe
Boundary fields and renormalization group flow in the two-matrix model
We analyze the Ising model on a random surface with a boundary magnetic field
using matrix model techniques. We are able to exactly calculate the disk
amplitude, boundary magnetization and bulk magnetization in the presence of a
boundary field. The results of these calculations can be interpreted in terms
of renormalization group flow induced by the boundary operator. In the
continuum limit this RG flow corresponds to the flow from non-conformal to
conformal boundary conditions which has recently been studied in flat space
theories.Comment: 31 pages, Late
Extrauterine listeriosis in the gravid mouse influences embryonic growth and development
Gravid mice and other rodents inoculated with Listeria monocytogenes typically fail to clear an intrauterine infection and either succumb or expel their intrauterine contents. We took advantage of this property to investigate the effects of an extrauterine infection on parameters of pregnancy success. Pregnant mice were selected for our study if they showed no clinical signs of listeriosis following oral inoculation at 7.5 gestational days (gd), and had no detectable intrauterine colony forming units (cfu) at near term (18.5 gd). The range of oral doses employed was 10(6)-10(8) cfu per mouse for two listerial serotype strains (4nonb and 1/2a). At all doses, inoculation resulted in a decrease in average near-term (18.5 gd) fetal weight per litter compared to sham inoculated controls. Additionally, embryonic death (indicated by intrauterine resorptions) was exhibited by some inoculated mice but was absent in all sham inoculated animals. In parallel experiments designed to detect possible loss of placental function, gravid uteruses were examined histopathologically and microbiologically 96 h after oral inoculation. Placental lesions were associated with high (> 10(6)), but not low (< 10(2)) or absent intrauterine cfu. In vitro, mouse embryonic trophoblasts were indistinguishable from mouse enterocytes in terms of their sensitivity to listerial exposure. A model consistent with our observations is one in which products (host or bacterial) generated during an acute infection enter embryos transplacentally and influences embryonic survival and slows normal growth in utero
Recent Advances Concerning Certain Class of Geophysical Flows
This paper is devoted to reviewing several recent developments concerning
certain class of geophysical models, including the primitive equations (PEs) of
atmospheric and oceanic dynamics and a tropical atmosphere model. The PEs for
large-scale oceanic and atmospheric dynamics are derived from the Navier-Stokes
equations coupled to the heat convection by adopting the Boussinesq and
hydrostatic approximations, while the tropical atmosphere model considered here
is a nonlinear interaction system between the barotropic mode and the first
baroclinic mode of the tropical atmosphere with moisture.
We are mainly concerned with the global well-posedness of strong solutions to
these systems, with full or partial viscosity, as well as certain singular
perturbation small parameter limits related to these systems, including the
small aspect ratio limit from the Navier-Stokes equations to the PEs, and a
small relaxation-parameter in the tropical atmosphere model. These limits
provide a rigorous justification to the hydrostatic balance in the PEs, and to
the relaxation limit of the tropical atmosphere model, respectively. Some
conditional uniqueness of weak solutions, and the global well-posedness of weak
solutions with certain class of discontinuous initial data, to the PEs are also
presented.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1507.0523
Symmetries and reversing symmetries of toral automorphisms
Toral automorphisms, represented by unimodular integer matrices, are
investigated with respect to their symmetries and reversing symmetries. We
characterize the symmetry groups of GL(n,Z) matrices with simple spectrum
through their connection with unit groups in orders of algebraic number fields.
For the question of reversibility, we derive necessary conditions in terms of
the characteristic polynomial and the polynomial invariants. We also briefly
discuss extensions to (reversing) symmetries within affine transformations, to
PGL(n,Z) matrices, and to the more general setting of integer matrices beyond
the unimodular ones.Comment: 34 page
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