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Indirect long-term global radiative cooling from NOx emissions
Anthropogenic emissions of short‐lived, chemically reactive gases, such as NO x and CO, are known to influence climate by altering the chemistry of the global troposphere and thereby the abundance of the greenhouse gases O3, CH4 and the HFCs. This study uses the characteristics of the natural modes of the tropospheric chemical system to decompose the greenhouse effect of NO x and CO emissions into (i) short‐lived modes involving predominantly tropospheric O3 and (ii) the long‐lived mode involving a global coupled CH4‐CO‐O3 perturbation. Combining these two classes of greenhouse perturbations—large, short‐lived, regional O3 increases and smaller, long‐lived, global decreases in CH4 and O3—we find that most types of anthropogenic NO x emissions lead to a negative radiative forcing and an overall cooling of the earth
Building the red sequence through gas-rich major mergers
Understanding the details of how the red sequence is built is a key question
in galaxy evolution. What are the relative roles of gas-rich vs. dry mergers,
major vs. minor mergers or galaxy mergers vs. gas accretion? In Wild et al.
2009 we compare hydrodynamic simulations with observations to show how gas-rich
major mergers result in galaxies with strong post-starburst spectral features,
a population of galaxies easily identified in the real Universe using optical
spectra. Using spectra from the VVDS deep survey with z~0.7, and a principal
component analysis technique to provide indices with high enough SNR, we find
that 40% of the mass flux onto the red-sequence could enter through a strong
post-starburst phase, and thus through gas-rich major mergers. The deeper
samples provided by next generation galaxy redshift surveys will allow us to
observe the primary physical processes responsible for the shut-down in
starformation and build-up of the red sequence.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, proceedings of IAU symposium 262 "Stellar
populations, planning for the next decade
Diamond Integrated Optomechanical Circuits
Diamond offers unique material advantages for the realization of micro- and
nanomechanical resonators due to its high Young's modulus, compatibility with
harsh environments and superior thermal properties. At the same time, the wide
electronic bandgap of 5.45eV makes diamond a suitable material for integrated
optics because of broadband transparency and the absence of free-carrier
absorption commonly encountered in silicon photonics. Here we take advantage of
both to engineer full-scale optomechanical circuits in diamond thin films. We
show that polycrystalline diamond films fabricated by chemical vapour
deposition provide a convenient waferscale substrate for the realization of
high quality nanophotonic devices. Using free-standing nanomechanical
resonators embedded in on-chip Mach-Zehnder interferometers, we demonstrate
efficient optomechanical transduction via gradient optical forces. Fabricated
diamond resonators reproducibly show high mechanical quality factors up to
11,200. Our low cost, wideband, carrier-free photonic circuits hold promise for
all-optical sensing and optomechanical signal processing at ultra-high
frequencies
Seasonal cycles of ozone and oxidized nitrogen species in northeast Asia - 2:A model analysis of the roles of chemistry and transport
[1] The dominant factors controlling the seasonal variations of ozone (O-3) and three major oxidized nitrogen species, peroxyacetyl nitrate (PAN), nitrogen oxides (NOx), and nitric acid (HNO3), in northeast Asia are investigated by using a three-dimensional global chemical transport model to analyze surface observations made at Rishiri Island, a remote island in northern Japan. The model was evaluated by comparing with observed seasonal variations, and with the relationships between O-3, CO, and PAN. We show that the model reproduces the chemical environment at Rishiri Island reasonably well, and that the seasonal cycles of O-3, CO, NOy species, and VOCs are well predicted. The impact of local emissions on some of these constituents is significant, but is not the dominant factor affecting the seasonal cycles. The seasonal roles of chemistry and transport in controlling O-3 and PAN are revealed by examining production/ destruction and import/ export/deposition fluxes in the boundary layer over the Rishiri region. For O-3, transport plays a key role throughout the year, and the regional photochemical contribution is at most 10% in summer. For PAN, in contrast, transport dominates in winter, while in-situ chemistry contributes as much as 75% in summer. It is suggested that the relative contribution of transport and in-situ chemistry is significantly different for O-3 and PAN, but that the wintertime dominance of transport due to the long chemical lifetimes of these species is sufficient to drive the seasonal cycles of springtime maximum and summertime minimum characteristic of remote sites
On a generalized quantum SWAP gate
The SWAP gate plays a central role in network designs for qubit quantum computation. However, there has been a view to generalize qubit quantum computing to higher dimensional quantum systems. In this paper we construct a generalized SWAP gate using only instances of the generalized controlled-NOT gate to cyclically permute the states of d qudits for d prime
Clouds, photolysis and regional tropospheric ozone budgets.
We use a three-dimensional chemical transport model to examine the shortwave radiative effects of clouds on the tropospheric ozone budget. In addition to looking at changes in global concentrations as previous studies have done, we examine changes in ozone chemical production and loss caused by clouds and how these vary in different parts of the troposphere. On a global scale, we find that clouds have a modest effect on ozone chemistry, but on a regional scale their role is much more significant, with the size of the response dependent on the region. The largest averaged changes in chemical budgets (±10–14%) are found in the marine troposphere, where cloud optical depths are high. We demonstrate that cloud effects are small on average in the middle troposphere because this is a transition region between reduction and enhancement in photolysis rates. We show that increases in boundary layer ozone due to clouds are driven by large-scale changes in downward ozone transport from higher in the troposphere rather than by decreases in in-situ ozone chemical loss rates. Increases in upper tropospheric ozone are caused by higher production rates due to backscattering of radiation and consequent increases in photolysis rates, mainly J(NO2). The global radiative effect of clouds on isoprene, through decreases of OH in the lower troposphere, is stronger than on ozone. Tropospheric isoprene lifetime increases by 7% when taking clouds into account. We compare the importance of clouds in contributing to uncertainties in the global ozone budget with the role of other radiatively-important factors. The budget is most sensitive to the overhead ozone column, while surface albedo and clouds have smaller effects. However, uncertainty in representing the spatial distribution of clouds may lead to a large sensitivity of the ozone budget components on regional scales
Lessons Learned from Remote Collaboration on Student Projects
We describe an informal experiment in which students from two different universities collaborated remotely, through email, on a class project. Students enrolled in a course in quantitative decision making at both the University of Hawaii (UH) and Southern Methodist University (SMU) were paired in teams to analyze and solve a complex linear programming case problem. In addition to making a series of decisions related to the case, students were asked to devise a team strategy for working as a remote team. Despite some shortcomings related primarily to time constraints and miscalculations in planning, the majority of students involved in the experiment made quality decisions and thought the experience was valuable. We describe the project and report on the lessons learned in designing and implementing remote email collaboration among students. We also provide suggestions for other educators interested in conducting similar projects
Signatures from Scalar Dark Matter with a Vector-like Quark Mediator
We present a comprehensive study of a model where the dark matter is composed
of a singlet real scalar that couples to the Standard Model predominantly via a
Yukawa interaction with a light quark and a colored vector-like fermion. A
distinctive feature of this scenario is that thermal freeze-out in the early
universe may be driven by annihilation both into gluon pairs at one-loop ()
and by virtual internal Bremsstrahlung of a gluon (). Such a dark
matter candidate may also be tested through direct and indirect detection and
at the LHC; viable candidates have either a mass nearly degenerate with that of
the fermionic mediator or a mass above about 2 TeV.Comment: 30 pages, 10 figures. Matches published versio
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