1,056 research outputs found
Defining the 3D geometry of thin shale units in the Sleipner reservoir using seismic attributes
Acknowledgments The seismic interpretation and image processing was carried out in the SeisLab facility at the University of Aberdeen (sponsored by BG BP and Chevron). Seismic imaging analysis was performed using GeoTeric (ffA), and analysis of seismic amplitudes was performed in Petrel 2015 (Schlumberger). We would like to thank the NDDC (RG11766-10) for funding this research and Statoil for the release of the Sleipner field seismic dataset utilized in this research paper and also Anne-Kari Furre and her colleagues for their assistance. We also thank the editor, Alejandro Escalona and the two anonymous reviewers for their constructive and in depth comments that improved the paper.Peer reviewedPostprin
Ultraviolet and soft X--ray photon--photon elastic scattering in an electron gas
We have considered the processes which lead to elastic scattering between two
far ultraviolet or X--ray photons while they propagate inside a solid, modeled
as a simple electron gas. The new ingredient, with respect to the standard
theory of photon--photon scattering in vacuum, is the presence of low--energy,
nonrelativistic electron--hole excitations. Owing to the existence of
two--photon vertices, the scattering processes in the metal are predominantly
of second order, as opposed to fourth order for the vacuum case. The main
processes in second order are dominated by exchange of virtual plasmons between
the two photons. For two photons of similar energy , this gives
rise to a cross section rising like up to maximum of around
~cm, and then decreasing like . The maximal cross
section is found for the photon wavevector , the Fermi surface
size, which typically means a photon energy in the keV range.
Possible experiments aimed at checking the existence of these rare but
seemingly measurable elastic photon--photon scattering processes are discussed,
using in particular intense synchrotron sources.Comment: 33 pages, TeX, Version 3.1, S.I.S.S.A. preprint 35/93/C
Multilayer modeling of adoption dynamics in energy demand management.
Due to the emergence of new technologies, the whole electricity system is undergoing transformations on a scale and pace never observed before. The decentralization of energy resources and the smart grid have forced utility services to rethink their relationships with customers. Demand response (DR) seeks to adjust the demand for power instead of adjusting the supply. However, DR business models rely on customer participation and can only be effective when large numbers of customers in close geographic vicinity, e.g., connected to the same transformer, opt in. Here, we introduce a model for the dynamics of service adoption on a two-layer multiplex network: the layer of social interactions among customers and the power-grid layer connecting the households. While the adoption process-based on peer-to-peer communication-runs on the social layer, the time-dependent recovery rate of the nodes depends on the states of their neighbors on the power-grid layer, making an infected node surrounded by infectious ones less keen to recover. Numerical simulations of the model on synthetic and real-world networks show that a strong local influence of the customers' actions leads to a discontinuous transition where either none or all the nodes in the network are infected, depending on the infection rate and social pressure to adopt. We find that clusters of early adopters act as points of high local pressure, helping maintaining adopters, and facilitating the eventual adoption of all nodes. This suggests direct marketing strategies on how to efficiently establish and maintain new technologies such as DR schemes
Ultrafast Resonant Polarization Interferometry: Towards the First Direct Detection of Vacuum Polarization
Vacuum polarization, an effect predicted nearly 70 years ago, is still yet to
be directly detected despite significant experimental effort. Previous attempts
have made use of large liquid-helium cooled electromagnets which inadvertently
generate spurious signals that mask the desired signal. We present a novel
approach for the ultra-sensitive detection of optical birefringence that can be
usefully applied to a laboratory detection of vacuum polarization. The new
technique has a predicted birefringence measurement sensitivity of in a 1 second measurement. When combined with the extreme
polarizing fields achievable in this design we predict that a vacuum
polarization signal will be seen in a measurement of just a few days in
duration.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. submitted to PR
Seismic and structural characterization of fluid escape pipes using 3D and partial stack seismic from the Loyal field (UK) : A multiphase and repeated intrusive mechanism
Acknowledgements We thank an anonymous reviewer for the several constructive comments. The seismic interpretation and image processing was carried out in the SeisLab facility at the University of Aberdeen (sponsored by BG BP and Chevron). Seismic imaging analysis was performed using GeoTeric® (ffA), and analysis of seismic amplitudes was performed in Petrel® 2016 (Schlumberger). We would like to thank the Tuscany PhD Regional program and the Erasmus+exchange for funding the Aberdeen permanence of one of us (D.M.). Gazprom for supporting A.J PhD., BP for the release of the Loyal field seismic dataset utilized in this research paper and also N.Vanden Beukel (BP) and M. Gorling (BP) and his colleagues for their assistance.Peer reviewedPostprin
Towards a direct measurement of vacuum magnetic birefringence: PVLAS achievements
Nonlinear effects in vacuum have been predicted but never observed yet
directly. The PVLAS collaboration has long been working on an apparatus aimed
at detecting such effects by measuring vacuum magnetic birefringence.
Unfortunately the sensitivity has been affected by unaccounted noise and
systematics since the beginning. A new small prototype ellipsometer has been
designed and characterized at the Department of Physics of the University of
Ferrara, Italy entirely mounted on a single seismically isolated optical bench.
With a finesse F = 414000 and a cavity length L = 0.5 m we have reached the
predicted sensitivity of psi = 2x10^-8 1/sqrt(Hz) given the laser power at the
output of the ellipsomenter of P = 24 mW. This record result demonstrates the
feasibility of reaching such sensitivities and opens the way to designing a
dedicated apparatus for a first detection of vacuum magnetic birefringence
Interacting Discovery Processes on Complex Networks
Innovation is the driving force of human progress. Recent urn models reproduce well the dynamics through which the discovery of a novelty may trigger further ones, in an expanding space of opportunities, but neglect the effects of social interactions. Here we focus on the mechanisms of collective exploration and we propose a model in which many urns, representing different explorers, are coupled through the links of a social network and exploit opportunities coming from their contacts. We study different network structures showing, both analytically and numerically, that the pace of discovery of an explorer depends on its centrality in the social network. Our model sheds light on the role that social structures play in discovery processes
Limits on the violation of g-universality with a Galileo-type experiment
Abstract We present new results for a Galilean experiment using two masses of copper and tungsten in simultaneous free fall. The experiment searches for a possible difference in the free-fall acceleration Δ g and it is sensitive to any composition-dependent interaction between the test masses and the earth, whose range exceeds 10 km. The results show no evidence for any composition-dependent gravity-like interaction within Δg μ Gal
- …