10,839 research outputs found
Improved solution of the lidar equation utilizing particle counter measurements
The extraction of particle backscattering from incoherent lidar measurements poses some problems. In the case of measurements of the stratospheric aerosol layer the solution of the lidar equation is based on two assumptions which are necessary to normalize the measured signal and to correct it with the two-way transmission of the laser pulse. Normalization and transmission are tackled by adding the information contained in aerosol particle counter measurements of the University of Wyoming to the ruby lidar measurements at Garmisch-Partenkirchen. Calculated backscattering from height levels above 25 km for the El Chichon period will be compared with lidar measurements and necessary corrections. The calculated backscatter-to-extinction ratios are compared to those, which were derived from a comparison of published extinction values to measured lidar backscattering at Garmisch. These ratios were used to calculate the Garmisch lidar returns. For the period 4 to 12 months after the El Chichon eruption a backscater-to-extinction ratio of 0.026 1/sr was applied with smaller values before and after that time
Lidar observations of the decline of the El Chichon stratospheric load
The eruption of the Mexican volcano El Chichon in Apr. 1982 enhanced the stratospheric aerosol load to a level which so far has not been observed by remote sensing techniques. The ruby lidar system at Garmisch-Partenkirchen recorded an increase of about two orders of magnitude above the background level of the years 1977/78. At northern midlatitudes backscattering was peaking in Jan./Feb. 1983, as illustrated. The decline of the El Chichon stratospheric perturbation is discussed. The decay of the El Chichon stratospheric cloud is characterized by an overall 1/e lifetime of about 12 months. The El Chichon decay is further characterized by seasonal variations of the integral backscattering coefficient, which exhibit a winter maximum and a summer minimum. These variations are inversely correlated with the seasonal mean movement of the tropopause height indicating transport processes
Metastability of a granular surface in a spinning bucket
The surface shape of a spinning bucket of granular material is studied using
a continuum model of surface flow developed by Bouchaud et al. and Mehta et al.
An experimentally observed central subcritical region is reproduced by the
model. The subcritical region occurs when a metastable surface becomes unstable
via a nonlinear instability mechanism. The nonlinear instability mechanism
destabilizes the surface in large systems while a linear instability mechanism
is relevant for smaller systems. The range of angles in which the granular
surface is metastable vanishes with increasing system size.Comment: 8 pages with postscript figures, RevTex, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Thermal convection in mono-disperse and bi-disperse granular gases: A simulation study
We present results of a simulation study of inelastic hard-disks vibrated in
a vertical container. An Event-Driven Molecular Dynamics method is developed
for studying the onset of convection. Varying the relevant parameters
(inelasticity, number of layers at rest, intensity of the gravity) we are able
to obtain a qualitative agreement of our results with recent hydrodynamical
predictions. Increasing the inelasticity, a first continuous transition from
the absence of convection to one convective roll is observed, followed by a
discontinuous transition to two convective rolls, with hysteretic behavior. At
fixed inelasticity and increasing gravity, a transition from no convection to
one roll can be evidenced. If the gravity is further increased, the roll is
eventually suppressed. Increasing the number of monolayers the system
eventually localizes mostly at the bottom of the box: in this case multiple
convective rolls as well as surface waves appear. We analyze the density and
temperature fields and study the existence of symmetry breaking in these fields
in the direction perpendicular to the injection of energy. We also study a
binary mixture of grains with different properties (inelasticity or diameters).
The effect of changing the properties of one of the components is analyzed,
together with density, temperature and temperature ratio fields.
Finally, the presence of a low-fraction of quasi-elastic impurities is shown
to determine a sharp transition between convective and non-convective steady
states.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication on Physical Review
Optoelectronic Reservoir Computing
Reservoir computing is a recently introduced, highly efficient bio-inspired
approach for processing time dependent data. The basic scheme of reservoir
computing consists of a non linear recurrent dynamical system coupled to a
single input layer and a single output layer. Within these constraints many
implementations are possible. Here we report an opto-electronic implementation
of reservoir computing based on a recently proposed architecture consisting of
a single non linear node and a delay line. Our implementation is sufficiently
fast for real time information processing. We illustrate its performance on
tasks of practical importance such as nonlinear channel equalization and speech
recognition, and obtain results comparable to state of the art digital
implementations.Comment: Contains main paper and two Supplementary Material
Proton NMR relaxometry as a useful tool to evaluate swelling processes in peat soils
Dramatic physical and physico-chemical changes in soil properties may arise due to temperature and moisture variations as well as swelling of soil organic matter (SOM) under constant conditions. Soil property variations may influence sorption/desorption and transport processes of environmental contaminants and nutrients in natural-organic-matterrich soils. Notwithstanding the studies reported in literature, a mechanistic model for SOM swelling is unavailable yet. The objective of the present study was the evaluation of the swelling of peat soils, considered as SOM models, by 1H NMR relaxometry and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Namely, information on the processes governing physical and physicochemical changes of peat during re-hydration were collected. The basic hypothesis of the present study was that the changes are slow and may affect water state as well as amounts of different water types into the peats. For this reason, such changes can be evidenced through the variations of mobility and thermal behaviour of the involved H2O molecules by using 1H NMR relaxometry and DSC. According to the experimental results, a mechanistic model, describing the fundamental processes of peat swelling, was obtained. Two different peats re-wetted at three temperatures were used. The swelling process was monitored by measuring spin-spin relaxation time (T2) over a hydration time of several months. Moreover, DSC, T1 – T2 and T2 – D correlation measurements were done at the beginning and at the end of the hydration. Supplementary investigations were also done in order to discriminate between the swelling effects and the contributions from soil solution, internal magnetic field gradients and/or soil microorganisms to proton relaxation. All the results revealed peat swelling. It was evidenced by pore size distribution changes, volumetric expansion and redistribution of water, increasing amounts of nonfreezable and loosely bound water, as well as formation of gel phases and reduction of the translational and rotational mobility of H2O molecules. All the findings implied that changes of the physical and physicochemical properties of peats were obtained. In particular, three different processes having activation energies comprised in the interval 5 – 50 kJ mol-1 were revealed. The mechanistic model which was, then, developed included water reorientation in bound water phases, water diffusion into the peat matrix and reorientation of SOM chains as fundamental processes governing SOM swelling. This study is of environmental significance in terms of re-naturation and re-watering of commercially applied peatlands and of sorption/desorption and transport processes of pollutants and nutrients in natural organic matter rich soil
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