12,071 research outputs found
Ocean-atmosphere interactions in the tropical Atlantic seasonal cycle and multidecadal variability of ENSO
The interaction between the ocean and atmosphere drives changes in the climate system in a wide variety of timescales. The strong annual cycle in the equatorial Atlantic, especially over the east, has been object of extensive research but the role of ocean-atmosphere interactions in driving the seasonal cycle remains to be fully understood in this region. The west African monsoon and the Atlantic cold tongue are the main phenomena controlling the seasonal variability in the equatorial Atlantic and a better understanding of their interaction is crucial for a complete comprehension of the dynamics of the annual cycle. Ocean atmosphere interactions are the main driver of ENSO, which is the leading mode of ocean-atmosphere variability at interannual timescales in the tropics. ENSO properties have experienced large changes in the last few decades but the drivers behind those changes are still in debate. The three studies presented in this thesis are based in climate model simulations. In the first and second papers the atmosphere and ocean components of NorESM model are used to investigate the dynamics of the seasonal cycle in the equatorial Atlantic. The third paper focuses on the identification of multidecadal modulation of ENSO properties by means of a strongly simplified model: the conceptual recharge oscillator model. The first part of this thesis presents an in-depth study of the mechanisms of the seasonal cycle in the equatorial Atlantic with special focus on the quantification of the role of the coupling between the ocean and the atmosphere. My results show that thermodynamic coupling is the main driver of the seasonal cycle in the western equatorial Atlantic and indicate that the dynamical Bjerknes feedback plays a secondary role. In the east, ocean dynamics and the monsoon are the main drivers of the seasonal cycle in the ocean and atmosphere, respectively, with ocean-atmosphere interactions contributing to the amplification of the annual cycle. In the second part of this thesis, I study the changes in observed ENSO properties at multidecadal timescales. The large observed changes in ENSO in the recent decades are reproduced with a conceptual model based on the recharge and discharge of the Pacific equatorial upper ocean heat content. This indicates that dynamic coupling is the main driver of ENSO in the last decades with the thermocline feedback being the mechanism responsible of the amplification of the SST anomalies in the eastern equatorial Pacific
Interaction between U/UO2 bilayers and hydrogen studied by in-situ X-ray diffraction
This paper reports experiments investigating the reaction of H with
uranium metal-oxide bilayers. The bilayers consist of 100 nm of
epitaxial -U (grown on a Nb buffer deposited on sapphire) with a
UO overlayer of thicknesses of between 20 and 80 nm. The oxides were made
either by depositing via reactive magnetron sputtering, or allowing the uranium
metal to oxidise in air at room temperature. The bilayers were exposed to
hydrogen, with sample temperatures between 80 and 200 C, and monitored via
in-situ x-ray diffraction and complimentary experiments conducted using
Scanning Transmission Electron Microscopy - Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy
(STEM-EELS). Small partial pressures of H caused rapid consumption of the
U metal and lead to changes in the intensity and position of the diffraction
peaks from both the UO overlayers and the U metal. There is an
orientational dependence in the rate of U consumption. From changes in the
lattice parameter we deduce that hydrogen enters both the oxide and metal
layers, contracting the oxide and expanding the metal. The air-grown oxide
overlayers appear to hinder the H-reaction up to a threshold dose, but
then on heating from 80 to 140 C the consumption is more rapid than for the
as-deposited overlayers. STEM-EELS establishes that the U-hydride layer lies at
the oxide-metal interface, and that the initial formation is at defects or
grain boundaries, and involves the formation of amorphous and/or
nanocrystalline UH. This explains why no diffraction peaks from UH
are observed. {\textcopyright British Crown Owned Copyright 2017/AWE}Comment: Submitted for peer revie
Charge Dynamics of InAs Quantum Dots Under Resonant and Above-Band Excitation
Research involving light-matter interactions in semiconductor nanostructures has been an interesting topic of investigation for decades. Many systems have been studied for not only probing fundamental physics of the solid state, but also for direct development of technological advancements. Research regarding self-assembled, epitaxially grown quantum dots (QDs) has proven to be prominent in both regards. The development of a reliable, robust source for the production of quantum bits to be utilized in quantum information protocols is a leading venture in the world of condensed matter and solid-state physics. Fluorescence from resonantly driven QDs is a promising candidate for the production of single, indistinguishable photons to be utilized in quantum information protocols, and the material/sample currently leading the research in regards to this are indium-arsenide (InAs) QDs. However, a few obstacles exist inhibiting InAs QDs’ ability to be an efficient and reliable source of single, indistinguishable photons. The root sources of these problems are mostly associated with the dynamic electrical environment in the vicinity of the QDs. The electrical environment is complex due to inevitable emergence of defects and impurities in the bulk host material during epitaxial growth. The presence of these defects results in a complicated network through which charges can migrate around, into, and out of the QDs, resulting in time-dependent perturbations to the electric potential by which QDs confine charge carriers. Inevitably, this results in time-dependent fluctuations in the optical frequency of the emitted fluorescence, and ultimately a broadening of the time-averaged absorption and emission spectra, dubbed spectral diffusion. Additionally, blinking can occur, which is fluctuations of the fluorescence intensity on time scales that are large relative to the lifetime of confined excited states. Both contribute to a loss of applicability to use these samples as an efficient source of single, indistinguishable photons. The broadening of the time-averaged emission spectrum via spectral diffusion results in a loss of indistinguishability amongst photons emitted at different times, whereas blinking results in an abatement of a consistent single photon source. Understanding the exact electrical environment in which the QDs reside, as well as the complex environment through which carriers migrate can help future implementation of both growth and excitation techniques to minimize these undesirable effects. In this dissertation we explore the electric environment of our sample, the complex pathways through which carriers migrate, and how the resulting charge dynamics affect the intensity and indistinguishability of the emitted fluorescence from resonantly driven InAs QDs
Transforming gender relations in an ageing world : a policy discussion paper
This policy discussion paper explores the way in which intersecting inequalities affect life courses and gender relations in older age. It argues for a gendered lifecourse perspective within the Sustainable Development Goals framework
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