1,061 research outputs found
Borehole temperatures record changing climate
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95375/1/eost9082.pd
Global Change and the Earth System
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/94868/1/eost14816.pd
Rescuing Complementarity With Little Drama
The AMPS paradox challenges black hole complementarity by apparently
constructing a way for an observer to bring information from the outside of the
black hole into its interior if there is no drama at its horizon, making
manifest a violation of monogamy of entanglement. We propose a new resolution
to the paradox: this violation cannot be explicitly checked by an infalling
observer in the finite proper time they have to live after crossing the
horizon. Our resolution depends on a weak relaxation of the no-drama condition
(we call it "little drama") which is the "complementarity dual" of scrambling
of information on the stretched horizon. When translated to the description of
the black hole interior, this implies that the fine-grained quantum information
of infalling matter is rapidly diffused across the entire interior while
classical observables and coarse-grained geometry remain unaffected. Under the
assumption that information has diffused throughout the interior, we consider
the difficulty of the information-theoretic task that an observer must perform
after crossing the event horizon of a Schwarzschild black hole in order to
verify a violation of monogamy of entanglement. We find that the time required
to complete a necessary subroutine of this task, namely the decoding of Bell
pairs from the interior and the late radiation, takes longer than the maximum
amount of time that an observer can spend inside the black hole before hitting
the singularity. Therefore, an infalling observer cannot observe monogamy
violation before encountering the singularity.Comment: 26 pages, 3 figures - v2: added references, small tweaks - v3:
corrected typos to reflect final published versio
Mantle devolatilization and convection: Implications for the thermal history of the Earth
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/95357/1/grl3652.pd
Thermal stresses at the oceanic-continental margin
Dissimilar temperature profiles beneath oceans and continents give rise to thermoelastic stresses at and adjacent to the oceanic-continental margin. Computations of the magnitude and orientation of the maximum shear stress field reveal a zone of shear dipping beneath the continent from the margin.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/33354/1/0000752.pd
On the use of the volumetric thermal expansion coefficient in models of ocean floor topography
The use of the volumetric thermal expansion coefficient, instead of the linear coefficient, in successful models of ocean floor topography implies that the elastic rigidity of the lithosphere relaxes, enabling isostasy to be achieved. However, the presence of a thin elastic lid in the lithosphere, inferred from gravity investigations, implies some rigidity at the top of the lithospheric column and suggests that the volumetric thermal expansion coefficient derived from rheologically uniform models of the topography is about 15% too small.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/23262/1/0000196.pd
Climate change inferred from borehole temperatures
Temperature changes at the Earth's surface propagate downward into the subsurface and impart a thermal signature to the rocks that can be analyzed to yield a surface temperature history over the past few centuries. Thus subsurface temperatures have the potential to extend the 20th century meteorologic temperature record back well into the pre-industrial era and therefore to provide information relevant to an assessment of the role of greenhouse gases in atmospheric warming. Short period variations in surface temperature are attenuated at shallow depths, whereas longer period excursions propagate deeper. The ability to resolve details of the surface temperature history diminishes with time. Care must be taken to identify and evaluate local anthropogenic temperature perturbations such as urbanization, deforestation and wetland destruction and microclimatic effects associated with topography and vegetation patterns, in order to isolate true regional climate change. Investigations in North America indicate significant regional variability in the surface temperature history inferred from borehole profiles, similar to that observed in the meteorologic record of the 20th century.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/30810/1/0000468.pd
Cratonization and thermal evolution of the mantle
The stabilization of continental lithosphere to form cratons is accomplished by volatile loss from the upper mantle during magmatic events associated with the formation of continental crust. Volatile depletion elevates the solidus and increases the stiffness of the mantle residuum, thereby imparting a resistance to subsequent melting and deformation. Freeboard is maintained in part by the buoyancy associated with an increased Mg/(Mg + Fe) ratio in the mantle residuum following extraction of crustal material. Augmented subcratonic seismic velocities derive from the same shift in this ratio. The higher effective viscosity of the stabilized subcratonic upper mantle inhibits its entrainment in mantle convection, and locally thickens the conductive boundary layer. Heat approaching from greater depths is diverted away from the stiff craton to other areas that continue to transfer heat by convection, thus yielding a low surface heat flow within cratons.Cratonization by devolatilization and petrologic depletion was most effective in the Archean and has diminished in effectiveness over geologic time as the mantle temperature has fallen because of the declining store of internal heat. From the Archean to the present that ascending mantle material which has undergone partial melting has encountered the solidus at progressively shallower depth, has remained supersolidus over a smaller depth range, has temperatures which have exceeded the solidus by lesser amounts, has undergone diminishing degrees of partial melting, and has experienced less thorough devolatilization. At a given time the rate of production of continental crust is likely to be proportional to the depth extent and fraction of partial melting. Integration of the partial melt zone over time yields a growth curve that is similar to some continental crustal growth curves inferred from isotopic evolution.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/26023/1/0000095.pd
Temperature trends ever the past five centuries reconstructed from borehole temperatures
For an accurate assessment of the relative roles of natural variability and anthropogenic influence in the Earth's climate, reconstructions of past temperatures from the pre-industrial as well as the industrial period are essential. But instrumental records are typically available for no more than the past 150 years. Therefore reconstructions of pre-industrial climate rely principally on traditional climate proxy records(1-5), each with particular strengths and limitations in representing climatic variability. Subsurface temperatures comprise an independent archive of past surface temperature changes that is complementary to both the instrumental record and the climate proxies. Here we use present-day temperatures in 616 boreholes from all continents except Antarctica to reconstruct century-long trends in temperatures over the past 500 years at global, hemispheric and continental scales. The results confirm the unusual warming of the twentieth century revealed by the instrumental record(6), but suggest that the cumulative change over the past five centuries amounts to about 1 K, exceeding recent estimates from conventional climate proxies(2-5). The strength of temperature reconstructions from boreholes lies in the detection of long-term trends, complementary to conventional climate proxies, but to obtain a complete picture of past warming, the differences between the approaches need to be investigated in detail.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/62610/1/403756a0.pd
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