109 research outputs found
Pavement stresses due to tire impact
Road surfaces wear continually under the effects of vehicular motions in an environment of changing temperature, humidity, etc. Regulatory agencies need to set limits on vehicular loads, tire pressures, etc., in order to mitigate the damage caused by the traveling stress footprints of vehicular traffic. In order to understand and quantify the relationship between damage caused and the parameters influencing the forces generated by a moving vehicle on a road surface, it is necessary to construct a model for a mechanical system of vehicle body, suspension springs, axle, wheel rim and tire, transmitting forces back and forward to the road surface.
The previous paragraph describes the broad problem presented to the workshop. In what follows we organize a simple mathematical model to represent the major components of the system, and we indicate how this model may be validated (or not) by tests and, if it is successful, how it can be used in a predictive capacity
Stress-testing the VBF approximation in multijet final states
We consider electro-weak Higgs plus three jets production at NLO QCD beyond
strict VBF acceptance cuts. We investigate, for the first time, how accurate
the VBF approximation is in these regions and within perturbative
uncertainties, by a detailed comparison of full and approximate calculations.
We find that a rapidity gap between the tagging jets guarantees a good
approximation, while an invariant mass cut alone is not sufficient, which needs
to be confronted with experimental choices. We also find that a significant
part of the QCD corrections can be attributed to Higgs-Strahlungs-type
topologies.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, add VBSCAN report numbe
How emissions, climate, and land use change will impact mid-century air quality over the United States: A focus on effects at national parks
We use a global coupled chemistry-climate-land model (CESM) to assess the integrated effect of climate, emissions and land use changes on annual surface O3 and PM2.5 in the United States with a focus on national parks (NPs) and wilderness areas, using the RCP4.5 and RCP8.5 projections. We show that, when stringent domestic emission controls are applied, air quality is predicted to improve across the US, except surface O3 over the western and central US under RCP8.5 conditions, where rising background ozone counteracts domestic emission reductions. Under the RCP4.5 scenario, surface O3 is substantially reduced (about 5 ppb), with daily maximum 8 h averages below the primary US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) of 75 ppb (and even 65 ppb) in all the NPs. PM2.5 is significantly reduced in both scenarios (4 μg m-3; ~50%), with levels below the annual US EPA NAAQS of 12 μg m-3 across all the NPs; visibility is also improved (10-15 dv; >75 km in visibility range), although some western US parks with Class I status (40-74 % of total sites in the US) are still above the 2050 planned target level to reach the goal of natural visibility conditions by 2064. We estimate that climate-driven increases in fire activity may dominate summertime PM2.5 over the western US, potentially offsetting the large PM2.5 reductions from domestic emission controls, and keeping visibility at present-day levels in many parks. Our study indicates that anthropogenic emission patterns will be important for air quality in 2050. However, climate and land use changes alone may lead to a substantial increase in surface O3 (2-3 ppb) with important consequences for O3 air quality and ecosystem degradation at the US NPs. Our study illustrates the need to consider the effects of changes in climate, vegetation, and fires in future air quality management and planning and emission policy making
Application of <sup>14</sup>C analyses to source apportionment of carbonaceous PM<sub>2.5</sub> in the UK
Determination of the radiocarbon (<sup>14</sup>C) content of airborne particulate matter yields insight into the proportion of the carbonaceous material derived from fossil and contemporary carbon sources. Daily samples of PM<sub>2.5</sub> were collected by high-volume sampler at an urban background site in Birmingham, UK, and the fraction of <sup>14</sup>C in both the total carbon, and in the organic and elemental carbon fractions, determined by two-stage combustion to CO<sub>2</sub>, graphitisation and quantification by accelerator mass spectrometry. OC and EC content was also determined by Sunset Analyzer. The mean fraction contemporary TC in the PM<sub>2.5</sub> samples was 0.50 (range 0.27–0.66, n = 26). There was no seasonality to the data, but there was a positive trend between fraction contemporary TC and magnitude of SOC/TC ratio and for the high values of these two parameters to be associated with air-mass back trajectories arriving in Birmingham from over land. Using a five-compartment mass balance model on fraction contemporary carbon in OC and EC, the following average source apportionment for the TC in these PM<sub>2.5</sub> samples was derived: 27% fossil EC; 20% fossil OC; 2% biomass EC; 10% biomass OC; and 41% biogenic OC. The latter category will comprise, in addition to BVOC-derived SOC, other non-combustion contemporary carbon sources such as biological particles, vegetative detritus, humic material and tyre wear. The proportion of total PM<sub>2.5</sub> at this location estimated to derive from BVOC-derived secondary organic aerosol was 9–29%. The findings from this work are consistent with those from elsewhere in Europe and support the conclusion of a significant and ubiquitous contribution from non-fossil biogenic sources to the carbon in terrestrial aerosol
Stress testing the vector-boson-fusion approximation in multijet final states
We consider electroweak Higgs plus three jets production at NLO QCD beyond strict VBF acceptance cuts. We investigate, for the first time, how accurate the VBF approximation is in these regions and within perturbative uncertainties by a detailed comparison of full and approximate calculations. We find that a rapidity gap between the tagging jets guarantees a good approximation, while an invariant mass cut alone is not sufficient, which needs to be confronted with experimental choices. We also find that a significant part of the QCD corrections can be attributed to Higgs-Strahlungs-type topologies
Recommended from our members
Sources of nitrogen deposition in Federal Class I areas in the US
It is desired to control excessive reactive nitrogen (Nr) deposition due to
its detrimental impact on ecosystems. Using a three-dimensional atmospheric
chemical transport model, GEOS-Chem, Nr deposition in the contiguous US and
eight selected Class I areas (Voyageurs (VY), Smoky Mountain (SM), Shenandoah
(SD), Big Bend (BB), Rocky Mountain (RM), Grand Teton (GT), Joshua Tree (JT),
and Sequoia (SQ)) is investigated. First, modeled Nr deposition is compared
with National Trends Network (NTN) and Clean Air Status and Trends Network
(CASTNET) deposition values. The seasonality of measured species is generally
well represented by the model (R2 > 0.6), except in JT. While modeled Nr
is generally within the range of seasonal observations, large overestimates
are present in sites such as SM and SD in the spring and summer (up to 0.6 kg N ha month−1),
likely owing to model high-biases in surface HNO3. The
contribution of non-measured species (mostly dry deposition of NH3) to
total modeled Nr deposition ranges from 1 to 55 %. The spatial distribution
of the origin of Nr deposited in each Class I area and the contributions of
individual emission sectors are estimated using the GEOS-Chem adjoint model.
We find the largest role of long-range transport for VY, where 50 % (90 %) of
annual Nr deposition originates within 670 (1670) km of the park. In
contrast, the Nr emission footprint is most localized for SQ, where 50 %
(90 %) of the deposition originates from within 130 (370) km. Emissions from
California contribute to the Nr deposition in remote areas in the western US
(RM, GT). Mobile NOx and livestock NH3 are found to be the major
sources of Nr deposition in all sites except BB, where contributions of
NOx from lightning and soils to natural levels of Nr deposition are
significant (∼ 40 %). The efficiency in terms of Nr deposition per kg
emissions of NH3-N, NOx-N, and SO2-S are also estimated. Unique
seasonal features are found in JT (opposing efficiency distributions for
winter and summer), RM (large fluctuations in the range of effective
regions), and SD (upwind NH3 emissions hindering Nr deposition). We also
evaluate the contributions of emissions to the total area of Class I regions
in critical load exceedance, and to the total magnitude of exceedance. We
find that while it is effective to control emissions in the western US to
reduce the area of regions in CL exceedance, it can be more effective to
control emissions in the eastern US to reduce the magnitude of Nr deposition
above the CL. Finally, uncertainty in the nitrogen deposition caused by
uncertainty in the NH3 emission inventory is explored by comparing results
based on two different NH3 inventories; noticeable differences in the
emission inventories and thus sensitivities of up to a factor of four found in
individual locations
Les Houches 2015: Physics at TeV Colliders Standard Model Working Group Report
This Report summarizes the proceedings of the 2015 Les Houches workshop on
Physics at TeV Colliders. Session 1 dealt with (I) new developments relevant
for high precision Standard Model calculations, (II) the new PDF4LHC parton
distributions, (III) issues in the theoretical description of the production of
Standard Model Higgs bosons and how to relate experimental measurements, (IV) a
host of phenomenological studies essential for comparing LHC data from Run I
with theoretical predictions and projections for future measurements in Run II,
and (V) new developments in Monte Carlo event generators.Comment: Proceedings of the Standard Model Working Group of the 2015 Les
Houches Workshop, Physics at TeV Colliders, Les Houches 1-19 June 2015. 227
page
Meteorological and Back Trajectory Modeling for the Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur Study II
The Rocky Mountain Atmospheric Nitrogen and Sulfur (RoMANS II) study with field operations during November 2008 through November 2009 was designed to evaluate the composition and sources of reactive nitrogen in Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado, USA. As part of RoMANS II, a mesoscale meteorological model was utilized to provide input for back trajectory and chemical transport models. Evaluation of the model's ability to capture important transport patterns in this region of complex terrain is discussed. Previous source-receptor studies of nitrogen in this region are also reviewed. Finally, results of several back trajectory analyses for RoMANS II are presented. The trajectory mass balance (TrMB) model, a receptor-based linear regression technique, was used to estimate mean source attributions of airborne ammonia concentrations during RoMANS II. Though ammonia concentrations are usually higher when there is transport from the east, the TrMB model estimates that, on average, areas to the west contribute a larger mean fraction of the ammonia. Possible reasons for this are discussed and include the greater frequency of westerly versus easterly winds, the possibility that ammonia is transported long distances as ammonium nitrate, and the difficulty of correctly modeling the transport winds in this area
Scaling Patterns for QCD Jets
Jet emission at hadron colliders follows simple scaling patterns. Based on
perturbative QCD we derive Poisson and staircase scaling for final state as
well as initial state radiation. Parton density effects enhance staircase
scaling at low multiplicities. We propose experimental tests of our theoretical
findings in Z+jets and QCD gap jets production based on minor additions to
current LHC analyses.Comment: 36 pages, 16 figure
- …