1,525 research outputs found

    Sea state bias in altimeter sea level estimates determined by combining wave model and satellite data

    Get PDF
    This study documents a method for increasing the precision of satellite-derived sea level measurements. Results are achieved using an enhanced three-dimensional (3-D) sea state bias (SSB) correction model derived from both Jason-1 altimeter ocean observations (i.e., sea state and wind) and estimates of mean wave period from a numerical ocean wave model, NOAA’s WAVEWATCH III. A multiyear evaluation of Jason-1 data indicates sea surface height variance reduction of 1.26 (±0.2) cm2 in comparison to the commonly applied two-parameter SSB model. The improvement is similar for two separate variance reduction metrics and for separate annual data sets spanning 2002–2004. Spatial evaluation of improvement shows skill increase at all latitudes. Results indicate the new model can reduce the total Jason-1 and Jason-2 altimeter range error budgets by 7.5%. In addition to the 2-D (two-dimensional) and 3-D model differences in correcting the range for wavefield variability, mean model regional differences also occur across the globe and indicate a possible 1–2 cm gradient across ocean basins linked to the zonal variation in wave period (short fetch and period in the west, swells and long period in the east). Overall success of this model provides first evidence that operational wave modeling can support improved ocean altimetry. Future efforts will attempt to work within the limits of wave modeling capabilities to maximize their benefit to Jason-1 and Jason-2 SSB correction methods

    Evolution annuelle du peuplement zooplanctonique dans un lagunage à haut rendement et incidence du temps de séjour

    Get PDF
    Proposé au début des années soixante par W.J. OSWALD, le lagunage dit « à haut rendement », utilisé pour l'épuration d'eaux usées domestiques, représente un écosystème hypereutrophe. Il se distingue considérablement du lagunage naturel par des temps de séjour très courts (2 à 12 jours), de très faibles profondeurs (< 1 m) et par une agitation constante de façon à favoriser le développement algal.Cette étude a pour objectifs de : 1) caractériser les successions saisonnières du zooplancton dans un écosystème où celles-ci n'ont pratiquement pas été étudiées et 2) étudier l'impact, sur la structure du peuplement et au fil des saisons, du temps de séjour des eaux à traiter.Le suivi du peuplement zooplanctonique a été réalisé pendant une période de deux ans dans deux bassins à haut rendement (nommés A et B) de même configuration alimentés en eaux usées. Les temps de résidence des eaux à traiter sont constants et de huit jours dans l'un, variable et ajusté selon l'ensoleillement et la charge entrante dans l'autre.Les résultats obtenus sont analysés par une classification hiérarchique avec contrainte de contiguïté temporelle. Les groupes obtenus sont ensuite testés par l'analyse discriminante. Les résultats sont regroupés chronologiquement : en six groupes pour le bassin B et en dix groupes pour le bassin A. L'analyse discriminante montre que les Crustacés et les Rotifères sont respectivement responsables des regroupements dans les bassins B et A. Pendant la période de démarrage du lagunage ainsi qu'en automne et en hiver, le zooplancton est principalement composé de Protozoaires : Ciliés libres ou fixés en fortes densités (jusqu'à 2,7.107 ind. 1-1) et Rhizopodes (Amibes). Au printemps et en été, lorsque le rayonnement solaire devient important, la production primaire étant optimale, les Protozoaires sont remplacés par des brouteurs herbivores métazoaires. La production de Rotifères et de Daphnies dont les exigences en nourriture (microalgues) sont considérables est importante au printemps ou bien en été uniquement dans le bassin à temps de séjour court. Le développement des Crustacés Copépodes et Ostracodes est favorisé en été dans le bassin à temps de séjour plus long.Tous ces organismes participent activement à réparation. ils se nourrissent pour la plupart en filtrant les éléments en suspension dans le milieu et participent directement à l'élimination des MES et de la DCO (PIZAY-PARENTY, 1985).II devient donc envisageable, par suite du rôle non négligeable joué par le zooplancton et surtout par Daphnia magna, de concevoir une gestion du lagunage qui favoriserait le développement de ce Cladocère. Cette biomasse facilement récupérable par tamisage peut être valorisée en aquaculture.High rate ponds for wastewater treatment have been the focus of much attention since their creation by W.J. OSWALD in the early 1960's. These aquatic ecosystems are hypereutrophic because of massive nutrient introduction by wastewater influents. These kinds of ponds are very different front natural biological ponds because of short residence times (2 to 12 days), shallow depths (<1 m) and constant mechanical mixing which improve alga : growth.This study presents the following objectives : 1) to characterize seasonal successions of zooplankton in this ecosystem where they are unknown and 2) to study residence time influence on zooplanktonic successions in function of seasons. Our investigation consists in studying two similar high rate ponds of 48 m2 surface area and 35 cm depth constantly stirred by paddle wheels.Only residence time is different. The first pond has eight days residence time and in the second one, it changes with solar radiations and organic matter concentrations. The influents come from a primary pond of eight days residence time, fed continuously with domestic influents front a small town, Mèze. The aim of this experiment is to compare seasonal successions in these two high rate ponds (called A and B) with different residence times. Zooplanktonic investigation has been carried out for two years. One sample was collected twice a week in primary pond effluent and two others samples collected once a week into the two high rate ponds near the outflow areas. The results of chronological clustering take inter account the discontinuities of zooplanktonic structure. We obtain six sequences in B pond and ten groups in A pond. Stepwise discriminant analysis shows that Crustaceans and Rotifers are respectively responsible for chronological clustering in B and in A pond. During the sterling period of wastewater treatment and in autumn and in winter, photosynthesis is low and zooplankton is composed mainly of Protozoa : free-living or fixed Ciliates in great concentrations (until 2,7.107 ind. l-1) and Rhizopods (Amæba sp.). These organisms have important food needs (bacteria and algal detritus). During spring and summer, as solar radiations become important, Protozoa are replaced by metazoan grazers. Spring or summer with short residence times increase Rotifers or Daphnia magna production white summer with longer residence times increase Cyclops sp and cypris ovum production. All these organisms are active components of wastewater treatment : the consumption of particulates by zooplankton Increases TSS and COD removal efficiencies (PIZAY-PARENTY, 1985).Therefore, because of the filtering activity of Crustaceans (especially of Daphnia magna), it seems possible to conceive a new pond managment, with residence time changes, favourable to exponential algal growth and consequently to crustacean biomass production. It is easier to harvest this biomass (with nets) than to harvest algal biomass, which still presents problems

    Interqubit coupling mediated by a high-excitation-energy quantum object

    Full text link
    We consider a system composed of two qubits and a high-excitation-energy quantum object used to mediate coupling between the qubits. We treat the entire system quantum mechanically and analyze the properties of the eigenvalues and eigenstates of the total Hamiltonian. After reproducing well-known results concerning the leading term in the mediated coupling, we obtain an expression for the residual coupling between the qubits in the off state. We also analyze the entanglement between the three objects, i.e. the two qubits and the coupler, in the eigenstates of the total Hamiltonian. Although we focus on the application of our results to the recently realized parametric-coupling scheme with two qubits, we also discuss extensions of our results to harmonic-oscillator couplers, couplers that are near resonance with the qubits and multi-qubit systems. In particular, we find that certain errors that are absent for a two-qubit system arise when dealing with multi-qubit systems.Comment: 15 pages (two-column

    An Integrated NMR, LC-DAD-MS, LC-QTOF Metabolomic Characterization of Sartoria hedysaroides: Correlation of Antioxidant and Enzyme Inhibitory Activity with Chemical Composition by Multivariate Data Analysis

    Get PDF
    Sartoria hedysaroides Boiss and Heldr. (Fabaceae) is an endemic plant of Turkey that has received little scientific consideration so far. In the present study, the chemical profiles of extracts from the aerial part and roots of S. hedysaroides obtained using solvents with different polarities were analyzed combining integrated NMR, LC-DAD-MSn, and LC-QTOF methods. In vitro antioxidant and enzyme inhibitory activities were evaluated, and the results were combined with chemical data using multivariate approaches. Phenolic acids, flavonoids, ellagitannins, and coumarins were identified and quantified in the extracts of aerial part and roots. Methanolic extract of S. hedysaroides aerial part showed the highest phenolic content and the highest antioxidant activity and cupric ion reducing antioxidant capacity. Dichloromethane extract of S. hedysaroides roots showed the highest inhibition of butyryl cholinesterase, while methanolic extract of S. hedysaroides aerial part was the most active tyrosinase inhibitor. Multivariate data analysis allowed us to observe a good correlation between phenolic compounds, especially caffeoylquinic derivatives and flavonoids and the antioxidant activity of extracts. Acetylcholinesterase inhibition was correlated with the presence of caffeoylquinic acids and coumarins. Overall, the present study appraised the biological potential of understudied S. hedysaroides, and provided a comprehensive approach combining metabolomic characterization of plant material and multivariate data analysis for the correlation of chemical data with results from multi-target biological assays

    Proton and Helium Spectra from the CREAM-III Flight

    Full text link
    Primary cosmic-ray elemental spectra have been measured with the balloon-borne Cosmic Ray Energetics And Mass (CREAM) experiment since 2004. The third CREAM payload (CREAM-III) flew for 29 days during the 2007-2008 Antarctic season. Energies of incident particles above 1 TeV are measured with a calorimeter. Individual elements are clearly separated with a charge resolution of ~0.12 e (in charge units) and ~0.14 e for protons and helium nuclei, respectively, using two layers of silicon charge detectors. The measured proton and helium energy spectra at the top of the atmosphere are harder than other existing measurements at a few tens of GeV. The relative abundance of protons to helium nuclei is 9.53+-0.03 for the range of 1 TeV/n to 63 TeV/n. The ratio is considerably smaller than other measurements at a few tens of GeV/n. The spectra become softer above ~20 TeV. However, our statistical uncertainties are large at these energies and more data are needed

    Role of relaxation in the quantum measurement of a superconducting qubit using a nonlinear oscillator

    Full text link
    We analyze the relaxation of a superconducting flux qubit during measurement. The qubit state is measured with a nonlinear oscillator driven across the threshold of bifurcation, acting as a switching dispersive detector. This readout scheme is of quantum non-demolition type. Two successive readouts are used to analyze the evolution of the qubit and the detector during the measurement. We introduce a simple transition rate model to characterize the qubit relaxation and the detector switching process. Corrected for qubit relaxation the readout fidelity is at least 95%. Qubit relaxation strongly depends on the driving strength and the state of the oscillator.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure

    Neonatal brain: Regional variability of in vivo MR imaging relaxation rates at 3.0 T-initial experience

    Get PDF
    PURPOSE: To retrospectively investigate regional in vivo magnetic resonance,(MR). imaging transverse and longitudinal relaxation rates at 3.0 T in neonatal brain, the p relationship between these rates, and their potential use for gray matter (G),versus-M white matter (WM) tissue discrimination. MATERIALS AND METHODS: I Informed parental consent for performance of imaging procedures was obtained in each infant. Informed consent for retrospective image analysis was not required; ethics approval was obtained from institutional review board. At 3.0 T, R1 and R2 were measured in brain regions (frontal WM, posterior WM, periventricular WM, frontal GM, posterior GM, basal ganglia, and thalamus) in 13 infants with suspected neurologic abnormality (two term, 11 preterm). Maps of R1 and R2 were acquired with T1 by multiple readout pulses and segmented spin-echo echo-planar imaging sequences, respectively. Accuracy of R1 and R2 map acquisition methods was tested in phantoms by comparing them with inversion-recovery and spin-echo sequences, respectively. Statistical analysis included linear regression analysis to determine relationship between R1 and R2 and Wilcoxon signed rank test to investigate the potential. for discrimination between GM and WM. RESULTS: In phantoms, R1 values measured with T1 by multiple readout pulses sequence were 3%-8% lower than those measured with inversion recovery sequence, and R2 values measured with segmented echo-planar sequence were 1%-8% lower than those measured with spin-echo sequence. A strong correlation of 0.944 (P \u3c.001) between R1 and R2 in neonatal brain was observed. For R2, relative differences between GM and WM were larger than were those for R1 (z = -2.366, P \u3c.05). For frontal GM and frontal WM, (R2(GM) - R2(WM))/R2(WM) yielded 0.8 +/- 0.2 (mean +/- standard deviation) and (R1(GM) - R1(WM))/R1(WM) yielded 0.3 +/- 0.09. CONCLUSION: Results at 3.0 T indicate that R1 decreases with increasing field strength, while R2 values are similar to those reported at lower field strengths. For neonates, R2 image contrast may be more advantageous than R1 image contrast for differentiation between GM and WM. (C) RSNA, 2005
    corecore