38 results on '"Krger, K."'
Search Results
2. High-x$_{t}$ single-spin asymmetry in $\pi^{0}$ and $\eta$ production at x$_{F}$ = 0 by 200-GeV polarized antiprotons and protons
- Author
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Adams, D L., Akchurin, N., Belikov, N I., Bystricky, J., Corcoran, M D., Cossairt, J D., Cranshaw, J., Derevshchikov, A A., Enyo, H., Funahashi, H., Goto, Y., Grachov, O A., Grosnick, D P., Hill, D A., Imai, K., Itow, Y., Iwatani, K., Krger, K W., Kuroda, K., Laghai, M., Lehar, F., De Lesquen, A., Lopiano, D., Luehring, F C., Maki, T., Makino, S., Masaike, A., Matulenko Yu, A., Meshchanin, A P., Michalowicz, A., Miller, D H., Miyake, K., Nagamine, T., Nessi-Tedaldi, F., Nessi, M., Nguyen, Cong Tu, Nurushev, S B., Ohashi, Y., Onel, Y., Patalakha, D I., Pauletta, G., Penzo, A., Read, A L., Roberts, J B., Van Rossum, L., Rykov, V L., Saito, Nobuhiko., Salvato, G., Schiavon, P., Skeens, J., Solovyanov, V L., Spinka, H M., Takashima, R., Takeutchi, F., Tamura, N., Tanaka, N., Underwood, D G., Vasilev, A N., Villari, A., White, J L., Yamashita, S., Yokosawa, A., Yoshida, T., Zanetti, A., BOMBAR, Claudine, Laboratoire d'Annecy de Physique des Particules (LAPP), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Savoie Mont Blanc (USMB [Université de Savoie] [Université de Chambéry])-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and E581
- Subjects
[PHYS.HEXP] Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] - Published
- 1992
3. First results for the two-spin parameter A$_{LL}$ in $\pi^{0}$ production by 200-GeV polarized protons and antiprotons
- Author
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Adams, D L., Akchurin, N., Belikov, N I., Bystricky, J., Chaumette, P., Corcoran, M D., Cossairt, J D., Cranshaw, J., Deregel, J., Derevshchikov, A A., Durand, Geoffroy, Enyo, H., Fabre, J., Fukuda, K., Funahashi, H., Goto, Y., Grachov, O A., Grosnick, D P., Hill, D A., Imai, K., Itow, Y., Iwatani, K., Kasprzyk, T., Krger, K W., Kuroda, K., Laghai, M., Lehar, F., De Lesquen, A., Lopiano, D., Luehring, F C., Maki, T., Makino, S., Masaike, A., Matulenko Yu, A., Meshchanin, A P., Michalowicz, A., Miller, D H., Miyake, K., Nagamine, T., Nessi-Tedaldi, F., Nessi, M., Nguyen, Cong Tu, Nurushev, S B., Ohashi, Y., Onel, Y., Patalakha, D I., Pauletta, G., Penzo, A., Read, A L., Roberts, J B., Van Rossum, L., Rykov, V L., Saito, Nobuhiko., Salvato, G., Schiavon, P., Shepard, J., Skeens, J., Solovyanov, V L., Spinka, H M., Takashima, R., Takeutchi, F., Tamura, N., Tanaka, N., Underwood, D G., Vasilev, A N., Villari, A., White, J L., Yamashita, S., Yokosawa, A., Yoshida, T., Zanetti, A., Laboratoire d'Annecy de Physique des Particules (LAPP), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Savoie Mont Blanc (USMB [Université de Savoie] [Université de Chambéry])-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), E704, and BOMBAR, Claudine
- Subjects
[PHYS.HEXP] Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] - Published
- 1991
4. Comparison of spin asymmetries and cross sections in $\pi^{0}$ production by 200-GeV polarized antiprotons and protons
- Author
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Adams, D L., Akchurin, N., Belikov, N I., Bystricky, J., Corcoran, M D., Cossairt, J D., Cranshaw, J., Derevshchikov, A A., Enyo, H., Funahashi, H., Goto, Y., Grachov, O A., Grosnick, D P., Hill, D A., Imai, K., Itow, Y., Iwatani, K., Krger, K W., Kuroda, K., Laghai, M., Lehar, F., De Lesquen, A., Lopiano, D., Luehring, F C., Maki, T., Makino, S., Masaike, A., Matulenko Yu, A., Meshchanin, A P., Michalowicz, A., Miller, D H., Miyake, K., Nagamine, T., Nessi-Tedaldi, F., Nessi, M., Nguyen, Cong Tu, Nurushev, S B., Ohashi, Y., Onel, Y., Patalakha, D I., Pauletta, G., Penzo, A., Read, A L., Roberts, J B., Van Rossum, L., Rykov, V L., Saito, Nobuhiko., Salvato, G., Schiavon, P., Skeens, J., Solovyanov, V L., Spinka, H M., Takashima, R., Takeutchi, F., Tamura, N., Tanaka, N., Underwood, D G., Vasilev, A N., Villari, A., White, J L., Yamashita, S., Yokosawa, A., Yoshida, T., Zanetti, A., BOMBAR, Claudine, Laboratoire d'Annecy de Physique des Particules (LAPP), Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Université Savoie Mont Blanc (USMB [Université de Savoie] [Université de Chambéry])-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), and E581
- Subjects
[PHYS.HEXP] Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] ,[PHYS.HEXP]Physics [physics]/High Energy Physics - Experiment [hep-ex] - Published
- 1991
5. A pyrosequencing insight into sprawling bacterial diversity and community dynamics in decaying deadwood logs of Fagus sylvatica and Picea abies.
- Author
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Hoppe B, Krger K, Kahl T, Arnstadt T, Buscot F, Bauhus J, and Wubet T
- Subjects
- Metagenome, Phylogeny, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S genetics, Bacteria classification, Bacteria genetics, Biodiversity, Fagus, Microbiota, Picea, Trees, Wood microbiology
- Abstract
Deadwood is an important biodiversity hotspot in forest ecosystems. While saproxylic insects and wood-inhabiting fungi have been studied extensively, little is known about deadwood-inhabiting bacteria. The study we present is among the first to compare bacterial diversity and community structure of deadwood under field conditions. We therefore compared deadwood logs of two temperate forest tree species Fagus sylvatica and Picea abies using 16S rDNA pyrosequencing to identify changes in bacterial diversity and community structure at different stages of decay in forest plots under different management regimes. Alphaproteobacteria, Acidobacteria and Actinobacteria were the dominant taxonomic groups in both tree species. There were no differences in bacterial OTU richness between deadwood of Fagus sylvatica and Picea abies. Bacteria from the order Rhizobiales became more abundant during the intermediate and advanced stages of decay, accounting for up to 25% of the entire bacterial community in such logs. The most dominant OTU was taxonomically assigned to the genus Methylovirgula, which was recently described in a woodblock experiment of Fagus sylvatica. Besides tree species we were able to demonstrate that deadwood physico-chemical properties, in particular remaining mass, relative wood moisture, pH, and C/N ratio serve as drivers of community composition of deadwood-inhabiting bacteria.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Thrombosediagnostik im klinischen Alltag - Ergebnisse einer multizentrischen Erhebung
- Author
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Krger, K.
- Abstract
AIM: To evaluate the processes of the management of patients, who are supposed to have a deep vein thrombosis, we performed a German-wide survey. METHOD: Within 4 weeks data from 1 051 consecutive patients referred with symptoms of deep vein thrombosis were documented in 28 outdoor departments and private practices specialised on vascular diseases. All patients were questioned about the time period of symptoms, the referring doctor and the kind of transport. The symptoms required to estimate the clinical probability were examined before investigation. RESULTS: The results showed that in Germany the patients are symptomatic for 5.8 4.7 days (mean SD) before they received an adequate diagnostic investigation. 73 % of all patients were referred by the familial doctors and 15 % by orthopaedics. 64 % had a low clinical probability only (score ? 1). 96 % of the patients were sent to the investigation in a mobile manner (75 % came with their own car, 8 % with bus or tram, 13 % accompanied by a family member). 2.3 % (25) were sent with the ambulance in a sitting and 1.5 % (16) in a lying position. It remained unclear whether the ambulance transports were indicated or not. CONCLUSION: The data show, that the handling of patients before the diagnosis of a deep vein thrombosis is proved or excluded has to be improved. The referring doctors have to be trained to shorten the time delay and to avoid unnecessary investigations. The sense of the recommended screening for clinical probability has to be re-evaluated and the questions of responsibility for transport safety have to be discussed.
- Published
- 2006
7. Measurement of Di-jet Cross-Sections in Photoproduction and Photon Structure
- Author
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Adloff, C., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Astvatsatourov, A., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bahr, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Bate, P., Beglarian, A., Behnke, O., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Benisch, T., Berger, C., Bernardi, G., Berndt, T., Bertrand-Coremans, G., Bizot, J C., Borras, K., Boudry, V., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Broker, H B., Brown, D P., Brckner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brger, J., Bsser, F W., Bunyatyan, A., Burke, S., Burkhardt, H., Burrage, A., Buschhorn, G., Campbell, A J., Cao, J., Carli, T., Caron, S., Chabert, E., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Collard, C., Contreras, J G., Coughlan, J A., Cousinou, M C., Cox, B E., Cozzika, G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J B., Dau, W D., Daum, K., David, M., Davidsson, M., Delcourt, B., Delerue, N., Demirchyan, R., de Roeck, A., De Wolf, E A., Diaconu, C., Dixon, P., Dodonov, V., Donovan, K T., Dowell, J D., Droutskoi, A., Duprel, C., Ebert, J., Eckerlin, G., Eckstein, D., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Ellerbrock, M., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Faulkner, P J W., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Feltesse, J., Ferencei, J., Ferrarotto, F., Ferron, S., Fleischer, M., Flugge, G., Fomenko, A., Foresti, I., Formnek, J., Foster, J M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Garvey, J., Gassner, J., Gayler, J., Gerhards, R., Ghazaryan, S., Glazov, A., Grlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Goodwin, C., Gorelov, I., Grab, C., Grssler, H., Greenshaw, T., Griffiths, R K., Grindhammer, G., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haustein, V., Haynes, W J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R C W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Heremans, R., Herrera, G., Herynek, I., Hilgers, M., Hiller, K H., Hilton, C D., Hladky, J., Hoting, P., Hoffmann, D., Hoprich, W., Horisberger, R., Hurling, S., Ibbotson, M., Issever, C., Jacquet, M., Jaffr, M., Janauschek, L., Jansen, D M., Janssen, X., Jemanov, V., Jnsson, L B., Johnson, D P., Jones, M A S., Jung, H., Kastli, H K., Kant, D., Kapichine, M., Karlsson, M., Karschnick, O., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Keil, F., Keller, N., Kennedy, J., Kenyon, I R., Kermiche, S., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Koblitz, B., Kolanoski, H., Kolya, S D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S K., Krasny, M W., Krehbiel, H., Kroseberg, J., Krucker, D., Krger, K., Kupper, A., Kuhr, T., Kurca, T., Kutuev, R., Lachnit, W., Lahmann, R., Lamb, D., Landon, M P J., Lange, W., Lastovicka, T., Lebedev, A., Leiner, B., Lematre, V., Lemrani, R., Lendermann, V., Levonian, S., Lindstrm, M., Lobo, G., Lobodzinska, E., Lobodzinski, B., Loktionova, N., Lubimov, V., Luders, S., Luke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krger, H., Malden, N., Malinovskii, E., Malinovski, I., Maracek, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martyn, H U., Martyniak, J., Maxfield, S J., McMahon, T R., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, A., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P O., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Mkrtchyan, T., Mohr, R., Mohrdieck, S., Mondragon, M N., Moreau, F., Morozov, A., Morris, J V., Mller, D., Muller, K., Murn, P., Nagovizin, V., Naroska, B., Naumann, J., Naumann, T., Negri, I., Newman, P R., Nguyen, H K., Nicholls, T C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Nix, O., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Olsson, J E., Ozerov, D., Panassik, V., Pascaud, C., Passaggio, S., Patel, G D., Perez, E., Phillips, J P., Pitzl, D., Poschl, R., Potachnikova, I., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Rdel, G., Rauschenberger, J., Reimer, P., Reisert, B., Reyna, D., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Royon, C., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D P C., Scheins, J., Schilling, F P., Schleif, S., Schleper, P., Schmidt, D., Schoeffel, L., Schning, A., Schrner, T., Schroder, V., Schultz-Coulon, H C., Sedlak, K., Sefkow, F., Shekelian, V., Shevyakov, I., Shtarkov, L N., Siegmon, G., Sievers, P., Sirois, Y., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Smith, M., Solochenko, V., Solovev, Yu., Spaskov, V., Specka, A., Spitzer, H., Stamen, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Sutton, J P., Swart, M., Tasevsky, M., Chernyshov, V., Chechelnitskii, S., Thompson, G., Thompson, P D., Tobien, N., Traynor, D., Truol, P., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Turney, J E., Tzamariudaki, E., Udluft, S., Usik, A., Valkar, S., Valkarova, A., Vallee, C., Van Mechelen, P., Vazdik, Ya., Villet, G., von Dombrowski, S., Wacker, K., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., West, L R., White, G., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Winde, M., Winter, G G., Wissing, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wunsch, E., Zaicek, J., Zaleisak, J., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zini, P., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., zur Nedden, M., Adloff, C., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Astvatsatourov, A., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bahr, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Bate, P., Beglarian, A., Behnke, O., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Benisch, T., Berger, C., Bernardi, G., Berndt, T., Bertrand-Coremans, G., Bizot, J C., Borras, K., Boudry, V., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Broker, H B., Brown, D P., Brckner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brger, J., Bsser, F W., Bunyatyan, A., Burke, S., Burkhardt, H., Burrage, A., Buschhorn, G., Campbell, A J., Cao, J., Carli, T., Caron, S., Chabert, E., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Collard, C., Contreras, J G., Coughlan, J A., Cousinou, M C., Cox, B E., Cozzika, G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J B., Dau, W D., Daum, K., David, M., Davidsson, M., Delcourt, B., Delerue, N., Demirchyan, R., de Roeck, A., De Wolf, E A., Diaconu, C., Dixon, P., Dodonov, V., Donovan, K T., Dowell, J D., Droutskoi, A., Duprel, C., Ebert, J., Eckerlin, G., Eckstein, D., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Ellerbrock, M., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Faulkner, P J W., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Feltesse, J., Ferencei, J., Ferrarotto, F., Ferron, S., Fleischer, M., Flugge, G., Fomenko, A., Foresti, I., Formnek, J., Foster, J M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Garvey, J., Gassner, J., Gayler, J., Gerhards, R., Ghazaryan, S., Glazov, A., Grlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Goodwin, C., Gorelov, I., Grab, C., Grssler, H., Greenshaw, T., Griffiths, R K., Grindhammer, G., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haustein, V., Haynes, W J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R C W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Heremans, R., Herrera, G., Herynek, I., Hilgers, M., Hiller, K H., Hilton, C D., Hladky, J., Hoting, P., Hoffmann, D., Hoprich, W., Horisberger, R., Hurling, S., Ibbotson, M., Issever, C., Jacquet, M., Jaffr, M., Janauschek, L., Jansen, D M., Janssen, X., Jemanov, V., Jnsson, L B., Johnson, D P., Jones, M A S., Jung, H., Kastli, H K., Kant, D., Kapichine, M., Karlsson, M., Karschnick, O., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Keil, F., Keller, N., Kennedy, J., Kenyon, I R., Kermiche, S., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Koblitz, B., Kolanoski, H., Kolya, S D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S K., Krasny, M W., Krehbiel, H., Kroseberg, J., Krucker, D., Krger, K., Kupper, A., Kuhr, T., Kurca, T., Kutuev, R., Lachnit, W., Lahmann, R., Lamb, D., Landon, M P J., Lange, W., Lastovicka, T., Lebedev, A., Leiner, B., Lematre, V., Lemrani, R., Lendermann, V., Levonian, S., Lindstrm, M., Lobo, G., Lobodzinska, E., Lobodzinski, B., Loktionova, N., Lubimov, V., Luders, S., Luke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krger, H., Malden, N., Malinovskii, E., Malinovski, I., Maracek, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martyn, H U., Martyniak, J., Maxfield, S J., McMahon, T R., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, A., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P O., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Mkrtchyan, T., Mohr, R., Mohrdieck, S., Mondragon, M N., Moreau, F., Morozov, A., Morris, J V., Mller, D., Muller, K., Murn, P., Nagovizin, V., Naroska, B., Naumann, J., Naumann, T., Negri, I., Newman, P R., Nguyen, H K., Nicholls, T C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Nix, O., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Olsson, J E., Ozerov, D., Panassik, V., Pascaud, C., Passaggio, S., Patel, G D., Perez, E., Phillips, J P., Pitzl, D., Poschl, R., Potachnikova, I., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Rdel, G., Rauschenberger, J., Reimer, P., Reisert, B., Reyna, D., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Royon, C., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D P C., Scheins, J., Schilling, F P., Schleif, S., Schleper, P., Schmidt, D., Schoeffel, L., Schning, A., Schrner, T., Schroder, V., Schultz-Coulon, H C., Sedlak, K., Sefkow, F., Shekelian, V., Shevyakov, I., Shtarkov, L N., Siegmon, G., Sievers, P., Sirois, Y., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Smith, M., Solochenko, V., Solovev, Yu., Spaskov, V., Specka, A., Spitzer, H., Stamen, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Sutton, J P., Swart, M., Tasevsky, M., Chernyshov, V., Chechelnitskii, S., Thompson, G., Thompson, P D., Tobien, N., Traynor, D., Truol, P., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Turney, J E., Tzamariudaki, E., Udluft, S., Usik, A., Valkar, S., Valkarova, A., Vallee, C., Van Mechelen, P., Vazdik, Ya., Villet, G., von Dombrowski, S., Wacker, K., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., West, L R., White, G., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Winde, M., Winter, G G., Wissing, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wunsch, E., Zaicek, J., Zaleisak, J., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zini, P., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., and zur Nedden, M.
- Abstract
The production of hard di-jet events in photoproduction at HERA is dominatedby resolved photon processes in which a parton in the photon with momentumfraction x_gamma is scattered from a parton in the proton. These processes aresensitive to the quark and gluon content of the photon. The differential di-jetcross-section dsigma/dlog(x_gamma) is presented here, measured in taggedphotoproduction at HERA using data taken with the H1 detector, corresponding toan integrated luminosity of 7.2 pb^(-1). Using a restricted data sample at hightransverse jet energy, E_(T,jet) 6 GeV, the effective parton densityf_gamma,eff(x_gamma) = [q(x_gamma) + bar(q)(x_gamma) +9/4g(x_gamma)] in thephoton in leading order QCD is measured down to x_gamma=0.05 from which thegluon density in the photon is derived.
8. A Search for Excited Fermions at HERA
- Author
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Adloff, C., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Astvatsatourov, A., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bahr, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Bate, P., Beglarian, A., Behnke, O., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Benisch, T., Berger, C., Bernardi, G., Berndt, T., Bizot, J C., Borras, K., Boudry, V., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Broker, H B., Brown, D P., Brckner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brger, J., Bsser, F W., Bunyatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Burrage, A., Buschhorn, G., Campbell, A J., Cao, J., Carli, T., Caron, S., Chabert, E., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Collard, C., Contreras, J G., Coughlan, J A., Cousinou, M C., Cox, B E., Cozzika, G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J B., Dau, W D., Daum, K., Davidsson, M., Delcourt, B., Delerue, N., Demirchyan, R., de Roeck, A., De Wolf, E A., Diaconu, C., Dixon, P., Dodonov, V., Dowell, J D., Droutskoi, A., Duprel, C., Eckerlin, G., Eckstein, D., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Ellerbrock, M., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Erdmann, W., Faulkner, P J W., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Ferencei, J., Ferron, S., Fleischer, M., Flugge, G., Fomenko, A., Foresti, I., Formnek, J., Foster, J M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Garvey, J., Gassner, J., Gayler, J., Gerhards, R., Ghazaryan, S., Grlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Goodwin, C., Grab, C., Grssler, H., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haynes, W J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R C W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Heremans, R., Herrera, G., Herynek, I., Hilgers, M., Hiller, K H., Hladky, J., Hoting, P., Hoffmann, D., Hoprich, W., Horisberger, R., Hurling, S., Ibbotson, M., Issever, C., Jacquet, M., Jaffr, M., Janauschek, L., Jansen, D M., Janssen, X., Jemanov, V., Jnsson, L B., Johnson, D P., Jones, M A S., Jung, H., Kastli, H K., Kant, D., Kapichine, M., Karlsson, M., Karschnick, O., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Keil, F., Keller, N., Kennedy, J., Kenyon, I R., Kermiche, S., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Koblitz, B., Kolya, S D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S K., Krasny, M W., Krehbiel, H., Kroseberg, J., Krger, K., Kupper, A., Kuhr, T., Kurca, T., Kutuev, R., Lachnit, W., Lahmann, R., Lamb, D., Landon, M P J., Lange, W., Lastoviicka, T., Lebailly, E., Lebedev, A., Leiner, B., Lemrani, R., Lendermann, V., Levonian, S., Lindstrm, M., Lobodzinska, E., Lobodzinski, B., Loktionova, N., Lubimov, V., Luders, S., Luke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krger, H., Malden, N., Malinovskii, E., Malinovski, I., Maracek, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martyn, H U., Martyniak, J., Maxfield, S J., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P O., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Mkrtchyan, T., Mohr, R., Mohrdieck, S., Mondragon, M N., Moreau, F., Morozov, A., Morris, J V., Muller, K., Murn, P., Nagovizin, V., Naroska, B., Naumann, J., Naumann, T., Negri, I., Nellen, G., Newman, P R., Nicholls, T C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Nix, O., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Olsson, J E., Ozerov, D., Panassik, V., Pascaud, C., Patel, G D., Perez, E., Phillips, J P., Pitzl, D., Poschl, R., Potachnikova, I., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Rdel, G., Rauschenberger, J., Reimer, P., Reisert, B., Reyna, D., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Royon, C., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D P C., Scheins, J., Schilling, F P., Schleper, P., Schmidt, D., Schmitt, S., Schoeffel, L., Schning, A., Schrner, T., Schroder, V., Schultz-Coulon, H C., Sedlak, K., Sefkow, F., Shekelian, V., Shevyakov, I., Shtarkov, L N., Siegmon, G., Sievers, P., Sirois, Y., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Solochenko, V., Solovev, Yu., Spaskov, V., Specka, A., Spitzer, H., Stamen, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Swart, M., Tasevsky, M., Chernyshov, V., Chechelnitskii, S., Thompson, G., Thompson, P D., Tobien, N., Traynor, D., Truol, P., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Turney, J E., Tzamariudaki, E., Udluft, S., Usik, A., Valkar, S., Valkarova, A., Vallee, C., Van Mechelen, P., Vazdik, Ya., von Dombrowski, S., Wacker, K., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., White, G., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Winde, M., Winter, G G., Wissing, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wunsch, E., Wyatt, A C., Zaicek, J., Zaleisak, J., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., zur Nedden, M., Adloff, C., Andreev, V., Andrieu, B., Arkadov, V., Astvatsatourov, A., Ayyaz, I., Babaev, A., Bahr, J., Baranov, P., Barrelet, E., Bartel, W., Bassler, U., Bate, P., Beglarian, A., Behnke, O., Beier, C., Belousov, A., Benisch, T., Berger, C., Bernardi, G., Berndt, T., Bizot, J C., Borras, K., Boudry, V., Braunschweig, W., Brisson, V., Broker, H B., Brown, D P., Brckner, W., Bruel, P., Bruncko, D., Brger, J., Bsser, F W., Bunyatyan, A., Burkhardt, H., Burrage, A., Buschhorn, G., Campbell, A J., Cao, J., Carli, T., Caron, S., Chabert, E., Clarke, D., Clerbaux, B., Collard, C., Contreras, J G., Coughlan, J A., Cousinou, M C., Cox, B E., Cozzika, G., Cvach, J., Dainton, J B., Dau, W D., Daum, K., Davidsson, M., Delcourt, B., Delerue, N., Demirchyan, R., de Roeck, A., De Wolf, E A., Diaconu, C., Dixon, P., Dodonov, V., Dowell, J D., Droutskoi, A., Duprel, C., Eckerlin, G., Eckstein, D., Efremenko, V., Egli, S., Eichler, R., Eisele, F., Eisenhandler, E., Ellerbrock, M., Elsen, E., Erdmann, M., Erdmann, W., Faulkner, P J W., Favart, L., Fedotov, A., Felst, R., Ferencei, J., Ferron, S., Fleischer, M., Flugge, G., Fomenko, A., Foresti, I., Formnek, J., Foster, J M., Franke, G., Gabathuler, E., Gabathuler, K., Garvey, J., Gassner, J., Gayler, J., Gerhards, R., Ghazaryan, S., Grlich, L., Gogitidze, N., Goldberg, M., Goodwin, C., Grab, C., Grssler, H., Greenshaw, T., Grindhammer, G., Hadig, T., Haidt, D., Hajduk, L., Haynes, W J., Heinemann, B., Heinzelmann, G., Henderson, R C W., Hengstmann, S., Henschel, H., Heremans, R., Herrera, G., Herynek, I., Hilgers, M., Hiller, K H., Hladky, J., Hoting, P., Hoffmann, D., Hoprich, W., Horisberger, R., Hurling, S., Ibbotson, M., Issever, C., Jacquet, M., Jaffr, M., Janauschek, L., Jansen, D M., Janssen, X., Jemanov, V., Jnsson, L B., Johnson, D P., Jones, M A S., Jung, H., Kastli, H K., Kant, D., Kapichine, M., Karlsson, M., Karschnick, O., Kaufmann, O., Kausch, M., Keil, F., Keller, N., Kennedy, J., Kenyon, I R., Kermiche, S., Kiesling, C., Klein, M., Kleinwort, C., Knies, G., Koblitz, B., Kolya, S D., Korbel, V., Kostka, P., Kotelnikov, S K., Krasny, M W., Krehbiel, H., Kroseberg, J., Krger, K., Kupper, A., Kuhr, T., Kurca, T., Kutuev, R., Lachnit, W., Lahmann, R., Lamb, D., Landon, M P J., Lange, W., Lastoviicka, T., Lebailly, E., Lebedev, A., Leiner, B., Lemrani, R., Lendermann, V., Levonian, S., Lindstrm, M., Lobodzinska, E., Lobodzinski, B., Loktionova, N., Lubimov, V., Luders, S., Luke, D., Lytkin, L., Magnussen, N., Mahlke-Krger, H., Malden, N., Malinovskii, E., Malinovski, I., Maracek, R., Marage, P., Marks, J., Marshall, R., Martyn, H U., Martyniak, J., Maxfield, S J., Mehta, A., Meier, K., Merkel, P., Metlica, F., Meyer, H., Meyer, J., Meyer, P O., Mikocki, S., Milstead, D., Mkrtchyan, T., Mohr, R., Mohrdieck, S., Mondragon, M N., Moreau, F., Morozov, A., Morris, J V., Muller, K., Murn, P., Nagovizin, V., Naroska, B., Naumann, J., Naumann, T., Negri, I., Nellen, G., Newman, P R., Nicholls, T C., Niebergall, F., Niebuhr, C., Nix, O., Nowak, G., Nunnemann, T., Olsson, J E., Ozerov, D., Panassik, V., Pascaud, C., Patel, G D., Perez, E., Phillips, J P., Pitzl, D., Poschl, R., Potachnikova, I., Povh, B., Rabbertz, K., Rdel, G., Rauschenberger, J., Reimer, P., Reisert, B., Reyna, D., Riess, S., Rizvi, E., Robmann, P., Roosen, R., Rostovtsev, A., Royon, C., Rusakov, S., Rybicki, K., Sankey, D P C., Scheins, J., Schilling, F P., Schleper, P., Schmidt, D., Schmitt, S., Schoeffel, L., Schning, A., Schrner, T., Schroder, V., Schultz-Coulon, H C., Sedlak, K., Sefkow, F., Shekelian, V., Shevyakov, I., Shtarkov, L N., Siegmon, G., Sievers, P., Sirois, Y., Sloan, T., Smirnov, P., Solochenko, V., Solovev, Yu., Spaskov, V., Specka, A., Spitzer, H., Stamen, R., Steinhart, J., Stella, B., Stellberger, A., Stiewe, J., Straumann, U., Struczinski, W., Swart, M., Tasevsky, M., Chernyshov, V., Chechelnitskii, S., Thompson, G., Thompson, P D., Tobien, N., Traynor, D., Truol, P., Tsipolitis, G., Turnau, J., Turney, J E., Tzamariudaki, E., Udluft, S., Usik, A., Valkar, S., Valkarova, A., Vallee, C., Van Mechelen, P., Vazdik, Ya., von Dombrowski, S., Wacker, K., Wallny, R., Walter, T., Waugh, B., Weber, G., Weber, M., Wegener, D., Wegner, A., Wengler, T., Werner, M., White, G., Wiesand, S., Wilksen, T., Winde, M., Winter, G G., Wissing, C., Wobisch, M., Wollatz, H., Wunsch, E., Wyatt, A C., Zaicek, J., Zaleisak, J., Zhang, Z., Zhokin, A., Zomer, F., Zsembery, J., and zur Nedden, M.
9. Observation and modelling of ozone-destructive halogen chemistry in a passively degassing volcanic plume.
- Author
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Surl, Luke, Roberts, Tjarda, and Bekki, Slimane
- Subjects
VOLCANIC plumes ,BROMINE ,HALOGENS ,NITROGEN oxides ,SULFATE aerosols ,OZONE layer depletion ,MERCURY oxidation - Abstract
Volcanoes emit halogens into the atmosphere that undergo complex chemical cycling in plumes and cause destruction of ozone. We present a case study of the Mount Etna plume in the summer of 2012, when the volcano was passively degassing, using aircraft observations and numerical simulations with a new 3D model "WRF-Chem Volcano" (WCV), incorporating volcanic emissions and multi-phase halogen chemistry. Measurements of SO 2 – an indicator of plume intensity – and ozone were made in the plume a few tens of kilometres from Etna, revealing a strong negative correlation between ozone and SO 2 levels. From these observations, using SO 2 as a tracer species, we estimate a mean in-plume ozone loss rate of 1.3×10−5 molecules of O 3 per second per molecule of SO 2. This value is similar to observation-based estimates reported very close to Etna's vents, indicating continual ozone loss in the plume up to at least tens of kilometres downwind. The WCV model is run with nested grids to simulate the plume close to the volcano at 1 km resolution. The focus is on the early evolution of passively degassing plumes aged less than 1 h and up to tens of kilometres downwind. The model is able to reproduce the so-called "bromine explosion": the daytime conversion of HBr into bromine radicals that continuously cycle in the plume. These forms include the radical BrO, a species whose ratio with SO 2 is commonly measured in volcanic plumes as an indicator of halogen ozone-destroying chemistry. The species BrO is produced in the ambient-temperature chemistry, with in-plume BrO / SO 2 ratios on the order of 10−4 mol/mol, similar to those observed previously in Etna plumes. Wind speed and time of day are identified as non-linear controls on this ratio. Sensitivity simulations confirm the importance of near-vent radical products from high-temperature chemistry in initiating the ambient-temperature plume halogen cycling. Heterogeneous reactions that activate bromine also activate a small fraction of the emitted chlorine; the resulting production of chlorine radical Cl strongly enhances the methane oxidation and hence the formation of formaldehyde (HCHO) in the plume. Modelled rates of ozone depletion are found to be similar to those derived from aircraft observations. Ozone destruction in the model is controlled by the processes that recycle bromine, with about three-quarters of this recycling occurring via reactions between halogen oxide radicals. Through sensitivity simulations, a relationship between the magnitude of halogen emissions and ozone loss is established. Volcanic halogen cycling profoundly impacts the overall plume chemistry in the model, notably hydrogen oxide radicals (HO x), nitrogen oxides (NO x), sulfur, and mercury chemistry. In the model, it depletes HO x within the plume, increasing the lifetime of SO 2 and hence slowing sulfate aerosol formation. Halogen chemistry also promotes the conversion of NO x into nitric acid (HNO 3). This, along with the displacement of nitrate out of background aerosols in the plume, results in enhanced HNO 3 levels and an almost total depletion of NO x in the plume. The halogen–mercury model scheme is simple but includes newly identified photo-reductions of mercury halides. With this set-up, the mercury oxidation is found to be slow and in near-balance with the photo-reduction of the plume. Overall, the model findings demonstrate that halogen chemistry has to be considered for a complete understanding of sulfur, HO x , reactive nitrogen, and mercury chemistry and of the formation of sulfate particles in volcanic plumes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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- View/download PDF
10. Design of a New Stress Wave Communication Method for Underwater Communication.
- Author
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He, Sihong, Wang, Ning, Ho, Michael, Zhu, Junxiao, and Song, Gangbing
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STRESS waves ,STEEL pipe ,THEORY of wave motion ,DATA transmission systems ,TELECOMMUNICATION systems ,UNDERWATER exploration ,ERROR rates - Abstract
Underwater communication is crucial for subsea engineering. Currently, although a variety of available technologies are available for underwater communication, almost all of them are highly dependent on the conditions of the subsea environment. Hence, underwater communication is still a challenging issue. This article develops a new stress wave communication method that can be implemented along steel pipes for underwater data transmission. In this article, we analyze stress wave propagation along pipelines, and the corresponding channel response shows the features of dispersion and frequency selectivity. Thus, a suitable carrier frequency is then selected and binary phase-shift keying is applied to encode information into the carrier stress wave. The proposed single-input-single-output communication system is implemented on a steel pipe and experiments are conducted both when in air and seawater. Results demonstrate the validity and stability of the proposed method. The communication data rate of the method can reach 1000 b/s with a low bit error rate. The proposed method shows great promise for enabling underwater communication with lower loss and longer range than conventional underwater communication methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Dispersal changes soil bacterial interactions with fungal wood decomposition.
- Author
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Wang C, Smith GR, Gao C, and Peay KG
- Abstract
Although microbes are the major agent of wood decomposition - a key component of the carbon cycle - the degree to which microbial community dynamics affect this process is unclear. One key knowledge gap is the extent to which stochastic variation in community assembly, e.g. due to historical contingency, can substantively affect decomposition rates. To close this knowledge gap, we manipulated the pool of microbes dispersing into laboratory microcosms using rainwater sampled across a transition zone between two vegetation types with distinct microbial communities. Because the laboratory microcosms were initially identical this allowed us to isolate the effect of changing microbial dispersal directly on community structure, biogeochemical cycles and wood decomposition. Dispersal significantly affected soil fungal and bacterial community composition and diversity, resulting in distinct patterns of soil nitrogen reduction and wood mass loss. Correlation analysis showed that the relationship among soil fungal and bacterial community, soil nitrogen reduction and wood mass loss were tightly connected. These results give empirical support to the notion that dispersal can structure the soil microbial community and through it ecosystem functions. Future biogeochemical models including the links between soil microbial community and wood decomposition may improve their precision in predicting wood decomposition., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2023
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12. THE EFFECTS OF INVASIVE EPIBIONTS ON CRAB–MUSSEL COMMUNITIES: A THEORETICAL APPROACH TO UNDERSTAND MUSSEL POPULATION DECLINE.
- Author
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LYU, JINGJING, AUKER, LINDA A., PRIYADARSHI, ANUPAM, and PARSHAD, RANA D.
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PREDATION ,MUSSELS ,KEYSTONE species ,MYTILUS edulis ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) are important keystone species that have been declining in the Gulf of Maine. This could be attributed to a variety of complex factors such as indirect effects due to invasion by epibionts, which remains unexplored mathematically. Based on classical optimal foraging theory (OFT) and anti-fouling defense mechanisms of mussels, we derive an ODE model for crab–mussel interactions in the presence of an invasive epibiont, Didemnum vexillum. The dynamical analysis leads to results on stability, global boundedness and bifurcations of the model. Next, via optimal control methods, we predict various ecological outcomes. Our results have key implications for preserving mussel populations in the advent of invasion by non-native epibionts. In particular, they help us understand the changing popluation dynamics of local predator–prey communities, due to indirect effects that epibionts confer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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13. Characterizing Input Methods for Human-to-robot Demonstrations.
- Author
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Praveena, Pragathi, Subramani, Guru, Mutlu, Bilge, and Gleicher, Michael
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OBJECT manipulation ,ROBOT programming ,REMOTE control ,ROBOTICS - Abstract
Human demonstrations are important in a range of robotics applications, and are created with a variety of input methods. However, the design space for these input methods has not been extensively studied. In this paper, focusing on demonstrations of hand-scale object manipulation tasks to robot arms with two-finger grippers, we identify distinct usage paradigms in robotics that utilize human-to-robot demonstrations, extract abstract features that form a design space for input methods, and characterize existing input methods as well as a novel input method that we introduce, the instrumented tongs. We detail the design specifications for our method and present a user study that compares it against three common input methods: free-hand manipulation, kinesthetic guidance, and teleoperation. Study results show that instrumented tongs provide high quality demonstrations and a positive experience for the demonstrator while offering good correspondence to the target robot. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
14. Effects of Epixylic Vegetation Removal on the Dynamics of the Microbial Community Composition in Decaying Logs in an Alpine Forest.
- Author
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Chang, Chenhui, Wu, Fuzhong, Wang, Zhuang, Tan, Bo, Cao, Rui, Yang, Wanqin, and Cornelissen, Johannes H. C.
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MICROBIAL communities ,VEGETATION dynamics ,FIR ,DEAD trees ,FATTY acid analysis ,SOIL microbial ecology ,NUTRIENT cycles ,WOOD decay - Abstract
Epixylic vegetation may be important in dead wood decay by altering the microenvironment and, thereby, microbial communities in logs. However, the interaction between epixylic vegetation and dead wood microbial communities remains poorly known. Therefore, repeated experimental epixylic (bryophyte-dominated) vegetation removal (ERM) from logs of the fir Abies faxoniana across a wide range of decay classes (I–V) was conducted on the eastern Tibetan Plateau. The dynamics of the microbial community were separately measured in heartwood, sapwood and bark using the phospholipid fatty acid analysis (PLFA) method. Our results showed that the effects of ERM on the microbial community depended greatly on the three log components and sampling seasons but less on decay class. (1) The absence of epixylic vegetation generally enhanced the total microbial biomass and Sørensen similarity in bark, whereas it had a more complicated effect on those in heartwood and sapwood. Specifically, the response to ERM became progressively stronger from winter until the late growing season. (2) ERM increased the total percentage of Gram-negative bacteria and fungi in heartwood and upper side sapwood and decreased their percentages in bark. (3) The moisture content and pH of the logs were good predictors and likely drivers of the dynamic patterns of the microbial community composition. Our findings demonstrate strong and partly consistent interactions between epixylic vegetation and microbial communities. Further in-depth research should reveal how these interactions feed back to the decomposition process of logs and thereby to carbon and nutrient cycles in the alpine forest ecosystem. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Home-Field Advantage in Wood Decomposition Is Mainly Mediated by Fungal Community Shifts at "Home" Versus "Away".
- Author
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Purahong, Witoon, Kahl, Tiemo, Krüger, Dirk, Buscot, François, and Hoppe, Björn
- Subjects
EUROPEAN beech ,FOREST litter ,NITROGEN-fixing bacteria ,PLANT communities ,NORWAY spruce ,ALNUS glutinosa ,FUNGAL communities ,NITROGEN fixation - Abstract
The home-field advantage (HFA) hypothesis has been used intensively to study leaf litter decomposition in various ecosystems. However, the HFA in woody substrates is still unexplored. Here, we reanalyzed and integrated existing datasets on various groups of microorganisms collected from natural deadwood of two temperate trees, Fagus sylvatica and Picea abies, from forests in which one or other of these species dominates but where both are present. Our aims were (i) to test the HFA hypothesis on wood decomposition rates of these two temperate tree species, and (ii) to investigate if HFA hypothesis can be explained by diversity and community composition of bacteria and in detail N-fixing bacteria (as determined by molecular 16S rRNA and nifH gene amplification) and fungi (as determined by molecular ITS rRNA amplification and sporocarp surveys). Our results showed that wood decomposition rates were accelerated at "home" versus "away" by 38.19% ± 20.04% (mean ± SE). We detected strong changes in fungal richness (increase 36–50%) and community composition (R
ANOSIM = 0.52–0.60, P < 0.05) according to HFA hypothesis. The changes of fungi were much stronger than for total bacteria and nitrogen fixing for both at richness and community composition levels. In conclusion, our results support the HFA hypothesis in deadwood: decomposition rate is accelerated at home due to specialization of fungal communities produced by the plant community above them. Furthermore, the higher richness of fungal sporocarps and nitrogen-fixing bacteria (nifH) may stimulate or at least stabilize wood decomposition rates at "home" versus "away." [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Climate Impacts From Large Volcanic Eruptions in a High‐Resolution Climate Model: The Importance of Forcing Structure.
- Author
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Yang, Wenchang, Vecchi, Gabriel A., Fueglistaler, Stephan, Horowitz, Larry W., Luet, David J., Muñoz, Ángel G., Paynter, David, and Underwood, Seth
- Subjects
CLIMATE change ,VOLCANIC eruptions ,ATMOSPHERIC models ,EXPLOSIVE volcanic eruptions ,RADIATIVE forcing - Abstract
Explosivevolcanic eruptions have large climate impacts and can serve as observable tests of the climatic response to radiative forcing. Using a high‐resolution climate model, we contrast the climate responses to Pinatubo, with symmetric forcing, and those to Santa Maria and Agung, which had meridionally asymmetric forcing. Although Pinatubo had larger global‐mean forcing, asymmetric forcing strongly shifts the latitude of tropical rainfall features, leading to larger local precipitation/tropical cyclone changes. For example, North Atlantic tropical cyclone activity over is enhanced/reduced by SH forcing (Agung)/NH forcing (Santa Maria) but changes little in response to the Pinatubo forcing. Moreover, the transient climate sensitivity estimated from the response to Santa Maria is 20% larger than that from Pinatubo or Agung. This spread in climatic impacts of volcanoes needs to be considered when evaluating the role of volcanoes in global and regional climate and serves to contextualize the well‐observed response to Pinatubo. Key Points: Weaker‐than‐Pinatubo volcanic eruptions with interhemispherically asymmetric forcings can have larger climate impacts than PinatuboZonal‐mean and regional precipitation and TC activity are more sensitive to interhemispherically asymmetric than symmetric eruptionsGlobal‐mean surface temperature is more sensitive to the NH asymmetric eruptions [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Changes in the Microbial Community of Pinus arizonica Saplings After Being Colonized by the Bark Beetle Dendroctonus rhizophagus (Curculionidae: Scolytinae).
- Author
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Gonzalez-Escobedo, Roman, Briones-Roblero, Carlos I., López, María Fernanda, Zúñiga, Gerardo, and Rivera-Orduña, Flor N.
- Subjects
PINE ,BACTERIA ,FUNGI ,BARK beetles - Abstract
The death of trees is an ecological process that promotes regeneration, organic matter recycling, and the structure of communities. However, diverse biotic and abiotic factors can disturb this process. Dendroctonus bark beetles (Curculionidae: Scolytinae) are natural inhabitants of pine forests, some of which produce periodic outbreaks, killing thousands of trees in the process. These insects spend almost their entire life cycle under tree bark, where they reproduce and feed on phloem. Tunneling and feeding of the beetles result in the death of the tree and an alteration of the resident microbiota as well as the introduction of microbes that the beetles vector. To understand how microbial communities in subcortical tissues of pines change after they are colonized by the bark beetle Dendroctonus rhizophagus, we compare both the bacterial and fungal community structures in two colonization stages of Pinus arizonica (Arizona pine) employing Illumina MiSeq. Our findings showed significant differences in diversity and the dominance of bacterial community in the two colonization stages with Shannon (P = 0.004) and Simpson (P = 0.0006) indices, respectively, but not in species richness with Chao1 (P = 0.19). In contrast, fungal communities in both stages showed significant differences in species richness with Chao1 (P = 0.0003) and a diversity with Shannon index (P = 0.038), but not in the dominance with the Simpson index (P = 0.12). The β-diversity also showed significant changes in the structure of bacterial and fungal communities along the colonization stages, maintaining the dominant members in both cases. Our results suggest that microbial communities present in the Arizona pine at the tree early colonization stage by bark beetle change predictably over time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Robustness of the stratospheric pathway in linking the Barents-Kara Sea sea ice variability to the mid-latitude circulation in CMIP5 models.
- Author
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De, Bithi and Wu, Yutian
- Subjects
SEA ice ,CIRCULATION models ,EDDY flux ,HEAT flux ,THEORY of wave motion ,STRATOSPHERE ,POLAR vortex - Abstract
This study investigates the robustness of the stratospheric pathway in linking the sea ice variability over the Barents-Kara Sea in late autumn and early winter to the mid-latitude circulation in the subsequent winter. Two groups of models from the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project phase 5 (CMIP5) archive, one with a well-resolved stratosphere (high-top models) and the other with a poorly-resolved stratosphere (low-top models) are explored to distinguish the role of the stratospheric pathway. The results show that, collectively, high-top models are able to capture the persistent mid-latitude circulation response in the subsequent winter. The response in low-top models is, however, weaker and not as long-lasting most likely due to lack of stratospheric variability. Analysis of eddy heat flux reveals that stronger vertical wave propagation leads to a stronger response in stratospheric polar vortex in high-top models. In particular, it shows that zonal wave-2 eddy heat flux is crucial in leading to a stronger linear constructive interference with the climatological waves in high-top models. The results find that multi-model ensemble of CMIP5 high-top models is able to capture the prolonged impact of sea ice variability on the mid-latitude circulation and out performs the low-top models in this regard. Our study suggests that the representation of the stratosphere in climate models plays an important role in amplifying and extending the mid-latitude circulation response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Incubation with macroalgae induces large shifts in water column microbiota, but minor changes to the epibiota of co‐occurring macroalgae.
- Author
-
Chen, Melissa Y. and Parfrey, Laura Wegener
- Subjects
MICROBIAL growth ,NEREOCYSTIS ,ANTI-infective agents ,BACTERIAL communities ,MERISTEMS - Abstract
Abstract: Macroalgae variably promote and deter microbial growth through release of organic carbon and antimicrobial compounds into the water column. Consequently, macroalgae influence the microbial composition of the surrounding water column and biofilms on nearby surfaces. Here, we use manipulative experiments to test the hypotheses that (i)
Nereocystis luetkeana andMastocarpus sp. macroalgae alter the water column microbiota in species‐specific manner, that (ii) neighbouring macroalgae alter the bacterial communities on the surface (epibiota) of actively growingNereocystis luetkeana meristem fragments (NMFs), and that (iii) neighbours alter NMF growth rate. We also assess the impact of laboratory incubation on macroalgal epibiota by comparing each species to wild counterparts. We find strong differences between theNereocystis andMastocarpus epibiota that are maintained in the laboratory.Nereocystis andMastocarpus alter water column bacterial community composition and richness in a species specific manner, but cause only small compositional shifts on NMF surfaces that do not differ by species, and do not change richness. Co‐incubation with macroalgae results in significant change in abundance of fivefold more genera in the water column compared to NMF surfaces, although the direction (i.e., enrichment or reduction) of shift is generally consistent between the water and NMF surfaces. Finally, NMFs grew during the experiment, but growth did not depend on the presence or identity of neighbouring macroalgae. Thus, macroalgae exhibit a strong and species‐specific influence on the water column microbiota, but a much weaker influence on the epibiota of neighbouring macroalgae. Overall, these results support the idea that macroalgae surfaces are highly selective and demonstrate that modulations of macroalgal microbiota operate within an overarching paradigm of host species specificity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Sapwood and heartwood affect differentially bacterial and fungal community structure and successional dynamics during Quercus petraea decomposition.
- Author
-
Viotti C, Bach C, Maillard F, Ziegler-Devin I, Mieszkin S, and Buée M
- Subjects
- Bacteria metabolism, Forests, Fungi genetics, Fungi metabolism, Soil Microbiology, Wood microbiology, Mycobiome, Quercus microbiology
- Abstract
In forests, bacteria and fungi are key players in wood degradation. Still, studies focusing on bacterial and fungal successions during the decomposition process depending on the wood types (i.e. sapwood and heartwood) remain scarce. This study aimed to understand the effect of wood type on the dynamics of microbial ecological guilds in wood decomposition. Using Illumina metabarcoding, bacterial and fungal communities were monitored every 3 months for 3 years from Quercus petraea wood discs placed on forest soil. Wood density and microbial enzymes involved in biopolymer degradation were measured. We observed rapid changes in the bacterial and fungal communities and microbial ecological guilds associated with wood decomposition throughout the experiment. Bacterial and fungal succession dynamics were very contrasted between sapwood and heartwood. The initial microbial communities were quickly replaced by new bacterial and fungal assemblages in the sapwood. Conversely, some initial functional guilds (i.e. endophytes and yeasts) persisted all along the experiment in heartwood and finally became dominant, possibly limiting the development of saprotrophic fungi. Our data also suggested a significant role of bacteria in nitrogen cycle during wood decomposition., (© 2021 Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The microbial community in decaying fallen logs varies with critical period in an alpine forest.
- Author
-
Chang, Chenhui, Wu, Fuzhong, Yang, Wanqin, Xu, Zhenfeng, Cao, Rui, He, Wei, Tan, Bo, and Justine, Meta Francis
- Subjects
MICROBIAL communities ,WOOD decay ,WOOD microbiology ,SNOW cover - Abstract
Little information has been available on the shifts in the microbial community in decaying fallen logs during critical periods in cold forests. Minjiang fir (Abies faxoniana) fallen logs in decay classes I-V were in situ incubated on the forest floor of an alpine forest in the eastern Tibet Plateau. The microbial community was investigated during the seasonal snow cover period (SP), snow thawing period (TP), early growing season (EG) and late growing season (LG) using Phosphorous Lipid Fatty Acid (PLFA) analysis. Total microbial biomass and microbial diversity in fallen logs were much more affected by critical period than decay class, whereas decay class had a stronger effect on microbial diversity than on microbial biomass. Abundant microbial biomass and microbial diversity in logs even without the cover of snow were observed in winter, which could not be linked to thermal insulation by snow cover. The freshly decayed logs functioned as an excellent buffer of environmental variation for microbial organisms during the sharp fluctuations in temperature in winter. We also found distinct decay patterns along with seasonality for heartwood, sapwood and bark, which requires further detailed research. Gram
- bacteria mainly dominated the shifts in microbial community composition from SP to EG, while fungi and Gram+ bacteria mainly dominated it from SP to TP. Based on previous work and the present study, we conclude that fallen logs on the forest floor alter ecological processes by influencing microbial communities on woody debris and beneath the soil and litter. Our study also emphasizes the need to maintain a number of fallen logs, especially fresh ones, on the forest floor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Evaluation of ACCMIP ozone simulations and ozonesonde sampling biases using a satellite-based multi-constituent chemical reanalysis.
- Author
-
Kazuyuki Miyazaki and Bowman, Kevin
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC ozone analysis ,OZONESONDES ,TROPOSPHERE ,STRATOSPHERE ,CHEMISTRY ,SIMULATION methods & models ,MATHEMATICAL models - Abstract
The Atmospheric Chemistry Climate Model Intercomparison Project (ACCMIP) ensemble ozone simulations for the present day from the 2000 decade simulation results are evaluated by a state-of-the-art multi-constituent atmospheric chemical reanalysis that ingests multiple satellite data including the Tropospheric Emission Spectrometer (TES), the Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS), the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI), and the Measurement of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT) for 2005–2009. Validation of the chemical reanalysis against global ozonesondes shows good agreement throughout the free troposphere and lower stratosphere for both seasonal and year-to-year variations, with an annual mean bias of less than 0.9 ppb in the middle and upper troposphere at the tropics and mid-latitudes. The reanalysis provides comprehensive spatiotemporal evaluation of chemistry-model performance that compliments direct ozonesonde comparisons, which are shown to suffer from significant sampling bias. The reanalysis reveals that the ACCMIP ensemble mean overestimates ozone in the northern extratropics by 6–11 ppb while underestimating by up to 18 ppb in the southern tropics over the Atlantic in the lower troposphere. Most models underestimate the spatial variability of the annual mean lower tropospheric concentrations in the extratropics of both hemispheres by up to 70 %. The ensemble mean also overestimates the seasonal amplitude by 25–70 % in the northern extratropics and overestimates the inter-hemispheric gradient by about 30 % in the lower and middle troposphere. A part of the discrepancies can be attributed to the 5-year reanalysis data for the decadal model simulations. However, these differences are less evident with the current sonde network. To estimate ozonesonde sampling biases, we computed model bias separately for global coverage and the ozonesonde network. The ozonesonde sampling bias in the evaluated model bias for the seasonal mean concentration relative to global coverage is 40–50 % over the western Pacific and east Indian Ocean and reaches 110 % over the equatorial Americas and up to 80 % for the global tropics. In contrast, the ozonesonde sampling bias is typically smaller than 30 % for the Arctic regions in the lower and middle troposphere. These systematic biases have implications for ozone radiative forcing and the response of chemistry to climate that can be further quantified as the satellite observational record extends to multiple decades. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Characterization of Unexplored Deadwood Mycobiome in Highly Diverse Subtropical Forests Using Culture-independent Molecular Technique.
- Author
-
Purahong, Witoon, Pietsch, Katherina A., Lentendu, Guillaume, Schöps, Ricardo, Bruelheide, Helge, Wirth, Christian, Buscot, François, and Wubet, Tesfaye
- Subjects
WOOD microbiology ,WOOD decay ,FOREST ecology - Abstract
The deadwood mycobiome, also known as wood-inhabiting fungi (WIF), are among the key players in wood decomposition, having a large impact on nutrient cycling in forest soils. However, our knowledge of WIF richness and distribution patterns in different forest biomes is limited. Here, we used pyrotag sequencing of the fungal internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) region to characterize the deadwood mycobiome of two tree species with greatly different wood characteristics (Schima superba and Pinus massoniana) in a Chinese subtropical forest ecosystem. Specifically, we tested (i) the effects of tree species and wood quality properties on WIF OTU richness and community composition; (ii) the role of biotic and abiotic factors in shaping the WIF communities; and (iii) the relationship between WIF OTU richness, community composition and decomposition rates. Due to different wood chemical properties, we hypothesized that the WIF communities derived from the two tree species would be correlated differently with biotic and abiotic factors. Our results show that deadwood in subtropical forests harbors diverse fungal communities comprising six ecological functional groups. We found interesting colonization patterns for this subtropical biome, where Resinicium spp. were highly detected in both broadleaved and coniferous deadwood. In addition, the members of Xylariales were frequently found in Schima. The two deadwood species differed significantly in WIF OTU richness (Pinus > Schima) and community composition (P < 0.001). Variations in WIF community composition of both tree species were significantly explained by wood pH and ecological factors (biotic: deadwood species, basal area and abiotic: soil pH), but the WIF communities derived from each tree species correlated differently with abiotic factors. Interestingly, we found that deadwood decomposition rate significantly correlated with WIF communities and negatively correlated with WIF OTU richness. We conclude that the pattern of WIF OTU richness and community composition are controlled by multiple interacting biotic and abiotic factors. Overall, our study provides an in-depth picture of the deadwood mycobiome in this subtropical forest. Furthermore, by comparing our results to results from temperate and boreal forests we contribute to a better understanding of patterns of WIF communities across different biomes and geographic locations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Impact of Phanerochaete chrysosporium on the Functional Diversity of Bacterial Communities Associated with Decaying Wood.
- Author
-
Hervé, Vincent, Ketter, Elodie, Pierrat, Jean-Claude, Gelhaye, Eric, and Frey-Klett, Pascale
- Subjects
PHANEROCHAETE ,BACTERIAL population genetics ,WOOD decay ,FOREST ecology ,MICROCOSM & macrocosm - Abstract
Bacteria and fungi naturally coexist in various environments including forest ecosystems. While the role of saprotrophic basidiomycetes in wood decomposition is well established, the influence of these fungi on the functional diversity of the wood-associated bacterial communities has received much less attention. Based on a microcosm experiment, we tested the hypothesis that both the presence of the white-rot fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium and the wood, as a growth substrate, impacted the functional diversity of these bacterial communities. Microcosms containing sterile sawdust were inoculated with a microbial inoculum extracted from a forest soil, in presence or in absence of P. chrysosporium and subsequently, three enrichment steps were performed. First, bacterial strains were isolated from different microcosms previously analyzed by 16S rRNA gene-based pyrosequencing. Strains isolated from P. chrysosporium mycosphere showed less antagonism against this fungus compared to the strains isolated from the initial forest soil inoculum, suggesting a selection by the fungus of less inhibitory bacterial communities. Moreover, the presence of the fungus in wood resulted in a selection of cellulolytic and xylanolytic bacterial strains, highlighting the role of mycospheric bacteria in wood decomposition. Additionally, the proportion of siderophore-producing bacteria increased along the enrichment steps, suggesting an important role of bacteria in iron mobilization in decaying-wood. Finally, taxonomic identification of 311 bacterial isolates revealed, at the family level, strong similarities with the high-throughput sequencing data as well as with other studies in terms of taxonomic composition of the wood-associated bacterial community, highlighting that the isolated strains are representative of the wood-associated bacterial communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Naturally forced multidecadal variability of the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation.
- Author
-
Menary, Matthew and Scaife, Adam
- Subjects
ATLANTIC meridional overturning circulation ,ATMOSPHERIC models ,OCEAN temperature ,ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,OCEAN-atmosphere interaction ,SIMULATION methods & models ,CLIMATE change ,ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis - Abstract
The mechanisms by which natural forcing factors alone could drive simulated multidecadal variability in the Atlantic meridional overturning circulation (AMOC) are assessed in an ensemble of climate model simulations. It is shown for a new state-of-the-art general circulation model, HadGEM2-ES, that the most important of these natural forcings, in terms of the multidecadal response of the AMOC, is solar rather than volcanic forcing. AMOC strengthening occurs through a densification of the North Atlantic, driven by anomalous surface freshwater fluxes due to increased evaporation. These are related to persistent North Atlantic atmospheric circulation anomalies, driven by forced changes in the stratosphere, associated with anomalously weak solar irradiance during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Within a period of approximately 100 years the 11-year smoothed ensemble mean AMOC strengthens by 1.5 Sv and subsequently weakens by 1.9 Sv, representing respectively approximately 3 and 4 standard deviations of the 11-year smoothed control simulation. The solar-induced variability of the AMOC has various relevant climate impacts, such as a northward shift of the intertropical convergence zone, anomalous Amazonian rainfall, and a sustained increase in European temperatures. While this model has only a partial representation of the atmospheric response to solar variability, these results demonstrate the potential for solar variability to have a multidecadal impact on North Atlantic climate. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Acquired reactive perforating dermatosis.
- Author
-
Wagner, Gunnar and Sachse, Michael Max
- Abstract
Acquired reactive perforating dermatosis is characterized by umbilicated erythematous papules and plaques with firmly adherent crusts. Histopathological examination shows a typical cup-shaped ulceration in the epidermis containing cellular debris and collagen. There is transepidermal elimination of degenerated material with basophilic collagen bundles. The etiology and pathogenesis of acquired reactive perforating dermatosis are unclear. Metabolic disorders and malignancies are associated with this dermatosis. Associated pruritus is regarded as a key pathogenic factor. Constant scratching may cause a repetitive trauma to the skin. This pathogenesis may involve a genetic predisposition. The trauma may lead to degeneration of the collagen bundles. Treatment of acquired reactive perforating dermatosis follows a multimodal approach. Apart from the treating any underlying disease, treatment of pruritus is a major goal. Systemic steroids and retinoids, as well as UVB phototherapy are well-established treatment options. Some patients may also benefit from oral allopurinol. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A contrail cirrus prediction model.
- Author
-
Schumann, U.
- Subjects
MATHEMATICAL models of forecasting ,CONDENSATION trails ,CIRRUS clouds ,EQUATIONS ,METHODOLOGY - Abstract
The article presents a study on the contrail cirrus prediction model. It describes its function of simulating and forecasting the properties of contrails as well as assumptions, equations and analysis-method for contrail-cirrus cover made from the optical depth of both clouds. It also notes its simulation of the cloud's life-cycle and implementation of a Contrail Cirrus Prediction Tool (CoCiP).
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Biochemické aspekty fetálnej hypoxie.
- Author
-
Biringer, K., Danko, J., Dókuš, K., Maťašová, K., Zibolen, M., and Pullmann, R.
- Published
- 2011
29. Comparison of CMAM simulations of carbon monoxide (CO), nitrous oxide (N2O), and methane (CH4) with observations from Odin/SMR, ACE-FTS, and Aura/MLS.
- Author
-
Jin, J. J., Semeniuk, K., Beagley, S. R., Fomichev, V. I., Jonsson, A. I., McConnell, J. C., Urban, J., Murtagh, D., Manney, G. L., Boone, C. D., Bernath, P. F., Walker, K. A., Barret, B., Ricaud, P., and Dupuy, E.
- Subjects
SIMULATION methods & models ,CARBON monoxide ,NITROUS oxide ,METHANE ,ATMOSPHERE ,SPECTROMETERS ,TELECOMMUNICATION satellites - Abstract
Simulations of CO, N
2 O and CH4 from a coupled chemistry-climate model (CMAM) are compared with satellite measurements from Odin Sub-Millimeter Radiometer (Odin/SMR), Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS), and Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (Aura/MLS). Pressure-latitude cross-sections and seasonal time series demonstrate thatCMAMreproduces the observed global CO, N2 O, and CH4 distributions quite well. Generally, excellent agreement with measurements is found between CO simulations and observations in the stratosphere and mesosphere. Differences between the simulations and the ACE-FTS observations are generally within 30%, and the differences between CMAM results and SMR and MLS observations are slightly larger. These differences are comparable with the difference between the instruments in the upper stratosphere and mesosphere. Comparisons of N2 O show that CMAM results are usually within 15% of the measurements in the lower and middle stratosphere, and the observations are close to each other. However, the standard version of CMAM has a low N2 O bias in the upper stratosphere. The CMAM CH4 distribution also reproduces the observations in the lower stratosphere, but has a similar but smaller negative bias in the upper stratosphere. The negative bias may be due to that the gravity drag is not fully resolved in the model. The simulated polar CO evolution in the Arctic and Antarctic agrees with the ACE and MLS observations. CO measurements from 2006 show evidence of enhanced descent of air from the mesosphere into the stratosphere in the Arctic after strong stratospheric sudden warmings (SSWs). CMAM also shows strong descent of air after SSWs. In the tropics, CMAM captures the annual oscillation in the lower stratosphere and the semiannual oscillations at the stratopause and mesopause seen in Aura/MLS CO and N2 O observations and in Odin/SMR N2 O observations. The Odin/SMR and Aura/MLS N2 O observations also show a quasi-biennial oscillation (QBO) in the upper stratosphere, whereas, the CMAM does not have QBO included. This study confirms that CMAM is able to simulate middle atmospheric transport processes reasonably well. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Satellite observations and modelling of transport in the upper troposphere through the lower mesosphere during the 2006 major stratospheric sudden arming.
- Author
-
Manney, G. L., Harwood, R. S., MacKenzie, I. A., Minschwaner, K., Allen, D. R., Santee, M. L., Walker, K. A., Hegglin, M. I., Lambert, A., Pumphrey, H. C., Bernath, P. F., Boone, C. D., Schwartz, M. J., Livesey, N. J., Daffer, W. H., and Fuller, R. A.
- Abstract
An unusually strong and prolonged stratospheric sudden warming (SSW) in January 2006 was the first major SSW for which globally distributed long-lived trace gas data are available covering the upper troposphere through the lower mesosphere. We use Aura Microwave Limb Sounder (MLS), Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment-Fourier Transform Spectrometer (ACE-FTS) data, the SLIMCAT Chemistry Transport Model (CTM), and assimilated meteorological analyses to provide a comprehensive picture of transport during this event. The upper tropospheric ridge that triggered the SSW was associated with an elevated tropopause and layering in trace gas profiles in con junction with stratospheric and tropospheric intrusions. Anomalous poleward transport (with corresponding quasi-isentropic troposphere-to-stratosphere exchange at the lowest levels studied) in the region over the ridge extended well into the lower stratosphere. In the middle and upper stratosphere, the breakdown of the polar vortex transport barrier was seen in a signature of rapid, widespread mixing in trace gases, including CO, H
2 O, CH4 and N2 O. The vortex broke down slightly later and more slowly in the lower than in the middle stratosphere. In the middle and lower stratosphere, small remnants with trace gas values characteristic of the pre-SSW vortex lingered through the weak and slow recovery of the vortex. The upper stratospheric vortex quickly reformed, and, as enhanced diabatic descent set in, CO descended into this strong vortex, echoing the fall vortex development. Trace gas evolution in the SLIMCAT CTM agrees well with that in the satellite trace gas data from the upper troposphere through the middle stratosphere. In the upper stratosphere and lower mesosphere, the SLIMCAT simulation does not capture the strong descent of mesospheric CO and H2 O values into the reformed vortex; poor CTM performance in the upper stratosphere and lower meso sphere results primarily from biases in the diabatic descent in assimilated analyses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Atmospheric Circulation Trends, 1950–2000: The Relative Roles of Sea Surface Temperature Forcing and Direct Atmospheric Radiative Forcing.
- Author
-
Deser, Clara and Phillips, Adam S.
- Subjects
ATMOSPHERIC circulation ,OCEAN temperature ,RADIATIVE forcing ,GREENHOUSE gases research ,OZONE layer ,GENERAL circulation model ,WINDS - Abstract
The relative roles of direct atmospheric radiative forcing (due to observed changes in well-mixed greenhouse gases, tropospheric and stratospheric ozone, sulfate and volcanic aerosols, and solar output) and observed sea surface temperature (SST) forcing of global December–February atmospheric circulation trends during the second half of the twentieth century are investigated by means of experiments with an atmospheric general circulation model, Community Atmospheric Model, version 3 (CAM3). The model experiments are conducted by specifying the observed time-varying SSTs and atmospheric radiative quantities individually and in combination. This approach allows the authors to isolate the direct impact of each type of forcing agent as well as to evaluate their combined effect and the degree to which their impacts are additive. CAM3 realistically simulates the global patterns of sea level pressure and 500-hPa geopotential height trends when both forcings are specified. SST forcing and direct atmospheric radiative forcing drive distinctive circulation responses that contribute about equally to the global pattern of circulation trends. These distinctive circulation responses are approximately additive and partially offsetting. Atmospheric radiative changes directly drive the strengthening and poleward shift of the midlatitude westerly winds in the Southern Hemisphere (and to a lesser extent may contribute to those over the Atlantic–Eurasian sector in the Northern Hemisphere), whereas SST trends (specifically those in the tropics) are responsible for the intensification of the Aleutian low and weakening of the tropical Walker circulation. Discrepancies between the atmospheric circulation trends simulated by CAM3 and Community Climate System Model, version 3 (CCSM3), a coupled model driven by the same atmospheric radiative forcing as CAM3, are traced to differences in their tropical SST trends: in particular, a 60% weaker warming of the tropical Indo-Pacific in the CCSM3 ensemble mean than in nature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Simulation of secular trends in the middle atmosphere, 1950-2003.
- Author
-
Garcia, R. R., Marsh, D. R., Kinnison, D. E., Boville, B. A., and Sassi, F.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Dynamics of the orientation tuning of postsynaptic potentials in the cat visual cortex.
- Author
-
Volgushev, M., Vidyasagar, T.R., and Pei, Xing
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. The Role of the SO 2 Radiative Effect in Sustaining the Volcanic Winter and Soothing the Toba Impact on Climate.
- Author
-
Osipov, Sergey, Stenchikov, Georgiy, Tsigaridis, Kostas, LeGrande, Allegra N., and Bauer, Susanne E.
- Subjects
VOLCANIC eruptions ,SULFUR dioxide ,ATMOSPHERIC chemistry ,ATMOSPHERIC aerosols ,VOLCANIC plumes - Abstract
Volcanic eruptions are an important climate driver. The impact of Pinatubo‐sized eruptions has been observed and is well constrained. The magnitude and duration of volcanic winter effects after supereruptions such as Toba remain disputed due to disagreement between the strong cooling predicted by models and much milder climate perturbations according to the paleodata. Here we present a reevaluated climate impact of a Toba‐sized supereruption based on up‐to‐date GISS ModelE simulations. In this study, we account for all known primary mechanisms that govern the evolution of the volcanic plume and their nonlinear interactions. The SO 2 radiative effects are evaluated for the first time in coupled climate simulations with the interactive atmospheric chemistry module. We found that SO 2 effects on photochemistry, dynamics, and radiative forcing are especially prominent. Due to strong absorption in ultraviolet, SO 2 feedback on photochemistry partially offsets the limiting effect associated with aerosol microphysical processes. SO 2 greenhouse warming soothes the radiative cooling exerted by sulfate aerosols. SO 2 absorption in the shortwave and longwave causes radiative heating and lofting of the volcanic plume, and boosts the efficiency of SO 2 impact on photochemistry. Our analysis shows that SO 2 lifetime and magnitude of effects scale up and increase with the amount of emitted material. For a Pinatubo‐sized eruption, SO 2 feedbacks on chemistry and dynamics are relevant only during the initial stage of the volcanic plume evolution, while local SO 2 concentrations are high. For a Toba‐sized eruption, SO 2 effects are as important as sulfate aerosols and produce a less extreme volcanic winter. Key Points: SO 2 inhibits production of sulfate aerosols and sustains volcanic winter effectsSO 2 greenhouse warming partially offsets the aerosols radiative coolingSO 2 enhances lofting of the volcanic plume [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. How long does a fetal scalp blood sample take?
- Author
-
Tuffnell, D., Haw, W. L., and Wilkinson, K.
- Subjects
ACIDOSIS ,CORD blood ,FETAL anoxia ,FETAL monitoring ,LABOR (Obstetrics) - Abstract
The study aim was to identify the time from a decision to perform a fetal blood sample to the result of the test being available. A total of 100 consecutive fetal scalp blood samples taken on women in labour were identified from the blood gas analysers on the delivery suite. Eighty-nine percent of attempts yielded a result. The median time taken was 18 minutes (interquartile range 12–25 minutes). In 9% of women, the result took longer than 30 minutes. This is important clinically when repeated testing is required or in the second stage when operative vaginal delivery is achievable. Furthermore, when retrospectively analysing cases with a poor outcome, the time to obtain a result needs to be taken into account when determining the time at which a baby could have been delivered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. The Effects of Oral Magnesium Supplementation on Glycemic Response among Type 2 Diabetes Patients.
- Author
-
ELDerawi, Wafaa A., Naser, Ihab A., Taleb, Mahmmoud H., and Abutair, Ayman S.
- Abstract
Background: Magnesium (Mg) supplementation may help control glycemic response among type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. Objective: This study means to determine whether Mg supplementation improves glycemic control indicators in patients with T2D. Methods: After one week of the dietary stabilization phase, 42 T2D patients were stratified according to sex, age, fasting blood sugar (FBS) and Mg levels and then randomly allocated into two groups. The intervention group was on 250 mg/day of elemental Mg for three months while the control group did not receive any type of supplements throughout the intervention period. Results: The daily administration of 250 mg of elemental Mg indicated a significant improvement in HbA1C (8.32 to 7.96%, p < 0.001), insulin levels (IL) (15.56 to 12.18 μIU/mL, p < 0.001), C-peptide (2.28 to 1.90 ng/mL, p = 0.001), HOMA.IR (6.16 to 4.44, p < 0.001) and HOMA.β% (59.99 to 52.37, p = 0.036) of the intervention group when compared with the control group after three months of intervention. Conclusion: The results of this study revealed that oral Mg supplementation reduces insulin resistance and improves the glycemic control indicators among T2D patients. Trial registration: current controlled trials PHRC/HC/32/15. Registered 5 October 2015. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Tidal deformation and radial pulsations of neutron star with holographic multiquark core
- Author
-
Pinkanjanarod, Sitthichai, Burikham, Piyabut, and Ponglertsakul, Supakchai
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Nuclear currents in chiral effective field theory
- Author
-
Krebs, Hermann
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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