1,865 research outputs found
The Development of the Brazilian Bio-electricity Market: An Historical Analysis of the Institutional Changes in the Sugarcane and Electricity Markets
Crop Production/Industries, Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Subtropical Gyre Variability as Seen from Satellites
A satellite multi-sensor approach is used to analyse the biological response of open ocean regions of the subtropical gyres to changes in physical forcing. Thirteen years (1998-2010) of SeaWiFS chlorophyll a (Chl-a), combined with concurrent satellite records of sea-surface temperature (SST) and sea level height, were analysed to investigate the seasonal and interannual variability of Chl-a concentration within these immense so-called ocean deserts. The seasonal variability of Chl-a within the gyres is driven mostly by the warming/cooling of surface waters. Summer warming promotes shallower mixed layers and lower Chl-a due to a reduction of vertical mixing and consequently a decrease in nutrient supply. The opposite happens during the winter cooling period. Therefore, long-term trends in SST have the potential to cause an impact on the interannual variability of Chl-a. Our analyses show that, during the 13 whole years of SeaWiFS data record, the North Pacific, Indian Ocean, and North Atlantic gyres experienced a decrease in Chl-a of 9%, 12%, and 11%, respectively, with corresponding SST increases of 0.27 C, 0.42 C, and 0.32 C. The South Pacific and South Atlantic gyres also showed warming trends but with weak positive trends in Chl-a that are not statistically significant. We hypothesize that the warming of surface waters in these two gyres are counterbalanced by other interacting physical and biological driving mechanisms, as indicated in previous studies
Remote Versus Local Forcing of Chlorophyll Variability in the South Atlantic Bight
This TM documents results of analyses addressing the local versus remote forcing of chlorophyll variability on the shelf and slope regions of the South Atlantic Bight (SAB) based on satellite-derived products and a limited amount of in situ data. This study is part of a larger multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional effort to study the Eastern U.S. Continental Shelf carbon budget (U.S. Eastern Continental Shelf Carbon Budget: Modeling, Data Assimilation, and Analysis, U.S. ECoS), a project funded by the NASA Earth System Enterprise Interdisciplinary Science Program that started in the summer of 2004
Extended Optical Model Analyses of Elastic Scattering, Direct Reaction, and Fusion Cross Sections for the 9Be + 208Pb System at Near-Coulomb-Barrier Energies
Based on the extended optical model approach in which the polarization
potential is decomposed into direct reaction (DR) and fusion parts,
simultaneous analyses are performed for elastic scattering, DR, and
fusion cross section data for the Be+Pb system at
near-Coulomb-barrier energies. Similar analyses are also performed
by only taking into account the elastic scattering and fusion data as was
previously done by the present authors, and the results are compared with those
of the full analysis including the DR cross section data as well. We find that
the analyses using only elastic scattering and fusion data can produce very
consistent and reliable predictions of cross sections particularly when the DR
cross section data are not complete. Discussions are also given on the results
obtained from similar analyses made earlier for the Be+Bi system.Comment: 5 figure
Extended Optical Model Analyses of Elastic Scattering and Fusion Cross Sections for 6Li + 208Pb System at Near-Coulomb-Barrier Energies by using Folding Potential
Based on the extended optical model approach in which the polarization
potential is decomposed into direct reaction (DR) and fusion parts,
simultaneous analyses are performed for elastic scattering and
fusion cross section data for the Li+Pb system at
near-Coulomb-barrier energies. A folding potential is used as the bare
potential. It is found that the real part of the resultant DR part of the
polarization potential is repulsive, which is consistent with the results from
the Continuum Discretized Coupled Channel (CDCC) calculations and the
normalization factors needed for the folding potentials. Further, it is found
that both DR and fusion parts of the polarization potential satisfy separately
the dispersion relation.Comment: 6 figure
Interassay variability of immunometric methods for thyrotropin in an external quality assessment survey: evidence that functional sensitivity is not always adequate for clinical decisions
State of the Climate in 2016: Global Ocean Phytoplankton
Marine phytoplankton contribute roughly half the net primary production (NPP) on Earth, fixing atmospheric CO2 into food that fuels global ocean ecosystems and drives biogeochemical cycles. Satellite ocean color sensors, such as SeaWiFS, MODIS, and VIIRS, provide observations of sufficient frequency and geographic coverage to globally monitor changes in the near-surface concentrations of the phytoplankton pigment chlorophyll-a (Chla; mg -cu m) that serve as a proxy for phytoplankton abundance. Here, global Chla distributions for 2016 are evaluated within the context of the 19-year continuous record provided through the combined observations of SeaWiFS (19972010), MODIS on Aqua (MODISA, 2002present), and VIIRS on Suomi-NPP (2011present). All Chla data used in this analysis correspond to version R2014.0, which utilized common algorithms and calibration methods to maximize consistency in the multi-mission satellite record
Fusion versus Breakup: Observation of Large Fusion Suppression for ^9Be + ^{208}Pb
Complete fusion excitation functions for Be + Pb have been
measured to high precision at near barrier energies. The experimental fusion
barrier distribution extracted from these data allows reliable prediction of
the expected complete fusion cross-sections. However, the measured
cross-sections are only 68% of those predicted. The large cross-sections
observed for incomplete fusion products support the interpretation that this
suppression of fusion is caused by Be breaking up into charged fragments
before reaching the fusion barrier. Implications for the fusion of radioactive
nuclei are discussed.Comment: RevTex, 11 pages, 2 postscript figures, to appear in PR
Breakup of F on Pb near the Coulomb barrier
Angular distributions of oxygen produced in the breakup of F incident
on a Pb target have been measured around the grazing angle at beam
energies of 98 and 120 MeV. The data are dominated by the proton stripping
mechanism and are well reproduced by dynamical calculations. The measured
breakup cross section is approximately a factor of 3 less than that of fusion
at 98 MeV. The influence of breakup on fusion is discussed.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figure
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