Spelling suggestions: "subject:" kinds"" "subject:" finds""
181 |
A Climatology of High-Wind Events Associated with Post-Tropical Cyclones in the United StatesGilliland, Joshua M. 01 August 2011 (has links)
During 1951-2009, 47% of all tropical systems (TSs) within the Atlantic Basin transitioned to post-tropical (PTC) extratropical classification. These systems have shown the capability of producing hurricane-force winds and gusts for portions of the eastern United States. This study provides a climatological foundation for high-wind observations that were contributed from PTCs. In this study, 76 PTC systems were identified and tracked using six hourly observations from the National Hurricane Center’s HURDAT dataset. Mean wind radii buffers were calculated and used to determine the high-wind observations attributed by PTCs. High-wind climatology was developed by using hourly surface wind data from the National Climatic Data Center (NCDC) and deploying the current NWS high-wind criteria. For this study, the geography and climatology of PTCs and resultant high winds were analyzed using geographic information systems (GIS). Findings show that < 1% (270) of all high-winds events that occur within the U.S. were contributed from PTCs. The highest frequencies were found in three regions: Midwest, Mid-Atlantic, and New England. Due to the low number of high-wind events produced from PTCs, an adjusted wind scale was created by using standard deviations of sustained and gust observations. The goal of this study is determine the contribution of high winds from PTCs, with the aim of improving our understanding of the hazardous outcomes of such events.
|
182 |
Not all speeds are created equal: investigating the predictability of statistically downscaled historical land surface winds over central Canada.Culver, Aaron Magelius Riis 26 April 2012 (has links)
A statistical downscaling approach based on multiple linear-regression is used to
investigate the predictability of land surface winds over the Canadian prairies and Ontario.
This study's model downscales mid-tropospheric predictors (wind components
and speed, temperature, and geopotential height) from reanalysis products to predict
historical wind observations at thirty-one airport-based weather surface stations in
Canada. The model's performance is assessed as a function of: season; geographic
location; averaging timescale of the wind statistics; and wind regime, as defined by
how variable the vector wind is relative to its mean amplitude.
Despite large differences in predictability characteristics between sites, several
systematic results are observed. Consistent with recent studies, a strong anisotropy
of predictability for vector quantities is observed, while some components are generally
well predicted, others have no predictability. The predictability of mean quantities is
greater on shorter averaging timescales. In general, the predictability of the surface
wind speeds over the Canadian prairies and Ontario is poor; as is the predictability
of sub-averaging timescale variability.
These results and the relative predictability of vector and scalar wind quantities
are interpreted with theoretically- and empirically-derived wind speed sensitivities to
the resolved and unresolved variability in the vector winds. At most sites, and on longer averaging timescales, the scalar wind quantities are found to be highly sensitive
to unresolved variability in the vector winds. These results demonstrate limitations to
the statistical downscaling of wind speed and suggest that deterministic models which
resolve the short-timescale variability may be necessary for successful predictions. / Graduate
|
183 |
Sensitivity of sea-ice cover and ocean properties to wind-stress and radiative forcings from 1500 to 2000Sedláček, Jan, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.). / Written for the Dept. of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences. Title from title page of PDF (viewed 2008/02/12). Includes bibliographical references.
|
184 |
Analysis of the measure-correlate-predict methodology for wind resource assessment /Sheppard, Colin John Ritter. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Humboldt State University, 2009. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 69-70). Also available via Humboldt Digital Scholar.
|
185 |
Evolution of diurnal surface winds and surface currents for Monterey BayFoster, Michael D. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Naval Postgraduate School, 1993. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 95-98).
|
186 |
Bohuslav Martin Chamber Works for Six or More Players Featuring Winds: A Survey and Conductor’s Analytical Study of La revue de cuisine and Jazz SuiteHeller, Lauren 02 October 2012 (has links)
No description available.
|
187 |
Massive star mergers and the recent transient in NGC 4490: a more massive cousin of V838 Mon and V1309 ScoSmith, Nathan, Andrews, Jennifer E., Van Dyk, Schuyler D., Mauerhan, Jon C., Kasliwal, Mansi M., Bond, Howard E., Filippenko, Alexei V., Clubb, Kelsey I., Graham, Melissa L., Perley, Daniel A., Jencson, Jacob, Bally, John, Ubeda, Leonardo, Sabbi, Elena 01 May 2016 (has links)
The Galactic transient V1309 Sco was the result of a merger in a low-mass star system, while V838 Mon was thought to be a similar merger event from a more massive B-type progenitor. In this paper, we study a recent optical and infrared (IR) transient discovered in the nearby galaxy NGC4490 named NGC4490-OT2011 (NGC 4490-OT hereafter), which appeared similar to these merger events (unobscured progenitor, irregular multi-peaked light curve, increasingly red colour, similar optical spectrum, IR excess at late times), but which had a higher peak luminosity and longer duration in outburst. NGC4490-OT has less in common with the class of SN 2008S-like transients. A progenitor detected in pre-eruption Hubble Space Telescope (HST) images, combined with upper limits in the IR, requires a luminous and blue progenitor that has faded in late-time HST images. The same source was detected by Spitzer and ground-based data as a luminous IR (2-5 mu m) transient, indicating a transition to a self-obscured state qualitatively similar to the evolution seen in other stellar mergers and in luminous blue variables. The post-outburst dust-obscured source is too luminous and too warm at late times to be explained with an IR echo, suggesting that the object survived the event. The luminosity of the enshrouded IR source is similar to that of the progenitor. Compared to proposed merger events, the more massive progenitor of NGC4490-OT seems to extend a correlation between stellar mass and peak luminosity, and may suggest that both of these correlate with duration. We show that spectra of NGC4490-OT and V838 Mon also resemble light-echo spectra of eta Car, prompting us to speculate that eta Car may be an extreme extension of this phenomenon.
|
188 |
The progenitors of type Ia supernovae : what can we learn from the circumstellar medium around single degenerate systems?Booth, Richard Anthony January 2013 (has links)
While the progenitors of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) have long been thought to be thermonuclear explosions of white dwarf stars, what triggers the explosion are still a topic of debate. This thesis considers constraints on single-degenerate progenitors of SNe Ia based on the presence of a Roche-lobe filling companion. The ejecta strips material from the companion, that maybe detectable via Hα emission during the nebular phase. Using the full structure from simulations produces line widths are larger than those produced in simple models. The structure formed by the ejecta-companion interaction produce a broken reverse shock that may be visible in X-rays via the Fe Kα line at the age of Tycho's supernova remnant (SNR). If the similar structures in Tycho’s SNR are produced this way then the companion star must have been massive, with M ~ 2 M<sub>⊙</sub>. Detections of circumstellar material within the supernova provides another way to indirectly probe the companion star. Mass loss through winds or novae are expected to shape the circumsteller medium for single-degenerate progenitors and the velocities, v ~ 100 km s<sup>-1</sup> appear to be consistent with recurrent nova shells, a model that is tested by analysing simulations of RS Ophiuchi. Models of RS Ophiuchi can explain the absorption lines seen around the 2006 outburst if the mass loss is 10<sup>−6</sup> M<sub>⊙</sub> yr<sup>-1,/sup>. The circumsteller medium is shown to produce in the velocity and relative strengths of the features seen in SN 2006X. However, whether density in the shells is high enough to produce the required recombination timescale and to overcome ionization by γ-rays for shells at 5 × 10<sup>16</sup> cm remains uncertain.
|
189 |
Revealing the Physics of Multiphase Galactic Winds Through Massively-Parallel Hydrodynamics SimulationsSchneider, Evan Elizabeth, Schneider, Evan Elizabeth January 2017 (has links)
This thesis documents the hydrodynamics code Cholla and a numerical study of multiphase galactic winds. Cholla is a massively-parallel, GPU-based code designed for astrophysical simulations that is freely available to the astrophysics community. A static-mesh Eulerian code, Cholla is ideally suited to carrying out massive simulations (> 2048 ³ cells) that require very high resolution. The code incorporates state-of-the-art hydrodynamics algorithms including third-order spatial reconstruction, exact and linearized Riemann solvers, and unsplit integration algorithms that account for transverse fluxes on multidimensional grids. Operator-split radiative cooling and a dual-energy formalism for high mach number flows are also included. An extensive test suite demonstrates Cholla's superior ability to model shocks and discontinuities, while the GPU-native design makes the code extremely computationally efficient - speeds of 5-10 million cell updates per GPU-second are typical on current hardware for 3D simulations with all of the aforementioned physics.
The latter half of this work comprises a comprehensive study of the mixing between a hot, supernova-driven wind and cooler clouds representative of those observed in multiphase galactic winds. Both adiabatic and radiatively-cooling clouds are investigated. The analytic theory of cloud-crushing is applied to the problem, and adiabatic turbulent clouds are found to be mixed with the hot wind on similar timescales as the classic spherical case (4-5 t_cc) with an appropriate rescaling of the cloud-crushing time. Radiatively cooling clouds survive considerably longer, and the differences in evolution between turbulent and spherical clouds cannot be reconciled with a simple rescaling. The rapid incorporation of low-density material into the hot wind implies efficient mass-loading of hot phases of galactic winds. At the same time, the extreme compression of high-density cloud material leads to long-lived but slow-moving clumps that are unlikely to escape the galaxy.
|
190 |
The effect of wind on heart rate at submaximal performance of conditioned treadmill runnersSmith, Ronald January 2011 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
|
Page generated in 0.0489 seconds