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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Milton :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Lasers-Industrial applications-Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Covers the nature of nonlinear optical interactions; solid state, fiber, and semiconductor lasers; optical parametric oscillators; and ultrashort pulse generation and applications. This book also explores applications of interest, such as electromagnetically induced transparency, atomic trapping, and soliton optical communications.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (508 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781000154382
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Preface -- Table of Contents -- The Nature of the Nonlinear Optical Susceptibility -- Third-Order and Cascaded Nonlinearities -- Picosecond Optical Pulse Generation Using Semiconductor Lasers -- Microcavity Lasers and QED -- Solid-State Laser Materials -- Diode-Pumped Solid-State Lasers -- Fibre Lasers -- Optical Parametric Oscillators: continuous wave operation -- Pulsed Parametric Oscillators -- Ultrashort Pulse Sources -- Applications of Ultrashort Optical Pulses -- Ultrafast Imaging Techniques -- Fibre Nonlinearities -- Electromagnetically Induced Transparency -- Cooling and Trapping Neutral Atoms with Laser Light -- Presentations by Participants -- Participants' Addresses -- Index.
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht :Springer Netherlands,
    Keywords: Nonlinear optics-Congresses. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Proceedings of the NATO Advanced Study Institute, Erice, Sicily, Italy, July 13--26, 1993.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (375 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789401724463
    Series Statement: NATO Science Series E: Series ; v.289
    DDC: 621.369
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht :Springer Netherlands,
    Keywords: Science-Philosophy. ; Electronic books.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (372 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789401111263
    Series Statement: Boston Studies in the Philosophy and History of Science Series ; v.159
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Oxford :Taylor & Francis Group,
    Keywords: Climatology. ; Electronic books.
    Description / Table of Contents: Originally published in 1931 (this re-issues the 8th edition of 1953), this book gives students a comprehensive account of global climatic types and the impact of climate on economics, issues of race, health, meteorology and geography. Climate change is covered from earliest times up until the middle of the twentieth century.
    Type of Medium: Online Resource
    Pages: 1 online resource (331 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781000692297
    Series Statement: Routledge Library Editions: Pollution, Climate and Change Series
    DDC: 551.6
    Language: English
    Note: Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Original Title Page -- Original Copyright Page -- Preface -- Contents -- MAPS AND DIAGRAMS -- 1. January Isanomalous Lines -- 2. July Isanomalous Lines -- 3. Climatic Control of Settlement -- 4. Climographs -- 5. Equipluves and Isohyets -- 6. Mean Annual Cloudines -- 7. Wind Rose for Mendoza (Argentine) -- 8. Generalized Circulation of the Atmosphere -- 9. Wind Force and Direction, January and February -- 10. Wind Force and Direction, July and August -- 11. Annual Variation of Insolation -- 12. Insolation at Different Latitudes on 21st June -- 13. Altitude of the Snow-line -- 14. Yearly March of Temperature in Continental and Marine Climates -- 15. Mean Annual Range of Temperature -- 16. January Isotherms and Mean Annual Minima of Temperature over the Great Lakes -- 17. Temperature-Height diagram, conditional instability -- 18. Diurnal Changes of Lapse Rate -- 19. Stages in Development of Depression from Wave to Occlusion -- 20. Warm and Cold Occlusions -- 21. Depression Structure and Weather -- 22. Generalized Circulation Wheels and Frontogenetic Regions in North Atlantic and Bordering Lands, Autumn -- 23. Generalized Vertical Circulation -- 24. Air Masses and Fronts, January and February -- 25. Air Masses and Fronts, Northern Hemisphere, Winter -- 26. Air Masses and Fronts, Northern Hemisphere, Summer -- 27. The Principal Causes of Rainfall -- 28. Köppen's Temperature Zones -- 29. Climatic Requirements of some Major Vegetational Formations -- 30. Duration of Growing Season and Forest Type -- 31. Eight Forest Climates -- 32. Temperature Zones -- 33. Seasonal Distribution of Rain (Highly Generalized) -- 34. Distribution of Climatic Types and their Schematic Arrangement on an Ideal Continent -- 35. Annual March of Temperature and Rainfall in Equatorial Climates. , 36. March of Rainfall in Equatorial and Tropical Climates -- 37. Pressure Winds and Rainfall in the Malay Archipelago -- 38. Temperature and Rainfall Régimes in the East Indies -- 39. Rainfall Régimes on Trade-wind Coasts -- 40. Distribution of Tropical Cyclones -- 41. Annual March of Rainfall and Temperature in Tropical Continental Climates -- 42. Duration of Rainy Season in Africa -- 43. Vegetation of Africa -- 44. Mean Pressure and Winds, January -- 45. Cold Weather Rainfall and Storm-tracks -- 46. Diurnal Range of Temperature (January) -- 47. Mean Daily Relative Humidity (January) -- 48. Mean Temperature (May) -- 49. Mean Maximum Temperature (May) -- 50. Hot Weather Rainfall (March-May) -- 51. Weather on I4th May, 1897 -- 52. Weather on 3rd July, 1889 -- 53. Annual March of Temperature and Rainfall in India -- 54. Streamlines during Monsoon -- 55. Monsoon Rainfall (June-October) -- 56. Rainfall at Hué and Madras -- 57. Advance of the Monsoon Rains into Australia -- 58. Transition of Climates in South Australia and Victoria -- 59. Yearly March of Temperature in Mediterranean Climates -- 60. The Rainfall Control of Vegetation and Crops in Swanland -- 61. Rainfall Régimes in Eastern Margin Warm-Temperate Climates -- 62. Antarctic Depression Unfavourable to Inland Rains -- 63. Antarctic Depression Favourable to Good Inland Rains -- 64. Rainfall Régimes in the Gulf-Atlantic States -- 65. Rainfall Régimes in Cool-Temperate Climates -- 66. Mean Temperatures at Kew -- 67. Principal Tracks of Depressions in Western Europe -- 68. Cyclone Tracks, North America -- 69. Tracks of Continental Depressions and of Typhoons -- 70. Chief Storm Tracks, Japan -- 71. Approximate Positions of the Summer Isotherms of 32° and 50° in the Polar Regions -- 72. Northern Limit of Productive Date Palm -- 73. Mechanism of Up-valley Winds in Mountains. , 74. Mean Height of Snow-level in the Inn Valley in Northern Tyrol -- 75. Altitude and the Growing Season in the Eastern Alps -- 76. Evidence for Climatic Zones in Permo-Carboniferous Times -- 77. Land and Sea during the Eocene -- 78. Land and Sea at Maximum Glaciation -- 79. Climatic Conditions during the Continental Phase -- 80. Climatic Conditions during the Maritime Phase -- 81. Climatic Conditions during the Forest Period -- 82. Climatic Conditions during the Peat-Bog Phase -- I: The Meaning and Scope of Climatology -- II: The Elements of Climate -- III: The Factors of Climate -- IV: Air Masses -- V: The Classification of Climates -- VI: Equatorial Climates -- VII: Tropical Climates -- VIII: Tropical Monsoon Climates -- IX: Western Margin Warm-Temperate Climates -- X: Eastern Margin Warm-Temperate Climates -- XI: Cool-Temperate Climates -- XII: Cold Climates -- XIII: Arctic Climates -- XIV: Desert Climates -- XV: Mountain Climates -- XVI: Changes of Climate -- Index.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2021-10-22
    Description: Geobiology explores how Earth's system has changed over the course of geologic history and how living organisms on this planet are impacted by or are indeed causing these changes. For decades, geologists, paleontologists, and geochemists have generated data to investigate these topics. Foundational efforts in sedimentary geochemistry utilized spreadsheets for data storage and analysis, suitable for several thousand samples, but not practical or scalable for larger, more complex datasets. As results have accumulated, researchers have increasingly gravitated toward larger compilations and statistical tools. New data frameworks have become necessary to handle larger sample sets and encourage more sophisticated or even standardized statistical analyses. In this paper, we describe the Sedimentary Geochemistry and Paleoenvironments Project (SGP; Figure 1), which is an open, community-oriented, database-driven research consortium. The goals of SGP are to (1) create a relational database tailored to the needs of the deep-time (millions to billions of years) sedimentary geochemical research community, including assembling and curating published and associated unpublished data; (2) create a website where data can be retrieved in a flexible way; and (3) build a collaborative consortium where researchers are incentivized to contribute data by giving them priority access and the opportunity to work on exciting questions in group papers. Finally, and more idealistically, the goal was to establish a culture of modern data management and data analysis in sedimentary geochemistry. Relative to many other fields, the main emphasis in our field has been on instrument measurement of sedimentary geochemical data rather than data analysis (compared with fields like ecology, for instance, where the post-experiment ANOVA (analysis of variance) is customary). Thus, the longer-term goal was to build a collaborative environment where geobiologists and geologists can work and learn together to assess changes in geochemical signatures through Earth history. With respect to the data product, SGP is focused on assembling a well-vetted and comprehensive dataset that is tractable to multivariate statistical analyses accounting for multiple geological and methodological biases. Phase 1 of the project, which focused on the Neoproterozoic and Paleozoic, has been completed. Future phases will capture a broader range of geologic time, data types, and geography. The database contains tens of thousands of unpublished data points provided by consortium members, as well as detailed metadata that go beyond what is contained in papers. In many cases, these represent measurements that are tangential to a given published study but still of high utility to database studies; these allow the community to address questions that would be impossible to answer solely with the published data. For instance, in order to use a proxy such as Mo/TOC (total organic carbon) ratios in mudrocks deposited under a euxinic water column, the full suite of trace metal, iron speciation, and total organic carbon data is needed. Likewise, geospatial information is required to account for sampling biases, and many statistical learning approaches cannot accept, or have difficulty with, incomplete geological predictor variables. Ultimately, it is this complete data matrix that will allow for SGP’s most insightful analyses.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-08-09
    Description: Ice formation and growth play a critical role in the initiation of precipitation. However, fundamental knowledge gaps in microphysical processes exist, for example, in the efficiency of diffusional growth of ice crystals, which leads to uncertainties in weather forecasts and climate projections. The CLOUDLAB project aims to bridge this gap by using supercooled stratus clouds as a natural laboratory for glaciogenic cloud seeding experiments. Ice nucleating particles (particles containing mainly silver iodide) are dispersed into these clouds via an Uncrewed Aerial Vehicle (UAV), triggering ice crystal formation and growth. The use of a UAV for seeding in conjunction with the persistent nature of stratus clouds enables repeated seeding experiments under similar and well-constrained initial conditions. So far, 50 seeding experiments with seeding temperatures between -10°C and -3°C were conducted in clouds over the Swiss plateau. The seeding-induced microphysical changes were monitored using in-situ and ground-based remote sensing equipment positioned 3-15 minutes downstream of the seeding location. The seeding plume had an extent of multiple hundreds of metres and was detected by increased reflectivity in the vertically pointing and scanning cloud radars (additional instrumentation was provided by TROPOS in the frame of the accompanying PolarCAP project). Simultaneously, high concentrations of small ice crystals were detected with a holographic imager mounted on a tethered balloon. The findings are contextualized with simulations using the numerical weather model (ICON).
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-08-30
    Description: The formation and growth of ice in clouds are essential for precipitation formation. Despite advances in our understanding of ice phase processes arising from laboratory and modeling studies, a major gap exists in representative in-situ field observations. CLOUDLAB aims to fill this gap by performing targeted glaciogenic cloud seeding experiments (using silver iodide injections) in supercooled, predominantly liquid stratus clouds over the Swiss Plateau to induce ice crystal formation and subsequent growth processes. Downwind of the seeding location, the freshly generated ice crystals are observed using two scanning cloud radars and a tethered balloon system equipped with an optical particle counter and holographic imager. The holographic imager captures phase-resolved information about the number, size, and spatial distributions of hydrometeors with high spatio-temporal resolution (〉6 µm, 40 Hz). We present in-situ and remote sensing data observed during a series of cloud seeding experiments. The ice crystal and aerosol number concentrations increased by several orders of magnitudes during the passage of the seeding plume. Simultaneously at the same location, the radar reflectivity increased by 10 to 20 dB compared to the unseeded background cloud. The observed ice crystals formed three to fifteen minutes before the detection and grew to a diameter of around 100-200 µm. We will also assess how the seeding influences the liquid phase (e.g. liquid water content, cloud droplet size) and answer the question: Does the seeding produce fully glaciated patches? This dataset provides unique insights into early-stage ice processes and broadens our understanding of precipitation formation.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-08-31
    Description: Low stratus clouds are a commonly occurring phenomenon over the Swiss Plateau during wintertime and can last up to several days. This almost stable characteristic is exploited in the CLOUDLAB project, which aims to gain a more profound understanding of ice crystal formation and growth by introducing seeding particles into a supercooled liquid cloud, thus initiating glaciation of the cloud. The seeding particles (silver iodide) are injected into the dynamically stable cloud from a drone enabling a highly precise and repetitive experimental setup. By observing the microphysical changes via an extensive observational setup of remote sensing and in-situ instrumentation, the low stratus clouds effectively serve as a natural laboratory for seeding experiments. To further our understanding of the occurring processes, we employ the ICON-NWP model in large-eddy mode with a horizontal resolution of up to 65 m to simulate the conducted experimental conditions. The existing two-moment microphysics scheme is supplemented by a seeding parameterization allowing us to mimic the ice nucleation behavior of the seeding particles. While it remains a challenge for numerical models to adequately represent low stratus, we successfully simulated several seeding experiments. Here, we present first comparisons between model simulations and observational data in the form of case studies and show the potential of ICON-NWP for interpreting our seeding signals.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-08-31
    Description: How cloud droplet activation and ice nucleation occur in clouds is still an open question that is important for predicting cloud occurrence, weather, and climate. More measurements in real clouds are vital to supplement laboratory studies to further our understanding of cloud microphysical processes. Here, we present results from CLOUDLAB, a field study deploying glaciogenic cloud seeding experiments, using a drone to release silver-iodide-containing particles into supercooled stratus clouds over the Swiss Plateau. We measure the downstream effects on aerosol and cloud particle populations in-situ with two portable optical particle spectrometers (POPS) mounted on a second drone and on a tethered balloon, as well as an in-situ holographic imager and ground-based remote-sensing instruments. With more than 50 in-cloud and 30 out-of-cloud experiments, covering a range of environmental conditions (temperature, wind speed, liquid water content), we address how the seeding material induces freezing in-cloud, specifically: Do the particles first activate into cloud droplets and then nucleate ice via immersion freezing, or do the particles collide with existing cloud droplets and cause contact freezing? By comparing POPS size distributions of the seeding material measured in- and out-of-cloud, at different distances from the seeding drone, we can identify how much hygroscopic growth occurs under different conditions to infer cloud droplet activation. Meanwhile, supporting in-situ cloud particle measurements and cloud radar reflectivity show the presence and extent of ice nucleation. These novel methods and data offer unique insights into cloud droplet activation and ice nucleation in real environmental conditions.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
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