988 resultados para LOW-LATITUDE GLACIATION
Resumo:
A novel bloom of the surf diatom Anaulus australis Drebes et Schultz was observed in subtropical waters off Surfers' Paradise, Queensland, Australia (27 degrees 55'S; 153 degrees 23'E) in early May 2000. This is the lowest latitude in which an Anaulus australis surf diatom bloom has been reported. Nitrogen stable isotope analysis of surf diatoms may indicate anthropogenic nutrient inputs in this environment.
Resumo:
Highly diverse radiolarian faunas of latest Maastrichtian to early Eocene age have been recovered from the low latitude realm in order to contribute to the clarification of radiolarian taxonomy, construct a zonation based on a discrete sequence of co-existence intervals of species ranging from the late Paleocene to early Eocene and to describe a rich low latitude latest Cretaceous to late Paleocene fauna. 225 samples of late Paleocene to early Eocene age have been collected from ODP Leg 171 B-Hole 1051 A (Blake Nose), DSDP Leg 43-Site 384 (Northwest Atlantic) and DSDP Leg 10-Sites 86, 94, 95, 96. Sequences consist of mainly pelagic oozes and chalks, with some clay and ash layers. A new imaging technique is devised to perform (in particular on topotypic material) both transmitted light microscopy and SEM imaging on individual radiolarian specimens. SEM precedes transmitted light imaging. Radiolarians are adhered to a cover slip (using nail varnish) which is secured to a stub using conductive levers. Specimens are then photographed in low vacuum (40-50Pa; 0.5mbar), which enables charge neutralization by ionized molecules of the chamber atmosphere. Thus gold coating is avoided and subsequently this allows transmitted light imaging to follow. The conductive levers are unscrewed and the cover slip is simply overturned and mounted with Canada balsam. In an attempt towards a post-Haeckelian classification, the initial spicule (Entactinaria), micro- or macrosphere (Spumellaria) and initial spicule and cephalis (Nassellaria) have been studied by slicing Entactinaria and Spumellaria, and by tilting Nassellaria in the SEM chamber. A new genus of the family Coccodiscidae is erected and Spongatractus HAECKEL is re-located to the subfamily Axopruinae. The biochronology has been carried out using the Unitary Association Method (Guex 1977, 1991). A database recording the occurrences of 112 species has been used to establish a succession of 22 Unitary Associations. Each association is correlated to chronostratigraphy via calcareous microfossils that were previously studied by other authors. The 22 UAs have been united into seven Unitary Associations Zones (UAZones) (JP10- JE4). The established zones permit to distinguish supplementary subdivisions within the existing zonation. The low-latitude Paleocene radiolarian zonation established by Sanfilippo and Nigrini (1998a) is incomplete due to the lack of radiolarian-bearing early Paleocene sediments. In order to contribute to the study of sparsely known low latitude early Paleocene faunas, 80 samples were taken from the highly siliceous Guayaquil Formation (Ecuador). The sequence consists of black cherts, shales, siliceous limestones and volcanic ash layers. The carbonate content increases up section. Age control is supplied by sporadic occurrences of silicified planktonic foraminifera casts. One Cretaceous zone and seven Paleocene zones have been identified. The existing zonation for the South Pacific can be applied to the early-early late Paleocene sequence, although certain marker species have significantly shorter ranges (notably Buryella foremanae and B. granulata). Despite missing marker species in the late Paleocene, faunal distribution correlates reasonably to the Low-Latitude zonation. An assemblage highly abundant in Lithomelissa, Lophophaena and Cycladophora in the upper RP6 zone (correlated by the presence of Pterocodon poculum, Circodiscus circularis, Pterocodon? sp. aff. P. tenellus and Stylotrochus nitidus) shows a close affinity to contemporaneous faunas reported from Site 1121, Campbell Plateau. Coupled with a high diatom abundance (notably Aulacodiscus spp. and Arachnoidiscus spp.), these faunas are interpreted as reflecting a period of enhanced biosiliceous productivity during the late Paleocene. The youngest sample is void of radiolarians, diatoms and sponge spicules yet contains many pyritized infaunal benthic foraminifera which are akin to the midway-type fauna. The presence of this fauna suggests deposition in a neritic environment. This is in contrast to the inferred bathyal slope depositional environment of the older Paleocene sediments and suggests a shoaling of the depositional environment which may be related to a coeval major accretionary event. RESUME DE LA THESE Des faunes de radiolaires de basses latitudes très diversifiées d'âge Maastrichtien terminal à Eocène inférieur, ont été étudiées afin de contribuer à la clarification de leur taxonomie, de construire une biozonation basée sur une séquence discrète d'intervalles de coexistence des espèces d'age Paléocène supérieur à Eocène inférieur et de décrire une riche faune de basse latitude allant du Crétacé terminal au Paléocène supérieur. L'étude de cette faune contribue particulièrement à la connaissance des insaisissables radiolaires de basses latitudes du Paléocène inférieur. 225 échantillons d'âge Paléocène supérieur à Eocène inférieur provenant des ODP Leg 171B-Site 1051A (Blake Nose), Leg DSDP 43-Site 384 (Atlantique Nord -Ouest) et des DSDP Leg 10 -Sites 86, 94, 95, 96, ont été étudiés. Ces séquences sont constituées principalement de « ooze » et de « chalks »pélagiques ainsi que de quelques niveaux de cendres et d'argiles. Une nouvelle technique d'imagerie a été conçue afin de pouvoir prendre conjointement des images en lumière transmise et au Microscope Electronique à Balayage (MEB) de spécimens individuels. Ceci à été particulièrement appliqué à l'étude des topotypes. L'imagerie MEB précède l'imagerie en lumière transmise. Les radiolaires sont collés sur une lame pour micropaléontologie (au moyen de vernis à ongles) qui est ensuite fixée à un porte-objet à l'aide de bras métalliques conducteurs. Les spécimens sont ensuite photographiés en vide partiel (40-50Pa; 0.5mbar), ce qui permet la neutralisation des charges électrostatiques dues à la présence de molécules ionisées dans l'atmosphère de la chambre d'observation. Ainsi la métallisation de l'échantillon avec de l'or n'est plus nécessaire et ceci permet l'observation ultérieure en lumière transmise. Les bras conducteurs sont ensuite dévissés et la lame est simplement retournée et immergée dans du baume du Canada. Dans une approche de classification post Haeckelienne, le spicule initial (Entactinaires), la micro- ou macro -sphère (Spumellaires) et le spicule initial et cephalis (Nassellaires) ont été étudiés. Ceci a nécessité le sectionnement d'Entactinaires et de Spumellaires, et de pivoter les Nassellaires dans la chambre d'observation du MEB. Un nouveau genre de la Famille des Coccodiscidae a été érigé et Spongatractus HAECKEL à été réassigné à la sous-famille des Axopruninae. L'analyse biostratigraphique à été effectuée à l'aide de la méthode des Associations Unitaires {Guex 1977, 1991). Une base de données enregistrant les présences de 112 espèces à été utilisée poux établir une succession de 22 Associations Unitaires. Chaque association est corrélée à la chronostratigraphie au moyen de microfossiles calcaires précédemment étudiés par d'autres auteurs. Les 22 UAs ont été combinées en sept Zones d'Associations Unitaires (UAZones) (JP10- JE4). Ces Zones permettent d'insérer des subdivisions supplémentaires dans la zonation actuelle. La zonation de basses latitudes du Paléocène établie par Sanfilippo et Nigrini (1998a) est incomplète due au manque de sédiments du Paléocène inférieur contenant des radiolaires. Afin de contribuer à l'étude des faunes peu connues des basses latitudes du Paléocène inférieur, 80 échantillons ont été prélevés d'une section siliceuse de la Formation de Guayaquil (Equateur). La séquence est composée de cherts noirs, de shales, de calcaires siliceux et de couches de cendres volcaniques. La fraction carbonatée augmente vers le haut de la section. Des contraintes chronologiques sont fournies par la présence sporadique de moules de foraminifères planctoniques. Une zone d'intervalles du Crétacé et sept du Paléocène ont été mises en évidence. Bien que certaines espèces marqueur ont des distributions remarquablement plus courtes (notamment Buryella foremanae et B. granulata), la zonation existante pour le Pacifique Sud est applicable à la séquence d'age Paléocène inférieure à Paléocène supérieur basal étudiée. Malgré l'absence d'espèces marqueur du Paléocène supérieur, la succession faunistique se corrèle raisonnablement avec la zonation pour les basses latitudes. Un assemblage contenant d'abondants représentant du genre Lithomelissa, Lophophaena et Cycladophora dans la zone RP6 (correlée par la présence de Pterocodon poculum, Circodiscus circularis, Pterocodon? sp. aff. P. tenellus et Stylotrochus nitidus) montre une grande similitude avec certaines faunes issues des hauts latitudes et d'age semblable décrites par Hollis (2002, Site 1121, Campbell Plateau). Ceci, en plus d'une abondance importante en diatomés (notamment Aulacodiscus spp. et Arachnoidiscus spp.) nous mènent à interpréter cette faune comme témoin d'un épisode de productivité biosiliceuse accrue dans le Paléocène supérieur. L'échantillon le plus jeune, dépourvu de radiolaires, de diatomés et de spicules d'éponge contient de nombreux foraminifères benthiques infaunaux pyritisés. Les espèces identifiées sont caractéristiques d'une faune de type midway. La présence de ces foraminifères suggère un environnement de type néritique. Ceci est en contraste avec l'environnement de pente bathyale caractérisent les sédiments sous-jacent. Cette séquence de diminution de la tranche d'eau peut être associée à un événement d'accrétion majeure. RESUME DE LA THESE (POUR LE GRAND PUBLIC) Les radiolaires constituent le groupe de plancton marin le plus divers et le plus largement répandu de l'enregistrement fossile. Un taux d'évolution rapide et une variation géographique considérable des populations font des radiolaires un outil de recherche sans égal pour la biostratigraphie et la paléocéanographie. Néanmoins, avant de pouvoir les utiliser comme outils de travail, il est essentiel d'établir une solide base taxonomique. L'étude des Radiolaires peut impliquer plusieurs techniques d'extraction, d'observation et d'imagerie qui sont dépendantes du degré d'altération diagénétique des spécimens. Le squelette initial, qu'il s'agisse d'un spicule initial (Entactinaria), d'une micro- ou macro -sphère (Spumellaria) ou d'un spicule initial et d'un cephalis (Nassellaria), est l'élément le plus constant au cours de l'évolution et devrait représenter le fondement de la systématique. Des échantillons provenant de carottes de basses latitudes du Deep Sea Drilling Project et de l' Ocean Drilling ont été étudiés. De nouvelles techniques d'imagerie et de sectionnement ont été développées sur des topotypes de radiolaires préservés en opale, dans le but d'étudier les caractéristiques de leur squelette initial qui n'étaient pas visibles dans leur illustration originale. Ceci aide entre autre à comparer des spécimens recristallisés en quartz, provenant de terrains accrétés, avec les holotypes en opale de la littérature. La distribution des espèces étudiés a fourni des données biostratigraphiques qui ont été compilées à l'aide de la méthode des Associations Unitaires (Guez 1977, 1991). Il s'agit d'un modèle mathématique déterministe conçu pour exploiter la totalité de l'assemblage plutôt que de se confiner à l'utilisation de taxons marqueurs individuels. Une séquence de 22 Associations Unitaires a été établie pour la période allant du Paléocène supérieur à l'Éocène inférieur. Chaque Association Unitaire a été corrélée à l'échelle de temps absolue à l'aide de microfossiles calcaires. Les 22 UAs ont été combinées en sept Zones d'Associations Unitaires (JP10- JE4). Ces Zones permettent d'insérer des subdivisions supplémentaires dans la zonation actuelle. Les radiolaires du Paléocène inférieur à moyen des basses latitudes sont rares. Les meilleures sections connues se trouvent dans les hautes latitudes (Nouvelle Zélande). Quelques assemblages épars ont été mentionnés par le passé en Californie, en Équateur et en Russie. Une séquence siliceuse de 190 mètres dans la Formation de Guayaquil (Équateur), s'étendant du Maastrichtien supérieur au Paléocène supérieur, a fourni des faunes relativement bien préservées. L'étude de ces faunes a permis de mettre en évidence la première séquence complète de radiolaires de basses latitudes dans le Paléocène inférieure. Huit zones allant du Crétacé terminal au Paléocène supérieur ont pu être appliqués et la présence de foraminifères planctoniques a fournie plusieurs points d'attache chronologiques. Dans le Paléocène supérieur, un riche assemblage contenant d'abondants diatomés et radiolaires ayant des similitudes faunistiques marquantes avec des assemblages de hautes latitudes de Nouvelle Zélande, témoigne d'un épisode de productivité biosiliceuse accrue pendant cette période. Étant donné que la pointe du continent sud-américain et l'Antarctique étaient plus proches au cours du Paléocène, ce phénomène peut être expliqué par le transport, le long de la côte ouest de l'Amérique du Sud, d'eaux riches en nutriments en provenance de l'Océan Antarctique. Suite à cet épisode, l'enregistrement en radiolaires est interrompu. Ceci peut être associé à des événements tectoniques régionaux qui ont eu pour effet de diminuer la tranche d'eau relative, rendant l'environnement plus favorable aux foraminifères benthiques qui sont abondamment présents dans l'échantillon le plus jeune de la séquence.
Resumo:
The late Paleocene - early Eocene sequences of DSDP Leg 10 Sites 86, 94, 95, and 96, Leg 43 Site 384 and ODP Leg 171B Hole 1051A have been re-sampled and re-examined for radiolarians. A new late Paleocene to early Eocene low-latitude radiolarian zonation suited for the correlation of accreted terranes is established by using the Unitary Association (UA) method. This method has the property of attributing equal weight to each species occurrence, which has the advantage of not being dependant on a limited set of key datums. Twenty-two UAs have been erected and correlated to the existing age models (given by nannofossils, planktonic foraminifera and radiolarians) for each site. The 22 UAs have been united into seven Unitary Associations Zones (UA Zones) (JP10-JE4) to increase lateral traceability. Herein we present the resulting composite range chart and correlation between the studied cores. The position of the UA Zones in the Paleogene timescale of.Berggren et al. (1995) have been estimated using a general consensus correlation with calcareous microfossil groups and the existing radiolarian zonation. Reproducible radiolarian events identified in the present work are bound to directly tied and compiled absolute ages given by Nigrini et al. (2006) and Sanfilippo and Nigrini (1998a). The RP zones (Sanfilippo and Nigrini 1998a) and the UA Zones are consistent. Unitary Associations permit to distinguish supplementary zonal subdivisions within RP7 and RP6. Topotypes from DSDP Leg 10 have been illustrated using mainly SEM imaging to facilitate the identification of re-crystallized forms.
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Population studies of unidentified EGRET sources suggest that there exist at least three different populations of galactic gamma-ray sources. One of these populations is formed by young objects distributed along the galactic plane with a strong concentration toward the inner spiral arms of the Galaxy. Variability, spectral and correlation analysis indicate that this population is not homogeneous. In particular, there is a subgroup of sources that display clear variability in their gamma-ray fluxes on timescales from days to months. Following the proposal by Kaufman Bernad\'o et al. (2002), we suggest that this group of sources might be high-mass microquasars, i.e. accreting black holes or neutron stars with relativistic jets and early-type stellar companions. We present detailed inhomogeneous models for the gamma-ray emission of these systems that include both external and synchrotron self-Compton interactions. We have included effects of interactions between the jet and all external photon fields to which it is exposed: companion star, accretion disk, and hot corona. We make broadband calculations to predict the spectral energy distribution of these objects from radio up to GeV energies. The results and predictions can be tested by present and future gamma-ray instruments like INTEGRAL, AGILE, and GLAST.
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Among the goals of the Brazilian soybean improvement programmes, the breeding strategies for cultivars adapted to low latitudes have been included to extend crop areas and to increase production. Seeds of nine Brazilian soybean cultivars adapted to low latitudes were investigated regarding to their composition, and amino acid and antinutritional/toxic protein contents. Protein (394.5 ± 13.1 to 445.3 ± 8.0 g kg-1 dry matter) and oil (200.6 ± 1.2 to 232.3 ± 4.7 g kg-1 dry matter) contents showed low correlation to each other (r = -0.06). The total carbohydrate (141.7 ± 6.1 to 211.1 ± 15.0 g kg-1 dry matter) and ash contents (48.2 ± 4.2 to 52.2 ± 0.5 g kg-1 dry matter) were similar to data available for other soybean cultivars. All soybean cultivars presented low levels of tryptophan and sulphur amino acids. The lectin (1,152 to 147,456 HU kg-1 flour), trypsin inhibitor (34.45 ± 2.28 to 77.62 ± 2.63 g trypsin inhibited kg-1 flour), toxin (6,210 ± 134 to 34,650 ± 110 LD50 kg-1 flour) and urease (0.74 ± 0.02 to 1.22 ± 0.10 g kg¹ flour) presented variations in their contents amongst the cultivars. Compared to other soybean cultivars, urease was higher, the acute toxicity lower and the lectin and trypsin inhibitor contents similar to data available. In general, soybean cultivars showed similar biochemical composition to those developed in different geographic regions. The relevance of these findings to the agronomic features and to choice of soybean cultivars to be used as food or feed is discussed.
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Under global warming, the predicted intensification of the global freshwater cycle will modify the net freshwater flux at the ocean surface. Since the freshwater flux maintains ocean salinity structures, changes to the density-driven ocean circulation are likely. A modified ocean circulation could further alter the climate, potentially allowing rapid changes, as seen in the past. The relevant feedback mechanisms and timescales are poorly understood in detail, however, especially at low latitudes where the effects of salinity are relatively subtle. In an attempt to resolve some of these outstanding issues, we present an investigation of the climate response of the low-latitude Pacific region to changes in freshwater forcing. Initiated from the present-day thermohaline structure, a control run of a coupled ocean-atmosphere general circulation model is compared with a perturbation run in which the net freshwater flux is prescribed to be zero over the ocean. Such an extreme experiment helps to elucidate the general adjustment mechanisms and their timescales. The atmospheric greenhouse gas concentrations are held constant, and we restrict our attention to the adjustment of the upper 1,000 m of the Pacific Ocean between 40°N and 40°S, over 100 years. In the perturbation run, changes to the surface buoyancy, near-surface vertical mixing and mixed-layer depth are established within 1 year. Subsequently, relative to the control run, the surface of the low-latitude Pacific Ocean in the perturbation run warms by an average of 0.6°C, and the interior cools by up to 1.1°C, after a few decades. This vertical re-arrangement of the ocean heat content is shown to be achieved by a gradual shutdown of the heat flux due to isopycnal (i.e. along surfaces of constant density) mixing, the vertical component of which is downwards at low latitudes. This heat transfer depends crucially upon the existence of density-compensating temperature and salinity gradients on isopycnal surfaces. The timescale of the thermal changes in the perturbation run is therefore set by the timescale for the decay of isopycnal salinity gradients in response to the eliminated freshwater forcing, which we demonstrate to be around 10-20 years. Such isopycnal heat flux changes may play a role in the response of the low-latitude climate to a future accelerated freshwater cycle. Specifically, the mechanism appears to represent a weak negative sea surface temperature feedback, which we speculate might partially shield from view the anthropogenically-forced global warming signal at low latitudes. Furthermore, since the surface freshwater flux is shown to play a role in determining the ocean's thermal structure, it follows that evaporation and/or precipitation biases in general circulation models are likely to cause sea surface temperature biases.
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Recent literature has described a “transition zone” between the average top of deep convection in the Tropics and the stratosphere. Here transport across this zone is investigated using an offline trajectory model. Particles were advected by the resolved winds from the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts reanalyses. For each boreal winter clusters of particles were released in the upper troposphere over the four main regions of tropical deep convection (Indonesia, central Pacific, South America, and Africa). Most particles remain in the troposphere, descending on average for every cluster. The horizontal components of 5-day trajectories are strongly influenced by the El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO), but the Lagrangian average descent does not have a clear ENSO signature. Tropopause crossing locations are first identified by recording events when trajectories from the same release regions cross the World Meteorological Organization lapse rate tropopause. Most crossing events occur 5–15 days after release, and 30-day trajectories are sufficiently long to estimate crossing number densities. In a further two experiments slight excursions across the lapse rate tropopause are differentiated from the drift deeper into the stratosphere by defining the “tropopause zone” as a layer bounded by the average potential temperature of the lapse rate tropopause and the profile temperature minimum. Transport upward across this zone is studied using forward trajectories released from the lower bound and back trajectories arriving at the upper bound. Histograms of particle potential temperature (θ) show marked differences between the transition zone, where there is a slow spread in θ values about a peak that shifts slowly upward, and the troposphere below 350 K. There forward trajectories experience slow radiative cooling interspersed with bursts of convective heating resulting in a well-mixed distribution. In contrast θ histograms for back trajectories arriving in the stratosphere have two distinct peaks just above 300 and 350 K, indicating the sharp change from rapid convective heating in the well-mixed troposphere to slow ascent in the transition zone. Although trajectories slowly cross the tropopause zone throughout the Tropics, all three experiments show that most trajectories reaching the stratosphere from the lower troposphere within 30 days do so over the west Pacific warm pool. This preferred location moves about 30°–50° farther east in an El Niño year (1982/83) and about 30° farther west in a La Niña year (1988/89). These results could have important implications for upper-troposphere–lower-stratosphere pollution and chemistry studies.
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We report a clear transition through a reconnection layer at the low-latitude magnetopause which shows a complete traversal across all reconnected field lines during northwestward interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) conditions. The associated plasma populations confirm details of the electron and ion mixing and the time history and acceleration through the current layer. This case has low magnetic shear with a strong guide field and the reconnection layer contains a single density depletion layer on the magnetosheath side which we suggest results from nearly field-aligned magnetosheath flows. Within the reconnection boundary layer, there are two plasma boundaries, close to the inferred separatrices on the magnetosphere and magnetosheath sides (Ssp and Ssh) and two boundaries associated with the Alfvén waves (or Rotational Discontinuities, RDsp and RDsh). The data are consistent with these being launched from the reconnection site and the plasma distributions are well ordered and suggestive of the time elapsed since reconnection of the field lines observed. In each sub-layer between the boundaries the plasma distribution is different and is centered around the current sheet, responsible for magnetosheath acceleration. We show evidence for a velocity dispersion effect in the electron anisotropy that is consistent with the time elapsed since reconnection. In addition, new evidence is presented for the occurrence of partial reflection of magnetosheath electrons at the magnetopause current layer.
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The launch of the Double Star mission has provided the opportunity to monitor events at distinct locations on the dayside magnetopause, in coordination with the quartet of Cluster spacecraft. We present results of two such coordinated studies. In the first, 6 April 2004, both Cluster and the Double Star TC-1 spacecraft were on outbound transits through the dawn-side magnetosphere. Cluster observed northward moving FTEs with +/- polarity, whereas TC-1 saw -/+ polarity FTEs. The strength, motion and occurrence of the FTE signatures changes somewhat according to changes in IMF clock angle. These observations are consistent with ongoing reconnection on the dayside magnetopause, resulting in a series of flux transfer events (FTEs) seen both at Cluster and TC-1. The observed polarity and motion of each FTE signature advocates the existence of an active reconnection region consistently located between the positions of Cluster and TC-1, lying north and south of the reconnection line, respectively. This scenario is supported by the application of a model, designed to track flux tube motion, to conditions appropriate for the prevailing interplanetary conditions. The results from the model confirm the observational evidence that the low-latitude FTE dynamics is sensitive to changes in convected upstream conditions. In particular, changing the interplanetary magnetic field (IMF) clock angle in the model predicts that TC-1 should miss the resulting FTEs more often than Cluster, as is observed. For the second conjunction, on the 4 Jan 2005, the Cluster and TC-1 spacecraft all exited the dusk-side magnetosphere almost simultaneously, with TC-1 lying almost equatorial and Cluster at northern latitudes at about 4 RE from TC-1. The spacecraft traverse the magnetopause during a strong reversal in the IMF from northward to southward and a number of magnetosheath FTE signatures are subsequently observed. One coordinated FTE, studied in detail by Pu et al, [this issue], carries and inflowing energetic electron population and shows a motion and orientation which is similar at all spacecraft and consistent with the predictions of the model for the flux tube dynamics, given a near sub-solar reconnection line. This event can be interpreted either as the passage of two parallel flux tubes arising from adjacent x-line positions, or as a crossing of a single flux tube at different positions.
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The destruction of the four Cluster craft was a major loss to the planned ISTP effort, of which studies of the magnetopause and low-latitude boundary layer (LLBL) were an important part. While awaiting the re-flight mission, Cluster-II, we have been applying advances in our understanding made using other ISTP craft (like Polar and Wind) and using ground-based facilities (in particular the EISCAT incoherent scatter radars and the SuperDARN HF coherent radars) to measurements of the LLBL made in 1984 and 1985 by the AMPTE-UKS and -IRM spacecraft pair. In particular, one unexplained result of the AMPTE mission was that the electron characteristics could, in nearly all cases, order independent measurements near the magnetopause, such as the magnetic field, ion temperatures and the plasma flow. Studies of the cusp have shown that the precipitation is ordered by the time-elapsed since the field line was opened by reconnection. This insight has allowed us to reanalyse the AMPTE data and show that the ordering by the transition parameter is also due to the variation of time elapsed since reconnection, with the important implication that reconnection usually coats most of the dayside magnetopause with at least some newly-opened field lines. In addition, we can use the electron characteristics to isolate features like RDs, slow-mode shocks and slow-mode expansion fans. The ion characteristics can be used to compute the reconnection rate. We here retrospectively apply these new techniques, developed in the ISTP era, to a much-studied flux transfer event observed by the AMPTE satellites. As a result, we gain new understanding of its cause and structure.
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We analyze of ion populations observed by the NOAA-12 satellite within dayside auroral transients. The data are matched with an open magnetopause model which allows for the transmission of magnetosheath ions across one or both of the two Alfvén waves which emanate from the magnetopause reconnection site. It also allows for reflection and acceleration of ions of magnetospheric origin by these waves. From the good agreement found between the model and the observations, we propose that the events and the low-latitude boundary precipitation are both on open field lines.
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A pass of the AMPTE-UKS satellite through the low-latitude boundary layer (LLBL) at 8:30 MLT is studied in detail. The magnetosheath field is predominantly northward. It is shown that multiple transitions through part or all of the layer of antisunward flow lead to overestimation of both the voltage across this layer and its width. The voltage is estimated to be only about 3 kV and this implies that the full LLBL is about 1200 km thick, consistent with previous studies.
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Ionospheric scintillations can seriously jeopardize the reliability of the GNSS signals and consequently can cause significant error or outage on precise positioning applications. The threat is most acute at low latitudes where ionospheric irregularities are more likely to occur resulting in L-band signal scintillations. This paper describes the effort made to model the ionospheric scintillations over the Latin American region in the frame of the CIGALA project funded by the European GNSS Supervisory Authority within the 7th Framework Programme of the European Commission. Comparisons between the low-latitude model of scintillations and observations are here presented and discussed within the project perspectives. © 2011 IEEE.
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Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico (CNPq)