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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: Understanding the crustal signature of impact ejecta contained in the Cretaceous/Tertiary (K/T) boundary layer is crucial to constraining the possible site(s) of the postulated K/T impact event. The relatively unaltered clastic constituents of the boundary layer at widely separated outcrops within the western interior of North America are not compatible with a single oceanic impact but require instead an impact site on a continent or continental margin. On the other hand, chemical compositions of highly altered K/T boundary layer components in some marine sections have suggested to others an impact into oceanic crust. We suspect that post-depositional alteration within the marine setting accounts for this apparent oceanic affinity. If, however, this is not the case, multiple simultaneous impacts, striking continent as well as ocean floor, would seem to be required.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: ; : Mathematical metho
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  • 2
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: This paper presents a new examination of the biogeochemical cycles of carbon as they may have changed between an Archean Earth deficient in land, sedimentary rocks, and biological activity, and a Proterozoic Earth much like the modern Earth, but lacking terrestrial life and carbonate-secreting plankton. Results of a numerical simulation of this transition show how increasing biological activity could have drawn down atmospheric carbon dioxide by extracting sedimentary organic carbon from the system. Increasing area of continents could further have drawn down carbon dioxide by encouraging the accumulation of carbonate sediments. An attempt to develop a numerical simulation of the carbon cycles of the Precambrian raises questions about sources and sinks of marine carbon and alkalinity on a world without continents. More information is needed about sea-floor weathering processes.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology (ISSN 0921-8181); p. 261-289.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The crystallization of ammonium sulfate solutions under very high supersaturation is investigated. The results imply that high saturation ratios can exist at least to 30 +/- 5 and possibly higher in smaller drops. Under certain atmospheric conditions highly supersaturated drops can persist at even lower temperatures and humidities.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
    Type: 1990 Conference on Cloud Physics; Jul 23, 1990 - Jul 27, 1990; San Francisco, CA; United States
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The interaction of the solar wind and the earth's magnetosphere is presently simulated by a 3D, time-dependent, global MHD method in order to model the magnetopause and magnetotail generation of magnetic flux ropes. It is noted that strongly twisted and localized magnetic flux tubes simular to magnetic flux ropes appear at the subpolar magnetopause when the IMF has a large azimuthal component, as well as a southward component. Plasmoids are generated in the magnetotail after the formation of a near-earth magnetic neutral line; the magnetic field lines have a helical structure that is connected from dawn to dusk.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The traditional 2D picture of plasmoid formation predicts the creation of closed loops, field lines closed on themselves, which are called magnetic islands. Examination of plasmoid formation in three dimensions led Hughes and Sibeck (1987) to the conclusion that a flux rope is formed instead of a magnetic island. A 2 1/2-dimensional flux rope model is here used to study the magnetic topology of plasmoids and examine the ability to distinguish between the two models using magnetometer data from a single satellite pass. Spacecraft data is simulated by sampling the magnetic field along a path through the model. The principal axis directions are strongly dependent on the path of a satellite through the structure. ISEE 3 magnetic field observations of plasmoids can be reproduced using a model of a flux rope with a significant axial component. It appears that principal axis analysis of magnetometer data of a single satellite pass is insufficient to differentiate between magnetic island and flux rope models, and can give misleading indications of the real axes of symmetry of the structure.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: On the basis of a 3D MHD simulation, the magnetic topology of a plasmoid that forms by a localized reconnection process in a magnetotail configuration (including a net dawn-dusk magnetic field component B sub y N is discussed. As a consequence of B sub y N not equalling 0, the plasmoid assumes a helical flux rope structure rather than an isolated island or bubble structure. Initially all field lines of the plasmoid flux rope remain connected with the earth, while at later times a gradually increasing amount of flux tubes becomes separated, connecting to either the distant boundary or to the flank boundaries. In this stage, topologically different flux tubes become tangled and wrapped around each other, consistent with predictions on the basis of an ad hoc plasmoid model.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: During the 1054 UT CDAW 6 substorm event, two ISEE spacecraft observed dynamic changes in the magnetic field and in the flux of energetic particles in the near-earth plasma sheet. In the substorm growth phase, the magnetic field at both ISEE spacecraft became tail-like. Following expansion phase onset, two small scale magnetic islands were observed moving tailward at a velocity of about 580 km/s. The passage of these two magnetic islands was coincident with bursts of tailward streaming energetic particles. The length of the magnetic loops was estimated to have been about 2 to 3 earth radii while the height of the loops was less than 0.5 earth radii. The magnetic islands were produced by multipoint reconnection processes in the near tail plasma sheet which may have been associated with the formation of the near-earth neutral line and the subsequent formation of a large scale plasmoid. The near-earth neutral line retreated tailward later in the expansion phase, as suggested by the reversal of the streaming of energetic particles.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 8
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: Magnetic field reconnection is a fundamental process that occurs in the magnetotail during geomagnetic substorms. Some 2D reconnection models predict the formation of a plasmoid, or closed loop of magnetic field lines, in the noon-midnight meridional plane at those times. When the 3D magnetotail magnetic field is considered, it becomes clear that reconnection produces a flux rope with an axis transverse to the earth-sun line. Three signatures mark both 2D plasmoids and 3D flux ropes: (1) a bipolar magnetic field signature, (2) tailward flow of a hot plasma, and (3) convecting isotropic energetic particle distributions. Plasmoids and flux ropes may be distinguished by (4) the axial magnetic field that only flux ropes possess. All four signatures have been identified in near-earth, middle, and distant magnetotail observations, but their interpretation is disputed. Thus, the existence of magnetotail flux ropes remains a controversial subject.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: The present investigation of the mapping of flux-transfer events (FTEs) onto the polar cap using the Toffoletto and Hill (1989) open version of Voigt's (1981) closed magnetic field model assumes that the magnetic flux associated with FTEs crosses the magnetopause through small regions of large normal components, whence these small flux tubes proceed to map to the polar cap ionosphere. It is found that while the footprint of a circular hole in the magnetopause of an otherwise closed magnetosphere becomes progressively distorted as the hole moves from the day to the night side, a similar region of enhanced open flux in an otherwise open magnetosphere retains an approximately circular footprint. Such regions, moving through the magnetosphere at a slower rate than the background, would generate the dipolar-electric field and current structures predicted by Southwood (1987).
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-08-28
    Description: Conjunctive measurements made by the Dynamics Explorer 1 and 2 spacecraft on October 22, 1981, under conditions of southward IMF, suggest the existence of a cusp ion injection from a region at the magnetopause with a scale size of about 1/2 to 1 earth radii. Current signatures observed by the LAPI and MAGB instruments on board DE-2 indicate the existence of a rotation in the magnetic field that is consistent with a filamentary current system. The observed current structure can be interpreted as the ionospheric signature of a flux transfer event (FTE). In addition to this large-scale current structure there exist three small-scale filamentary current pairs. These current pairs close locally and thus, if the present interpretation of this event as an FTE is correct, represent the first reported observations of FTE interior structure at low-altitudes.
    Keywords: GEOPHYSICS
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