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  • Bücher  (7)
  • Bücher (GFZ-OPAC)  (7)
  • Cambridge : Cambridge University Press  (7)
  • 2000-2004  (7)
  • AWI Bibliothek  (7)
  • RIFS Bibliothek
  • 1
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Signatur: AWI A6-04-0010
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xviii, 719 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Ausgabe: First published
    ISBN: 052100666X , 0-521-00666-X
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents Preface Part 1 Mathematical tools M 1 Algebra of vectors M 1.1 Basic concepts and definitions M 1.2 Reference frames M 1.3 Vector multiplication M 1.4 Reciprocal coordinate systems M 1.5 Vector representations M 1.6 Products of vectors in general coordinate systems M 1.7 Problems M 2 Vector functions M 2.1 Basic definitions and operations M 2.2 Special dyadics M 2.3 Principal-axis transformation of symmetric tensors M 2.4 Invariants of a dyadic M 2.5 Tensor algebra M 2.6 Problems M 3 Differential relations M 3.1 Differentiation of extensive functions M 3.2 The Hamilton operator in generalized coordinate systems M 3.3 The spatial derivative of the basis vectors M 3.4 Differential invariants in generalized coordinate systems M 3.5 Additional applications M 3.6 Problems M 4 Coordinate transformations M 4.1 Transformation relations of time-independent coordinate systems M 4.2 Transformation relations of time-dependent coordinate systems M 4.3 Problems M 5 The method of covariant differentiation M 5.1 Spatial differentiation of vectors and dyadics M 5.2 Time differentiation of vectors and dyadics M 5.3 The local dyadic of vP M 5.4 Problems M 6 Integral operations M 6.1 Curves, surfaces, and volumes in the general qi system M 6.2 Line integrals, surface integrals, and volume integrals M 6.3 Integral theorems M 6.4 Fluid lines, surfaces, and volumes M 6.5 Time differentiation of fluid integrals M 6.6 The general form of the budget equation M 6.7 Gauss' theorem and the Dirac delta function M 6.8 Solution of Poisson's differential equation M 6.9 Appendix: Remarks on Euclidian and Riemannian spaces M 6.10 Problems M 7 Introduction to the concepts of nonlinear dynamics M 7.1 One-dimensional flow M 7.2 Two-dimensional flow Part 2 Dynamics of the atmosphere 1 The laws of atmospheric motion 1.1 The equation of absolute motion 1.2 The energy budget in the absolute reference system 1.3 The geographical coordinate system 1.4 The equation of relative motion 1.5 The energy budget of the general relative system 1.6 The decomposition of the equation of motion 1.7 Problems 2 Scale analysis 2.1 An outline of the method 2.2 Practical formulation of the dimensionless flow numbers 2.3 Scale analysis of large-scale frictionless motion 2.4 The geostrophic wind and the Euier wind 2.5 The equation of motion on a tangential plane 2.6 Problems 3 The material and the local description of flow 3.1 The description of Lagrange 3.2 Lagrange's version of the continuity equation 3.3 An example of the use of Lagrangian coordinates 3.4 The local description of Euler 3.5 Transformation from the Eulerian to the Lagrangian system 3.6 Problems 4 Atmospheric flow fields 4.1 The velocity dyadic 4.2 The deformation of the continuum 4.3 Individual changes with time of geometric fluid configurations 4.4 Problems 5 The Navier-Stokes stress tensor 5.1 The general stress tensor 5.2 Equilibrium conditions in the stress field 5.3 Symmetry of the stress tensor 5.4 The frictional stress tensor and the deformation dyadic 5.5 Problems 6 The Helmholtz theorem 6.1 The three-dimensional Helmholtz theorem 6.2 The two-dimensional Helmholtz theorem 6.3 Problems 7 Kinematics of two-dimensional flow 7.1 Atmospheric flow fields 7.2 Two-dimensional streamlines and normals 7.3 Streamlines in a drifting coordinate system 7.4 Problems 8 Natural coordinates 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Differential definitions of the coordinate lines 8.3 Metric relationships 8.4 Blaton's equation 8.5 Individual and local time derivatives of the velocity 8.6 Differential invariants 8.7 The equation of motion for frictionless horizontal flow 8.8 The gradient wind relation 8.9 Problems 9 Boundary surfaces and boundary conditions 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Differential operations at discontinuity surfaces 9.3 Particle invariance at boundary surfaces, displacement velocities 9.4 The kinematic boundary-surface condition 9.5 The dynamic boundary-surface condition 9.6 The zeroth-order discontinuity surface 9.7 An example of a first-order discontinuity surface 9.8 Problems 10 Circulation and vorticity theorems 10.1 ErteFs form of the continuity equation 10.2 The baroclinic Weber transformation 10.3 The baroclinic Ertel-Rossby invariant 10.4 Circulation and vorticity theorems for frictionless baroclinic flow 10.5 Circulation and vorticity theorems for frictionless barotropic flow 10.6 Problems 11 Turbulent systems 11.1 Simple averages and fluctuations 11.2 Weighted averages and fluctuations 11.3 Averaging the individual time derivative and the budget operator 11.4 Integral means 11.5 Budget equations of the turbulent system 11.6 The energy budget of the turbulent system 11.7 Diagnostic and prognostic equations of turbulent systems 11.8 Production of entropy in the microturbulent system 11.9 Problems 12 An excursion into spectral turbulence theory 12.1 Fourier Representation of the continuity equation and the equation of motion 12.2 The budget equation for the amplitude of the kinetic energy 12.3 Isotropie conditions, the transition to the continuous wavenumber space 12.4 The Heisenberg spectrum 12.5 Relations for the Heisenberg exchange coefficient 12.6 A prognostic equation for the exchange coefficient 12.7 Concluding remarks on closure procedures 12.8 Problems 13 The atmospheric boundary layer 13.1 Introduction 13.2 Prandtl-layer theory 13.3 The Monin-Obukhov similarity theory of the neutral Prandtl layer 13.4 The Monin-Obukhov similarity theory of the diabatic Prandtl layer 13.5 Application of the Prandtl-layer theory in numerical prognostic models 13.6 The fluxes, the dissipation of energy, and the exchange coefficients 13.7 The interface condition at the earth's surface 13.8 The Ekman layer - the classical approach 13.9 The composite Ekman layer 13.10 Ekman pumping 13.11 Appendix A: Dimensional analysis 13.12 Appendix B: The mixing length 13.13 Problems 14 Wave motion in the atmosphere 14.1 The representation of waves 14.2 The group velocity 14.3 Perturbation theory 14.4 Pure sound waves 14.5 Sound waves and gravity waves 14.6 Lamb waves 14.7 Lee waves 14.8 Propagation of energy 14.9 External gravity waves 14.10 Internal gravity waves 14.11 Nonlinear waves in the atmosphere 14.12 Problems 15 The barotropic model 15.1 The basic assumptions of the barotropic model 15.2 The tinfiltered barotropic prediction model 15.3 The filtered barotropic model 15.4 Barotropic instability 15.5 The mechanism of barotropic development 15.6 Appendix 15.7 Problems 16 Rossby waves 16.1 One-and two-dimensional Rossby waves 16.2 Three-dimensional Rossby waves 16.3 Normal-mode considerations 16.4 Energy transport by Rossby waves 16.5 The influence of friction on the stationary Rossby wave 16.6 Barotropic equatorial waves 16.7 The principle of geostrophic adjustment 16.8 Appendix 16.9 Problems 17 Inertial and dynamic stability 17.1 Inertial motion in a horizontally homogeneous pressure field 17.2 Inertial motion in a homogeneous geostrophic wind field 17.3 Inertial motion in a geostrophic shear wind field 17.4 Derivation of the stability criteria in the geostrophic wind field 17.5 Sectorial stability and instability 17.6 Sectorial stability for normal atmospheric conditions 17.7 Sectorial stability and instability with permanent adaptation 17.8 Problems 18 The equation of motion in general coordinate systems 18.1 Introduction 18.2 The covariant equation of motion in general coordinate systems 18.3 The contravariant equation of motion in general 18.4 The equation of motion in orthogonal coordinate systems 18.5 Lagrange's equation of motion 18.6 Hamilton's equation of motion 18.7 Appendix 18.8 Problems 19 The geographical coordinate systems 19.1 The equation of motion 19.2 Application of Lagrange's equation of motion 19.3 The first metric simplification 19.4 The coordinate simplification 19.5 The continuity equation 19.6 Problems 20 The stereographic coordinate system 20.1 The stereographic projection 20.2 Metric forms in stereographic coordinates 20.
    Standort: AWI Lesesaal
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 2
    Signatur: 12/M 01.0453 ; AWI A3-01-0215 ; PIK N 071-01-0481 ; PIK N 071-0115 ; PIK N 071-02-0351 ; PIK N 071-01-0564
    In: Climate change 2001
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 881 S.
    Ausgabe: 1st publ.
    ISBN: 0521014956
    Klassifikation:
    Meteorologie und Klimatologie
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents: Foreword. - Preface. - Summary for Policymakers. - Technical Summary. - 1 The Climate System: an Overview. - 2 Observed Climate Variability and Change. - 3 The Carbon Cycle and Atmospheric Carbon Dioxide. - 4 Atmospheric Chemistry and Greenhouse Gases. - 5 Aerosols, their Direct and Indirect Effects. - 6 Radiative Forcing of Climate Change. - 7 Physical Climate Processes and Feedbacks. - 8 Model Evaluation. - 9 Projections of Future Climate Change. - 10 Regional Climate Information - Evaluation and Projections. - 11 Changes in Sea Level. - 12 Detection of Climate Change and Attribution of Causes. - 13 Climate Scenario Development. - 14 Advancing Our Understanding. - Appendix I Glossary. - Appendix II SRES Tables. - Appendix Ill Contributors to the IPCC WGI Third Assessment Report. - Appendix IV Reviewers of the IPCC WGI Third Assessment Report. - Appendix V Acronyms and Abbreviations. - Appendix VI Units. - Appendix VII Some Chemical Symbols used in this Report. - Appendix VIII Index.
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
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  • 3
    Signatur: M 01.0454/Regal 12 ; PIK N 071-01-0473 ; PIK N 071-01-0393 ; PIK N 071-01-0566 ; PIK N 071-05-0568 ; AWI A3-01-0216 ; PIK N 071-02-0349
    In: Climate change 2001
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 1032 S.
    Ausgabe: 1st publ.
    ISBN: 0521015006
    Serie: Climate change 2001
    Klassifikation:
    Meteorologie und Klimatologie
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Standort: Lesesaal
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: GFZ Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
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  • 4
    Signatur: AWI A6-04-0011 ; PIK N 456-03-0069
    In: Large-scale atmosphere-ocean dynamics, Volume 1
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Numerical weather prediction is a problem of mathematical physics. The complex flows in the atmosphere and oceans are modelled by the Navier-Stokes based equations of fluid mechanics together with classical thermodynamics. However, due to the enormous complexity of these equations, meteorologists and oceanographers appeal to asymptotic methods, variational principles and conservation laws to construct models of the dominant large-scale flows that control our weather. Simplified models are often amenable to analytical and numerical solution. The lectures in these volumes explain why such simplifications to Newton's second law produce accurate, useful models and, just as meteorologists seek patterns in the weather, mathematicians use geometrical thinking to understand the structure behind the governing equations. Here constrained Hamiltonian mechanics, transformation groups, and convex analysis are used to control the potentially chaotic dynamics in the numerical simulations, and to suggest optimal ways to exploit observational data. This book and its companion show how geometry and analysis quantify the concepts behind the fluid dynamics, and thus facilitate new solution strategies.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: xxx, 370 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 052180681X
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents: Contributors. - Preface. - Introduction and Scientific Background / J.C.R. Hunt, J. Norbury and I. Roulstone. - 1. A view of the equations of meteorological dynamics and various approximations / A. A. White. - 2. Extended-geostrophic Euler-Poincare models for mesoscale oceanographic flow / J. S. Allen, D. D. Holm and P. A. Newberger. - 3. Fast singular oscillating limits of stably-stratified 3D Euler and Navier-Stokes equations and ageostrophic wave fronts / A. Babin, A. Mahalov and B. Nicolaenko. - 4. New mathematical developments in atmosphere and ocean dynamics, and their application to computer simulations / M. J. P. Cullen. - 5. Rearrangements of functions with applications to meteorology and ideal fluid flow / R. J. Douglas. - 6. Statistical methods in atmospheric dynamics: probability metrics and discrepancy measures as a means of defining balance / S. Baigent and J. Norbury.
    Standort: AWI Lesesaal
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
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  • 5
    Signatur: PIK N 071-02-0097 ; AWI A3-02-0084
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 397 Seiten , Illustrationen , 28 cm
    ISBN: 0521015073
    Sprache: Englisch
    Anmerkung: Contents Foreword Preface Summary for Policymakers Synthesis Report Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 6 Question 7 Question 8 Question 9 Working Group Summaries Working Group I: The Scientific Basis Working Group II: Impacts, Adaptation, and Vulnerability Working Group III: Mitigation Annexes A. Authors and Expert Reviewers B. Glossary of Terms C. Acronyms, Abbreviations, and Units D. Scientific, Technical, and Socio-Economic Questions Selected by the Panel E. List of Major IPCC Reports
    Standort: A 18 - Bitte bestellen
    Zweigbibliothek: PIK Bibliothek
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
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  • 6
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Dazugehörige Bände
    Signatur: AWI A6-04-0031
    In: Cambridge monographs on applied and computational mathematics
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: XXVII, 499 S.
    ISBN: 0521453097
    Serie: Cambridge monographs on applied and computational mathematics 9
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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  • 7
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Monographie ausleihbar
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    Signatur: AWI A12-02-0102
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Contents: Preface. - 1 Evolution of the earth's atmosphere. - 2 Half-life, residence time, and renewal time of chemicals in the atmosphere. - 3 Present chemical composition of the atmosphere. - 4 Interactions of solar and terrestrial radiation with atmospheric trace gases and aerosols. - 5 Sources, transformations, transport , and sinks of chemicals in the troposphere. - 6 Atmospheric aerosols. - 7 Cloud and precipitation chemistry. - 8 Tropospheric chemical cycles. - 9 Air pollution. - 10 Stratospheric chemistry. - Appendix. - Index.
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Introduction to atmospheric chemistry is a concise, clear review of the fundamentals of atmospheric chemistry. In ten relatively brief chapters, it reviews our basic understanding of the chemistry of the earth's atmosphere and some outstanding environmental issues, including air pollution, acid rain, the ozone hole, and global change. Peter Hobbs is an eminent atmospheric science teacher, researcher, and author of several well-known textbooks. This text and Hobbs' other Cambridge University Press book, Basic physical chemistry for the atmospheric sciences, form ideal companion volumes for a full course of atmospheric chemistry. Subjects covered include evolution of the earth's atmosphere; interactions between solar and terrestrial radiation and atmospheric chemical species; sources, transformations, transport, and sinks of chemicals in the atmosphere; atmospheric gases and particles; cloud and precipitation chemistry; biogeochemical cycling; air pollution; and stratospheric chemistry. Student exercises are provided at the end of each chapter. The book is designed to be a primary textbook for a first university course in atmospheric chemistry and will be adopted in departments of atmospheric science, meteorology, environmental science, geophysics, and chemistry. It is also eminently suitable for self-instruction.
    Materialart: Monographie ausleihbar
    Seiten: X, 262 S. Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    Ausgabe: 1. publ.
    ISBN: 052177800X
    Zweigbibliothek: AWI Bibliothek
    Standort Signatur Erwartet Verfügbarkeit
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