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  • 1
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Dordrecht [u.a.] : Kluwer
    Call number: M 93.1059 ; AWI A6-92-0298 ; M 93.1094
    Description / Table of Contents: Atmospheric Tidal and Planetary Waves is written for workers in the fields of meteorology, climatology, aeronomy and space physics, and deals in a unified way with global scale dynamical processes within the lower, middle, and upper atmosphere. lrregular ultralong planetary waves with periods ranging from a few days to a few years are considered, as well as regular large-scale waves with basic periods of one (solar or lunar) day and one year, and the climatic mean flow (lumped together as tidal waves). The basic concept is the separation of the atmospheric flow into eigenmodes on a sphere (Hough functions). The sources and the meridional and vertical structure of these modes are discussed in detail, and Observations of tidal and planetary waves within the lower, middle, and upper atmosphere are interpreted in terms of Hough modes. The effects of nonlinear wave-wave interactions are outlined.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: X, 348 S. , graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9027726302
    Series Statement: Atmospheric sciences library 12
    Classification:
    Geodynamics
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents: Preface. - Chapter 1. lntroduction. - Chapter 2. Basic Equations. - 2.1. Hydrodynamic and Thermodynamic Equations. - 2.2. Equations of the Mean Flow. - 2.3. Equations of the Eddies. - 2.4. Energy Balance. - 2.5. Vorticity and Divergence. - 2.6. Linearization. - 2.7. Eliassen-Palm Flux. - 2.8. Ertel Potential Vorticity. - 2.9. Diffusive Separation of Atmospheric Constituents. - 2.10. Spherical Harmonics. - 2.11. Hermite Functions. - Chapter 3. External Energy Sources. - 3.1. Solar Irradiance. - 3.2. Solar Heat Input into Upper Atmosphere. - 3.3. Solar Heat Input into Lower and Middle Atmosphere. - 3.4. Lunar Gravitational Tidal Energy. - 3.5. Solar Wind Energy. - Chapter 4. Internal Energy Sources and Sinks. - 4.1. Eddy Viscosity. - 4.2. Eddy Heat Conduction. - 4.3. Latent Heat. - 4.4. Newtonian Cooling. - 4.5. Rayleigh Friction. - 4.6. Ion Drag. - 4.7. Feedback between Large-Scale Eddies and Mean Flow. - Chapter 5. Horizontal Modal Structure. - 5.1. Separation of Variables. - 5.2. Eigenvalues of Laplace's Equations. - 5.3. Gravity Waves. - 5.4. Rossby- Haurwitz Waves. - 5.5. Kelvin Waves and Yanai Waves. - 5.6. Low Frequency Waves with Positive Eigenvalues. - 5.7. Class Il Waves of Wavenumber m = 0. - 5.8. Diurnal Tides. - 5.9. Dynamo Action of Tidal Winds. - 5.10. Rossby Waves Migrating within Mean Zonal Flow. - 5.11. Influence of Zonal Mean Flow on Rossby-Haurwitz Waves. - 5.12. Salutions of Inhomogeneous Laplace Equations. - Chapter 6. Vertical Modal Structure. - 6.1. Characteristic Waves. - 6.2. Vertical Wavenumber. - 6.3. Particular Salutions. - 6.4. Boundary Conditions. - 6.5. Normal Modes. - 6.6. Height Structure of External Waves. - 6.7. Directly Driven Circulation Cells. - 6.8. Indirectly Driven Circulation Cells. - 6.9. Height Structure of Internal Waves. - 6.10. Impulsive Heat Input. - 6.11. Ray Tracing of Rossby Waves. - 6.12. Mode Conversion. - 6.13. Baroclinic Instability. - Chapter 7. Nonlinear Wave Propagation. - 7.1. Nonlinear Coupling between Rossby- Haurwitz Waves. - 7.2. Analytic Salutions for Weak Coupling of Rossby-Haurwitz Waves. - 7.3. Rossby- Haurwitz Wave Coupling in Realistic Mean Flow. - 7.4. Homogeneous and Isotropic Turbulence. - 7.5. Space-Time Analysis. - 7.6. Nonlinear Normal Mode Initialization. - 7.7. Lorenz Attractor. - 7.8. Logistic Difference Equation. - 7.9. Multiple Equilibria. - Chapter 8. Tidal Waves. - 8.1. Seasonal Tides within Lower and Middle Atmosphere (m = 0). - 8.2. Quasi-Stationary Seasonal Waves (m 〉 0). - 8.3. Climatic Mean Flow. - 8.4. Seasonal Tides within Upper Atmosphere. - 8.5. Migrating Solar Diurnal Tides within Lower and Middle Atmosphere. - 8.6. Migrating Solar Diurnal Tides within Upper Atmosphere. - 8.7. Nonmigrating Solar Diurnal Tides. - 8.8. Lunar Tides. - 8.9. Electromagnetic Effects of Tidal Waves. - 8.10. Energy and Momentum Deposition of Solar Diurnal Tides. - Chapter 9. Planetary Waves. - 9.1. Extratropical Transients. - 9.2. Southern Oscillation. - 9.3. Forty-Day Oscillations. - 9.4. Transients in the Tropical Middle Atmosphere. - 9.5. Fluctuations of Atmospheric Angular Momentum. - 9.6. Sudden Stratospheric Warnings. - 9.7. Thermospheric Response to Solar EUV Fluctuations. - 9.8. Thermospheric Storms. - 9.9. Solar Activity Effects within Middle and Lower Atmosphere. - Chapter 10. Epilogue. - References. - Subject Index.
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  • 2
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Tsukuba : The National Committee for Geodesy in Japan [u.a.]
    Call number: M 91.1268
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: S. 64-261
    Classification:
    Geodynamics
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Series available for loan
    Series available for loan
    Tulsa, Okla. : The American Association of Petroleum Geologists
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 9/S 90.0096(43) ; ILP/M06.0087
    In: Memoir
    In: Publication of the International Lithosphere Programme
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: VII, 198 S. : graph. Darst. + 30 Kt. in extra Bd.
    ISBN: 0891813209
    Series Statement: Memoir / The American Association of Petroleum Geologists 43
    Classification:
    Regional Geology
    Language: English
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  • 4
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Beijing : International Academic Publishers [u.a.]
    Call number: M 93.0444
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 258 S.
    ISBN: 7800030008
    Classification:
    Regional Geology
    Language: English
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  • 5
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Washington, D.C. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 11/M 92.0515 ; 11/M 93.0582
    In: Reviews in mineralogy
    Description / Table of Contents: Both mineralogy and geology began as macroscopic observational sciences. Toward the end of the 19th century, theoretical crystallography began to examine the microscopic consequences of translational symmetry, and with the advent of crystal structure analysis at the beginning of this century, the atomic (crystal) structure of minerals became accessible to us. Almost immediately, the results were used to explain at the qualitative level many of the macroscopic physical properties of minerals. However, it was soon realized that the (static) arrangement of atoms in a mineral is only one aspect of its constitution. Also of significance are its vibrational characteristics, electronic structure and magnetic properties, factors that play an even more important role when we come to consider the behavior of the minerals in dynamic processes. It was as probes of these types of properties that spectroscopy began to playa significant role in mineralogy. During the 1960's, a major effort in mineralogy involved the characterization of cation ordering in minerals, and this work began to have an impact in petrology via the thermodynamic modeling of inter- and intra-crystalline exchange. This period saw great expansion in the use of vibrational, optical and Mossbauer spectroscopies for such work. This trend continued into the 1970s, with increasing realization that adequate characterization of the structural chemistry of a mineral often requires several complementary spectroscopic and diffraction techniques. The last decade has seen the greatest expansion in the use of spectroscopy in the Earth Sciences. There has been a spate of new techniques (Magic Angle Spinning Nuclear Magnetic Resonance, Extended X-ray Absorption Fine-Structure and other synchrotron related techniques) and application of other more established methods (inelastic neutron scattering, Auger spectroscopy, photoelectron spectroscopy). Furthermore, scientific attention has been focused more on processes than on crystalline minerals, and the materials of interest have expanded to include glasses, silicate melts, gels, poorly-crystalline and amorphous phases, hydrothermal solutions and aqueous fluids. In addition, many of the important intereactions occur at surfaces or near surfaces, and consequently it is not just the properties and behavior of the bulk materials that are relevant. This is an exciting time to be doing Earth Sciences, particularly as the expansion in spectroscopic techniques and applications is enabling us to look at geochemical and geophysical processes in a much more fundamental way than was previously possible. However, the plethora of techniques is very forbidding to the neophyte, whether a graduate student or an experienced scientist from another field. There are an enormous number of texts in the field of spectroscopy. However, very few have a slant towards geological materials, and virtually none stress the integrated multi-technique approach that is necessary for use in geochemical and geophysical problems. I hope that this volume will fill this gap and provide a general introduction to the use of spectroscopic techniques in Earth Sciences. I thank all of the authors for trying to meet most of the deadlines associated with the production of this volume. It is my opinion that the primary function of this volume (and its associated Short Course) is instructive. With this in mind, I also thank each of the authors for the additional effort necessary to write a (relatively) brief but clear introduction to a very complex subject, and for good-humoredly accepting my requests to include more explanation and shorten their manuscripts. The authors of this volume presented a short course, entitled "Spectroscopic Methods in Mineralogy and Geology", May 13-15, 1988, in Hunt Valley, Maryland. The course was sandwiched between the first V.M. Goldschmidt-Conference, organized by the Geochemical Society and held at Hunt Valley, and the spring meeting of the American Geophysical Union, held in Baltimore.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xvi, 698 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-22-7 , 978-0-939950-22-5
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Series Statement: Reviews in mineralogy 18
    Classification:
    Regional Geology
    Language: English
    Note: Chapter 1. Introduction To Spectroscopic Methods by George Calas and Frank C. Hawthorne, p. 1 - 10 Chapter 2. Symmetry, Group Theory And Quantum Mechanics by Paul F. McMillan and Anthony C. Hess, p. 11 - 62 Chapter 3. Spectrum-Fitting Methods by Frank C. Hawthorne and Glenn A. Waychunas, p. 63 - 98 Chapter 4. Infrared And Raman Spectroscopy by Paul F. McMillan and Anne M. Hofmeister, p. 99 - 160 Chapter 5. Inelastic Neutron Scattering by Subrata Ghose, p. 161 - 192 Chapter 6. Vibrational Spectroscopy Of Hydrous Components by George R. Rossman, p. 193 - 206 Chapter 7. Optical Spectroscopy by George R. Rossman, p. 207 - 254 Chapter 8. Mossbauer Spectroscopy by Frank C. Hawthorne, p. 255 - 340 Chapter 9. MAS NMR Spectroscopy Of Minerals And Glasses by R. James Kirkpatrick, p. 341 - 404 Chapter 10. NMR Spectroscopy And Dynamic Processes In Mineralogy And Geochemistry by Jonathan F. Stebbins, p. 405 - 430 Chapter 11. X-Ray Absorption Spectroscopy: Applications In Mineralogy ind Geochemistry by Gordon E. Brown, Jr., George Calas, Glenn A. Waychunas and Jacqueline Petiau, p. 430 - 512 Chapter 12. Electron Paramagnetic Resonance by George Calas, p. 513 - 572 Chapter 13. Auger Electron And X-Ray Photelectron Spectroscopies by Micheal F.Hochella, Jr., p. 572 - 638 Chapter 14. Luminescence, X-Ray Emission and New Spectroscopies by Gless A. Waychunas, p. 639 - 698
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