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  • Books  (286)
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  • Berlin : Springer
  • Wabern : Federal Office of Topography, Swiss Geological Survey
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  • Books  (286)
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  • 1
    Call number: M 22.94778
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xii, 246 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme , 23.5 cm x 15.5 cm
    ISBN: 9783662641057 , 3662641054
    Language: English
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 2
    Call number: M 21. 94487
    Description / Table of Contents: Einführung -- Die Vermessung der Erde im Wandel der Zeit -- Die Geodäsie im 21. Jahrhundert – Globale Referenzsysteme und moderne geodätische Raumbeobachtungsverfahren -- Unser Planet im Fokus – Phänomene des globalen Wandels -- Gesellschaftliche Relevanz der hochgenauen Vermessung unseres Planeten aus dem Weltraum.
    Description / Table of Contents: Woher weiß Ihr Handy, wo Sie gerade unterwegs sind? Wie verändert sich unser Planet aufgrund von geodynamischen Prozessen und dem fortschreitenden Klimawandel? Wie können diese Veränderungen präzise aus dem Weltraum vermessen werden, um verlässliche Aussagen etwa über das Abschmelzen der Eisschilde oder die Bedrohung von Küstenregionen durch den steigenden Meeresspiegel zu erhalten? Das vorliegende Sachbuch gibt Antworten auf diese gesellschaftlich relevanten Fragen. Es richtet sich an interessierte Laien, die mehr über unseren faszinierenden Planeten erfahren wollen, aber auch an Fachexperten naturwissenschaftlicher Disziplinen. Sie werden mitgenommen auf eine spannende Zeitreise von den ersten Vermessungen in der Antike bis in das Zeitalter der Satelliten, die uns die weltweite Bestimmung von extrem genauen Positionen und eine globale Sicht auf unseren Heimatplaneten ermöglichen. Anhand anschaulicher Beispiele wird vermittelt, wie tief die globale Positionierung und Navigation mit Satelliten unseren Alltag durchdrungen haben, und welche fundamentalen Beiträge die Geodäsie als die Wissenschaft von der Vermessung der Erde zum Verständnis des Erdsystems und zur Bestimmung der Auswirkungen des Klimawandels liefert. Mit Interviewbeiträgen von Günter Hein, Harald Lesch und Stefan Rahmstorf Die Autoren Detlef Angermann ist promovierter Geodät und leitet den Bereich Referenzsysteme am Deutschen Geodätischen Forschungsinstitut der TU München. Roland Pail ist Professor für Astronomische und Physikalische Geodäsie an der TU München. Florian Seitz ist Professor für Geodätische Geodynamik und leitet das Deutsche Geodätische Forschungsinstitut der TU München. Urs Hugentobler ist Professor für Satellitengeodäsie und leitet die Forschungseinrichtung Satellitengeodäsie der TU München.
    Pages: XVI, 275 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783662623374
    URL: Cover
    Language: German
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 3
    Call number: PIK B 190-18-91863
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xi, 229 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme , 23.5 cm x 15.5 cm
    ISBN: 3662564181 , 9783662564189 , 9783662564196 (electronic)
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: Introduction ; Part 1: European Cities in Global Competition ; 1 Dynamic Competition in Space: Theoretical Models, Empirical Evidence, Political Challenges ; 2 Increasing the Innovative Capacity of European Cities: Making Use of Proven Concepts from the National Level ; Part 2: City Management and Direct Democracy ; 3 Open Government: Exploring Patterns of Mobile Interaction Between Citizens and Local Government ; 4 Building the Smart City: Leipzig ; 5 Location Communication in Leipzig and Thoughts About Destination Management ; Part 3: Success Factors in Global Competition Among Cities ; 6 Key Factors for Successful City Marketing: An Example from Münster ; 7 Strategies for Cities in Global Competition: An Essay on Spatial Economics and Management Science ; Part 4: Complementarity Between Region and City ; 8 The Significance of the Region for Urban Growth: The Example of Bonn and the Rhein-Sieg District ; 9 The Digital City: Using the Example of “Mönchengladbach on eBay” ; Part 5: Cost Efficiency in City Management ; 10 A Mechanism Design Approach to Planning Problems in Intermodal Transport Logistics of Large City Sea Ports and Megahubs
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 4
    Call number: IASS 16.90580
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xxiii, 426 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme , 23.5 cm x 15.5 cm, 0 g
    ISBN: 3662490439 , 9783662490433 , 9783662490457 (electronic)
    Language: English
    Branch Library: IASS
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  • 5
    Call number: PIK P 120-18-91341
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXI, 267 Seiten , 19 cm x 12.7 cm, 0 g
    ISBN: 366249776X , 9783662497760 , 9783662497777
    Language: German
    Note: Contents: Einleitung - um was geht es in diesem Buch?- Erster Teil: Energiewende - was steckt dahinter?- Drei Ziele der Energiewende - Beschreibung. Drei Ziele der Energiewende - Analyse. Vier Motive der Energiewende - Beschreibung. Vier Motive der Energiewende - Analyse. Rahmenbedingungen der Energiewende - Beschreibung. Rahmenbedingungen der Energiewende - Analyse. Systemische Folgen - Beschreibung -- Zweiter Teil: Energie-Wende - Wo stehen wir heute?- Einführung. Status quo 2015 - Ziele. Status quo 2015 - Motive. Status quo 2015 - Rahmenbedingungen. Status quo 2015 - Systemische Folgen. Zusammenfassung -- Dritter Teil: Energiewende - was kostet sie wirklich?- Einführung. Phase 1 der Energiewende (2000-2014). Phase 2 der Energiewende (2015-2030). Phase 3 der Energiewende (2030-2050). Zusammenfassung -- Vierter Teil: Energiewende - Bequeme und unbequeme Wahrheiten -- 10 Antworten
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
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  • 6
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI S4-18-91822
    In: Texts in computational science and engineering, 6
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXXI, 922Seiten , Illustrationen, graphische Darstellungen
    Edition: Fifth edition
    ISBN: 9783662498873 , 9783662498866
    Series Statement: Texts in computational science and engineering 6
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: 1 Computing with Formulas. - 1.1 The First Programming Encounter: a Formula. - 1.1.1 Using a Program as a Calculator. - 1.1.2 About Programs and Programming. - 1.1.3 Tools for Writing Programs. - 1.1.4 Writing and Running Your First Python Program. - 1.1.5 Warning About Typing Program Text. - 1.1.6 Verifying the Result. - 1.1.7 Using Variables. - 1.1.8 Names of Variables. - 1.1.9 Reserved Words in Python. - 1.1.10 Comments. - 1.1.11 Formatting Text and Numbers. - 1.2 Computer Science Glossary. - 1.3 Another Formula: Celsius-Fahrenheit Conversion. - 1.3.1 Potential Error: Integer Division. - 1.3.2 Objects in Python. - 1.3.3 Avoiding Integer Division. - 1.3.4 Arithmetic Operators and Precedence. - 1.4 Evaluating Standard Mathematical Functions. - 1.4.1 Example: Using the Square Root Function. - 1.4.2 Example: Computing with sinh x. - 1.4.3 A First Glimpse of Rounding Errors. - 1.5 Interactive Computing. - 1.5.1 Using the Python Shell. - 1.5.2 Type Conversion. - 1.5.3 IPython. - 1.6 Complex Numbers. - 1.6.1 Complex Arithmetics in Python. - 1.6.2 Complex Functions in Python. - 1.6.3 Unified Treatment of Complex and Real Functions. - 1.7 Symbolic Computing. - 1.7.1 Basic Differentiation and Integration. - 1.7.2 Equation Solving. - 1.7.3 Taylor Series and More. - 1.8 Summary. - 1.8.1 Chapter Topics. - 1.8.2 Example: Trajectory of a Ball. - 1.8.3 About Typesetting Conventions in This Book. - 1.9 Exercises. - 2 Loops and Lists. - 2.1 While Loops. - 2.1.1 A Naive Solution. - 2.1.2 While Loops. - 2.1.3 Boolean Expressions. - 2.1.4 Loop Implementation of a Sum. - 2.2 Lists. - 2.2.1 Basic List Operations. - 2.2.2 For Loops. - 2.3 Alternative Implementations with Lists and Loops. - 2.3.1 While Loop Implementation of a for Loop. - 2.3.2 The Range Construction. - 2.3.3 For Loops with List Indices. - 2.3.4 Changing List Elements. - 2.3.5 List Comprehension. - 2.3.6 Traversing Multiple Lists Simultaneously. - 2.4 Nested Lists. - 2.4.1 A table as a List of Rows or Columns. - 2.4.2 Printing Objects. - 2.4.3 Extracting Sublists. - 2.4.4 Traversing Nested Lists. - 2.5 Tuples. - 2.6 Summary. - 2.6.1 Chapter Topics. - 2.6.2 Example: Analyzing List Data. - 2.6.3 How to Find More Python Information. - 2.7 Exercises. - 3 Functions and Branching. - 3.1 Functions. - 3.1.1 Mathematical Functions as Python Functions. - 3.1.2 Understanding the Program Flow. - 3.1.3 Local and Global Variables. - 3.1.4 Multiple Arguments. - 3.1.5 Function Argument or Global Variable?. - 3.1.6 Beyond Mathematical Functions. - 3.1.7 Multiple Return Values. - 3.1.8 Computing Sums. - 3.1.9 Functions with No Return Values. - 3.1.10 Keyword Arguments. - 3.1.11 Doc Strings. - 3.1.12 Functions as Arguments to Functions. - 3.1.13 The Main Program. - 3.1.14 Lambda Functions. - 3.2 Branching. - 3.2.1 If-else Blocks. - 3.2.2 Inline if Tests. - 3.3 Mixing Loops, Branching, and Functions in Bioinformatics Examples. - 3.3.1 Counting Letters in DNA Strings. - 3.3.2 Efficiency Assessment. - 3.3.3 Verifying the Implementations. - 3.4 Summary. - 3.4.1 Chapter Topics. - 3.4.2 Example: Numerical Integration. - 3.5 Exercises. - 4 User Input and Error Handling. - 4.1 Asking Questions and Reading Answers. - 4.1.1 Reading Keyboard Input. - 4.2 Reading from the Command Line. - 4.2.1 Providing Input on the Command Line. - 4.2.2 A Variable Number of Command-Line Arguments. - 4.2.3 More on Command-Line Arguments. - 4.3 Turning User Text into Live Objects. - 4.3.1 The Magic Eval Function. - 4.3.2 The Magic Exec Function. - 4.3.3 Turning String Expressions into Functions. - 4.4 Option-Value Pairs on the Command Line. - 4.4.1 Basic Usage of the Argparse Module. - 4.4.2 Mathematical Expressions as Values. - 4.5 Reading Data from File. - 4.5.1 Reading a File Line by Line. - 4.5.2 Alternative Ways of Reading a File. - 4.5.3 Reading a Mixture of Text and Numbers. - 4.6 Writing Data to File. - 4.6.1 Example: Writing a Table to File. - 4.6.2 Standard Input and Output as File Objects. - 4.6.3 What is a File, Really?. - 4.7 Handling Errors. - 4.7.1 Exception Handling. - 4.7.2 Raising Exceptions. - 4.8 A Glimpse of Graphical User Interfaces. - 4.9 Making Modules. - 4.9.1 Example: Interest on Bank Deposits. - 4.9.2 Collecting Functions in a Module File. - 4.9.3 Test Block. - 4.9.4 Verification of the Module Code. - 4.9.5 Getting Input Data. - 4.9.6 Doc Strings in Modules. - 4.9.7 Using Modules. - 4.9.8 Distributing Modules. - 4.9.9 Making Software Available on the Internet. - 4.10 Making Code for Python 2 and 3. - 4.10.1 Basic Differences Between Python 2 and 3. - 4.10.2 Turning Python 2 Code into Python 3 Code. - 4.11 Summary. - 4.11.1 Chapter Topics. - 4.11.2 Example: Bisection Root Finding. - 4.12 Exercises. - 5 Array Computing and Curve Plotting. - 5.1 Vectors. - 5.1.1 The Vector Concept. - 5.1.2 Mathematical Operations on Vectors. - 5.1.3 Vector Arithmetics and Vector Functions. - 5.2 Arrays in Python Programs. - 5.2.1 Using Lists for Collecting Function Data. - 5.2.2 Basics of Numerical Python Arrays. - 5.2.3 Computing Coordinates and Function Values. - 5.2.4 Vectorization. - 5.3 Curve Plotting. - 5.3.1 MATLAB-Style Plotting with Matplotlib. - 5.3.2 Matplotlib; Pyplot Prefix. - 5.3.3 SciTools and Easyviz. - 5.3.4 Making Animations. - 5.3.5 Making Videos. - 5.3.6 Curve Plots in Pure Text. - 5.4 Plotting Difficulties. - 5.4.1 Piecewisely Defined Functions. - 5.4.2 Rapidly Varying Functions. - 5.5 More Advanced Vectorization of Functions. - 5.5.1 Vectorization of StringFunction Objects. - 5.5.2 Vectorization of the Heaviside Function. - 5.5.3 Vectorization of a Hat Function. - 5.6 More on Numerical Python Arrays. - 5.6.1 Copying Arrays. - 5.6.2 In-Place Arithmetics. - 5.6.3 Allocating Arrays. - 5.6.4 Generalized Indexing. - 5.6.5 Testing for the Array Type. - 5.6.6 Compact Syntax for Array Generation. - 5.6.7 Shape Manipulation. - 5.7 High-Performance Computing with Arrays. - 5.7.1 Scalar Implementation. - 5.7.2 Vectorized Implementation. - 5.7.3 Memory-Saving Implementation. - 5.7.4 Analysis of Memory Usage. - 5.7.5 Analysis of the CPU Time. - 5.8 Higher-Dimensional Arrays. - 5.8.1 Matrices and Arrays. - 5.8.2 Two-Dimensional Numerical Python Arrays. - 5.8.3 Array Computing. - 5.8.4 Matrix Objects. - 5.9 Some Common Linear Algebra Operations. - 5.9.1 Inverse, Determinant, and Eigenvalues. - 5.9.2 Products. - 5.9.3 Norms. - 5.9.4 Sum and Extreme Values. - 5.9.5 Indexing. - 5.9.6 Transpose and Upper/Lower Triangular Parts. - 5.9.7 Solving Linear Systems. - 5.9.8 Matrix Row and Column Operations. - 5.9.9 Computing the Rank of a Matrix. - 5.9.10 Symbolic Linear Algebra. - 5.10 Plotting of Scalar and Vector Fields. - 5.10.1 Installation. - 5.10.2 Surface Plots. - 5.10.3 Parameterized Curve. - 5.10.4 Contour Lines. - 5.10.5 The Gradient Vector Field. - 5.11 Matplotlib. - 5.11.1 Surface Plots. - 5.11.2 Contour Plots. - 5.11.3 Vector Field Plots. - 5.12 Mayavi. - 5.12.1 Surface Plots. - 5.12.2 Contour Plots. - 5.12.3 Vector Field Plots. - 5.12.4 A 3D Scalar Field and Its Gradient Field. - 5.12.5 Animations. - 5.13 Summary. - 5.13.1 Chapter Topics. - 5.13.2 Example: Animating a Function. - 5.14 Exercises. - 6 Dictionaries and Strings. - 6.1 Dictionaries. - 6.1.1 Making Dictionaries. - 6.1.2 Dictionary Operations. - 6.1.3 Example: Polynomials as Dictionaries. - 6.1.4 Dictionaries with Default Values and Ordering. - 6.1.5 Example: Storing File Data in Dictionaries. - 6.1.6 Example: Storing File Data in Nested Dictionaries. - 6.1.7 Example: Reading and Plotting Data Recorded at Specific Dates. - 6.2 Strings. - 6.2.1 Common Operations on Strings. - 6.2.2 Example: Reading Pairs of Numbers. - 6.2.3 Example: Reading Coordinates. - 6.3 Reading Data fromWeb Pages. - 6.3.1 About Web Pages. - 6.3.2 How to Access Web Pages
    Location: AWI Reading room
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  • 7
    Call number: 15/S 02.0237 ; 15/S 02.0237(22) 2. Ex.
    In: Geotechnologien science report
    Description / Table of Contents: Joint Research Project CO2MAN (CO2MAN Reservoir Management): Continuation of Research and Development Work for CO2 Storage at the Ketzin Pilot SiteMONACO - Monitoring Approach for Geological CO2 Storage Sites Using a Hierarchical Observation Concept -- Advances in Stable Isotope Monitoring of Injected CO2 Under Elevated Pressures, Temperatures and Salinities: Selected Results from the Project CO2ISO-LABEL -- CO2BioPerm - Influence of Bio-Geochemical CO2-Transforrmation Processes on the Long-Term Permeability -- Seismic and Sub-seismic Deformation Prediction in the Context of Geological Carbon Trapping and Storage -- Long-Term Safety of Well Abandonment: First Results from Large Scale Laboratory Experiments (COBRA) -- "CO2RINA" - CO2 storage Risk Integrated Analysis -- Saltwater Monitoring Using Long-Electrode ERT -- Carbon Dioxide Storage in Eastern Brandenburg: Implications for Synergetic Geothermal Heat Recovery and Conceptualization of an Early Warning System Against Freshwater Salinization - BRINE -- Combined Natural and Social Science Approach for Regional-Scale Characterisation of CO2 Storage Formations and Brine Migration Risks (CO2Brim) -- Chances for and Limitations of Acceptance for CCS in Germany.
    Description / Table of Contents: This book explores the industrial use of secure, permanent storage technologies for carbon dioxide (CO2), especially geological CO2 storage. Readers are invited to discover how this greenhouse gas could be spared from permanent release into the atmosphere through storage in deep rock formations. Themes explored here include CO2 reservoir management, caprock formation, bio-chemical processes and fluid migration. Particular attention is given to groundwater protection, the improvement of sensor technology, borehole seals and cement quality. A collaborative work by scientists and industrial partners, this volume presents original research, it investigates several aspects of innovative technologies for medium-term use and it includes a detailed risk analysis. Coal-based power generation, energy consuming industrial processes (such as steel and cement) and the burning of biomass all result in carbon dioxide. Those involved in such industries who are considering geological storage of CO2, as well as earth scientists and engineers will value this book and the innovative monitoring methods described. Researchers in the field of computer imaging and pattern recognition will also find something of interest in these chapters.
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: X, 245 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt.
    ISBN: 9783319139296
    Series Statement: Geotechnologien science report 22
    Classification:
    Geophysical Deep Sounding
    Location: Reading room
    Location: Reading room
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  • 8
    Call number: 15/S 02.0237(21) ; 15/S 02.0237(21) / 2.Ex. ; 15/S 02.0237(21) / 3. Ex.
    In: Geotechnologien science report
    Description / Table of Contents: Content: 4D Spectral Electrical Impedance Tomography (EIT) a diagnostic imaging tool f the characterization of subsurface structures and processes (4D-EIT).- From Airborne Data Inversion to In-Depth Analysis (AIDA).- Monitoring and Imaging based on Interferometric Concepts (MIIC).- Mining Environments: Continuous Monitoring and Simultaneous Inversion (MINE).- Three-dimensional Multi-Scale and Multi-Method Inversion to Determine the Electrical Conductivity Distribution of the Subsurface Using Parallel Computing Architectures (Multi-EM).- Multi-Scale S-Wave Tomography for Exploration and Risk Assessment of Development Sites (MuSaWa).- Seismic Observations for Underground Development (SOUND).- Toolbox for Applied Seismic Tomography (TOAST).- Tomographic Methods in Hydrogeology (TOMOME).
    Type of Medium: Series available for loan
    Pages: x, 176 S.
    ISBN: 9783319042046
    Series Statement: Geotechnologien science report 21
    Location: Reading room
    Location: Reading room
    Location: Reading room
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  • 9
    Call number: 7/M 20.93442
    Description / Table of Contents: This book provides a comprehensive and advanced overview of the basic theory of thermal remote sensing and its application in hydrology, agriculture, and forestry. Specifically, the book highlights the main theory, assumptions, advantages, drawbacks, and perspectives of these methods for the retrieval and validation of surface temperature/emissivity and evapotranspiration from thermal infrared remote sensing. It will be an especially valuable resource for students, researchers, experts, and decision-makers whose interest focuses on the retrieval and validation of surface temperature/emissivity, the estimation and validation of evapotranspiration at satellite pixel scale, and the application of thermal remote sensing. Both Prof. Huajun Tang and Prof. Zhao-Liang Li work at the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (CAAS), China
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXI, 281 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783642420269 (print) , 9783642420276
    Series Statement: Springer Remote Sensing / Photogrammetry
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1 Introduction 2 Basic theory of quantitative remote sensing 3 Radiometric calibration in thermal infrared 4. Retrieval of land surface emissivity from remotely sensed data 5. Land surface temperature retrieval from thermal infrared data 6. Estimation and validation of evapotranspiration from thermal infrared remote sensing data 7. Application of thermal remote sensing in agriculture drought monitoring and thermal anomaly detection 8. Future development and perspectives Index.
    Location: Upper compact magazine
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  • 10
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: M 13.0090
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 43 S. , 260 mm x 193 mm
    ISBN: 3642346049 , 978-3-642-34604-0
    Series Statement: acatech IMPULS
    Location: Upper compact magazine
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  • 11
    Call number: M 13.0140
    Description / Table of Contents: Anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions, energy security and sustainability are three of the greatest contemporary global challenges today. This year the Sino-German Cooperation Group "Underground Storage of CO2 and Energy", is meeting on the 21-23 May 2013 for the second time in Goslar, Germany, to convene its 3rd Sino-German conference on the theme "Clean Energy Systems in the Subsurface: Production, Storage and Conversion". This volume is a collection of diverse quality scientific works from different perspectives elucidating on the current developments in CO2 geologic sequestration research to reduce greenhouse emissions including measures to monitor surface leakage, groundwater quality and the integrity of caprock, while ensuring a sufficient supply of clean energy. The contributions herein have been structured into 6 major thematic research themes:Integrated Energy and Environmental Utilization of Geo-reservoirs: Law, Risk Management & MonitoringCO2 for Enhanced Gas and Oil Recovery, Coal Bedded Methane and Geothermal SystemsTrapping Mechanisms and Multi-Barrier Sealing Systems for Long-Term CO2 StorageCoupled THMC-Processes and Numerical ModellingRock Mechanical Behaviour Considering Cyclic Loading, Dilatancy, Damage, Self-sealing and HealingUnderground Storage and Supply of Energy"Clean energy systems in the subsurface" will be invaluable to researchers, scientists and experts in both academia and industry trying to find a long lasting solution to the problems of global climate change, energy security and sustainability.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 380 S. : Ill., graph. Darst., Kt. , 235 mm x 155 mm
    ISBN: 9783642378485
    Series Statement: Springer Series in Geomechanics and Geoengineering
    Classification:
    Engineering
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  • 12
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: IASS 16.90586
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXIX, 411 S. , graph. Darst.
    Edition: 4. ed.
    ISBN: 3642345972 , 9783642345975 , 9783642345982 (electronic)
    Series Statement: WMU studies in maritime affairs 1
    Language: English
    Branch Library: IASS
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  • 13
    Call number: M 18.92011
    In: Data assimilation for atmospheric, oceanic and hydrologic applications
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xix, 730 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 978-3-642-35087-0
    Series Statement: Data assimilation for atmospheric, oceanic and hydrologic applications Vol. II
    Language: English
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 14
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: AWI G3-13-0054
    Description / Table of Contents: Permafrost hydrology systematically elucidates the roles of seasonally and perennially frozen ground on the distribution, storage and flow of water. Cold regions of the world are subject to mounting development which significantly affects the physical environment. Climate change, natural or human-induced, reinforces the impacts. Knowledge of surface and ground water processes operating in permafrost terrain is fundamental to planning, management and conservation. This book is an indispensable reference for libraries and researchers, an information source for practitioners, and a valuable text for training the next generations of cold region scientists and engineers.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 563 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten (teilweise farbig)
    ISBN: 9783642234613
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: 1 Introduction. - 1.1 The world cold regions. - 1.2 Water in frozen soils. - 1.3 Permafrost. - 1.3.1 Definitions. - 1.3.2. Distribution. - 1.3.3. Factors influencing permafrost occurence. - 1.4 Permafrost and hydrology. - 1.4.1 Permafrost hydrology. - 1.4.2 Hydrologic behavior of seasonal frost and permafrost. - 1.5 Environments of permafrost regions. - 1.5.1 Hydroclimatology. - 1.5.2 Geology. - 1.5.3 Glaciation. - 1.5.4 Physiography. - 1.5.5 Vegetation. - 1.5.6 Peat cover. - 1.6 Presentation of the book. - 2 Moisture and heat. - 2.1 Precipitation. - 2.1.1 General pattern. - 2.1.2 Cyclones. - 2.1.3 Recycling. - 2.1.4 Trace precipitation. - 2.2 Surface energy balance. - 2.3 Evaporation. - 2.3.1 Eddy Fluctuation Method. - 2.3.2 Aerodynamic method. - 2.3.3 Bowen Ratio Method. - 2.3.4 Priestley and Taylor Method. - 2.4 Energy balance of the active layer. - 2.4.1 Energy Balance. - 2.4.2 Thermal conductivity and heat capacity. - 2.5 Ground temperature. - 2.5.1 Penetration of temperature waves. - 2.5.2 Frost table development. - 2.6 Heat and moisture flows in frozen soils. - 2.6.1 Stefan's Algorithm. - 2.6.2 Near-Surface ground temperature. - 2.6.3 Moisture migration and ice lens formation. - 2.7 Ground ice. - 2.7.1 Types of ground ice. - 2.7.2 Excess ice. - 3 Groundwater. - 3.1 Groundwater occurence in permafrost. - 3.1.1 Suprapermafrost groundwater. - 3.1.2 Intrapermafrost groundwater. - 3.1.3 Subpermafrost groundwater. - 3.2 Groundwater recharge and circulation. - 3.2.1 Recharge. - 3.2.2 Groundwater movement. - 3.3 Groundwater discharge. - 3.3.1 Seeps. - 3.3.2 Springs. - 3.3.3 Baseflow. - 3.3.4 Ponds and lakes. - 3.4 Icings. - 3.4.1 Ground and spring icings. - 3.4.2 River icings. - 3.4.3 Icing dimension. - 3.4.4 Icing problems. - 3.5 Domed ice features. - 3.5.1 Frost mounds and icing mounds. - 3.5.2 Pingos. - References. - 4 Snow cover. - 4.1 Snow accumulation. - 4.1.1 Winter precipitation. - 4.1.2 Blowing snow. - 4.1.3 Terrain heterogeneity. - 4.1.4 Vegetation cover. - 4.2 Characteristics of the snow cover. - 4.2.1 Snow temperature and insulation. - 4.2.2 Snow metamorphism. - 4.2.3 Snow stratigraphy. - 4.3 Snowmelt processes. - 4.3.1 Radiation melt. - 4.3.2 Turbulent fluxes melt. - 4.3.3 Other melt terms. - 4.4 Snowmelt in permafrost areas. - 4.4.1 Tundra and Barren areas. - 4.4.2 Dirty snow. - 4.4.3 Shrub fields. - 4.4.4 Forests. - 4.5 Meltwater movement in snow. - 4.5.1 Dry snow. - 4.5.2 Wet snow. - References. - 5 Active layer dynamics. - 5.1 Freeze-back and winter periods. - 5.1.1 Snow cover and ground freezing. - 5.1.2 Moisture flux and ice formation. - 5.1.3 Vapor flux from soil to snow. - 5.2 Snowmelt period. - 5.2.1 Snowmelt and basal ice. - 5.2.2 Infiltration into frozen soil. - 5.2.3 Soil warming. - 5.2.4 Surface saturation, evaporation and runoff. - 5.3 Summer. - 5.3.1 Active layer thaw. - 5.3.2 Summer precipitation. - 5.3.3 Evaporation. - 5.3.4 Rainwater infiltration. - 5.3.5 Soil moisture. - 5.3.6 Groundwater. - References. - 6 Slope processes. - 6.1 Flow paths. - 6.1.1 Flow paths in snow. - 6.1.2 Surface and subsurface flows. - 6.1.3 Flow in bedrock areas. - 6.1.4 Flow in unconsolidated materials. - 6.2 Water sources. - 6.3 Factors influencing slope runoff generation. - 6.3.1 Microclimatic control. - 6.3.2 Topographic influence. - 6.3.3 Importance of the Frost table. - 6.3.4 Roles of organic materials. - 6.3.5 Bedrock control. - 6.4 Basin slopes in permafrost regions. - 6.4.1 High Arctic slopes. - 6.4.2 Low Arctic slopes. - 6.4.3 Subarctic slopes. - 6.4.4 Alpine permafrost zones. - 6.4.5 Precambrian bedrock terrain. - 6.5 Concepts for basin flow generation. - 6.5.1 Variable source area and fill-and-spill concepts. - 6.5.2 Heterogenous slopes. - References. - 7 Cold lakes. - 7.1 Types of lake. - 7.2 Lake ice. - 7.2.1 Lake ice regime. - 7.2.2 Ice formation and growth. - 7.2.3 Ice decay. - 7.3 Lake circulation. - 7.4 Hydrologic inputs. - 7.5 Lake evaporation. - 7.6 Lake outflow. - 7.6.1 Outflow conditions. - 7.6.2 Fill-and-Spill concept and lake outflow. - 7.7 Lake level. - 7.8 Large lakes. - 7.9 Permafrost and lakes. - References. - 8 Northern wetlands. - 8.1 Wetlands in permafrost regions. - 8.2 Factors favoring wetland occurence. - 8.2.1 Climate. - 8.2.2 Topography. - 8.2.3 Stratigraphy. - 8.2.4 Other factors. - 8.3 Hydrogeomorphic features in wetlands. - 8.3.1 Bog-related features. - 8.3.2 Fen-related features. - 8.3.3 Marshes and swamps. - 8.3.4 Shallow water bodies. - 8.4 Hydrologic behavior of wetlands. - 8.4.1 Seasonality of hydrologic activities. - 8.4.2 Wetland storage. - 8.4.3 Flow paths. - 8.4.4 Application of Fill-and-Spill concept. - 8.5 Patchy arctic wetlands. - 8.5.1 Wetlands maintained by snowmelt. - 8.5.2 Groundwater-fed wetlands. - 8.5.3 Valley bottom fens. - 8.5.4 Wetlands due to lateral inundation. - 8.5.5 Tundra ponds. - 8.5.6 Lake-fed and lake-bed wetlands. - 8.6 Extensive wetlands. - 8.6.1 Wet terrain. - 8.6.2 Ice-wedge polygon fields. - 8.6.3 Coastal plains. - 8.6.4 Deltas. - 8.6.5 Subarctic continental wetlands. - 8.7 Wetlands, permafrost and disturbances. - References. - 9 Rivers in cold regions. - 9.1 Drainage patterns. - 9.2 In-valley conditions. - 9.2.1 Geological setting for channels. - 9.2.2 River ice. - 9.2.3 River icing. - 9.2.4 In-channel snow. - 9.2.5 Permafrost. - 9.2.6 Alluvial environment. - 9.3 In-channel hydrology. - 9.3.1 Lateral inflow. - 9.3.2 Channel inflow. - 9.3.3 Vertical water exchanges. - 9.3.4 Storage in channels. - 9.4 Flow connectivity and delivery. - 9.4.1 Flow network integration. - 9.4.2 Decoupling of flow network. - 9.4.3 Flow delivery. - References. - 10 Basin hydrology. - 10.1 Basin outflow generation. - 10.1.1 The roles of snow. - 10.1.2 Meltwater from glaciers. - 10.1.3 Rainfall contribution. - 10.1.4 Groundwater supply. - 10.1.5 Evaporation losses. - 10.1.6 Permafrost effects. - 10.1.7 Consequences of basin storage. - 10.2 Streamflow hydrograph. - 10.3 Streamflow regimes. - 10.3.1 Nival regime. - 10.3.2 Proglacial regime. - 10.3.3 Pluvial regime. - 10.3.4 Spring-fed Regime. - 10.3.5 Prolacustrine regime. - 10.3.6 Wetland regime. - 10.4 Streamflow in large basins. - 10.4.1 Scaling up to large rivers. - 10.4.2 Flow generation in a large basin: the Liard river. - 10.4.3 Regulated discharge of large rivers. - 10.4.4 Flow in a sub-continental scale basin: Mackenzie basin. - 10.5 Basin water balance. - 10.5.1 Considerations in water balance investigation. - 10.5.2 Regional tendencies. - 10.5.3 Examples from permafrost environments. - 10.6 Permafrost basin hydrology: general remarks. - References. - Appendices. - Index.
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  • 15
    Call number: AWI A3-20-93592
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xxxiii, 613 Seiten , Illustrationen , 42 mm x 170 mm
    Edition: Second edition
    ISBN: 978-3-642-13918-0
    Series Statement: Springer praxis books environmental sciences
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface Preface to the First Edition List of figures Abbreviations 1 Historical perspective (Roland A. Madden and Paul R. Julian) 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The intraseasonal, tropospheric oscillation 1.3 The elementary 4-D structure 1.4 Other early studies of the oscillation 1.5 The oscillation in 1979 1.6 Complexity of cloud movement and structure 1.7 Seasonal variations in the oscillation 1.8 The oscillation in the zonal average 1.9 Other effects of the oscillation 1.10 Summary 1.11 References 2 South Asian monsoon (B. N. Goswami) 2.1 Introduction 2.1.1 South Asian summer monsoon and active/break cycles 2.1.2 Amplitude and temporal and spatial scales 2.1.3 Regional propagation characteristics 2.1.4 Relationship between poleward-propagating ISOs and monsoon onset 2.1.5 Relationship with the MJO 2.2 Mechanism for temporal-scale selection and propagation 2.2.1 30 to 60-day mode 2.2.2 10 to 20-day mode 2.3 Air-sea interactions 2.4 Clustering of synoptic events by ISOs 2.5 Monsoon ISOs and predictability of the seasonal mean 2.6 Aerosols and monsoon ISOs 2.7 Predictability and prediction of monsoon ISOs 2.8 Summary and discussion 2.9 Acknowledgments 2.10 Appendix 2.11 References 3 Intraseasonal variability of the atmosphere-ocean-climate system: East Asian monsoon (Huang-Hsiung Hsu) 3.1 Introduction 3.2 General characteristics of EA/WNP monsoon flow 3.3 Periodicity, seasonality, and regionality 3.4 Intraseasonal oscillation propagation tendency 3.5 Relationship with monsoon onsets and breaks 3.6 The 10 to 30-day and 30 to 60-day boreal summer ISO 3.6.1 The 30 to 60-day northward/northwestward-propagating pattern 3.6.2 The 10 to 30-day westward-propagating pattern 3.7 Relationship with tropical cyclone activity 3.8 Upscale effect of TC and synoptic systems 3.9 Final remarks 3.9.1 Close association with the EA/WNP monsoon 3.9.2 The CISO vs. interannual variability 3.9.3 Multiperiodicities and multiscale interaction 3.9.4 Others 3.10 References 4 Pan America (Kingtse C. Mo, Charles Jones, and Julia Nogues Paegle) 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Variations in the IS band 4.3 IS variability in December-March 4.3.1 EOF modes 4.3.2 The Madden Julian Oscillation 4.3.3 The submonthly oscillation 4.4 IS variability in June-September 4.4.1 EOF modes 4.4.2 Madden-Julian Oscillation 4.4.3 Submonthly oscillation 4.5 Intraseasonal modulation of hurricanes 4.6 Summary 4.7 References 5 Australasian monsoon (M. C. Wheeler and J. L. McBride) 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Seasonal cycle of background flow 5.3 Broadband intraseasonal behavior: Bursts and breaks 5.4 Broadband intraseasonal behavior: Spectral analysis 5.5 Meteorology of the bursts and breaks 5.6 Characteristics and influence of the MJO 5.7 1983/1984 and 1987/1988 case studies 5.8 MJO influence on monsoon onset 5.9 Other modes and sources of ISV 5.10 Modulation of tropical cyclones 5.11 Extratropical-tropical interaction 5.12 Prediction 5.13 Conclusions 5.14 References 6 The oceans (William S. Kessler) 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Heat fluxes 6.2.1 Salinity and the barrier layer 6.2.2 A 1-D heat balance? 6.2.3 The role of advection 6.3 Vertical structure under westerly winds 6.4 Remote signatures of wind-forced Kelvin waves 6.5 El Nino and rectification of ISV 6.6 ISV in the Indian Ocean 6.6.1 Differences between the Indian and Pacific Ocean warm pools and their consequences 6.6.2 Oscillations lasting about 60 days in the western equatorial Indian Ocean 6.6.3 Recent models of wind-forced ISV in the Indian Ocean 6.7 Other intrinsic oceanic ISV 6.7.1 Global ISV 6.7.2 Non-TISO-forced ISV in the tropical Indo-Pacific 6.7.3 ISV outside the equatorial Indo-Pacific 6.8 Conclusion 6.9 References 7 Air-sea interaction (Harry Hendori) 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Air-sea fluxes for the eastward MJO 7.3 Air-sea fluxes associated with northward propagation in the Indian summer monsoon 7.4 SST variability 7.5 Mechanisms of SST variability 7.6 SST-atmosphere feedback 7.7 Impact of slow SST variations on MJO activity 7.8 Concluding remarks 7.9 Acknowledgments 7.10 References 8 Mass, momentum, and geodynamics (Benjamin F. Chao and David A. Salstein) 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Angular momentum variations and Earth rotation 8.2.1 Length-of-day variation and axial angular momentum 8.2.2 Polar motion excitation and equatorial angular momentum 8.2.3 Angular momentum and torques 8.3 Time-variable gravity 8.4 Geocenter motion 8.5 Conclusions 8.6 Acknowledgments 8.7 References 9 El Nino Southern Oscillation connection (William K. M. Lau) 9.1 Introduction 9.2 A historical perspective 9.3 Phase 1: The embryonic stage 9.3.1 OLR time-longitude sections 9.3.2 Seasonality 9.3.3 Supercloud clusters 9.3.4 Early modeling framework 9.4 Phase 2: The exploratory stage 9.4.1 MJO and ENSO interactions 9.4.2 WWEs 9.5 Phase 3: ENSO case studies 9.5.1 El Nino of 1997/1998 9.5.2 Stochastic forcings 9.6 Phase-4: Recent development 9.6.1 A new ISO index 9.6.2 Composite events 9.6.3 The ISV-ENSO biennial rhythm 9.7 TISV and predictability 9.8 Acknowledgments 9.9 References 10 Theories (Bin Wang) 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Review of ISO theories 10.2.1 Wave CISK 10.2.2 Wind-evaporation feedback or WISHE 10.2.3 Frictional convergence instability (FCI) 10.2.4 Cloud-radiation feedback 10.2.5 Convection-water vapor feedback and the moisture mode 10.2.6 Multiscale interaction theory 10.2.7 Mechanisms of the boreal summer intraseasonal oscillation 10.2.8 Atmosphere-ocean interaction 10.3 A general theoretical framework 10.3.1 Fundamental physical processes 10.3.2 Governing equations 10.3.3 Boundary layer dynamics near the equator 10.3.4 The 1.5-layer model for the MJO 10.3.5 The 2.5-layer model including the effects of basic flows 10.4 Dynamics of the MJO 10.4.1 Low-frequency equatorial waves and the associated Ekman pumping 10.4.2 Frictional convergence instability (FCI) 10.4.3 FCI mode under nonlinear heating 10.4.4 The role of multiscale interaction (MSI) in MJO dynamics 10.5 Dynamics of boreal summer ISO 10.5.1 Effects of mean flows on the ISO 10.5.2 Mechanism of northward propagation 10.6 Role played by atmospheric-ocean interaction 10.7 Summary and discussion 10.7.1 Understanding gained from the FCI theory 10.7.2 Model limitations 10.7.3 Outstanding issues 10.8 Acknowledgments 10.9 References 11 Modeling intraseasonal variability (K. R. Sperber, J. M. Slingo, and P. M. Inness) 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Modeling the MJO in boreal winter 11.2.1 Interannual and decadal variability of the MJO 11.2.2 Sensitivity to formulation of the atmospheric model 11.2.3 Modeling the MJO as a coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon 11.3 Boreal summer intraseasonal variability 11.3.1 GCM simulations 11.3.2 Air-sea interaction and boreal summer intraseasonal variability 11.3.3 Modeling studies of the links between boreal summer intraseasonal and interannual variability 11.4 The impact of vertical resolution in the upper ocean 11.5 Concluding remarks 11.6 Acknowledgments 11.7 References 12 Predictability and forecasting (Duane Waliser) 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Empirical models 12.3 Dynamical forecast models 12.4 Predictability 12.5 Real time forecasts 12.6 Discussion 12.7 Appendix 12.8 Acknowledgments 12.9 References 13 Africa and West Asia (Mathew Barlow) 13.1 Overview 13.2 Summary of Africa research 13.2.1 West Africa 13.2.2 Eastern Africa 13.2.3 Southern Africa 13.3 Summary of West Asia research 13.4 Station data analysis 13.4.1 Methodology and data 13.4.2 Nairobi 13.4.3 Riyadh 13.5 Relevance of Gill-Matsuno dynamics and the role of mean wind 13.6 Summary and discussion 13.7 References 14 Tropical-extratropical interactions (Paul E. Roundy) 14.1 Introduction 14.2 A boreal winter composite of the global flow associated with the MJO 14.3 Response of the global atmosphere to heating in tropical convection 14.4 Influence of extratropical waves on tropical convection 14.5 Two-way interactions between the tropics and extratropics 14.6 MJO inf
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  • 16
    Call number: M 11.0188 ; AWI G1-11-0076
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VII, 197 Seiten , Illustrationen , 235 mm x 155 mm
    ISBN: 9783642194771 , 978-3-642-19477-1
    Series Statement: Forschungsberichte / Interdisziplinäre Arbeitsgruppen, Berlin-Brandenburgische Akademie der Wissenschaften Band 26
    Classification:
    Meteorology and Climatology
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt Vorwort Einleitung / Sonja Germer, Matthias Naumann, Oliver Bens Zur gegenwärtigen Situation der Fokusregion Berlin-Brandenburg / Sonja Germer, Matthias Naumann, Oliver Bens I. Umweltwandel und die Folgen für den Landschaftswasserhaushalt Einleitung / Sonja Germer, Barbara Köstner, Herbert Sukopp, Jost Heintzenberg Temperaturaufzeichnungen in Berlin für die letzten 310 Jahre / Ulrich Cubasch, Christopher Kadow Simulation des gegenwärtigen und zukünftigen Regionalklimas von Brandenburg / Eberhard Schaller Simulation von Wasserhaushaltskomponenten unter dem Wandel des regionalen Klimas / Barbara Köstner, Matthias Kuhnert Reaktionen von Seeökosystemen auf Umweltveränderungen / Michael Hupfer, Brigitte Nixdorf, Klement Tockner Anthropogene Einflussfaktoren des Landschaftswasserhaushalts / Gunnar Lischeid Wasserhaushaltliche und wasserwirtschaftliche Bilanzen / Uwe Grünewald Kernaussagen / Barbara Köstner, Sonja Germer, Jost Heintzenberg II. Wandel von Landnutzungen und deren Konsequenzen für Wasserressourcen Einleitung / Inge Broer, Alfred Pühler, Mihaiela Rus Regionale Landwirtschaft im globalen Wandel / Konrad Hagedorn Den Rahmen setzen für die Entwicklung der Kulturlandschaften von morgen. Regionale Antworten auf globale Herausforderungen finden / Werner Konold Strategien zum Integrierten Land- und Wasserressourcenmanagement im märkischen Feuchtgebietsgürtel Oderbruch-Havelland / Joachim Quast Wassermanagement in der Landwirtschaft / Katrin Drastig, Annette Prochnow, Reiner Brunsch Waldbewirtschaftung unter den Bedingungen des Klimawandels in Brandenburg / Ralf Kätzel, Klaus Höppner Erzeugung und Verbrauch von landwirtschaftlichen Produkten aus Brandenburg in Berlin / Hans Kögl Neue Entwicklungen in der Pflanzenzüchtung und Systembetrachtungen der Pflanze-Umwelt-Interaktion / Inge Broer, Reiner Brunsch Kernaussagen / Inge Broer, Alfred Pühler, Mihaiela Rus III. Infrastrukturen neu denken: gesellschaftliche Funktionen und Weiterentwicklung / Eva Barlösius, Karl-Dieter Keim, Georg Meran, Timothy Moss, Claudia Neu Gegenwärtige Situation der Infrastrukturen Ausgangspunkt: LandInnovation Leistungen der Infrastrukturen in der Vergangenheit Wasser- und Bildungsinfrastrukturen: Gemeinsamkeiten und Unterschiede Kernaussagen über Infrastrukturen IV. Handeln unter Bedingungen des globalen Wandels / Sonja Germer, Karl-Dieter Keim, Matthias Naumann, Oliver Bens, Rolf Emmermann, Reinhard F. Hüttl Übergeordnete Herausforderungen des globalen Wandels Brückenprinzipien als Handlungsorientierung für den Umgang mit dem globalen Wandel Stärkung der interdisziplinären Forschung und des Transfers Abbildungsverzeichnis Tabellenverzeichnis Verzeichnis der Autorinnen und Autoren Verzeichnis der Mitglieder der interdisziplinären Arbeitsgruppe Globaler Wandel – Regionale Entwicklung Verzeichnis der Diskussionspapiere der interdisziplinären Arbeitsgruppe Globaler Wandel – Regionale Entwicklung
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  • 17
    Call number: M 11.0311
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Grundlagen.- Modellierungssprachen.- UML und Dialekte.- SoaML.- BPMN.- Modellierungswerkzeuge.- MID Innovator.- AndroMDA.- Eclipse.- Generatoren.- oAW.- JAVA.- .NET.- Plattform.- SOPERA.- MDA & MDSD.- Methodik.- Modellierungs-Methodik M(3).- Das Beispiel - Übersicht über alle Phasen.- Initiation: Geschäftsprozessmodellierung mit BPMN.- Evaluation: Analyse und BPEL.- Architecture Projection: Komponenten für SOA und EJB.- SoaML: Servicemodellierung.- JEE: Komponenten, die Services implementieren.- Construction und Deployment: Generierung und Plattformen.- Automatisierung: M2M-Transformationen.- Dokumentation generieren.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 432 S. , Ill. , 232 mm x 155 mm
    ISBN: 9783642144691
    Series Statement: Xpert.press
    Classification:
    Informatics
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  • 18
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 4/M 11.0235
    Description / Table of Contents: Content: Part I The Main Players. Rifted Margins: Building Blocks of Later Collision. - Intra-oceanic Subduction Zones. - The Subductability of Continental Lithosphere:The Before and After Story. - The Seismic Structure of Island Arc Crust. - Vertical Stratification of Composition, Density, and InferredMagmatic Processes in Exposed Arc Crustal Sections. - The Generation and Preservation of Mineral Deposits in Arc Continent Collision Environments. - Part II Specific Examples of Arc-Continent Collision: The Nature of the Banda Arc Continent Collisionin the Timor Region. - The Arc Continent Collision in Taiwan. - Early Eocene Arc Continent Collision in Kamchatka, Russia:Structural Evolution and Geodynamic Model. - The Asia Kohistan India Collision: Review and Discussion. - Processes of Arc Continent Collision in the Uralides. - The Record of Ordovician Arc Arc and Arc Continent Collisions in the Canadian Appalachians During the Closure of Iapetus. - Arc Continent Collision in the Ordovician of Western Ireland: Stratigraphic, Structural and Metamorphic Evolution. - Multiple Arc Development in the Paleoproterozoic Wopmay Orogen, Northwest Canada. - Part III Models of Arc-Continent Collision Processes: The Origin of Obducted Large-Slab Ophiolite Complexes. - Physical Modeling of Arc Continent Collision: A Reviewof 2D, 3D, Purely Mechanical and Thermo Mechanical Experimental Models. - Part IV Putting it All Together: Arc Continent Collision: The Making of an Orogen
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIII, 493 S. : farb. Ill., und graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783540885573
    Series Statement: Frontiers in earth sciences
    Classification:
    Tectonics
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  • 19
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 20-2/M 12.0176
    Description / Table of Contents: Content: - Preface- Structure of Microbial Mats and Biofilms "Exopolymer Microdomains" as a Structuring Agent for Heterogeneity Within Microbial Biofilms- On Stromatolite Lamination- Bacterial calcification- Bacterial Roles in the Precipitation of Carbonate Minerals- Bacterially Induced Microscale and Nanoscale Carbonate Precipitates- Calcification in Cyanobacteria Cyanobacteria: Architects of Sedimentary Structures Fungi and Sediments- Diatoms and Benthic Microbial Carbonates- Carbon Isotopes and Microbial Sediments- Sulphur Isotopes and Microbial Sulphur- Cycling in Sediments Products and Depth Limits of Microbial Activity in Petroliferous Subsurface Settings- Microbe-metal Interactions in Sediments Microbial- Phosphate Sediment Microbes and Black Shales Organic and Biogeochemical Patterns in Cryptic Microbialites Subaerial- Microbial Mats and Their Effects on Soil and Rock Microbial Sediments in Tropical Karst Terrains: A Model Based on the Cayman Islands- Ambient Temperature- Freshwater Microbial- Tufas Microbial Precipitates Around Continental Hot Springs and Geysers- Evaporite Microbial Sediments- Gypsum Microbial Sediments: Neogene and Modern Examples- Siliciclastic Intertidal Microbial Sediments Subaqueous Siliciclastic Stromatolites. A Case Study from Late Miocene- Beach Deposits in the Sorbas Basin of SE Spain- Shallow Marine Microbial Carbonate Deposits- Microbial Whitings- Cold Seep Carbonates in the Tertiary Of North-West Italy: Evidence of Bacterial Degradation of Methane Processes and Products Fueled by Hydrocarbons At Submarine Seeps- Microbial Contribution to Reefal Mud Mounds in Ancient Deep-Water Settings: Evidence from the Cambrian Mesozoic Reefal Thrombolites and Other Microbolites Proterozoic- Stromatolite Taxonomy and Biostratigraphy- Microbial Versus Environmental Influences on the Morphology of Late Archean- Fenestrated Microbialites- Archean Stromatolites As Microbial Archives- Index.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 332 S. , 357 schw.-w. Ill., 30 farb. Ill., 12 schw.-w. Tab
    ISBN: 9783642082757 , 3-642-08275-0
    Classification:
    D.8.
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  • 20
    Call number: 5/M 18.91297
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 482 S. , Ill., graph. Darst. , 24 cm
    Edition: 3rd, enl. ed.
    ISBN: 9783642058295 , 3642058299 , 3540206175
    URL: Cover
    Classification:
    Geophysics
    Language: English
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  • 21
    Call number: 19/M 09.0027
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: 1 Introduction.- 2 Basic Settings and Spherical Nomenclature.- 3 Scalar Spherical Harmonics.- Green Functions and Integral Theorems.- 5 Vector Spherical Harmonics.- 6 Tensor Spherical Harmonics.- 7 Scalar Zonal Kernel Functions.- 8 Vector Zonal Kernel Functions.- 9 Tensorial Zonal Kernel Functions.- 10 Application: Earth's Gravity Field.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVI, 600 S. , 68 schw.-w. Ill., 5 farb. Ill., 29 schw.-w. Tab., 5 schw.-w. Fotos, 63 schw.-w. graph. Darst., 5 farb. graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783540851110
    Series Statement: Advances in geophysical and environmental mechanics and mathematics AGEM2
    Classification:
    Mathematics
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  • 22
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI S4-19-91819
    In: Texts in computational science and engineering, 3
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXIV, 750 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: third edition, corrected 2nd printing 2009
    ISBN: 3540739157 , 9783540739159 , 9783540739166 (electronic)
    Series Statement: Texts in computational science and engineering 3
    Language: English
    Note: Table of Contents 1 Introduction 1.1 Scripting versus Traditional Programming 1.1.1 Why Scripting is Useful in Computational Science 1.1.2 Classification of Programming Languages 1.1.3 Productive Pairs of Programming Languages 1.1.4 Gluing Existing Applications 1.1.5 Scripting Yields Shorter Code 1.1.6 Efficiency 1.1.7 Type-Specification (Declaration) of Variables 1.1.8 Flexible Function Interfaces 1.1.9 Interactive Computing 1.1.10 Creating Code at Run Time 1.1.11 Nested Heterogeneous Data Structures 1.1.12 GUI Programming 1.1.13 Mixed Language Programming 1.1.14 When to Choose a Dynamically Typed Language 1.1.15 Why Python? 1.1.16 Script or Program? 1.2 Preparations for Working with This Book 2 Getting Started with Python Scripting 2.1 A Scientific Hello World Script 2.1.1 Executing Python Scripts 2.1.2 Dissection of the Scientific Hello World Script 2.2 Working with Files and Data 2.2.1 Problem Specification 2.2.2 The Complete Code 2.2.3 Dissection 2.2.4 Working with Files in Memory 2.2.5 Array Computing 2.2.6 Interactive Computing and Debugging 2. 2.7 Efficiency Measurements 2.2.8 Exercises 2.3 Gluing Stand-Alone Applications 2.3.1 The Simulation Code 2.3.2 Using Gnuplot to Visualize Curves 2.3.3 Functionality of the Script 2.3.4 The Complete Code 2.3.5 Dissection 2.3.6 Exercises 2.4 Conducting Numerical Experiments 2.4.1 Wrapping a Loop Around Another Script 2.4.2 Generating an HTML Report 2.4.3 Making Animations 2.4.4 Varying Any Parameter 2.5 File Format Conversion 2.5.1 A Simple Read/Write Script 2.5.2 Storing Data in Dictionaries and Lists 2.5.3 Making a Module with Functions 2.5.4 Exercises 3 Basic Python 3.1 Introductory Topics 3.1.1 Recommended Python Documentation 3.1.2 Control Statements 3.1.3 Running Applications 3.1.4 File Reading and Writing 3.1.5 Output Formatting 3.2 Variables of Different Types 3.2.1 Boolean Types 3.2.2 The None Variable 3.2.3 Numbers and Numerical Expressions 3.2.4 Lists and Tuples 3.2.5 Dictionaries 3.2.6 Splitting and Joining Text 3.2.7 String Operations 3.2.8 Text Processing 3.2.9 The Basics of a Python Class 3.2.10 Copy and Assignment 3.2.11 Determining a Variable's Type 3.2.12 Exercises 3.3 Functions 3.3.1 Keyword Arguments 3.3.2 Doc Strings 3.3.3 Variable Number of Arguments 3.3.4 Call by Reference 3.3.5 Treatment of Input and Output Arguments 3.3.6 Function Objects 3.4 Working with Files and Directories 3.4.1 Listing Files in a Directory 3.4.2 Testing File Types 3.4.3 Removing Files and Directories 3.4.4 Copying and Renaming Files 3.4.5 Splitting Pathnames 3.4.6 Creating and Moving to Directories 3.4.7 Traversing Directory Trees 3.4.8 Exercises 4 Numerical Computing in Python 4.1 A Quick NumPy Primer 4.1.1 Creating Arrays 4.1.2 Array Indexing 4.1.3 Loops over Arrays 4.1.4 Array Computations 4.1.5 More Array Functionality 4.1.6 Type Testing 4.1.7 Matrix Objects 4.1.8 Exercises 4.2 Vectorized Algorithms 4.2.1 From Scalar to Array in Function Arguments 4.2.2 Slicing 4.2.3 Exercises 4.3 More Advanced Array Computing 4.3.1 Random Numbers 4.3.2 Linear Algebra 4.3.3 Plotting 4.3.4 Example: Curve Fitting 4.3.5 Arrays on Structured Grids 4.3.6 File I/O with NumPy Arrays 4.3.7 Functionality in the Numpyutils Module 4.3.8 Exercises 4.4 Other Tools for Numerical Computations 4.4.1 The ScientificPython Package 4.4.2 The SciPy Package 4.4.3 The Python- Matlab Interface 3 4.4.4 Symbolic Computing in Python 4.4.5 Some Useful Python Modules 5 Combining Python with Fortran, C, and C++ 5.1 About Mixed Language Programming 5.1.1 Applications of Mixed Language Programming 5.1.2 Calling C from Python 5.1.3 Automatic Generation of Wrapper Code 5.2 Scientific Hello World Examples 5.2.1 Combining Python and Fortran 5.2.2 Combining Python and C 5.2.3 Combining Python and C++ Functions 5.2.4 Combining Python and C++ Classes 5.2.5 Exercises 5.3 A Simple Computational Steering Example 5.3.1 Modified Time Loop for Repeated Simulations 5.3.2 Creating a P ython Interface 5.3.3 The Steering Python Script 5.3.4 Equipping the Steering Script with a GUI 5.4 Scripting Interfaces to Large Libraries 6 Introduction to GUI Programming 6.1 Scientific Hello World GUI 6.1.1 Introductory Topics 6.1.2 The First Python/Tkinter Encounter 6.1.3 Binding Events 6.1.4 Changing the Layout 6.1.5 The Final Scientific Hello World GUI 6.1.6 An Alternative to Tkinter Variables 6.1.7 About the Pack Command 6.1.8 An Introduction to the Grid Geometry Manager 6.1.9 Implementing a GUI as a Class 6.1.10 A Simple Graphical Function Evaluator 6.1.11 Exercises 6.2 Adding GUis to Scripts 6.2.1 A Simulation and Visualization Script with a GUI 6.2.2 Improving the Layout 6.2.3 Exercises 6.3 A List of Common Widget Operations 6.3.1 Frame 6.3.2 Label 6.3.3 Button 6.3.4 Text Entry 6.3.5 Balloon Help 6.3.6 Option Menu 6.3.7 Slider 6.3.8 Check Button 6.3.9 Making a Simple Megawidget 6.3.10 Menu Bar 6.3.11 List Data 6.3.12 Listbox 6.3.13 Radio Button 6.3.14 Combo Box 6.3.15 Message Box 6.3.16 User-Defined Dialogs 6.3.17 Color-Picker Dialogs 6.3.18 File Selection Dialogs 6.3.19 Toplevel 6.3.20 Some Other Types of Widgets 6.3.21 Adapting Widgets to the User's Resize Actions 6.3.22 Customizing Fonts and Colors 6.3.23 Widget Overview 6.3.24 Exercises 7 Web Interfaces and CGI Programming 7.1 Introductory CGI Scripts 7.1.1 Web Forms and CGI Scripts 7.1.2 Generating Forms in CGI Scripts 7.1.3 Debugging CGI Scripts 7.1.4 A General Shell Script Wrapper for CGI Scripts 7.1.5 Security Issues 7.2 Adding Web Interfaces to Scripts 7.2.1 A Class for Form Parameters 7.2.2 Calling Other Programs 7.2.3 Running Simulations 7.2.4 Getting a CGI Script to Work 7.2.5 Using Web Applications from Scripts 7.2.6 Exercises 8 Advanced Python 8.1 Miscellaneous Topics 8.1.1 Parsing Command-Line Arguments 8.1.2 Platform-Dependent Operations 8.1.3 Run-Time Generation of Code 8.1.4 Exercises 8.2 Regular Expressions and Text Processing 8.2.1 Motivation 8.2.2 Special Characters 8.2.3 Regular Expressions for Real Numbers 8.2.4 Using Groups to Extract Parts of a Text 8.2.5 Extracting Interval Limits 8.2.6 Extracting Multiple Matches 8.2.7 Splitting Text 8.2.8 Pattern-Matching Modifiers 8.2.9 Substitution and Backreferences 8.2.10 Example: Swapping Arguments in Function Calls 8.2.11 A General Substitution Script 8.2.12 Debugging Regular Expressions 8.2.13 Exercises 8.3 Tools for Handling Data in Files 8.3.1 Writing and Reading Python Data Structures 8.3.2 Pickling Objects 8.3.3 Shelving Objects 8.3.4 Writing and Reading Zip and Tar Archive Files 8.3.5 Downloading Internet Files 8.3.6 Binary Input/Output 8.3.7 Exercises 8.4 A Database for NumPy Arrays 8.4.1 The Structure of the Database 8.4.2 Pickling 8.4.3 Formatted ASCII Storage 8.4.4 Shelving 8.4.5 Comparing the Various Techniques 8.5 Scripts Involving Local and Remote Hosts 8.5.1 Secure Shell Commands 8.5.2 Distributed Simulation and Visualization 8.5.3 Client/Server Programming 8.5.4 Threads 8.6 Classes 8.6.1 Class Programming 8.6.2 Checking the Class Type 8.6.3 Private Data 8.6.4 Static Data 8.6.5 Special Attributes 8.6.6 Special Methods 8.6.7 Multiple Inheritance 8.6.8 Using a Class as a C-like Structure 8.6.9 Attribute Access via String Names 8.6.10 New-Style Classes 8.6.11 Implementing Get/Set Functions via Properties 8.6.12 Subclassing Built-in Types 8.6.13 Building Class Interfaces at Run Time 8.6.14 Building Flexible Class Interfaces 8.6.15 Exercises 8.7 Scope of Variables 8.7.1 Global, Local, and Class Variables 8.7.2 Nested Functions 8.7.3 Dictionaries of Variables in Namespaces 8.8 Exceptions 8.8.1 Handling Exceptions 8.8.2 Raising Exceptions 8.9 Iterators 8.9.1 Constructing an Iterator 8.9.2 A Pointwise Grid Iterator 8.9.3 A Vectorized Grid Iterator 8.9.4 Generators 8.
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  • 23
    Call number: 9/M 09.0155
    Description / Table of Contents: Sedimentary basins host, among others, most of our energy and fresh-water resources: they can be regarded as large geo-reactors in which many physical and chemical processes interact. Their complexity can only be well understood in well-organized interdisciplinary co-operations.This book documents how researchers from different geo-scientific disciplines have jointly analysed the structural, thermal, and sedimentary evolution as well as fluid dynamics of a complex sedimentary basin system which has experienced a variety of activation and reactivation impulses as well as intense salt tectonics. In this book we have summarized our geological, geophysical and geochemical understanding of some of the most important processes affecting sedimentary basins in general and our view on the evolution of one of the largest, best explored and most complex continental sedimentary basins on Earth: The Central European Basin System. - Characteristics of complex intracontinental sedimentary basins.- The Central European Basin System.- Strain and temperature in space and time.- Basin fill.- Salt dynamics.- Fluid systems.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXIV, 520 S. + 1 CD-ROM , 49 schw.-w. Ill., 334 farb. Ill., 24 schw.-w. Tab., 1 schw.-w. Fotos, 23 farb. Fotos, 48 schw.-w. graph. Darst., 311 farb. graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783540850847
    Classification:
    Sedimentology
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  • 24
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 6/M 08.0312
    Description / Table of Contents: This is the first reference and handbook since the satellite era began, which describes and derives systematically the orbit theory with analytical solutions of the equations of satellite motion, with respect to all of the extraterrestrial and geopotential disturbances of the second order.The equations of satellite motion perturbed by extraterrestrial disturbances are solved by means of discretization and approximated potential functions as well as Gaussian equations. The equations perturbed by geopotential disturbances are solved by using symbolic mathematical operations. The traditional problem of singularity in the solutions is solved by so-called singularity-free theory. Simplified disturbed equations of motion are proposed to simplify the solutions. Applications of the theory for analytic orbit determination are discussed. The contents cover the complete orbit theory and the analytic solutions of the disturbed satellite orbits as well as their applications. Based on such theory, the algorithms of orbit determination can be greatly renewed; deeper insight into the physics of disturbances becomes possible; the way to a variety of new applications and refinements is opened.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XVI, 214 S.
    ISBN: 9783540785217 , 3-540-78521-3
    Classification:
    Satellites
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  • 25
    Call number: 9/M 07.0102 ; M 07.0133 ; M 07.0134
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Fluid Dynamics of Mantle Plumes.- Tracing the Hawaiian Mantle Plume by Converted Seismic Waves.- Iceland: The Current Picture of a Ridge-Centred Plume.- Combined Gas-geochemical and Receiver Function Studies on the Vogtland/NW Bohemia Intraplate Mantle Degassing Field, Central Europe.- Crustal and Upper Mantle Structure of the French Massif Central Plume.- Geodynamic Setting of the Tertiary Hocheifel Volcanism (Germany), Part I: 40Ar/39Ar Geochronology.- Geodynamic Setting of the Tertiary Hocheifel Volcanism (Germany), Part II: Geochemistry and Sr, Nd and Pb Isotopic Compositions.- The Quaternary Volcanic Fields of the East and West Eifel (Germany).- Thermal and Geochemical Evolution of the Shallow Subcontinental Lithospheric Mantle Beneath the Eifel: Constraints from Mantle Xenoliths, a Review.- He-Ne-Ar Isotope Systematics of Eifel and Pannonian Basin Mantle Xenoliths Trace Deep Mantle Plume-Lithosphere Interaction Beneath the European Continent.- Quaternary Uplift in the Eifel Area.- The Seismic Signature of the Eifel Plume.- Upper Mantle Structure Beneath the Eifel from Receiver Functions.- Rayleigh Wave Dispersion in the Eifel Region.- Seismic Anisotropy in the Asthenosphere Beneath the Eifel Region, Western Germany.- Gravity Observations in the Western Rhenish Massif and Forward Modelling of the Eifel Plume Bouguer Anomaly.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: X, 500 S. , 129 schw.-w. Ill., 27 farb. Ill., 12 schw.-w. Tab., 3 schw.-w. Fotos, 126 schw.-w. graph. Darst., 27 farb. graph. Darst.
    ISBN: 9783540680451 , 3-540-68045-4
    Classification:
    Tectonics
    Location: Reading room
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  • 26
    Call number: AWI S2-07-0030
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: IX, 221 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 9783540377054
    Series Statement: Springer-Lehrbuch
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt: 1 Einleitung. - 1.1 Alltägliche Probleme. - 1.2 Uni- und multivariate Daten. - 1.3 Wege ins Statistiklabyrinth. - 2 Statistische Grundlagen. - 2.1 Einführung in die Terminologie. - 2.2 Datentypen -Skalenniveaus. - 2.3 Korrelation. - 2.4 Regression. - 2.5 Lineare Regression. - 2.6 Multiplelineare Regression. - 2.7 Unimodale Modelle - die Gauß'sche Regression. - 2.8 Logistische und Gauß'sche logistische Regression. - 2.9 Interaktionen. - 2.10 Gewichtetes Mittel. - 2.11 Partielle Analysen. - 3 Datenmanipulationen. - 3.1 Normalverteilung und Transformationen. - 3.2 Standardisierungen. - 3.3 Transponieren, Umkodieren und Maskieren. - 4 Ähnlichkeits- und Distanzmaße. - 4.1 Qualitative Ähnlichkeitsmaße. - 4.2 Quantitative Ähnlichkeitsmaße. - 4.3 Distanzmaße. - 4.4 Vergleich der geschilderten Koeffizienten. - 5 Ordinationen - das Prinzip. - 5.1 Dimensionsreduktion als Analysestrategie. - 5.2 Polare Ordination. - 6 Korrespondenzanalyse (CA). - 6.1 Das Prinzip. - 6.2 Mathematische Artefakte - Probleme der CA. - 6.3 DCA {Detrended Correspondence Analysis). - 6.4 Zusammenfassendes zu Problemen der CA und DCA. - 7 Interpretation von CA und DCA. - 7.1 Zur Skalierung und Interpretation der Ordinationsdiagramme. - 7.2 Umweltvariablen-Interaktionen von Effekten. - 7.3 Ordination und Umweltdaten. - 8 Kanonische Ordination (constrained ordination). - 8.1 Prinzip der Kanonischen Korrespondenzanalyse (CCA). - 8.2 Interpretation eines CCA-Diagramms. - 8.3 Forward selection bei kanonischen Ordinationen. - 8.4 Überprüfung einer CCA. - 9 Hauptkomponentenanalyse (PCA). - 9.1 Das Prinzip - geometrische Herleitung. - 9.2 Das Prinzip - der mathematische Ansatz. - 9.3 Optionen bei einer PCA. - 9.4 Stärken und Schwächen der PCA. - 9.5 Faktorenanalyse. - 10 Lineare Methoden und Umweltdaten: PCA und RDA. - 10.1 Indirekte Ordination. - 10.2 Kanonische Ordination - Prinzip der Redundanzanalyse. - 10.3 Interpretation einer RDA. - 11 Partielle Ordination und variance partitioning. - 11.1 Kovariablen. - 11.2 Partielle PCA, CA, DCA. - 11.3 Partielle kanonische Ordination. - 11.4 Variance partitioning. - 12 Multidimensionale Skalierung. - 12.1 Der andere Weg zum Ziel. - 12.2 Metrische Multidimensionale Skalierung - Hauptkoordinatenanalyse. - 12.3 Nichtmetrische Multidimensionale Skalierung. - 12.3.1 Das Prinzip. - 12.3.2 NMDS - Optionen und Probleme. - 12.3.3 Ablauf einer NMDS. - 13 Klassifikation - das Prinzip. - 13.1 Das Wesen von Klassifikationen. - 13.2 Die wichtigsten Klassifikationsstrategien. - 14 Agglomerative Klassifikationsverfahren. - 14.1Clusteranalyse - Grundlagen. - 14.2 Auswertung von Dendrogrammen. - 15 Divisive Klassifikationsverfahren. - 15.1 Ordination Space Partitioning. - 15.2 TWINSPAN. - 15.3 Ablauf einer TWINSPAN-Analyse. - 15.4 Kritik an der TWINSPAN-Analyse. - 16 Sonstige Verfahren zur Beschreibung von Gruppenstrukturen. - 16.1 Nichthierarchische agglomerative Verfahren. - 16.2 Nichthierarchische divisive Verfahren. - 16.3 Numerische "treue"-basierte Verfahren. - 16.4 Diskriminanzanalyse. - 16.4.1 Das Prinzip. - 16.4.2 Voraussetzungen. - 16.4.3 Gütekriterien/Prüfung der Ergebnisse. - 17 Permutationsbasierte Tests. - 17.1 Das Prinzip von Permutationstests. - 17.2 Test auf Signifikanz von Ordinationsachsen. - 17.3 Mantel-Test. - 17.4 Gruppenvergleiche - Mantel-Tests und MRPP. - 17.5 Procrustes-Analysen. - 17.6 Indicator Species Analysis. - 17.7 Ausblick Randomisierungsverfahren. - Literatur. - Sachverzeichnis.
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  • 27
    Call number: PIK M 102-08-0153 ; PIK M 102-08-0257 ; 19/M 10.0047 ; AWI S1-10-0005
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 288 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten , 1 CD-ROM (12 cm)
    Edition: Second edition
    ISBN: 3540727485 , 978-3-540-72748-4
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Preface 1 Data Analysis in Earth Sciences 1.1 Introduction 1.2 Collecting Data 1.3 Types of Data 1.4 Methods of Data Analysis Recommended Reading 2 Introduction to MATLAB 2.1 MATLAB in Earth Sciences 2.2 Getting Started 2.3 The Syntax 2.4 Data Storage 2.5 Data Handling 2.6 Scripts and Functions 2.7 Basic Visualization Tools Recommended Reading 3 Univariate Statistics 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Empirical Distributions Measures of Central Tendency Measures of Dispersion 3.3 Example of Empirical Distributions 3.4 Theoretical Distributions Uniform Distribution Binomial or Bernoulli Distribution Poisson Distribution Normal or Gaussian Distribution Logarithmic Normal or Log-Normal Distribution Student's t Distribution Fisher's F Distribution Χ2 or Chi-Squared Distribution 3.5 Example ofTheoretical Distributions 3.6 Thet-Test 3.7 TheF-Test 3.8 The Χ2-Test Recommended Reading 4 Bivariate Statistics 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Pearson's Correlation Coefficient 4.3 Classical Linear Regression Analysis and Prediction 4.4 Analyzing the Residuals 4.5 Bootstrap Estimates of the Regression Coefficients 4.6 Jackknife Estimates of the Regression Coefficients 4.7 Cross Validation 4.8 Reduced Major Axis Regression 4.9 Curvilinear Regression Recommended Reading 5 Time-Series Analysis 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Generating Signals 5.3 Blackman-Tukey Autospectral Analysis 5.4 Blackman-Tukey Crossspectral Analysis 5.5 Interpolating and Analyzing Unevenly-Spaced Data 5.6 Evolutionary Blackman-Tukey Powerspectrum 5.7 Lomb-Scargle Powerspectrum 5.8 Wavelet Powerspectrum 5.9 Nonlinear Time-Series Analysis (by N. Marwarn) Phase Space Portrait Recurrence Plots Recommended Reading 6 Signal Processing 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Generating Signals 6.3 Linear Time-Invariant Systems 6.4 Convolution and Filtering 6.5 Comparing Functions for Filtering Data Series 6.6 Recursive and Nonrecursive Filters 6.7 Impulse Response 6.8 Frequency Response 6.9 Filter Design 6.10 Adaptive Filtering Recommended Reading 7 Spatial Data 7.1 Types of Spatial Data 7.2 The GSHHS Shoreline Data Set 7.3 The 2-Minute Gridded Global Elevation Data ETOPO2 7.4 The 30-Arc Seconds Elevation Model GTOPO30 7.5 The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission SRTM 7.6 Gridding and Contouring Background 7.7 Gridding Example 7.8 Comparison of Methods and Potential Artifacts 7.9 Statistics of Point Distributions Test for Uniform Distribution Test for Random Distribution Test for Clustering 7.10 Analysis of Digital Elevation Models (by R. Gebbers) 7.11 Geostatistics and Kriging (by R. Gebbers) Theorical Background Preceding Analysis Variography with the Classical Variogram Kriging Discussion of Kriging Recommended Reading 8 Image Processing 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Datastorage 8.3 Importing, Processing and Exporting Images 8.4 Importing, Processing and Exporting Satellite Images 8.5 Georeferencing Satellite Images 8.6 Digitizing from the Screen Recommended Reading 9 Multivariate Statistics 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Principal Component Analysis 9.3 Independent Component Analysis (by N. Marwan) 9.4 Cluster Analysis Recommended Reading 10 Statistics on Directional Data 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Graphical Representation 10.3 Empirical Distributions 10.4 Theoretical Distributions 10.5 Test for Randomness of Directional Data 10.6 Test for the Significance of a Mean Direction 10.7 Test for the Difference of Two Sets of Directions Recommended Reading General Index
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    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
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  • 28
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 6/M 07.0358 ; M 10.0023
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: 1 Introduction.- 2 Coordinate and Time Systems.- 3 Satellite Orbits.- 4 GPS Observables.- 5 Physical Influences of GPS Surveying.- 6 GPS Observation Equations and Equivalence Properties.- 7 Adjustment and Filtering Methods.- 8 Cycle Slip Detection and Ambiguity Resolution.- 9 Parameterisation and Algorithms of GPS Data Processing.- 10 Applications of GPS Theory and Algorithms.- 11 Perturbed Orbit and its Determination.- 12 Discussions.- Appendix 1: IAU 1980 Theory of Nutation.- Appendix 2: Numerical Examples of the Diagonalisation of the Equations.- References.- Subject Index.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 320 S. , 54 schw.-w. Ill., 15 schw.-w. Tab., 1 schw.-w. Fotos, 53 schw.-w. graph. Darst.
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    ISBN: 9783540727149 , 3-540-72714-0
    Classification:
    Reference Systems
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  • 29
    Call number: 7/M 07.0325
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Remote Sensing as a Tool for Urban Planning and Sustainability . - Automatic Land-Cover Classification Derived from High-Resolution IKONOS Satellite Imagery in the Urban Atlantic Forest of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, by Means of an Object-Oriented Approach. -Advances in Urban Remote Sensing: Examples From Berlin (Germany).- Spatial Analysis of Urban Vegetation Scale and Abundance.- Urban Environmental Monitoring in Buenos Aires ; Determining Green Areas.- Challenges in Characterizing and Mitigating Urban Heat Islands ; A Role for Integrated Approaches Including Remote Sensing.- Phoenix, Arizona, USA: Applications of Remote Sensing in a Rapidly Urbanizing Desert Region.- Application of Remote Sensing and GIS Technique for Urban Environmental Management and Sustainable Development of Delhi, India.- Berlin (Germany) Urban and Environmental Information System: Application of Remote Sensing for Planning and Governance - Potentials and Problems.- Views of Chiang Mai: The Contributions of Remote-Sensing to Urban Governance and Sustainability.- 20 Years After Reforms: Challenges to Planning and Development in China's City-Regions and Opportunities for Remote Sensing.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    ISBN: 354025546X
    Classification:
    Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing
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  • 30
    Journal available for loan
    Journal available for loan
    Wabern : Federal Office of Topography, Swiss Geological Survey
    Associated volumes
    Call number: ad. Z 94.0638/85
    In: Special issue "Central Alps"
    Type of Medium: Journal available for loan
    Pages: 1 Kt. : farb., 72 x 50 cm, 14 x 21 cmm gefaltet
    ISBN: 9783302400082
    Series Statement: Carta geologica speziale 127
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  • 31
    Call number: AWI S1-07-0025
    Description / Table of Contents: Since the publication of "Spectral Methods in Fluid Dynamics", spectral methods, particularly in their multidomain version, have become firmly established as a mainstream tool for scientific and engineering computation. While retaining the tight integration between the theoretical and practical aspects of spectral methods that was the hallmark of the earlier book, Canuto et al. now incorporate the many improvements in the algorithms and the theory of spectral methods that have been made since 1988. The initial treatment Fundamentals in Single Domains discusses the fundamentals of the approximation of solutions to ordinary and partial differential equations on single domains by expansions in smooth, global basis functions. The first half of the book provides the algorithmic details of orthogonal expansions, transform methods, spectral discretization of differential equations plus their boundary conditions, and solution of the discretized equations by direct and iterative methods. The second half furnishes a comprehensive discussion of the mathematical theory of spectral methods on single domains, including approximation theory, stability and convergence, and illustrative applications of the theory to model boundary-value problems. Both the algorithmic and theoretical discussions cover spectral methods on tensor-product domains, triangles and tetrahedra. All chapters are enhanced with material on the Galerkin with numerical integration version of spectral methods. The discussion of direct and iterative solution methods is greatly expanded as are the set of numerical examples that illustrate the key properties of the various types of spectral approximations and the solution algorithms. A companion book "Evolution to Complex Geometries and Applications to Fluid Dynamics" contains an extensive survey of the essential algorithmic and theoretical aspects of spectral methods for complex geometries and provides detailed discussions of spectral algorithms for fluid dynamics in simple and complex geometries.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXII, 563 Seiten , Illustrationen , 235 mm x 155 mm
    ISBN: 3540307257 , 3-540-30725-7 , 978-3-540-30725-9
    ISSN: 1434-8322
    Series Statement: Scientific computation
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1. Introduction 1.1 Historical Background 1.2 Some Examples of Spectral Methods 1.2.1 A Fourier Galerkin Method for the Wave Equation 1.2.2 A Chebyshev Collocation Method for the Heat Equation 1.2.3 A Legendre Galerkin with Numerical Integration (G-NI) Method for the Advection-Diffusion-Reaction Equation 1.2.4 A Legendre Tau Method for the Poisson Equation 1.2.5 Basic Aspects of Galerkin, Collocation, G-NI and Tau Methods 1.3 Three-Dimensional Applications in Fluids: A Look Ahead 2. Polynomial Approximation 2.1 The Fourier System 2.1.1 The Continuous Fourier Expansion 2.1.2 The Discrete Fourier Expansion 2.1.3 Differentiation 2.1.4 The Gibbs Phenomenon 2.2 Orthogonal Polynomials in (−1, 1) 2.2.1 Sturm-Liouville Problems 2.2.2 Orthogonal Systems of Polynomials 2.2.3 Gauss-Type Quadratures and Discrete Polynomial Transforms 2.3 Legendre Polynomials 2.3.1 Basic Formulas 2.3.2 Differentiation 2.3.3 Orthogonality, Diagonalization and Localization 2.4 Chebyshev Polynomials 2.4.1 Basic Formulas 2.4.2 Differentiation 2.5 Jacobi Polynomials 2.6 Approximation in Unbounded Domains 2.6.1 Laguerre Polynomials and Laguerre Functions 2.6.2 Hermite Polynomials and Hermite Functions 2.7 Mappings for Unbounded Domains 2.7.1 Semi-Infinite Intervals 2.7.2 The Real Line 2.8 Tensor-Product Expansions 2.8.1 Multidimensional Mapping 2.9 Expansions on Triangles and Related Domains 2.9.1 Collapsed Coordinates and Warped Tensor-Product Expansions 2.9.2 Non-Tensor-Product Expansions 2.9.3 Mappings 3. Basic Approaches to Constructing Spectral Methods 3.1 Burgers Equation 3.2 Strong and Weak Formulations of Differential Equations 3.3 Spectral Approximation of the Burgers Equation 3.3.1 Fourier Galerkin 3.3.2 Fourier Collocation 3.3.3 Chebyshev Tau 3.3.4 Chebyshev Collocation 3.3.5 Legendre G-NI 3.4 Convolution Sums 3.4.1 Transform Methods and Pseudospectral Methods 3.4.2 Aliasing Removal by Padding or Truncation 3.4.3 Aliasing Removal by Phase Shifts 3.4.4 Aliasing Removal for Orthogonal Polynomials 3.5 Relation Between Collocation, G-NI and Pseudospectral Methods 3.6 Conservation Forms 3.7 Scalar Hyperbolic Problems 3.7.1 Enforcement of Boundary Conditions 3.7.2 Numerical Examples 3.8 Matrix Construction for Galerkin and G-NI Methods 3.8.1 Matrix Elements 3.8.2 An Example of Algebraic Equivalence between G-NI and Collocation Methods 3.9 Polar Coordinates 3.10 Aliasing Effects 4. Algebraic Systems and Solution Techniques 4.1 Ad-hoc Direct Methods 4.1.1 Fourier Approximations 4.1.2 Chebyshev Tau Approximations 4.1.3 Galerkin Approximations 4.1.4 Schur Decomposition and Matrix Diagonalization 4.2 Direct Methods 4.2.1 Tensor Products of Matrices 4.2.2 Multidimensional Stiffness and Mass Matrices 4.2.3 Gaussian Elimination Techniques 4.3 Eigen-Analysis of Spectral Derivative Matrices 4.3.1 Second-Derivative Matrices 4.3.2 First-Derivative Matrices 4.3.3 Advection-Diffusion Matrices 4.4 Preconditioning 4.4.1 Fundamentals of Iterative Methods for Spectral Discretizations 4.4.2 Low-Order Preconditioning of Model Spectral Operators in One Dimension 4.4.3 Low-Order Preconditioning in Several Dimensions 4.4.4 Spectral Preconditioning 4.5 Descent and Krylov Iterative Methods for Spectral Equations 4.5.1 Multidimensional Matrix-Vector Multiplication 4.5.2 Iterative Methods 4.6 Spectral Multigrid Methods 4.6.1 One-Dimensional Fourier Multigrid Model Problem 4.6.2 General Spectral Multigrid Methods 4.7 Numerical Examples of Direct and Iterative Methods 4.7.1 Fourier Collocation Discretizations 4.7.2 Chebyshev Collocation Discretizations 4.7.3 Legendre G-NI Discretizations 4.7.4 Preconditioners for Legendre G-NI Matrices 4.8 Interlude 5. Polynomial Approximation Theory 5.1 Fourier Approximation 5.1.1 Inverse Inequalities for Trigonometric Polynomials 5.1.2 Estimates for the Truncation and Best Approximation Errors 5.1.3 Estimates for the Interpolation Error 5.2 Sturm-Liouville Expansions 5.2.1 Regular Sturm-Liouville Problems 5.2.2 Singular Sturm-Liouville Problems 5.3 Discrete Norms 5.4 Legendre Approximations 5.4.1 Inverse Inequalities for Algebraic Polynomials 5.4.2 Estimates for the Truncation and Best Approximation Errors 5.4.3 Estimates for the Interpolation Error 5.4.4 Scaled Estimates 5.5 Chebyshev Approximations 5.5.1 Inverse Inequalities for Polynomials 5.5.2 Estimates for the Truncation and Best Approximation Errors 5.5.3 Estimates for the Interpolation Error 5.6 Proofs of Some Approximation Results 5.7 Other Polynomial Approximations 5.7.1 Jacobi Polynomials 5.7.2 Laguerre and Hermite Polynomials 5.8 Approximation in Cartesian-Product Domains 5.8.1 Fourier Approximations 5.8.2 Legendre Approximations 5.8.3 Mapped Operators and Scaled Estimates 5.8.4 Chebyshev and Other Jacobi Approximations 5.8.5 Blended Trigonometric and Algebraic Approximations 5.9 Approximation in Triangles and Related Domains 6. Theory of Stability and Convergence 6.1 Three Elementary Examples Revisited 6.1.1 A Fourier Galerkin Method for the Wave Equation 6.1.2 A Chebyshev Collocation Method for the Heat Equation 6.1.3 A Legendre Tau Method for the Poisson Equation 6.2 Towards a General Theory 6.3 General Formulation of Spectral Approximations to Linear Steady Problems 6.4 Galerkin, Collocation, G-NI and Tau Methods 6.4.1 Galerkin Methods 6.4.2 Collocation Methods 6.4.3 G-NI Methods 6.4.4 Tau Methods 6.5 General Formulation of Spectral Approximations to Linear Evolution Problems 6.5.1 Conditions for Stability and Convergence: The Parabolic Case 6.5.2 Conditions for Stability and Convergence: The Hyperbolic Case 6.6 The Error Equation 7. Analysis of Model Boundary-Value Problems 7.1 The Poisson Equation 7.1.1 Legendre Methods 7.1.2 Chebyshev Methods 7.1.3 Other Boundary-Value Problems 7.2 Singularly Perturbed Elliptic Equations 7.2.1 Stabilization of Spectral Methods 7.3 The Eigenvalues of Some Spectral Operators 7.3.1 The Discrete Eigenvalues for Lu = −uxx 7.3.2 The Discrete Eigenvalues for Lu = −νuxx + βux 7.3.3 The Discrete Eigenvalues for Lu = ux 7.4 The Preconditioning of Spectral Operators 7.5 The Heat Equation 7.6 Linear Hyperbolic Equations 7.6.1 Periodic Boundary Conditions 7.6.2 Nonperiodic Boundary Conditions 7.6.3 The Resolution of the Gibbs Phenomenon 7.6.4 Spectral Accuracy for Non-Smooth Solutions 7.7 Scalar Conservation Laws 7.8 The Steady Burgers Equation Appendix A. Basic Mathematical Concepts A.1 Hilbert and Banach Spaces A.2 The Cauchy-Schwarz Inequality A.3 Linear Operators Between Banach Spaces A.4 The Fr´echet Derivative of an Operator A.5 The Lax-Milgram Theorem A.6 Dense Subspace of a Normed Space A.7 The Spaces Cm(Ω), m ≥ 0 A.8 Functions of Bounded Variation and the Riemann(-Stieltjes) Integral A.9 The Lebesgue Integral and Lp-Spaces A.10 Infinitely Differentiable Functions and Distributions A.11 Sobolev Spaces and Sobolev Norms A.12 The Sobolev Inequality A.13 The Poincar´e Inequality A.14 The Hardy Inequality A.15 The Gronwall Lemma Appendix B. Fast Fourier Transforms Appendix C. Iterative Methods for Linear Systems C.1 A Gentle Approach to Iterative Methods C.2 Descent Methods for Symmetric Problems C.3 Krylov Methods for Nonsymmetric Problems Appendix D. Time Discretizations D.1 Notation and Stability Definitions D.2 Standard ODE Methods D.2.1 Leap Frog Method D.2.2 Adams-Bashforth Methods D.2.3 Adams-Moulton Methods D.2.4 Backwards-Difference Formulas D.2.5 Runge-Kutta Methods D.3 Integrating Factors D.4 Low-Storage Schemes References Index
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  • 32
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 19/M 06.0079 ; 19/M 06.0080 ; 19/M 06.0081 ; M 06.0173
    Description / Table of Contents: Contents: Data Analysis in Earth Sciences. - Introduction to MATLAB. - Univariate Statistics. - Bivariate Statistics. - Time-Series Analysis. - Signal Processing. - Spatial Data. - Image Processing. - Multivariate Statistics.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 250 S. + 1 CD-ROM , 100 schw.-w. Ill. , 242 mm x 193 mm
    Edition: 1. Ed.
    ISBN: 3540279830
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  • 33
    Call number: 9/M 05.0597
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XI, 272 S. : zahlr. farb. Ill. und graph. Darst. + 1 CD-ROM
    ISBN: 354029144X
    Classification:
    Regional Geology
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  • 34
    Call number: AWI G9-06-0036 ; AWI G9-10-0040
    Description / Table of Contents: Sixty articles arranged in eight thematic sections refer to most recent geological and geophysical results of Antarctic research. The Precambrian of the East Antarctic shield and its geological history is considered as well as sub-ice topography, geophysics and stratigraphy, sedimentology and geophysics of the surrounding Southern Ocean. Particular emphasis is given to the connection of the Antarctic and the surrounding continents when forming part of Gondwana.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XX, 492 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme, Karten
    ISBN: 3540306730
    ISSN: 3-540-30673-0
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Theme 1 History of Antarctic Research 1.1 The Road to Gondwana via the Early SCAR Symposia / A. B. Ford 1.2 Exploring the Unknown: History of the First German South Polar Expedition 1901–1903 / C. Lüdecke Theme 2 Antarctica – The Old Core 2.1 Characteristics of Metamorphosed Banded Iron Formation and Its Relation to the Magnetic Anomaly in the Mt. Riiser-Larsen Area, Amundsen Bay, Enderby Land, Antarctica / M. Funaki, P. Dolinsky, N. Ishikawa, A. Yamazaki 2.2 Experimental Constraints on the Decompressional P-T Paths of Rundvågshetta Granulites, Lützow-Holm Complex, East Antarctica / T. Kawasaki, Y. Motoyoshi 2.3 Sapphirine – Orthopyroxene – Garnet Granulite from Schirmacher Hills, Central Dronning Maud Land / S. Baba, M. Owada, E. S. Grew, K. Shiraishi 2.4 Genesis of Ferropotassic A-Type Granitoids of Mühlig-Hofmannfjella, Central Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica / M. J. D’Souza, A. V. K. Prasad, R. Ravindra 2.5 Late Pan-African Fluid Infiltration in the Mühlig-Hofmann- and Filchnerfjella of Central Dronning Maud Land, East Antarctica / A. K. Engvik, S. Elvevold 2.6 Electron Microprobe (EMP) Dating on Monazite from Forefinger Point Granulites, East Antarctica: Implication for Pan-African Overprint / Y. Motoyoshi, T. Hokada, K. Shiraishi 2.7 Tectonic Subdivision of the Prince Charles Mountains: A Review of Geologic and Isotopic Data / E. V. Mikhalsky, A. A. Laiba, B. V. Beliatsky 2.8 Crustal Provinces of the Prince Charles Mountains Region and Surrounding Areas in the Light of Aeromagnetic Data / A. V. Golynsky, V. N. Masolov, V. S. Volnukhin, D. A. Golynsky 2.9 Magnetic Anomalies of the Grove Mountains Region and Their Geological Significance / A. V. Golynsky, D. A. Golynsky, V. N. Masolov, V. S. Volnukhin Theme 3 The Continent Beneath the Ice 3.1 ADMAP – A Digital Magnetic Anomaly Map of the Antarctic / A. V. Golynsky, M. Chiappini, D. Damaske, F. Ferraccioli, C. A. Finn, T. Ishihara, H. R. Kim, L. Kovacs, V. N. Masolov, P. Morris, R. von Frese 3.2 Identifying Major Sedimentary Basins Beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet from Aeromagnetic Data Analysis / R. E. Bell, M. Studinger, G. Karner, C. A. Finn, D. D. Blankenship 3.3 Bedrock Plateaus within the Ross Embayment and beneath the West Antarctic Ice Sheet, Formed by Marine Erosion in Late Tertiary Time / D. S. Wilson, B. P. Luyendyk 3.4 Inversion of Airborne Gravity Data Acquired over Subglacial Lakes in East Antarctica / I. Y. Filina, D. D. Blankenship, L. Roy, M. K. Sen, T. G. Richter, J. W. Holt 3.5 Russian Geophysical Studies of Lake Vostok, Central East Antarctica / V. N. Masolov, S. V. Popov, V. V. Lukin, A. N. Sheremetyev, A. M. Popkov 3.6 Morphology of the Subglacial Bed Relief of Lake Vostok Basin Area (Central East Antarctica) Based on RES and Seismic Data / S. V. Popov, A. N. Lastochkin, V. N. Masolov, A. M. Popkov 3.7 Deep Reflection Imaging beneath the Mizuho Plateau, East Antarctica, by SEAL-2002 Seismic Experiment / M. Yamashita, H. Miyamachi, M. Kanao, T. Matsushima, S. Toda, M. Takada, A. Watanabe 3.8 Seismic Anisotropy beneath Northern Victoria Land from SKS Splitting Analysis / S. Pondrelli, L. Margheriti, S. Danesi Theme 4 Gondwana Margins in Antarctica 4.1 Scouting Craton’s Edge in Paleo-Pacific Gondwana / C. A. Finn, J. W. Goodge, D. Damaske, C. M. Fanning 4.2 The Matusevich Fracture Zone in Oates Land, East Antarctica / G. Kleinschmidt, A. L. Läufer 4.3 Tectonic Model for Development of the Byrd Glacier Discontinuity and Surrounding Regions of the Transantarctic Mountains during the Neoproterozoic – Early Paleozoic / E. Stump, B. Gootee, F. Talarico 4.4 Depositional Environments of the Byrd Group, Byrd Glacier Area: A Cambrian Record of Sedimentation, Tectonism, and Magmatism / B. Gootee, E. Stump 4.5 Late-Ross Structures in the Wilson Terrane in the Rennick Glacier Area (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica) / A. L. Läufer, G. Kleinschmidt, F. Rossetti 4.6 Style of Uplift of Paleozoic Terranes in Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: Evidence from K-Ar Age Patterns / C. J. Adams Theme 5 Antarctic Peninsula Active Margin Tectonics 5.1 Patagonia – Antarctica Connections before Gondwana Break-Up / F. Hervé, H. Miller, C. Pimpirev 5.2 Moho Depth along the Antarctic Peninsula and Crustal Structure across the Landward Projection of the Hero Fracture Zone / T. Janik, P. Þroda, M. Grad, A. Guterch 5.3 Crustal Thinning and the Development of Deep Depressions at the Scotia- Antarctic Plate Boundary (Southern Margin of Discovery Bank, Antarctica) / J. Galindo-Zaldívar, J. C. Balanyá, F. Bohoyo, A. Jabaloy, A. Maldonado, J. M. Martínez-Martínez, J. Rodríguez-Fernández, E. Suriñach 5.4 Bransfield Basin Tectonic Evolution / J. Galindo-Zaldívar, L. Gamboa , A. Maldonado, S. Nakao, Y. Bochu 5.5 The Sedimentary Sequences of Hurd Peninsula, Livingston Island, South Shetland Islands: Part of the Late Jurassic–Cretaceous Depositional History of the Antarctic Peninsula / C. Pimpirev, K. Stoykova, M. Ivanov, D. Dimov 5.6 Regional Structures and Geodynamic Evolution of North Greenwich (Fort Williams Point) and Dee Islands, South Shetland Islands / J. F. Dumont, E. Santana, F. Hervé, C. Zapata 5.7 The Eocene Volcaniclastic Sejong Formation, Barton Peninsula, King George Island, Antarctica: Evolving Arc Volcanism from Precursory Fire Fountaining to Vulcanian Eruptions / S. B. Kim, Y. K. Sohn, M. Y. Choe 5.8 Elephant Island Recent Tectonics in the Framework of the Scotia-Antarctic-South Shetland Block Triple Junction (NE Antarctic Peninsula) / J. Galindo-Zaldívar, A. Maestro, J. López-Martínez, C. S. de Galdeano 5.9 Tectonics and Geomorphology of Elephant Island, South Shetland Islands / J. López-Martínez, R. A. J. Trouw, J. Galindo-Zaldívar, A. Maestro, L. S. A. Simões, F. F. Medeiros, C. C. Trouw 5.10 Geodynamical Studies on Deception Island: DECVOL and GEODEC Projects / M. Berrocoso, A. García-García, J. Martín-Dávila, M. Catalán-Morollón, M. Astiz, M. E. Ramírez, C. Torrecillas, J. M. E. de Salamanca Theme 6 Antarctic Rift Tectonics 6.1 Mawson Breccias Intrude Beacon Strata at Allan Hills, South Victoria Land: Regional Implications / D. H. Elliot, E. H. Fortner, C. B. Grimes 6.2 What Supports the Marie Byrd Land Dome? An Evaluation of Potential Uplift Mechanisms in a Continental Rift System / W. E. LeMasurier 6.3 A Multi-Phase Rifting Model for the Victoria Land Basin, Western Ross Sea / F. J. Davey, L. De Santis 6.4 Rift History of the Western Victoria Land Basin: A new Perspective Based on Integration of Cores with Seismic Reflection Data / C. R. Fielding, S. A. Henrys, T. J. Wilson 6.5 Constraints on the Timing of Extension in the Northern Basin, Ross Sea / S. C. Cande, J. M. Stock 6.6 The Structure of the Continental Margin off Wilkes Land and Terre Adélie Coast, East Antarctica / J. B. Colwell, H. M. J. Stagg, N. G. Direen, G. Bernardel, I. Borissova 6.7 Post-Rift Continental Slope and Rise Sediments from 38° E to 164° E, East Antarctica / P. E. O’Brien, S. Stanley, R. Parums Theme 7 Antarctic Neotectonics, Observatories and Data Bases 7.1 On Seismic Strain-Release within the Antarctic Plate / A. M. Reading 7.2 Vertical Crustal Deformation in Dronning Maud Land, Antarctica: Observation versus Model Prediction / M. Scheinert, E. Ivins, R. Dietrich, A. Rülke 7.3 Seismic Activity Associated with Surface Environmental Changes of the Earth System, around Syowa Station, East Antarctica / M. Kanao, K. Kaminuma 7.4 Geodynamic Features and Density Structure of the Earth’s Interior of the Antarctic and Surrounded Regions with the Gravimetric Tomography Method / R. Kh. Greku, V. P. Usenko, T. R. Greku 7.5 Some Recent Characteristics of Geomagnetic Secular Variations in Antarctica / A. Meloni, L. R. Gaya-Piqué, P. De Michelis, A. De Santis 7.6 Topographic and Geodetic Research by GPS, Echosounding and ERS Altimetric, and SAR Interferometric Surveys during Ukrainian Antarctic Expeditions in the West Antarctic / R. Greku, G. Milinevsky, Y. Ladanovsky, P. Bahmach, T. Greku 7.7 Geodetic Research o
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  • 35
    Call number: 11/M 05.0097
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XX, 480 S.
    Edition: 7., vollst. überarb. und aktualis. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3540238123
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  • 36
    Call number: 11/M 05.0582
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    ISBN: 3540279857
    Classification:
    Mineralogy
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  • 37
    Call number: PIK N 531-05-0066
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 336 S
    ISBN: 3540408002
    Series Statement: Global Change - The IGBP Series
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  • 38
    Call number: AWI G2-05-0084 ; AWI G2-06-0213
    Description / Table of Contents: To understand the global oceanic carbon budget and related climate change, exact measurements of organic carbon flux in all oceans environments, especially the continental margins, are crucial. In fact, data have been available for some time on organic carbon sources, pathways, and burial for most of the world's oceans, with the notable exception of the Arctic. With this book, the editors remedy this gap in knowledge, presenting an overview of organic-carbon sources, pathways, and burial of the circum-Arctic continental margin and deep-sea areas. Data from each Arctic shelf and basin are collates, presented in common and parallel formats, and related to the global carbon cycle. The book is suitable for lecturers, graduate students as well as scientists interested in the organic-carbon-cycle and Arctic Ocean (paleo-)environment.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIX, 363 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3-540-01153-6
    Language: English
    Note: Contents: 1 The Arctic Ocean: Boundary Conditions and Background Information. - 1.1 Physiography and Bathymetry of the Arctic Ocean. - 1.2 The Arctic Ocean: Modern Status and Recent Climate Change. - 1.3 The Tectonic Evolution of the Arctic Ocean: Overview and Perspectives. - 1.4 Geochemical Proxies Used for Organic Carbon Source Identification in Arctic Ocean Sediments. - 2 Modern Terrigenous Organic Carbon Input to the Arctic Ocean. - 2.1General Introduction. - 2.2 River Input. - 2.3 Organic Carbon Input to the Artic Seas Through Coastal Erosion. - 2.4 The Role of Arctic Sea Ice in Transporting and Cycling Terrestrial Organic Matter. - 2.5 Aeolian Input. - 2.6 Summary and Concluding Remarks. - 3 Primary and Secondary Production in the Arctic Seas. - 3.1 Introduction. - 3.2 Major Algal Groups and Their Distribution. - 3.3 Limitation and Control of Primary Production 3.4 Primary Production and Growth Rate. - 3.5 Seasonality. - 3.6 Distribution of Primary Production. - 3.7 Mesozooplankton . - 3.8 Primary Production - Impact of Climate Change. - 3.9 Summary and Concluding Remarks . - 4 The Role of Dissolved Organic Matter for the Organic Carbon Cycle in the Arctic Ocean. - 4.1 Introduction. - 4.2 Riverine DOM on Arctic Shelves and Beyond. - 4.3 Distribution, Chemical Composition, and Fluxes of Marine DOM in the Central Arctic Ocean. - 4.4 Summary and Concluding Remarks. - 5 Particulate Organic Carbon Flux to the Arctic Ocean Sea Floor. - 5.1 Introduction 5.2 What do we Know About Vertical Carbon Flux from the Arctic Ocean?. - 5.3 Case Studies. - 5.4 Regional Variability in POC Export Flux in the Arctic Ocean Determined Using 234Th as a Tracer. - 5.5 Particulate Organic Carbon Flux to the Sea floor of the Arctic Ocean: Quantity, Seasonality and Processes. - 5.6 Summary and Concluding Remarks. - 6 The Benthos of Arctic Seas and its Role for the Organic Carbon Cycle at the Seafloor. - 6.1 Introduction. - 6.2 Origin and Evolution of Arctic Habitats and Species. - 6.3 Food Supply of the Arctic Benthos: Sources and Pathways. - 6.4 Benthic Communities of the Arctic Seas. - 6.5 Organic Carbon Utilization by the Arctic Benthos. - 6.6 Summary and Concluding Remarks. - 7 Organic Carbon in Arctic Ocean Sediments: Sources, Variability, Burial, and Paleoenvironmental Significance. - 7.1 Organic Carbon in Arctic Ocean Sediments: A General Introduction. - 7.2 The Beaufort Sea: Distribution, Sources, Fluxes, and Burial Rates of Organic Carbon. - 7.3 The Continental Margin of the North Bering - Chukchi Sea: Distribution, Sources, Fluxes, and Burial Rates of Organic Carbon. - 7.4 The East Siberian Sea: Distribution, Sources, and Burial of Organic Carbon. - 7.5 The Laptev Sea: Distribution, Sources, Variability and Burial of Organic Carbon. - 7.6 The Kara Sea: Distribution, Sources, Variability and Burial of Organic Carbon. - 7.7 The Barents Sea: Distribution, Sources, Variability and Burial of Organic Carbon. - 7.8 Northern Fram Strait und Yermak Plateau: Distribution, Variability and Burial of Organic Carbon and Paleoenvironmental Implications. - 7.9 The Central Arctic Ocean: Distribution, Sources, Variability and Burial of Organic Carbon. - 8 Organic Carbon Budget: Arctic Ocean vs. Global Ocean. - 8.1 Introduction. - 8.2 Global Organic Carbon Fluxes: Sources and Sinks. - 8.3 Arctic Ocean Organic Carbon Fluxes: Sources and Sinks. - 8.4 Summary and Concluding Remarks. - 9 References.
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  • 39
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK N 322-04-0152
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 200 S
    Edition: 1. Aufl
    ISBN: 3540206272
    Series Statement: Advances in astrobiology and biogeophysics
    Note: Erscheinungsjahr in Vorlageform:[2004?]
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  • 40
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK N 456-03-0317
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 250 S.
    ISBN: 3540001840
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  • 41
    Call number: PIK M 311-01-0581 ; AWI A13-00-0040
    Description / Table of Contents: The author describes the stochastic (probabilistic) approach to the study of changes in the climate system. Climatic data and theoretical considerations suggest that a large part of climatic variation/variability has a random nature and can be analyzed using the theory of stochastic processes. This work summarizes the results of processing existing records of climatic parameters as well as appropriate theories: from the theory of random processes (based on the results of Kolmogorov and Yaglom) and Hasselmann's "stochastic climate model theory" to recently obtained results.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIII, 282 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 354066310X , 3-540-66310-X
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Introduction 1 Climatic System: Data, Processes, Scales, and Deterministic Models 1.1 Main Components of the Climate System 1.1.1 "Thick" Subsystems 1.1.2 "Thin" Subsystems 1.1.3 Local and Discrete Objects 1.2 Climate Processes 1.2.1 Overview of Climate Processes 1.2.2 External Climate Mechanisms 1.2.3 Internal Mechanisms of Climatie Variations 1.2.4 Transfer-Accumulation Processes 1.3 Scales of Climatic Variability 1.3.1 Spatial Scales 1.3.2 Temporal Scales 1.4 Deterministic Climate Models 1.4.1 General Circulation Models and Coupled Models 1.4.2 Other Types of Climate Models 1.5 Observational Basis for Stochastic Climate Theory 1.5.1 Data on Variability of "Thick" Climatic Subsystems 1.5.1.1 Near-Surface Air Temperature 1.5.1.2 Other Atmospheric Variables 1.5.1.3 Sea Surface Temperature 1.5.1.4 Sea Level 1.5.1.5 lce Sheets 1.5.2 Data on Variables of Thin Earth Covers 1.5.2.1 Snow Cover 1.5.2.2 Sea lce 1.5.2.3 Vegetation Cover 1.5.3 Data on Discrete and Local Climatic Objects 1.5.3.1 River Runoff 1.5.3.2 Lakes 1.5.3.3 Mountain Glaciers 1.5.4 Conclusions on Observational Data 2 Theoretical Foundations of the Stochastic Approach to Climate Variability Studies 2.1 Basic Ideas and Principles of the Stochastic Climate Theory 2.1.1 Mathematical Models and Natural Processes 2.1.2 A Climatic Variable as a Random Variable 2.1.3 Evolution of a Climatic Variable as a Random Function 2.1.4 Stationarity of Climatic Processes 2.2 Introduction to the Theory of Random Functions with Emphasis on Climate Variability 2.2.1 Moments, Mean Value, Correlation Function 2.2.2 The Ergodicity of Climate Variability 2.2.3 Examples of Stationary Random Sequences 2.2.3.1 Uncorrelated Random Variables 2.2.3.2 Moving Averages 2.2.4 Spectral Representation of the Random Process 2.2.5 Climatic Meanings of the Spectral Distribution Function 2.2.6 Spectral Representation of Stationary Sequences 2.2.7 The Markov Sequence 2.2.8 The Discrete Wiener Process 2.2.9 Other Types of Random Functions 2.2.9.1 Autoregressive Models 2.2.9.2 Seasonal Models 2.2.9.3 Threshold Models 2.3 Estimation of Model Parameters 2.3.1 Theoretical Models and the Practice of Model Identification 2.3.2 Informational Approach to the Identification of Stochastic Models 2.3.3 Maximum Entropy Method and Autoregressive Models 2.3.4 Model Identification and Estimation of Model Parameters 2.3.5 An Example ofModel Identification and Parameter Estimation 2.3.6 Frequency Truncation Method of Normalized Spectral Estimates 2.3.7 Other Methods of Time Series Processing 2.3.7.1 Conventional Methods. Moving Average and ARMA models 2.3.7.2 "Deterministic Chaos". Other Methods of Nonlinear Analysis 2.4 Physical Basis of the Stochastic Climate Theory 2.4.1 Atmospheric Forcing ofthe Climate System 2.4.1.1 Observational Evidence 2.4.1.2 Atmospheric Model Results 2.4.1.3 Simple Nonlinear Model as Analog of Atmospheric Forcing 2.4.2 Hasselmann's Stochastic Climate Models 2.4.2.1 Hypothesis on Weather-Climate Two-Scale Separation 2.4.2.2 Classification of Climate Models 2.4.2.3 Analogies with Turbulent Fluid, Brownian Motion, and Other Physical Processes. The Central Limit Theorem 2.4.2.4 Spectra and Correlation Functions of the Stochastic Climate Models. Models Without Feedback 2.4.2.5 Models with Feedback 3 Stochastic Models of Recent Climatic Changes 3.1 Changes in Thick Climatic Subsystems 3.1.1 Local Changes 3.1.1.1 Analysis of Observational Data 3.1.1.2 Local Stochastic Dynamical Models 3.1.2 Regional, Spatially Averaged, and Two-Dimensional Patterns 3.1.2.1 20 Stochastic Patterns of Observational Data 3.1.2.2 Stochastic Dynamical Regional Models 3.1.2.3 Stochastic Models of ENSO Events 3.1.3 Globally Averaged Climate Variables 3.1.3.1 Global Water Mass Exchange. Global Mean Sea Level 3.1.3.2 Global Temperatures 3.1.3.3 "Minus Two" Law of Climatic Variability 3.1.3.4 Stochastic Dynamical Models of Global Temperatures 3.1.3.5 Local-Global Polarization Phenomenon 3.2 Variabilities of Thin Climatic Subsystems 3.2.1 Analyzed Oata 3.2.1.1 37 GHz Polarization Oifference and Related Data 3.2.1.2 Snow and Sea lce Remotely Sensed Data 3.2.1.3 Related Satellite-Based and Conventional Data on Global Air and Sea Temperatures 3.2.2 Comparison of Results for Remotely Sensed and Conventional Data 3.2.2.1 Comparison of Results on Local Scales 3.2.2.2 Globally Averaged 37 GHz Polarization Difference Data. Concentration of Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere 3.2.3 Results of Stochastic Analysis of Local and Regional Hydrological Changes 3.2.3.1 Results of 37 GHz PD Data Analysis for Floodable Areas 3.2.3.2 Results for 37 GHz PD Data on Vegetation Cover in Different Natural Zones 3.2.4 Results of Analysis of Global Changes in Hydrological and Related Parameters 3.2.5 Modeling the Dynamics of Thin Subsystems 3.2.6 Local-Global Polarization Phenomenon and Thin Climatic Subsystems 3.2.7 Discussion on the Global Climatic Subsystems 3.3 Changes in Local and Discrete Climatic Objects 3.3.1 Rivers and River Runoff 3.3.2 Mountain Glaciers 4 Stochastic Models for Glacial Cycles 4.1 Stochastic Analysis of Reconstructed Data on Glacial Cycles 4.1.1 Existing Paleoreconstructed Time Series 4.1.2 Results of Stochastic Analysis of the Last Deglaciation Period, 0 - 18 ka B.P. 4.1.3 Analysis of 200 - 300 ka Time Series 4.1.4 Longer Time Series. Features of Cyclicity 4.1.5 High Resolution Paleorecords 4.2 Zero-Dimensional Model of Glacial Cycles 4.2.1 Hypotheses, Assumptions, and Equations 4.2.2 Results of Numerical Experiments 4.3 Two-Dimensional Stochastic Dynamical Model of Glacial Cycles 4.3.1 Mathematical Model, Parameters, and Experiments 4.3.1.1 Computational Area 4.3.1.2 Equations and Parameters of the Model 4.3.1.3 Numerical Experiments 4.3.2 Results 4.3.2.1 Experiments Without External Forcing 4.3.2.2 Experiments With External Forcing. Globally Averaged Results 4.3.2.3 Zonally Averaged Results 4.3.2.4 Regional Results Conclusion References Index
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  • 42
    Call number: IASS 16.90050
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: X, 192 S.
    ISBN: 9783642640926
    Series Statement: Wissenchaftsethik und Technikfolgenbeurteilung : Schriftenreihe der Europäischen Akademie zur Erforschung von Folgen wissenschaftlich-technischer Entwicklungen Bad Neuenahr-Ahrweiler GmbH Bd. 4
    Language: English
    Note: One way to shape technology and its embedding in society in the 21st century is through the visions that guide their development, especially concerning the long-term societal perspective. A critical discussion and assessment of these visions is a prerequisite for influencing the course of development. Technology assessment, therefore, has to provide a methodological repertoire for assessing and constructing visions, taking into account the requirements for long-term orientation and the need for public legitimation. This volume draws upon insights from technology assessment (TA), political sciences, epistemology, sociology and ethics. It contributes to the recent literature on "shaping technology", taking into account the "co-evolution of technology and society". It is connected to the TA literature that emphasises TA's pro-active role and its contricution to political judgement. It uses those insights from policy planning and epistemology that may help to reconcile long-term planning and public legitimacy
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  • 43
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK M 311-01-0575
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 836 S.
    Edition: 5. vollst. ûberarb. u. akt. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3540650881
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  • 44
    Call number: PIK N 455-99-0342 ; AWI A13-00-0146
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 255 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540658300 , 3-540-65830-0
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Einführung 1.1 Übersicht 1.2 Modernes naturwissenschaftliches Klimaverständnis 1.3 Modelle in der Klimaforschung 2 Klimarelevante Prozesse 2.1 Energie und Strahlung 2.1.1 Strahlung 2.1.2 Wärmetrausporte 15 2.1.3 Transport von Energie im Wasserkreislauf 2.2 Dynamik der Atmosphäre 2.2.1 Erzeugung von Bewegung 2.2.2 Vertikalstruktur der Atmosphäre 2.2.3 Allgemeine Zirkulation 2.2.4 Regionale Strukturen 2.2.5 Turbulenz 2.2.6 Aerosolpartikel 2.2.7 Wolken und Niederschlag 2.3 Zirkulation des Ozeans 2.3.1 Meeresoberflächenströmungen 2.3.2 Tiefenzirkulation 2.3.3 Wellen und Wirbel 2.4 Spurenstoffkreisläufe 2.4.1 Wasserdampf 2.4.2 Kohlendioxid 2.4.3 Methan 2.4.4 Stickstoffverbindungen 2.5 Kryosphäre 3 Natürliche Klimavariabilität 3.1 Jahres- und Tagesgang 3.2 Wetter 3.3 Interannuale Klimaschwankungen 3.3..1 ENSO-Phänomen 3.3.2 Nordatlantische Oszillation 3.3.3 Temperaturentwicklung seit 1900 3.3.4 Die Frage der Sonnenflecken 3.1 Homogenitätsproblematik 3.5 Historische Klimavariationen 3.6 Paläoklimatologie 3.6.1 Vereisungen 3.6.2 Klimarekonstruktion der Kalt- und Warmzeiten 3.6.3 Milanković-Theorie 4 Konzeptionelle Modelle 4.1 Klimazonen 4.2 Ein exemplarisches Energiebilanzmodell 4.2.1 Vereinfachte Bilanzgleichung für Energie 4.2.2 Diskretisierung 4.2.3 Schließung der Gleichung 4.2.4 Berechnungen: Integration 4.3 Physikalisch orientierte Modelle 4.4 Nichtlinearität und Chaos 4.5 Fluktuationen als stochastische Vorgänge 4.6 Wechselwirkungen verschiedener Prozesse 4.6.1 Gedämpftes System mit Störungen 4.6.2 Wirkung von positiven Rückkopplungen 5 Grundlagen von Strömungsmodellen 5.1 Grundgleichungen der Strömungs- und Thermodynamik 5.1.1 Zustandsvariablen 5.1.2 Gesetz der Massenerhaltung 5.1.3 Prinzip der Energieerhaltung 5.1.4 Impulserhaltung 5.1.5 Massenbilanzen für Beimengungen 5.1.6 Zustandsgleichungen 5.1.7 Zusammenfassung 5.2 Diskretisierung 5.2.1 Räumliche Diskretisierung 5.2.2 Zeitliche Diskretisierung 5.3 Parametrisierung und subskalige Prozesse 5.3.1 Schließungsproblem 5.3.2 Beispiel 1: Turbulenz 5.3.3 Beispiel 2: Konvektion und Wolkenbildung 5.3.4 Kritische Übersicht 5.4 Numerische Integration 6 Realitätsnahe Modelle des Klimasystems 6.1 Wettervorhersagemodelle 6.2 Modelle zur Klimasimulation 6.2.1 Methodik von Simulationen 6.2.2 Wechselwirkung von Atmosphäre und Ozean 6.2.3 Klimadrift und Flußkorrektur 6.2.4 Technische Details 6.2.5 Modellierung von Stoffkreisläufen und Biosphäre 6.3 Simulationen von Klimazuständen 6.3.1 Kontrollsimulationen des derzeitigen Klimas 6.3.2 Rekonstruktion von Paläoklimaten 6.3.3 Klimate anderer Planeten 6.3.1 Regionale und lokale Strukturen 6.4 Numerische Experimente mit Modellen 6.1.1 Zielsetzung 6.4.2 Wirksamkeit von Prozessen 6.4.3 Einschwingzeit der Atmosphäre 6.4.4 Sensitivität gegenüber Randbedingungen 6.5 Anwendung zur Klimavorhersage 6.5.1 Prognosen des ENSO-Phänomens 6.5.2 Großskalige Ölbrände in Kuwait 6.6 Beurteilung der Klimamodelle 7 Anthropogene Klimänderung 7.1 Übersicht 7.2 Emissions- und Konzentrations-Szenarien 7.2.1 Szenarien zukünftiger Emissionen 7.2.2 Erwartete Konzentrationen der Treibhausgase 7.3 Klimaszenarien realitätsnaher Modelle 7.3.1 Transiente Szenarienrechnungen 7.3.2 Ergebnisse eines exemplarischen Klima-Szenarios 7.3.3 Problem Kaltstart 7.3.4 2 x CO2-Simulationen 7.3.5 Informationswert von Szenarienrechnungen 7.3.6 Kritische Bewertung der Szenarien 7.4 Nachweis anthropogener Klimabeeinflussung 7.4.1 Zielsetzung 7.4.2 Natürliche Variabilität 7.4.3 Gewichtungsmuster und Nachweisvariable 7.4.4 Nachweis 7.4.5 Beurteilung 7.5 Lokale und regionale Szenarien 7.5.1 Hochaufgelöste Zeitscheibenexperimente 7.5.2 Regionalmodelle 7.5.3 Empirische Modelle 7.5.4 Implikationen 8 Klima und Gesellschaft 8.1 Übersicht 8.2 Historischer Überblick : gesellschaftliche Vorstellungen zum Einfluß von Klima 8.3 Klimafolgenforschung 8.3.1 Grundproblematik 8.3.2 Direkt beeinflußte Systeme 8.3.3 Indirekt beeinflußte Systeme 8.4 Ökonomische Aspekte des Klimawandels 8.4.1 Klimaänderung als Kostenfaktor 8.4.2 Ein zeitabhängiges Sechs-Komponenten-Modell 8.4.3 Beurteilung 8.4.4 Übersicht Klimapolitik 8.5 Vorstellungen von Klimawandel 8.5.1 Problemstellung 8.5.2 Natürliche Variabilität versus Kausalitätsdenken 8.5.3 Die Kempton-Studie 8.5.4 Soziale Interpretationsmechanismen 9 Résumé 10 Anhang 11 Literatur Stichwortverzeichnis
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  • 45
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK N 531-00-0087
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 429 S. , Abb., graph. Darst., Kt., Tab
    ISBN: 3540639497
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  • 46
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: M 98.0363 ; AWI G8-96-0626
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 433 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540593489
    Classification:
    Historical Geology
    Language: English
    Note: Contents I Review of Current Concepts 1 Introduction 1.1 Sequence Stratigraphy: A New Paradigm? 1.2 From Sloss to Vail 1.3 Problems and Research Trends: The Current Status 1.4 Stratigraphic Terminology 2 Methods for Studying Sequence Stratigraphy 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Erecting a Sequence Framework 2.2.1 The Importance of Unconformities 2.2.2 Facies Cycles 2.2.3 Stratigraphic Architecture: The Seismic Method 2.3 Methods for Assessing Regional and Global Changes in Sea Level, Other Than Seismic Stratigraphy 2.3.1 Areas and Volumes of Stratigraphic Units 2.3.2 Hypsometric Curves 2.3.3 Backstripping 2.3.4 Sea-Level Estimation from Paleoshorelines and Other Fixed Points 2.3.5 Documentation of Meter-Scale Cycles 2.4 Integrated Tectonic-Stratigraphic Analysis 3 The Four Basic Types of Stratigraphic Cycle 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The Supercontinent Cycle 3.3 Cycles with Episodicities of Tens of Millions of Years 3.4 Cycles with Million-Year Episodicities 3.5 Cycles with Episodicities of Less Than One Million Years 4 The Basic Sequence Model 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Terminology 4.3 Depositional Systems and Systems Tracts 4.4 Sequence Boundaries 4.5 Other Sequence Concepts 5 The Global Cycle Chart II The Stratigraphic Framework 6 Cycles with Episodicities of Tens to Hundreds of Millions of Years 6.1 Climate, Sedimentation, and Biogenesis 6.2 The Supercontinent Cycle 6.2.1 The Tectonic-Stratigraphic Model 6.2.2 The Phanerozoic Record 6.3 Cycles with Episodicities of Tens of Millions of Years 6.3.1 Intercontinental Correlations 6.3.2 Tectonostratigraphic Sequences 6.4 Main Conclusions 7 Cycles with Million-Year Episodicities 7.1 Extensional and Rifted Clastic Continental Margins 7.2 Foreland Basin of the North American Western Interior 7.3 Other Foreland Basins 7.4 Forearc Basins 7.5 Backarc Basins 7.6 Cyclothems and Mesothems 7;7 Carbonate Cycles of Platforms and Craton Margins 7.8 Evidence of Cyclicity in the Deep Oceans 7.9 Main Conclusions 8 Cycles with Episodicities of Less Than One Million Years 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Neogene Clastic Cycles of Continental Margins 8.3 Pre-Neogene Marine Carbonate and Clastic Cycles 8.4 Late Paleozoic Cyclothems 8.5 Lacustrine elastic and Chemical Rhythms 8.6 Clastic Cycles of Foreland Basins 8.7 Main Conclusions III Mechanisms 9 Long-Term Eustasy and Epeirogeny 9.1 Mantle Processes and Dynamic Topography 9.2 Supercontinent Cycles 9.3 Cycles with Episodicities of Tens of Millions of Years 9.3.1 Eustasy 9.3.2 Dynamic Topography and Epeirogeny 9.4 Main Conclusions 10 Milankovitch Processes 10.1 Introduction 10.2 The Nature of Milankovitch Processes 10.2.1 Components of Orbital Forcing 10.2.2 Basic Climatology 10.2.3 Variations with Time in Orbital Periodicities 10.2.4 Isostasy and Geoid Changes 10.2.5 The Nature of the Cyclostratigraphic Data Base 10.2.6 The Sensitivity of the Earth to Glaciation 10.2.7 Glacioeustasy in the Mesozoic? 10.2.8 Nonglacial Milankovitch Cyclicity 10.3 The Cenozoic Record 10.4 Late Paleozoic Cyclothems 10.5 The End-Ordovician Glaciation 10.6 Main Conclusions 11 Tectonic Mechanisms 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Rifting and Thermal Evolution of Divergent Plate Margins 11.2.1 Basic Geophysical Models and Their Implications for Sea-Level Change 11.2.2 Some Results from the Analysis of Modern Data Sets 11.3 Tectonism on Convergent Plate Margins and in Collision Zones 11.3.1 Magmatic Arcs and Subduction 11.3.2 Tectonism Versus Eustasy in Foreland Basins 11.3.2.1 The North American Western Interior Basin 11.3.2.2 The Appalachian Foreland Basin 11.3.2.3 Pyrenean and Himalayan Basins 11.3.3 Rates of Uplift and Subsidence 11.3.4 Discussion 11.4 Intraplate Stress 11.4.1 The Pattern of Global Stress 11.4.2 In-Plane Stress as a Control of Sequence Architecture 11.4.3 In-Plane Stress and Regional Histories of Sea-Level Change 11.5 Basement Control 11.6 Other Speculative Tectonic Hypotheses 11.7 Sediment Supply and the Importance of Big Rivers 11.8 Environmental Change 11.9 Main Conclusions IV Chronostratigraphy and Correlation: Why the Global Cycle Chart Should Be Abandoned 12 Time in Sequence Stratigraphy 12.1 Introduction 12.2 Hierarchies of Time and the Completeness of the Stratigraphic Record 12.3 Main Conclusions 13 Correlation, and the Potential for Error 13.1 Introduction 13.2 The New Paradigm of Geological Time? 13.3 The Dating and Correlation of Stratigraphic Events: Potential Sources of Uncertainty 13.3.1 Identification of Sequence Boundaries 13.3.2 Chronostratigraphic Meaning of Unconformities 13.3.3 Determination of the Biostratigraphic Framework 13.3.3.1 The Problem of Incomplete Biostratigraphic Recovery 13.3.3.2 Diachroneity of the Biostratigraphic Record 13.3.4 The Value of Quantitative Biostratigraphic Methods 13.3.5 Assessment of Relative Biostratigraphic Precision 13.3.6 Correlation of Biozones with the Global Stage Framework 13.3.7 Assignment of Absolute Ages 13.3.8 Implications for the Exxon Global Cycle Chart 13.4 Correlating Regional Sequence Frameworks with the Global Cycle Chart 13.4.1 Circular Reasoning from Regional Data 13.4.2 A Rigorous Test of the Global Cycle Chart 13.4.3 A Correlation Experiment 13.4.4 Discussion 13.5 Main Conclusions 14 Sea-Level Curves Compared 14.1 Introduction 14.2 The Exxon Curves: Revisions, Errors, and Uncertainties 14.3 Other Sea-Level Curves 14.3.1 Cretaceous Sea-Level Curves 14.3.2 Jurassic Sea-Level Curves 14.3.3 Why Does the Exxon Global Cycle Chart Contain So Many More Events Than Other Sea-Level Curves? 14.4 Main Conclusions V Approaches to a Modern Sequence-Stratigraphic Framework 15 Elaboration of the Basic Sequence Model 15.1 Introduction 15.2 Definitions 15.2.1 The Hierarchy of Units and Bounding Surfaces 15.2.2 Systems Tracts and Sequence Boundaries 15.3 The Sequence Stratigraphy of Clastic Depositional Systems 15.3.1 Pluvial Deposits and Their Relationship to Sea-Level Change 15.3.2 The Concept of the Bayline 15.3.3 Deltas, Beach-Barrier Systems, and Estuaries 15.3.4 Shelf Systems: Sand Shoals and Condensed Sections 15.3.5 Slope and Rise Systems 15.4 The Sequence Stratigraphy of Carbonate Depositional Systems 15.4.1 Platform Carbonates: Catch-Up Versus Keep-Up 15.4.2 Carbonate Slopes 15.4.3 Pelagic Carbonate Environments 15.5 Main Conclusions 16 Numerical and Graphical Modeling of Sequences 16.1 Introduction 16.2 Model Design 16.3 Selected Examples of Model Results 16.4 Main Conclusions VI Discussion and Conclusions 17 Implications for Petroleum Geology 17.1 Introduction 17.2 Integrated Tectonic-Stratigraphic Analysis 17.2.1 The Basis of the Methodology 17.2.2 The Development of an Allostratigraphic Framework 17.2.3 Choice of Sequence-Stratigraphic Models 17.2.4 The Search for Mechanisms 17.2.5 Reservoir Characterization 17.3 Controversies in Practical Sequence Analysis 17.3.1 The Case of the Tocito Sandstone, New Mexico 17.3.2 The Case of Gippsland Basin, Australia 17.3.3 Conclusions: A Modified Approach to Sequence Analysis for Practicing Petroleum Geologists and Geophysicists 17.4 Main Conclusions 18 Conclusions and Recommendations 18.1 Sequences in the Stratigraphic Record 18.1.1 Long-Term Stratigraphic Cycles 18.1.2 Cycles with Million-Year Episodicities 18.1.3 Cycles with Episodicities of Less Than One Million Years 18.2 Mechanisms 18.2.1 Long-Term Eustasy and Epeirogeny 18.2.2 Milankovitch Processes 18.2.3 Tectonic Mechanisms 18.3 Chronostratigraphy and Correlation 18.3.1 Concepts of Time 18.3.2 Correlation Problems, and the Basis of the Global Cycle Chart 18.3.3 Comparison of Sea-Level Curves 18.4 Modern Sequence Analysis 18.4.1 Elaboration of the Basic Sequence Model 18.4.2 Numerical and Graphical Modeling of Stratigraphic Sequences 18.5 Implications for Petroleum Geology 18.6 The Global-Eustasy Paradigm: Working Backwards from the Answer? 18.6.1 The Exxon Factor 18.6.2 Conclusions . 18.7 Recommendations References Author Index Subject Index
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  • 47
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK M 370-01-0396
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 472 p.
    Edition: 2.ed. repr.
    ISBN: 354061530x
    Series Statement: Springer Series in Synergetics 18
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  • 48
    Call number: AWI G7-96-0523
    In: Springer series in physical environment, 16
    Description / Table of Contents: Rockglaciers are the visible expression of the creep of mountain permafrost. They are indicative of special geo-ecologic and geomorphic conditions regarding thermal situation, talus production, hydrology, and hazards in high mountain environments of all major mountain systems on earth. As relict features, they are of great paleoclimatic value. This book presents a systematic treatment of this landform in its environmental context.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 331 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 3540607420 , 978-3-642-80095-5 , 978-3-642-80093-1
    ISSN: 0937-3047
    Series Statement: Springer series in physical environment 16
    Language: English
    Note: Introduction 1 Definitions 2 Historical Development of the Term Rockglacier 3 Rockglaciers: Description and Morphometry 3.1 General Description 3.2 Form Types 3.3 Morphometric Parameters 3.3.1 Rockglacier Sizes 3.3.2 Tongue-Shaped Rockg1aciers 3.3.3 Lobate Rockg1aciers 3.3.4 Rockglacier Thickness 3.3.5 Surface Relief 3.3.6 Rockglacier Surface and Source Area 4 Rockglacier Taxonomy 5 Rockglacier Distribution 5.1 General Information 5.2 Local Rockglacier Distribution 5.2.1 The Alps 5.2.2 The Mountains of Northern Europe 5.2.3 The Pyrenees 5.2.4 North American Mountains 5.2.5 The Andes of Central and South America 5.2.6 The Mountains of Asia 5.2.7 The Southern Alps 5.2.8 Antarctic Mountains 5.2.9 Conclusions 6 Rockglacier Material, Surficial Fabric and Internal Structure 6.1 Rock Type and Grain Size at and below the Surface 6.1.1 Rock Type 6.1.2 Grain Sizes at the Surface 6.1.3 Development of the Bouldery Mantle 6.1.4 Surface Fabric 6.1.5 Grain Sizes below the Bouldery Mantle 6.2 Internal Structure 6.2.1 Direct Information 6.2.1.1 Excavations, Outcrops, Tunnels 6.2.1.2 Smaller Boreholes 6.2.1.3 The Deep Borehole through the Rockglacier Murtel I 6.2.2 Indirect Information 6.2.2.1 Seismic Information 6.2.2.2 Geoelectric Soundings 6.2.2.3 Radio-Echo Soundings 6.2.2.4 Gravimetry 6.2.2.5 Borehole Geophysics and Related Measurements 6.2.2.6 BTS Measurements 6.2.2.7 Summary: The Inner Core of an Active Rockglacier 6.3 The Active Layer on Rockglaciers 7 Rockglacier Movement, Velocity, and Rheology 7.1 The Horizontal and Vertical Movement of Active Rockglaciers 7.1.1 Measurement Methods 7.1.2 Annual Horizontal Displacement 7.1.3 Long-Term Annual Averages 7.1.4 Long-Term Estimates 7.1.5 Longer Time Series 7.1.6 Monthly and Seasonal Measurements 7.1.7 Vertical Displacement 7.1.8 Conclusion 7.2 Geometry of Movement 7.2.1 The General Flow Patterns of Active Rockglaciers 7.2.1.1 Gruben Rockglacier 7.2.1.2 Macun Rockglacier 7.2.1.3 Arapaho Rockglacier 7.2.2 Horizontal Velocity on Longitudinal and Cross-Sectional Profiles 7.2.3 Surface and Subsurface Velocity 7.3 Rheologic Considerations 7.3.1 Shear Stress and Strain Rates in Active Rockglaciers 7.3.2 The Rheological Description of Active Rockglaciers 7.4 Rockglacier Movement and Climate 7.5 Discussion of Rockglacier Movement 8 Rockglacier Genesis and the Relation to Similar-Looking Landforms 8.1 Rockglacier Genesis 8.1.1 The Formation of Active Rockglaciers 8.1.1.1 Talus Rockglaciers 8.1.1.2 Debris Rockglaciers 8.1.1.3 Special Rockglaciers 8.1.1.4 Problematic Cases 8.1.2 Inactive Rockglaciers 8.1.3 Relict (Fossil) Rockglaciers 8.2 Published Hypotheses of Rockglacier Formation 8.2.1 Mass-Movement Hypotheses 8.2.1.1 The Bergsturz Hypothesis in General 8.2.1.2 Landslide Influences 8.2.2 The Glacial Hypothesis 8.2.2.1 Debris-Covered Glaciers and Thermokarst 8.2.2.2 Transition from True Glaciers to Rockglaciers? 8.2.2.3 The Moraine Hypothesis 8.2.3 The Periglacial (Blockstream) Hypothesis 8.3 True Rockglaciers under Wrong Labels 8.3.1 The Ostrem Ice-Cored Moraine Concept 8.3.2 The Protalus Rampart Concept 9 The Age of Rockglaciers 9.1 The Age of Active Rockglaciers 9.2 The Age of Climatic Inactive Rockglaciers 9.3 The Age of Relict (Fossil) Rockglaciers 10 Rockglaciers and the High Mountain Environment 10.1 Active Rockglaciers and Mountain Permafrost 10.2 Rockglaciers in the Coarse Debris Cycle 10.2.1 Rockglaciers and Talus Production 10.2.2 Rockglacier Size and Source Area 10.2.3 Rockglaciers as a Debris Transport System 10.3 Rockglaciers and Climate 10.3.1 Rockglaciers and Present Climate 10.3.2 Relict Rockglaciers and Paleoclimate Reconstruction 10.3.3 Reactivation of Inactive or Relict Rockglaciers 10.3.4 Rockglaciers and Climatic Change 10.4 Rockglaciers in the Alpine Hydrological Cycle 10.4.1 Rockglaciers as a Water Store 10.4.2 Discharge from Rockglacier Permafrost 10.4.3 Fluctuations in Rockglacier Permafrost Storage 10.5 Rockglaciers as Hazards in Alpine Environments 10.6 The Environment of Active Rockglaciers 11 Summary and Outstanding Problems 12 References Index of Place Names Subject Index
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  • 49
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: AWI A2-96-0161 ; PIK N 455-96-0131 ; MOP 48006
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 140 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540587365 , 3-540-58736-5
    Uniform Title: Climat d'hier à demain
    Language: German
    Note: Inhalt Geleitwort Danksagung Bildnachweis 1 Einleitung 2 Vom Wetter zum Klima 3 Das Klima der Vergangenheit Die Kleine Eiszeit Die quartären Vereisungen Die Geschichte des Klimas seit der Entstehung der Erde 4 Die Luft und das Wasser - die treibenden Elemente des Planeten Die atmosphärische Zirkulation Die ozeanische Zirkulation 5 Die Funktionsweise der Klimamaschine Luft und Wasser treten in Aktion Eis und Klima Das Leben und das Klima 6 Der Mensch und das Klima Die Treibhausgase Folgen der Verstärkung des Treibhauseffektes Das Ozon 7 Vorbereitung auf die Zukunft Literaturverzeichnis
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  • 50
    Call number: PIK N 456-97-0002 ; AWI S2-95-0215
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 334 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 354058918X , 978-3-662-03169-8
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Foreword Preface Contributors I Introduction 1 The Development of Climate Research / by ANTONIO NAVARRA 1.1 The Nature of Climate Studies 1.1.1 The Big Storm Controversy 1.1.2 The Great Planetary Oscillations 1.2 The Components of Climate Research 1.2.1 Dynamical Theory 1.2.2 Numerical Experimentation 1.2.3 Statistical Analysis 2 Misuses of Statistical Analysis in Climate Research / by HANS VON STORCH 2.1 Prologue 2.2 Mandatory Testing and the Mexican Hat 2.3 Neglecting Serial Correlation 2.4 Misleading Names: The Case of the Decorrelation Time 2.5 Use of Advanced Techniques 2.6 Epilogue II Analyzing The Observed Climate 3 Climate Spectra and Stochastic Climate Models / by CLAUDE FRANKIGNOUL 3.1 Introduction 3.2 Spectral Characteristics of Atmospheric Variables 3.3 Stochastic Climate Model 3.4 Sea Surface Temperature Anomalies 3.5 Variability of Other Surface Variables 3.6 Variability in the Ocean Interior 3.7 Long Term Climate Changes 4 The Instrumental Data Record: Its Accuracy and Use in Attempts to Identify the "CO2 Signal" / by PHIL JONES 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Homogeneity 4.2.1 Changes in Instrumentation, Exposure and Measuring Techniques 4.2.2 Changes in Station Locations 4.2.3 Changes in Observation Time and the Methods Used to Calculate Monthly Averages 4.2.4 Changes in the Station Environment 4.2.5 Precipitation and Pressure Homogeneity 4.2.6 Data Homogenization Techniques 4.3 Surface Climate Analysis 4.3.1 Temperature 4.3.2 Precipitation 4.3.3 Pressure 4.4 The Greenhouse Detection Problem 4.4.1 Definition of Detection Vector and Data Used 4.4.2 Spatial Correlation Methods 4.5 Conclusions 5 Interpreting High-Resolution Proxy Climate Data - The Example of Dendr о climatology / by KEITH R. BRIFFA 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Background 5.3 Site Selection and Dating 5.4 Chronology Confidence 5.4.1 Chronology Signal 5.4.2 Expressed Population Signal 5.4.3 Subsample Signal Strength 5.4.4 Wider Relevance of Chronology Signal 5.5 "Standardization" and Its Implications for Judging Theoretical Signal 5.5.1 Theoretical Chronology Signal 5.5.2 Standardization of "Raw" Data Measurements 5.5.3 General Relevance of the "Standardization" Problem 5.6 Quantifying Climate Signals in Chronologies 5.6.1 Calibration of Theoretical Signal 5.6.2 Verification of Calibrated Relationships 5.7 Discussion 5.8 Conclusions 6 Analysing the Boreal Summer Relationship Between World wide Sea-Surface Temperature and Atmospheric Variability / by M. NEIL WARD 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Physical Basis for Sea-Surface Temperature Forcing of the Atmosphere 6.2.1 Tropics 6.2.2 Extratropics 6.3 Characteristic Patterns of Global Sea Surface Temperature: EOFs and Rotated EOFs 6.3.1 Introduction 6.3.2 SST Data 6.3.3 EOF method 6.3.4 EOFs p^→1 - p^→3 6.3.5 Rotation of EOFs 6.4 Characteristic Features in the Marine Atmosphere Associated with the SST Patterns p^→2, p ^→3 and p^→2R in JAS 6.4.1 Data and Methods 6.4.2 Patterns in the Marine Atmosphere Associated with EOF p^→2 6.4.3 Patterns in the Marine Atmosphere Associated with EOF p^→3 6.4.4 Patterns in the Marine Atmosphere Associated with Rotated EOF p^→2R 6.5 JAS Sahel Rainfall Links with Sea-Surface Temperature and Marine Atmosphere 6.5.1 Introduction 6.5.2 Rainfall in the Sahel of Africa 6.5.3 High Frequency Sahel Rainfall Variations 6.5.4 Low Frequency Sahel Rainfall Variations 6.6 Conclusions III Simulating and Predicting Climate 7 The Simulation of Weather Types in GCMs : A Regional Approach to Control-Run Validation / by KEITH R. BRIFFA 7.1 Introduction 7.2 The Lamb Catalogue 7.3 An "Objective" Lamb Classification 7.4 Details of the Selected GCM Experiments 7.5 Comparing Observed and GCM Climates 7.5.1 Lamb Types 7.5.2 Temperature and Precipitation 7.5.3 Relationships Between Circulation Frequencies and Temperature and Precipitation 7.5.4 Weather-Type Spell Lengths and Storm Frequencies 7.6 Conclusions 7.6.1 Specific Conclusions 7.6.2 General Conclusions 8 Statistical Analysis of GCM Output / by CLAUDE FRANKIGNOUL 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Univariate Analysis 8.2.1 The i-Test on the Mean of a Normal Variable 8.2.2 Tests for Autocorrelated Variables 8.2.3 Field Significance 8.2.4 Example: GCM Response to a Sea Surface Temperature Anomaly 8.3 Multivariate Analysis 8.3.1 Test on Means of Multidimensional Normal Variables 8.3.2 Application to Response Studies 8.3.3 Application to Model Testing and Intercomparison 9 Field Intercomparison / by ROBERT E . LIVEZEY 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Motivation for Permutation and Monte Carlo Testing 9.2.1 Local vs. Field Significance 9.2.2 Test Example 9.3 Permutation Procedures 9.3.1 Test Environment 9.3.2 Permutation (PP) and Bootstrap (BP) Procedures 9.3.3 Properties 9.3.4 Interdependence Among Field Variables 9.4 Serial Correlation 9.4.1 Local Probability Matching 9.4.2 Times Series and Monte Carlo Methods 9.4.3 Independent Samples 9.4.4 Conservatism 9.5 Concluding Remarks 10 The Evaluation of Forecasts / by ROBERT E. LIVEZEY 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Considerations for Objective Verification 10.2.1 Quantification 10.2.2 Authentication 10.2.3 Description of Probability Distributions 10.2.4 Comparison of Forecasts 10.3 Measures and Relationships: Categorical Forecasts 10.3.1 Contingency and Definitions 10.3.2 Some Scores Based on the Contingency Table 10.4 Measures and Relationships: Continuous Forecasts 10.4.1 Mean Squared Error and Correlation 10.4.2 Pattern Verification (the Murphy-Epstein Decomposition) 10.5 Hindcasts and Cross-Validation 10.5.1 Cross-Validation Procedure 10.5.2 Key Constraints in Cross-Validation 11 Stochastic Modeling of Precipitation with Applications to Climate Model Downscaling / by DENNIS LETTENMAIER 11.1 Introduction 11.2 Probabilistic Characteristics of Precipitation 11.3 Stochastic Models of Precipitation 11.3.1 Background 11.3.2 Applications to Global Change 11.4 Stochastic Precipitation Models with External Forcing 11.4.1 Weather Classification Schemes 11.4.2 Conditional Stochastic Precipitation Models 11.5 Applications to Alternative Climate Simulation 11.6 Conclusions IV Pattern Analysis 12 Teleconnections Patterns / by ANTONIO NAVARRA 12.1 Objective Teleconnections 12.2 Singular Value Decomposition 12.3 Teleconnections in the Ocean-Atmosphere System 12.4 Concluding Remarks 13 Spatial Patterns: EOFs and CCA / by HANS VON STORCH 13.1 Introduction 13.2 Expansion into a Few Guess Patterns 13.2.1 Guess Patterns, Expansion Coefficients and Explained Variance 13.2.2 Example: Temperature Distribution in the Mediterranean Sea 13.2.3 Specification of Guess Patterns 13.2.4 Rotation of Guess Patterns 13.3 Empirical Orthogonal Functions 13.3.1 Definition of EOFs 13.3.2 What EOFs Are Not Designed for 13.3.3 Estimating EOFs 13.3.4 Example: Central European Temperature 13.4 Canonical Correlation Analysis 13.4.1 Definition of Canonical Correlation Patterns 13.4.2 CCA in EOF Coordinates 13.4.3 Estimation: CCA of Finite Samples 13.4.4 Example: Central European Temperature 14 Patterns in Time : SSA and MSSA / by ROBERT VAUTARD 14.1 Introduction 14.2 Reconstruction and Approximation of Attractors 14.2.1 The Embedding Problem 14.2.2 Dimension and Noise 14.2.3 The Macroscopic Approximation 14.3 Singular Spectrum Analysis 14.3.1 Time EOFs 14.3.2 Space-Time EOFs 14.3.3 Oscillatory Pairs 14.3.4 Spectral Properties 14.3.5 Choice of the Embedding Dimension 14.3.6 Estimating Time and Space-Time Patterns 14.4 Climatic Applications of SSA 14.4.1 The Analysis of Intraseasonal Oscillations 14.4.2 Empirical Long-Range Forecasts Using MSSA Predictors 14.5 Conclusions 15 Multivariate Statistical Modeling : POP-Model as a First Order Approximation / by JIN-SONG VON STORCH 15.1 Introduction 15.2 The Cross-Covariance Matrix and the Cross-Spectrum Matrix 15.3 Multivariate AR(1) Process and its Cross-Covariance and Cross-Spectrum Matrices 15.3.1 The System Matrix A and its POPs 15.3.2 Cross-Spectrum Matrix in POP-Basis: Its Matrix Formulation 15.3.3 Cross-Spectrum Matrix in POP-Basis: Its Diagonal Components 15.3.4
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  • 51
    Call number: AWI G5-96-0326
    In: NATO ASI series : I, Global and environmental change, Vol. 17
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 580 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540575944
    Series Statement: NATO ASI series : I, Global and environmental change 17
    Language: English
    Note: TABLE OF CONTENTS FOREWORD LIST OF AUTHORS AND PARTICIPANTS I - OPERATION OF THE OCEAN-ATMOSPHERE CARBON CYCLE The recent state of carbon cycling through the atmosphere / I. Levin Glacial ocean carbon cycle modeling / Ch. Heinze Glacial-interglacial changes in continental weathering: possible implication for atmospheric CO2 / G. Munhoven and L.M.François II - VARIATIONS OF THE OCEANS CARBON RESERVOIR: FAUNAL VERSUS GEOCHEMCAL RECORDS The relationship between surface water masses, oceanographic fronts and paleoclimatic proxies in surface sediments of the Greenland, Iceland, Norwegian Seas / T. Johannessen, E. Jansen, A. Flatrøy, A. C. Ravelo. - Is there a relationship between atmospheric CO2 and manganese in the ocean? / A. Mangini, H.-J. Rutsch, M. Frank, A. Eisenhauer, J.-D. Eckhardt Benthic foraminiferal assemblages and the δ13C-signal in the Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean: glacial-to-interglacial contrasts / A. Mackensen, H. Grobe, H.-W. Hubberten, G. Kuhn Foraminiferal population dynamics and stable carbon isotopes / Ch. Hemleben and J. Bijma A comparison of carbon isotopes and cadmium in the modern and glacial maximum ocean: can we account for the discrepancies? / E. A. Boyle Tracer-nutrient correlations in the upper ocean: observational and box model constraints on the use of benthic foraminiferal δ13C and Cd/Ca as paleo-proxies for the intermediate-depth ocean / R. Zahn and R. Keir IIΙ - GEOCHEMISTRY OF THE ORGANIC SEDIMENT FRACTION: CONSTRAINTS ON THE BIOLOGICAL CARBON PUMP Possible early diagenetic alteration of palaeo proxies / G.J. De Lange, B. Van Os, P.A. Pruysers, J.J. Middelburg, D. Castradori, P. Van Santvoort, P.J. Müller, H. Eggenkamp, F.G. Prahl Nitrogen isotope fractionation in the modern ocean: implications for the sedimentary record / J. P. Montoya The use of nitrogen isotopic ratio for reconstruction of past changes in surface ocean nutrient utilization / M.A. Altabet and R. Francois Variations in sedimentary organic δ13C as a proxy for past changes in ocean and atmospheric CO2 concentrations / G. H. Rau Reconstruction of paleoceanic PCO2 levels from carbon isotopic compositions of sedimentary biogenic components /J.P. Jasper and J.M. Hayes Late Quaternary PCO2 variations in the Angola Current: evidence from organic carbon δ13C and alkenone temperatures / P.J. Müller, R. Schneider, G. Ruhland PCO2 variations of equatorial surface water over the last 330,000 years: the δ13C record of organic carbon / L. Westerhausen, M. Sarnthein, U. Struck, H. Erlenkeuser, J. Poynter IV - GEOCHEMICAL AND MICROPALEONTOLOGICAL INDEXES OF PALEO-PRODUCTIVITY Paleoproductivity: flux proxies versus nutrient proxies and other problems concerning the Quaternary productivity record / W.H. Berger, J.C. Herguera, C.B. Lange, R. Schneider From modern flux to paleoflux: assessment from sinking assemblages to thanatocoenosis / K. Takahashi Late Quaternary paleoproductivity variations in the NE and equatorial Atlantic: diatom and Corg evidence / F. Abrantes, K. Winn, M. Sarnthein Glacial-Holocene paleoproductivity off western Australia: a comparison of proxy records / D.C. McCorkle, H. H. Veeh, D.J. Heggie Nutrient, mixing and export indices: A 250 Kyr paleoproductivity record from the western equatorial Pacific / J.C. Herguera Dinoflagellate cysts as paleoproductivity indicators: state of the art, potential, and limits / B. Dale and A. Fjeliså Deep-sea benthic foraminifers: food and bottom water masses / D. Schnitker The history of barium, biogenic silica and organic carbon accumulation in the Weddell Sea and Antarctic Ocean over the last 150,000 years / G. Shimmield, S. Derrick, A. Mackensen, H. Grobe, C. Pudsey SUBJECT INDEX
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  • 52
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK W 511-96-0066
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 167 p.
    ISBN: 3540525203
    Series Statement: Springer Series in Physical Environment 12
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  • 53
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: M 97.0070
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 1023 S.
    Edition: 10. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3540561846
    Classification:
    C.5.1.
    Language: German
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  • 54
    Call number: AWI A12-93-0213
    In: NATO ASI series : I, Global and environmental change, Vol. 7
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VI, 425 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 354056683X
    Series Statement: NATO ASI series : I, Global and environmental change 7
    Language: English
    Note: TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction Section 1: Overview Features of Polar Regions Relevant to Tropospheric Ozone Chemistry / L. A Barrie Climatology of Arctic and Antarctic Tropospheric Ozone / S. J. Oltmans Polar Sunrise Studies / J. Bottenheim Section II: Tropospheric Oxidants Modelling Meteorology and Transport of Air Masses in Arctic Regions / T. Iversen Impact of Global NOx Sources on the Northern Latitudes / H. Levy II, W. J. Moxim and P S. Kasibhatla Ozone Depletion During Polar Sunrise / J. C. McConnell, G. S. Henderson Section Ill: Field Studies Relationship Between Anthropogenic Nitrogen Oxides and Ozone Trends in the Arctic Troposphere / D. Jaffe Halocarbons in the Arctic and Antarctic Atmosphere / W. T. Sturges Measurements of Hydrocarbons in Polar Maritime Air Masses / S. A Penkett Carbon Monoxide and Light Alkanes as Tropospheric Tracers of Anthropogenic Ozone / D. D. Parrish Atmospheric Distribution of NO, 03, CO, and CH4 above the North Atlantic Based on the STRATOZ Ill Flight / D. H. Ehhalt, F. Rohrer and A Wahner Spectroscopic Measurement of Bromine, Oxide, Ozone, and Nitrous Acid in Alert / M. Hausmann, T. Rudolf, and U. Platt Ice Core Analysis in Arctic and Antarctic Regions / M. Legrand Record of Atmospheric Oxidant from Polar Ice Cores Over the past 100,000 Years: Dream or Real Possibility? / A Neftel and K. Fuhrer Section V: Marine Sources and Sinks Sources of Organobromines to the Arctic Atmosphere / R. Moore, R. Tokarczyk and C. Geen Hydrocarbons Emission from the Ocean / B. Bonsang Cycle of Tropospheric Phosgene / T.P. Kindler, W. L. Chameides, P. H. Wine, D. Cunnold, F. Alyea Session VI: Laboratory Studies of Heterogeneous Reactions Chemical Interactions of Tropospheric Halogens on Snow/Ice / M. J. Molina Reactions of Halogens Species on Ice Surfaces / D. R. Hanson and A. R. Ravishankara Heterogeneous Reactions of Chlorine Compounds / C. Zetzsch and W. Behnke Liquid Phase Photochemistry in Relation to Tropospheric Chemistry of Halogens / J. A Lavigne and C. H. Langford Session Vll: Homogeneous Gas-phase Reactions Ozone HOx Photochemistry in the Troposphere - Latitudinal Dependence of Reaction Rates / R. A Cox ClO + ClO → Products: A Case Study in Halogen Monoxide Disproportionation and Recombination Reactions / S. P. Sander, S. L. Nickolaisen and R. R. Friedl Thermal Stability of Peroxynitrates / K. H. Becker, F. Kirchner and F. Zabel Temperature Dependence (256-296 K) of the Absorption Cross Sections of Bromoform in the Wavelength Range 285-360 nm / G. K. Moortgat, R. Meller and W. Schneider Oxidation of Organic Sulfur Compounds / I. Barnes, K. H. Becker and R. D. Overath Halogen and Sulfur Reactions Relevant to Polar Chemistry / P. H. Wine, J.M. Nicovish, R.E. Stickel and Z. Zhao, C.J. Shackelford, K.D. Kreutter, E.P. Daykin, and S. Wang Reactions of BrO Radicals Relevant to Polar Chemistry / G. Le Bras Comparative Assessment of the Role of lodine Photochemistry in Tropospheric Ozone Depletion / M. E. Jenkin
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  • 55
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: PIK N 442-07-0157
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIV, 144 S.
    Edition: 4. erw. und akt. Aufl
    ISBN: 3540557733
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  • 56
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: M 032-01-0104
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 636 p.
    Edition: 2. pr.
    ISBN: 3540540628
    Series Statement: Applications of Mathematics. Stochastic Modelling and Applied Probability 23
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  • 57
    Call number: M 92.0753 ; AWI G6-92-0394
    Description / Table of Contents: This volume summarizes the main results of a priority programme of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), Bonn-Bad Godesberg
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XXIX, 544 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3-540-54034-2 , 0-387-54034-2
    Classification:
    Geochemistry
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1 Scope / G. Matthess 2 Polar Organic Substances and Their Role in the Water-Saturated and -Unsaturated Zones 2.0 Introduction / F.H. Frimmel 2.1 Isolation Procedures and Characterization Methods 2.1.1 Isolation and General Characterization of Organic Acids from Pore Water / F.H. Frimmel 2.1.2 Isolation and Characterization of Soil Humic Matter / W. Finger, B. Post and H. Klamberg 2.1.3 Isolation and Characterization of Organic Substancesin Ground Water and Sediments / F. Selenka and A. Hack 2.1.4 Chromatographie Characterization of the Acid-Soluble Part of Humic Substances / F.H. Frimmel 2.1.5 Spectroscopic Characterization of Humic Substances in the Ultraviolet and Visible Region and by Infrared Spectroscopy / G. Abbt-Braun 2.1.6 Temperature-Programmed/Time-Resolved Pyrolysis Field lonization Mass Spectrometry - a New Method for the Characterization of Humic Substances / H.-R. Schulten 2.1.7 Interpretation of the Pyrolysis Products of Isolated Humic and Fulvic Acids / G. Abbt-Braun 2.1.8 Characterization of Isolated Humic Material by 13C Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy /J. Buddrus and P. Burba 2.1.9 Characterization of Humic Substances Extracted by Organic Solvents / B. Post and H. Klamberg 2.2 Interaction of Inorganics with Humic Substances 2.2.1 Investigation of Metal Complexation by Polarography and Fluorescence Spectroscopy / F.H. Frimmel 2.2.2 Determination of Complexation Equilibria by the Ion-Exchange Method / W. Finger and H. Klamberg 2.2.3 Sorption of Metals on Humic Material / R. Becker and H. Klamberg 2.2.4 Interactions of Humic Substances with Iodine / K. G. Heumann and C. Reifenhäuser 2.2.5 Experiments on the Influence of Organic Ligands upon Kinetics of Feldspar Weathering / A. Petersen, G. Matthess and D. Schenk 2.3 Characterization of Some Organic Acids in the Subsurface of the Sandhausen Ecosystem / T. Cordt and H. Kussmaul 2.3.4 Organic Acids 2.3.5 Conclusions 3 Carbonate Systems 3.0 Introduction / E. Usdowski 3.1 Dissolution Kinetics in the Generation of Carbonate Ground Waters 3.1.1 Theoretical and Experimental Results of the Kinetics of Calcite Dissolution and Precipitation / W. Dreybrodt 3.1.2 Field Measurements and Laboratory Experiments on Calcite Dissolution Kinetics of Natural Porous Media / J. Baumann and H.D. Schulz 3.2 Field Studies on Subsurface Water of Selected Sites / B. Merkel and J. Grossmann 3.2.1 Pore Water Sampling in Carbonate Terrains 3.2.2 Variation of Inorganic Carbon in the Unsaturated Zone of a Carbonate Gravel System / L. Eichinger and B. Merkel 3.2.3 Isotope Geochemistry of the Subsurface Carbonate System in Sandhausen and Bocholt / H. Dörr, W. Leuchs, P. Obermann, W. Regenberg and C. Sonntag 3.2.4 Application of Stable Carbon and Sulfur Isotope Models to the Development of Ground Water in a Limestone-Dolomite-Anhydrite-Gypsum Area / K.W. Schaefer and E. Usdowski 3.2.5 A dissolution Front at the Contact of Sandsto Marly Limestone Aquifers / H.R. Langguth and R. Schulz 3.2.6 Carbonate Rock Dissolution Under Intermediate System Conditions / J. Michaelis 3.3 Alteration in Karst Systems 3.3.1 Mineralogy and Hydrogeochemistry of the Gypsum Karst of Foum Tatahouine, South Tunisia / W. Smykatz-Kloss, H. Hötzl and H. Kössl 3.3.2 Dedolomitization and Salt Formationin a Semi-Arid Environment / W. Smykatz-Kloss, and J. Goebelbecker 3.3.3 Transformation Processes in Paleokarst Sediments and Chemistry of Modern Waters in the Aladag Region, Turkey / M. Cevrini and W. Echle 4 Silicate Systems 4.0 Introduction / G. Matthess 4.1 Redox Reactions in the Subsurface 4.1.1 Anoxic Reaction Zones in an Aquifer Influenced by Increasing Nitrate and Sulfate Contents / W. Leuchs and P. Obermann 4.1.2 Nitrogen and Oxygen Isotopes as Indicators for Nitrification and Denitrification / H.-L. Schmidt, S. Voerkelius and A. Amberger 4.1.3 Redox Conditions and Microbial Sulfur Reactions in the Fuhrberger Field Sandy Aquifer / J. Böttcher, O. Strebet and W. Kölle 4.1.4 Influence of Fine-Grained Cover Beds on the Chemistry of Shallow Ground Water / G. Ebhardt and P. Fritsch 4.1.5 Hydrogeochemical Processes During the Passage of Surface Water and Ground Water Through Genetically Different Organic Sediments / H. Brühl, A. Moschick and H. Verleger 4.1.6 Hydrochemical Phenomena in the Dorsten Leakage System / M. Hoffmann, H.R. Langguth and J. Larue 4.1.7 Hydrogeochemical Processes in the Hamburg Deep Aquifer System / E.P. Loehnert, W. Bauhus and C. Sonntag 4.2 Rock-Water Interaction 4.2.1 Aluminium Speciation in Acid Soil Water and Ground Water / G. Dietze and B. Ulrich 4.2.2 Mineral-Pore Water Interaction in Two Soil Types on Pleistocene Sediments at Hamburg / F. Sztuka and I. Valeton 4.2.3 Subsurface Hydrochemical Reactions in the Sandhausen Forest Ecosystem / H. Jacob, W. Regenberg and C. Sonntag 4.3 Reaction Kinetics 4.3.1 Experimental Methods for Determining Dissolution Rates of Silicates - a Comparison / D. Schenk, G. Matthess, A. Dahmke and A. Petersen 4.3.2 Field Studies on the Kinetics of Silicate Minerals/Water Interaction / G. Matthess, A. Petersen, D. Schenk and A. Dahmke 5 Microbiology 5.0 Introduction / P. Hirsch 5.1 Characterization of the Natural Subsurface Environment 5.1.1 Morphological and Taxonomic Diversity of Ground Water Microorganisms / P. Hirsch, E. Rades-Rohkohl, J. Kölbel-Boelke and A. Nehrkorn 5.1.2 Methods of Studying Ground Water Microbiology: Critical Evaluations and Method suggestions / P. Hirsch, E. Rades-Rohkohl, J. Kölbel-Boelke, A. Nehrkorn, R. Schweisfurth, F. Selenka and A. Hack 5.1.3 Organic Substances in Ground Water and Sediments and Their Relationships to Microorganisms in a Sandy Aquifer / E Selenka and A. Hack 5.2 Microbial Activities 5.2.1 Observations on the Physiology of Microorganisms from Pristine Ground Water Environments / P. Hirsch 5.2.2 Formation and Transformation of Manganese Oxidation States by Bacteria / J. Gottfreund and R. Schweisfurth 5.2.3 Interactions Between Humic Acids and Microorganisms / G.-J. Tuschewitzki, B. Langer and H. Otremba 5.3 Microbiology of Selected Locations 5.3.1 Subsurface Microbial Activities in the Sandhausen Forest Ecosystem / R. Weyandt and R. Schweisfurth 5.3.2 Heterotrophic Bacterial Communities in the Bocholt Aquifer System / J. Kölbel-Boelke and A. Nehrkorn 5.3.3 The Natural Microflora of the Segeberger Forest Aquifer System / P. Hirsch and E. Rades-Rohkohl 5.3.4 Microbiological Observations of the Unsaturated Zone of a Quaternary Gravel Profile / I. Alexander, G. Freitag, J. Grossmann, Β. Merkel, P. Udluft and I. Ullsperger 6 Hydrogeochemical and Geochemical-Hydraulic Models and Model Concepts 6.0 Introduction / H.-D. Schulz 6.1 Hydrogeochemical Models and Concepts 6.1.1 Development of Secondary Permeability of a Fracture Aquifer in Carbonate Rocks: a Model / W. Dreybrodt 6.1.2 Some Aspects of Modelling the Carbon System in the Unsaturated Zone / B. Merkel, L. Eichinger and P. Udluft 6.1.3 Methodical Concepts in Silicate-Water Interaction - a Comparison of Results / A. Dahmke, G. Matthess, A. Petersen and D. Schenk 6.2 Combination of Transport and Geochemical Reactions 6.2.1 Water Movement and Geochemical Reactions in the Unsaturated Zone of Sands with Low Calcite Contents / H.-D. Schulz 6.2.2 Physical and Biochemical Processes Affecting Mass Transport in the Bocholt Aquifer System / C. Bugner and R. Mull 6.2.3 Tritium and 3He Measurements as Calibration Data for Ground Water Transport Models / H. Dörr, P. Schlosser, M. Stute and C. Sonntag 6.2.4 39Ar-, 85Kr-, 3He- and 3H Isotope Dating of Ground Water in the Bocholt and Segeberger Forst Aquifer Systems / M. Forster, H. Loosli and S. Weise 6.2.5 Modelling of Mass Balance and of Microbial Transformations in the Fuhrberger Feld Sandy Aquifer / O. Strebet, J. Böttcher and W.H.M. Duynisveld 6.3 Description of Geochemical Environments with Thermodynamic Equilibrium Models / M. Rolling and H.-D. Schulz 6
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  • 58
    Journal available for loan
    Journal available for loan
    Kaltenburg-Lindau : Europen Geophysical Society | Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: Z 92.0059
    In: Annales Geophysicae
    Type of Medium: Journal available for loan
    Pages: C613 Seiten
    Series Statement: Annales Geophysicae Vol. 9, Suppl.
    Language: English
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  • 59
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: AWI A11-23-95344
    In: Physics and chemistry in space : Planetology, 18
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: IX, 165 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 3540506853 , 3-540-50685-3 , 0387506853 , 0-387-50685-3 , 9783642486289
    Series Statement: Physics and chemistry in space : Planetology 18
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1 Noctilucent Clouds 1.1 Introduction 1.2 How, When and Where Noctilucent Clouds Are Seen 1.3 Amateur Observations 1.4 Cloud Types 1.5 Structure of the Upper Atmosphere 2 History 2.1 Introduction 2.2 The Discovery of the "Shining Night-Clouds" 2.3 Measurements of Noctilucent Clouds 2.4 The Middle Period of Noctilucent Cloud Research 3 Observations from Ground Level 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The Geometry of Twilight Scattering 3.3 Latitude of Observation 3.4 Absorption of Light in the Atmosphere 3.5 Height of Noctilucent Clouds 3.6 Drift Motions 3.7 Wave Structure 4 Spectrophotometry 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Spectroscopic Observations 4.3 Spectrophotometry from Ground Level 4.4 Rocket-Borne Photometers 4.5 Spectrophotometry from Satellites 4.6 Conclusions About Cloud Particle Sizes 5 Polarimetry 5.1 Introduction 5.2 Polarization by Scattering 5.3 Measurement of Polarized Light 5.4 Polarization Measured from Ground Level 5.5 Measurements of Polarization from Rockets 5.6 Conclusions About Cloud Particle Sizes 6 Rocket-Borne Sampling 6.1 Introduction 6.2 Flights over Sweden in 1962 and 1967 6.3 Flights over Sweden in 1970 and 1971 6.4 Flights over Canada in 1968 and 1970 6.5 Collectors Flown by Max-Planck-Institut Researchers, 1968 to 1971 6.6 Conclusions About Cloud Particle Sizes 7 Variation of Occurrence 7.1 Introduction 7.2 Sunspot Cycle 7.3 Seasonal Frequency of Noctilucent Clouds 7.4 Climatology of the Mesosphere 8 Other Observations 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Association with Hydroxyl Airglow Emission 8.3 Association with Aurora and Planetary Magnetic Activity 8.4 Lunar Effects 8.5 Lidar Observations 8.6 Artificial Noctilucent Clouds 8.7 Abnormal Observations 9 Environment of Noctilucent Clouds 9.1 Introduction 9.2 Atmospheric in Temperature 9.3 D-Region 9.4 Dust 9.5 Water Vapour in the Mesosphere 9.6 Radiation 9.7 Rates of Growth 9.8 Nucleation of Ice 9.9 Settling of Particles 9.10 Modelling Noctilucent Clouds by Numerical Simulation 10 The Nature of Noctilucent Clouds 10.1 Introduction 10.2 Formation in Noctilucent Clouds 10.3 Growth of Noctilucent Cloud Particle 10.4 Evaporation of Noctilucent Cloud Particles 10.5 The Relationship Between Polar Mesospheric Clouds and Noctilucent Clouds 10.6 Summary 11 Bibliography A) Before 1900 B) 1900-1950 C) Bibliography since 1950 Appendix 1: Atmospheric Refraction . Appendix 2: Atmospheric Transmission Along Grazing Pays Subject Index Name Index
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  • 60
    Call number: MOP 47263 / Mitte
    Description / Table of Contents: Vor einigen Jahren wurde an die VDI-Kommission Reinhaltung der Luft der Wunsch herangetragen, sie möge sich mit dem Problem der Luftqualität in großen Städten befassen und dabei auch Planungs­ aspekte berücksichtigen. Damals gab es nur wenige Richtlinien, Verordnungen und Vorschriften, die speziell auf die urbane Umwelt abgestimmt waren. Im Vorfeld der Richtlinienarbeit wurden daher von der Komission die beiden Kolloquien "Reinhaltung der Luft in großen Städten" am 8. -10. 12. 1982 in Berlin und - zusammen mit der VDI-Kommission Lärmminderung - "Umweltschutz in großen Städten" am 8. -10. 10. 1986 in München veranstaltet. Die Vorträge und Diskussionen auf diesen Kolloquien haben gezeigt, daß Bedarf sowohl für ein umfassendes Handbuch zu Fragen des Stadtklimas und der meteorologischen Probleme der Luftreinhaltung als auch für ein praxisnahes Handbuch für Stadt-, Regional-oder Landespla­ ner, in dem der Stand dieses Wissens auf klimatologischem und meteorologischem Gebiet übersichtlich dargestellt ist und das vor allem schnelle Entscheidungen ermöglicht, besteht. Zur Schließung dieser Lücken wurde im Juni 1984 der VDI-Aus­ schuß "Stadtklima und Luftreinhaltung" gegründet. Es wurde beschlossen, zwei getrennte Handbücher zu bearbeiten und mit den wissenschaftlichen Grundlagen zu beginnen. Die Mitarbeiter des Ausschusses haben die einzelnen Beiträge in eigener Verantwor­ tung, jedoch mit dem Ratschlag und der Hilfe des Ausschusses, verfaßt. Herr Prof. Dr. K. Höschele sah abschließend alle Beiträge kritisch durch und gab den Autoren wertvolle Anregungen für Er­ gänzungen. Den "Redakteuren" bleibt es, allen herzlich für ihre Beiträge und Mitarbeit zu danken.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XV, 426 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540188800 , 0387188800
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis Einleitung (H. Schirmer) 1. Definitionen (H. Schirmer) 1.1 Wetter, Witterung und Klima 1.2 Stadtklima 1.3 Luftzusammensetzung (J. Baumüller) 2. Klimatologische Wirkungsfaktoren (H. Schirmer) 2.1 Natürliche Wirkungsfaktoren 2.1.1 Geographische Breite 2.1.2 Art des Untergrundes 2.1.3 Höhenlage 2.1.4 Landschaftlich beeinflußte Wirkungsfaktoren 2.2 Anthropogene Wirkungsfaktoren 2.2.1 Besiedlung 2.2.2 Sonstige Nutzungsänderungen 3. Veränderungen des Klimas im Stadtbereich (W. Beckröge) 3.1 Strahlungshaushalt (J. Rath) 3.1.1 Kurzweiliger Strahlungshaushalt 3.1.2 Langweiliger Strahlungshaushalt 3.2 Energiebilanz 3.3 Luftströmungen (Horizontalaustausch) (W. Beckröge) 3.3.1 Definitionen 3.3.2 Geschwindigkeitsprofile 3.3.2.1 Spezifische Einflußparameter 3.3.2.2 Typische Windprofile 3.3.3 Richtungsänderungen in der Grenzschicht 3.3.4 Canopy Layer 3.3.4.1 Stadtspezifische Einflußparameter 3.3.4.2 Düseneffekte 3.3.4.3 Wirbelablösungen 3.3.4.4 Windfeld in Straßenschluchten 3.3.5 Aspekte für die Planung 3.3.5.1 Immissionsbelastungen in Straßenschluchten 3.3.5.2 Ventilationsbahnen, Frischluftschneisen 3.3.5.3 Filterfunktion von Bepflanzungen 3.3.5.4 Windrichtungsverteilungen und Industrieansiedlungen 3.4 Luftaustausch, Turbulenz 3.4.1 Definitionen 3.4.2 Stabilitätsklassen, -kriterien 3.4.3 Freie Konvektion 3.4.3.1 Stadtspezifische Einflußparameter 3.4.3.2 Konvektionszellen 3.4.4 Erzwungene Konvektion 3.4.4.1 Stadtspezifische Einflußparameter 3.4.5 Turbulenzspektren , Turbulenzintensität 3.4.6 Turbulenzverhalten der Atmosphäre im zeitlichen Verlauf 3.4.7 Planungsaspekte 3.4.7.1 Auswirkungen von Oberflächenveränderungen 3.4.7.2 Auswirkungen verschiedener Bauformen 3.4.7.3 Topographische Einflüsse 4. Klimatische Phänomene (W. Beckröge) 4.1 Wärmeinsel (M. Baltrusch, G. Schütz) 4.1.1 Beitrag der Abwärme zum Wärmeinseleffekt 4.1.1.1 Begriffsbestimmung "Wärmeinsel" 4.1.2 Abwärmeinsel (Wärmeinsel im Winter) 4.1.2.1 Begriffsbestimmung "Abwärme" 4.1.2.2 Abwärmeentstehung 4.1.2.3 Emittenten der Abwärme 4.1.2.4 Zeitverhalten der Abwärmequellen 4.1.2.5 Formen der Abwärmequellen 4.1.2.6 Abwärmekomponenten 4.1.2.7 Abwärmekataster 4.1.3 Wirkungen der Abwärmeinsel 4.1.3.1 Intensität der Abwärmeinsel 4.1.3.2 Auswirkungen der Abwärmeinsel 4.1.4 Planungsvorgaben und Ziele 4.1.4.1 Standort-und Maßnahmenempfehlungen, Anordung von Einzelobjekten 4.2 Dunsthaube, Dunstfahne (W. Beckröge) 4.2.1 Entstehung 4.2.2 Auswirkungen 4.2.2.1 StrahIungshaushalt 4.2.2.2 Nebel 4.2.2.3 Niederschlag 4.2.3 Aerosole (J. Löbel) 4.2.3.1 Definitionen und physikalische Eigenschaften 4.2.3.2 Quellen und Senken 4.2.3.3 Chemische Eigenschaften 4.2.3.4 Lufttrübung und Sichtweite 4.2.4 Aspekte für die Planung (W. Beckröge) 4.3 Lokale Windsysteme 4.3.1 Entstehung 4.3.1.1 Topographisch bedingte Systeme 4.3.1.2 Durch Bebauung bedingte Systeme 4.3.1.3 Land-See-Windzirkulation 4.3.2 Auswirkungen 4.3.2.1 FrischIuftzufuhr 4.3.3 Aspekte für die Planung 4.4 Niederschlag (P. Schlaak) 4.4.1 Niederschlagsarten, Niederschlagsintensitäten, Niederschlagsdauer 4.4.2 Auswirkungen der Orographie bzw. von Stadtgebieten auf die Niederschlagshöhe 4.4.3 Verteilung von kräftigen Schauern bzw. Gewittern 4.4.4 Schneefall und Schneedeckentage 4.4.5 Aspekte für die Planung 5. Emission, Umwandlung, Immission (J. Baumüller) 5.1 Emissionen in der Bundesrepublik Deutschland 5.1.1 Quellengruppe Kraftwerke 5.1.2 Quellengruppe Industrie 5.1.3 Quellengruppe Hausbrand und Kleingewerbe 5.1.4 Quellengruppe KFZ-Verkehr 5.1.5 Emissionskataster 5.1.6 Emissionsminderung und -begrenzung 5.2 Chemische Umwandlungen von Spurenstoffen während der Ausbreitung (J. Löbel) 5.2.1 Chemische Reaktionen 5.2.2 Chemische Reaktionen und Ausbreitungsmodelle 5.3 Immissionen (J. Baumüller) 5.3.1 Langzeitentwicklungen 5.3.2 Jahresgang 5.3.3 Wochengang 5.3.4 Tagesgang 5.3.5 Inversionen und Luftbelastung 5.3.6 Schadstoffwindrosen 5.3.7 Grenzwerte, Luftbelastungsindex 5.3.8 Luftaustauschgrößen 5.3.9 Smog und Smogverordnung 5.3.10 Wirkungsbezogene Meßverfahren (E. Koch, W. R. Thiel) 5.3.10.1 Allgemeines 5.3.10.2 Begriffsbestimmungen 5.3.10.3 Wirkungserhebungen an Menschen 5.3.10.4 Wirkungserhebungen an Pflanzen 5.3.10.5 Wirkungserhebungen an Tieren 5.3.10.6 Wirkungserhebungen an Materialien 5.3.10.7 Hinweise für die Anwendung der Verfahren in Planungsfällen 5.3.11 Trockene Deposition (J. Löbel) 5.3.11.1 Definition 5.3.11.2 Meßverfahren 5.3.11.3 Meßergebnisse 5.3.11.4 Modellansätze 5.3.12 Nasse Deposition 5.3.12.1 Definitionen 5.3.12.2 Meßverfahren 5.3.12.3 Meßergebnisse 5.3.12.4 Modelle zur Behandlung der nassen Deposition 6. Meßnetze, Feldexperimente, Verfahren (H. Schirmer) 6.1 Meßnetze (J. Baumüller) 6.1.1 Luftmeßnetze 6.2 Luftmeßnetz Schweiz (H. Schirmer) 6.3 Meteorologische Meßnetze in Stadtgebieten (U. Otte) 6.3.1 Ständige Netze (Grundnetze) 6.3.2 Temporäre Meßnetze 6.3.3 Feldexperimente 6.3.3.1 Horizontale Meßprofile 6.3.3.2 Vertikale Meßprofile 6.3.4 Ergänzende Meßverfahren 6.4 Aspekte für die Planung 6.5 Das digitale Geländeklimamodell des Deutschen Wetterdienstes 6.5.1 Grundlagen 6.5.2 Anwendungen 7. Modellierungen (M. Kerschgens) 7.1 Grundlagen stadtklimatischer Modellierungen 7.1.1 Einleitung 7.1.2 Prinzipielle Gleichungen 7.1.3 Parametrisierungen 7.1.4 Anwendungen und Einschränkungen 7.1.4.1 Diagnostische Modelle 7.1.4.2 Prognostische Modelle 7.1.5 Vergleich mit Messungen 7.1.6 Aspekte für die Planung 7.2 Modellansätze zur Simulation der Ausbreitung von Luftbeimengungen (H. Kolb) 7.2.1 Einsatzbereiche - Modellarten 7.2.2 Modelle mit physikalischem Hintergrund 7.2.2.1 Stationäre Modelle (Gaußmodelle) 7.2.2.2 Nicht-stationäre Modelle 7.2.3 Statistische und empirische Modelle 7.2.4 Physische Modelle 8. Überblick über die Wirkungen von Luftverunreinigungen auf Mensch, Tier, Pflanze und Materialien (E. Koch, W. R. Thiel) 8.1 Vorbemerkung 8.2 Wirkungen auf den Menschen 8.2.1 Allgemeines 8.2.2 Wirkungscharakter einzelner Luftverunreinigungskomponenten 8.3 Wirkungen auf Tiere 8.4 Wirkungen auf Pflanzen 8.4.1 Allgemeines 8.4.2 Wirkungscharakter einzelner Luftverunreinigungskomponenten 8.5 Wirkungen auf Materialien 8.5.1 Allgemeines 8.5.2 Wirkungscharakter einzelner Luftverunreinigungskomponenten 8.6 Abschließende Bemerkungen 8.7 Gerüche (E. Koch, G. Schütz) 8.7.1 Beurteilungsgrundlagen 8.7.2 Methoden zur Feststellung von Gerüchen 8.7.3 Aspekte für die Planung 8.7.4 Technische Verfahren zur Minderung von Geruchsimmissionen 8.7.5 Besondere Problemfälle 8.7.5.1 Kleinräumige Geruchsbelästigungen 8.7.5.2 Warngerüche 8.7.5.3 Geruchsfehlwahrnehmungen 9. Gebäudeklima (H. Schirmer) 9.1 Allgemeines 9.2 Thermodynamisches Verhalten von Gebäuden (J. Rath) 10. Bioklima (G. Jendritzky) 10.1 Einleitung 10.2 Der aktinische Wirkungskomplex 10.3 Der thermische Wirkungskomplex 10.3.1 Das Klima-Michel-Modell 10.3.2 Das MUKLIMO
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  • 61
    Call number: MOP 46919 / Mitte
    In: Verständliche Wissenschaft, 117
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: IX, 169 Seiten , Illustrationen , 18 cm
    ISBN: 3540175547 ((Berlin ...) kart.) , 0387175547 ((New York ...) kart.)
    Series Statement: Verständliche Wissenschaft 117
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis I. Satelliten 1. Einleitung 2. Meteorologische Satelliten 3. Elektromagnetische Strahlung - die Verbindung zwischen Erde und Satellit 4. Aufgaben meteorologischer Satelliten II. Meteorologische Produkte aus Satellitenmessungen 1. Satellitenbilder 2. Windfelder 3. Vertikalprofile III. Bewölkungskonfiguratiohen in Satellitenbildern und ihre meteorologische Bedeutung 1. Bänder, Spiralen und Zellen - die Tiefdrucksysteme der gemäßigten Breiten 1.1 Wolkenbänder an Kalt-und Warmfronten 1.2 Wolkenbänder an okkludierten Fronten 1.3 Bewölkungskonfigurationen in der Kaltluft 1.4 Wolkenbänder vor Kaltfronten 1.5 Wolkenkonfigurationen im Bereich des „Jet-Stream" 2. Ablauf meteorologischer Entwicklungen aus Bildfolgen 3. Bänder und Zellen - die Höhentiefs der gemäßigten Breiten 4. Spiralen und Wolkenlöcher - die tropischen Wirbelstürme 5. Einzelne Wolkenzellen - Schauer, Windböen und Gewitter 6. Einförmige große Wolkenflächen - Nebel und Stratus 7. Bewölkungskonfigurationen an und um Gebirgsmassive 8. Einige ergänzende Bemerkungen IV. Verwendung von Satellitendaten in der Synoptik 1. Diagnose des Wetterzustandes 1.1 Beispiel einer Diagnose: 20.9.1984, 6 GMT 1.1.1 Analyse der Unterlagen von 6 GMT 1.1.2 Analyse mittels Bildfolgen 1.2 Charakteristische Wetterlagen und deren Bewölkungskonfigurationen 1.2.1 Hoch über Mitteleuropa: 2.11.1984 1.2.2 Tiefdruckrinne über Mitteleuropa: 12.4.1985 1.2.3 Tief über Südwesteuropa: 18.5.1984 1.2.4 Tief über Nordosteuropa: 2.5.1985 2. Wetterprognosen 2.1 Allgemeine Bemerkungen 2.2 Verwendung von Satellitenmessungen bei der Wetterprognose 2.2.1 Satellitenbilder für Nowcasting und die sehr kurzfristige Vorhersage 2.2.2 Satellitenbilder und die Prognose für den nächsten Tag 2.2.3 Längerfristige Vorhersagen V. Abschließende Bemerkungen und Ausblick in die Zukunft Anhang A Anhang В Anhang C Anhang D Anhang E Sachverzeichnis
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  • 62
    Call number: 4/O 8932
    In: Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences
    Description / Table of Contents: The particular behavior of trace metals in the environment is determined by their specific physico-chemical form rather than by their total concentration. The introduction of atomic absorption spectrometry has lead to a plethora of scientific papers and reports in which metal concentrations in the environment are only reported as total concentrations. Only recently has the need for improved knowledge on the various forms and bioavailability of metals been realised. Considerable research effort is now devoted to measuring the concentrations of trace metals in surface waters. Efforts are made to couple chemical analytical techniques to process-related biological problems. The proceedings of the workshop on The Speciation of Metals in Water, Sediment and Soil Systems held in Sunne, Sweden, comprise these efforts and show aspects for further cooperation between analytical chemists and biologists
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: V, 190 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: Online edition Springer eBook Collection. Earth and Environmental Science
    ISBN: 9783540477334
    Series Statement: Lecture Notes in Earth Sciences 11
    URL: Volltext  (ZZ)
    Language: English
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  • 63
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: M 93.0654 ; MOP 46766 / Mitte
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VII, 187 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540162364
    Classification:
    Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1 Some Basic Relations 1.1 Natural Parameters and Observables 1.2 Propagation of Electromagnetic Waves 1.3 Waves at Boundaries Between Different Media 2 Spectral Lines of Atmospheric Gases 2.1 Resonant Frequencies of Molecules 2.2 Widths of Spectral Lines 2.3 Applications to the Earth's Atmosphere 3 Spectral Properties of Condensed Matter 3.1 Elementary Theory of Organic Dyes 3.2 Chlorophyll and Spectral Properties of Plants 3.3 Polarization of the Media and Dispersion of Radiation 4 Scattering of Radiation 4.1 Light Scattering by Molecules 4.2 Scattering of Radiation by Macroscopic Particles 4.3 Backscattering from Rough Surfaces 5 Transport of Radiation 5.1 The Equation of Radiative Transfer 5.2 Kirchhoff's Law and Radiometry 5.3 Radiometric Observation of Atmospheric Parameters and the Inversion of Remotely Sensed Data References Subject Index
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  • 64
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: PIK N 612-93-0225
    In: Encyclopedia of plant physiology
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 81 figs. XVI,522 pages
    ISBN: 3540139354 , 0-387-13935-4
    Series Statement: Encyclopedia of plant physiology 18
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    Call number: PIK N 612-93-0221
    In: Physiological plant ecology
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    Pages: 104 figs. XI, 799 pages
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    Series Statement: Physiological plant ecology 3
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    Call number: PIK N 612-93-0222
    In: Physiological plant ecology
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    In: Topics in applied physics ; 8
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 363 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Edition: second corrected and updated edition
    Edition: Online edition Springer eBook Collection. Physics and Astronomy
    ISBN: 9783540707554 , 9783540119135 (print)
    Series Statement: Topics in Applied Physics 8
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    Call number: MOP 45820 / Mitte
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    Pages: XIII, 298 Seiten , Illustrationen
    ISBN: 3540121447 , 0387121447
    Uniform Title: Izmerenie turbulentnych pulʹsacij 〈engl.〉
    Language: English
    Note: Contents Chapter One STATISTICAL DESCRIPTION OF TURBULENCE 1.1 Turbulence as a Random Process 1.2 Statistical Averages of Random Variables 1.3 Stationarity and Homogeneity 1.4 Spectral Decomposition 1.5 Connection Between Correlation and Spectral Functions 1.6 The Equations of Turbulences Chapter Two rlliASUREMENT OF TURBULENT FLUCTUATIONS 2.1 Modeling of Statistical Characteristics of Turbulent Fluctuations 2.2 Experimental Systems 2.3 Thermo-anemometry (Hot-wire and Hot-film) 2.4 Doppler method 2.5 Other Methods of Measuring Turbulent Fluctuations 2.6 Instrumental Processing of Recorded Fluctuations 2.7 Experimental Uncertainties Chapter Three TRANSDUCERS OF FINITE SIZE IN TURBULENT FLUCTUATIONS 3.1 General Relationships 3.2 Spatial and Wave Characteristics of Simple Transducers 3.3 A System of Transducers as Frequency Filter 3.4 Correction Functions for a Field of Velocity Fluctuations Chapter Four STATISTICAL MODELS OF TURBULENT FIELDS 4.1 Models of the Field as a Basis for Correcting the Results of Measurements 4.2 Corcos Model of the Turbulent Pressure Field and Its Simplest Modifications 4.3 Departure from Multiplication Hypothesis 4.4 Diffusion Model 4.5 Convection Model 4.6 Phase Velocity of Cross-Spectrum Chapter Five CORRECTION FUNCTIONS FOR THE PRESSURE FLUCTUATION FIELD 5.1 Power Spectrum 5.2 The Cross-Spectrum 5.3 Measurements with Wave Filters REFERENCES SUBJECT INDEX , Aus dem Russischen übersetzt
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    In: Topics in current physics, 28
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    In: Physiological plant ecology
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    In: Photosynthesis
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    In: Photosynthesis
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    Call number: 7/O 4593 ; MOP 44789 / Mitte
    In: Ecological studies, 18
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    Pages: XII, 367 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    ISBN: 3540074651
    Series Statement: Ecological studies 18
    Language: English
    Note: Contents 1. Introductory Remarks on Remote Sensing / E. SCHANDA 1.1 Application Areas of Remote Sensing 1.2 Sensing Systems 1.3 Remote Sensing and Spectral Constraints 2. Aerospace Photography / A. E. SALERNO 2.1 Introduction 2.2 Characteristics of Photographic Process 2.2.1 Sensitometry General 2.2.2 The Characteristic Curve 2.2.3 Development Control 2.2.4 Exposure Control 2.2.5 Film Speed 2.2.6 Reciprocity Law Anomalies 2.2.7 Density Measurement 2.2.8 Measurement of Color 2.2.9 Tone Reproduction Theory 2.2.10 Spectral Sensitivity 2.2.11 Resolution 2.2.12 Granularity 2.2.13 Dimensional Stability and Mechanical Properties 2.3 Cameras and Films 2.3.1 Cameras (General) 2.3.2 Aerial Cameras — Common Features 2.3.3 Optical System 2.3.4 Calibration 2.3.5 Image Motion 2.3.6 Hand Held Cameras 2.3.7 Special Cameras 2.3.8 Film (General) 2.3.9 Aerial Photographic Materials 2.3.10 Black-and-White Camera Films 2.3.11 Color Camera Films 2.4 Photographic Attributes of Earth Sciences 2.4.1 Agriculture 2.4.2 Geography and Geology 2.4.3 Hydrology and Oceanography 2.4.4 Anomalies, Atmospheric 2.4.5 Factors Affecting the Photo Image 2.4.6 Image Formation on Color Film 2.4.7 Processing of Color Film 2.4.8 Photo Systems, Choice 2.4.9 Image Enhancement Procedure Bibliography 3. Infrared Sensing Methods / P. W. SCHAPER 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The Infrared Radiation Field 3.3 Fundamentals of Measurement 3.4 Methods of Measurement 3.4.1 The Single Element Radiometer 3.4.2 Imaging Radiometers 3.4.3 Multi Wavelength Channel Radiometers 3.4.4 Spectrometers 3.4.5 Interferometers 3.5 Applications 3.6 Data Interpretation Error Sources 3.7 Expectations of the Near Future References 4. Laser Applications in Remote Sensing / R.T.H. COLLIS and P. B. RUSSELL 4.1 Introduction 4.1.1 Scope and Definitions 4.1.2 Technical Approaches 4.2 Fundamentals of Physical Processes Involved 4.2.1 Specular Reflection and Elastic (Non-resonant) Scattering 4.2.2 Inelastic and Resonant Scattering 4.2.3 Resonant Absorption 4.2.4 Doppler Effects 4.2.5 Polarization 4.3 Instrumentation 4.3.1 System Concepts 4.3.2 System Configuration 4.3.3 Lasers 4.3.4 Photodetection 4.3.5 Eye Safety 4.3.6 Viewpoint of Remote Sensing 4.4 Applications 4.4.1 General 4.4.2 Backscattering Techniques - Non-resonant Elastic Scattering 4.4.3 Inelastic and Resonant Backscattering 4.4.4 Resonant Absorption 4.4.5 Doppler Techniques 4.4.6 Polarization References 5. Radar Methods / G.P. DE LOOR 5.1 General Aspects 5.1.1 Introduction 5.1.2 Resolution 5.1.3 Image Build-up; Flight Procedure 5.1.4 Parallax 5.1.5 Image Correction 5.1.6 Registration of the Radar Signals 5.2 Backgrounds 5.2.1 Introduction 5.2.2 The Radar Equation 5.2.3 Ground Returns 5.3 Applications 5.3.1 Introduction 5.3.2 Geography 5.3.3 Geology 5.3.4 Vegetation Studies 5.3.5 Sea, Coastal and Oceanographic Studies 5.4 Conclusion References 6. Passive Microwave Sensing / E. SCHANDA 6.1 Principles of Passive Microwave Remote Sensing 6.1.1 Physical Fundamentals of Microwave Radiometry 6.1.2 Semitransparent Media 6.1.3 The Effects of the Atmosphere 6.2 Instrumental Aspects of Microwave Radiometry 6.2.1 The Sensitivity of a Microwave Radiometer 6.2.2 Other Types of Radiometers 6.2.3 Angular Resolution and Range of Passive Microwave Sensing 6.2.4 Realisations of Microwave Radiometers 6.3 Emissive Properties of Materials on the Surface of the Earth 6.3.1 Plane Surfaces of Homogeneous Materials 6.3.2 Heterogeneous Media 6.3.3 Rough Surfaces 6.3.4 Various Investigations on Emissivities 6.4 Remote Determination of Atmospheric Constituents by Their Micro-wave Spectra 6.4.1 The Absorption Coefficients of the Line Spectra 6.4.2 Determinations of Height Profiles 6.5 Passive Microwave Remote Sensing of Water, Ice and Snow 6.5.1 Investigations of Water Surfaces 6.5.2 Investigations of Ice and Snow 6.6 Investigations of the Soil, Vegetation and Geological Features 6.7 Investigations of the Atmosphere and of Meteorological Features 6.7.1 Sounding of Atmospheric Constituents from Molecular Line Radiation 6.7.2 Observation of Meteorological Features References 7. Applications of Gamma Radiation in Remote Sensing / R.L. GRASTY 7.1 The Natural Gamma-radiation Field 7.2 Gamma-ray Detector Systems 7.3 Operational Procedures 7.3.1 Background Radiation 7.3.2 Height Correction 7.3.3 Calibration and Spectral Stripping 7.4 Applications 7.4.1 Mineral Exploration 7.4.2 Geological Mapping 7.4.3 Water-equivalent Snow Measurements 7.4.4 Soil Moisture Measurement 7.4.5 Monitoring Nuclear Facilities 7.5 Future Prospects References 8. Sonar Methods / D.J. CREASEY 8.1 Introduction 8.2 Propagation of Acoustic Energy 8.2.1 General 8.2.2 Absorption Losses in Water 8.2.3 Beam Bending in Water 8.2.4 Propagation in Air 8.3 The Sonar Equation 8.3.1 Transducers and Arrays 8.3.2 Noise and Reverberation 8.3.3 Signal to Noise Ratio and Signal to Reverberation Ratio 8.3.4 Interference Signals in Air 8.4 Factors Affecting Resolution in a Sonar System 8.4.1 General 8.4.2 Range Resolution 8.4.3 Bearing Resolution 8.4.4 Doppler Effect in Sonar 8.5 Applications 8.5.1 Echo Sounding 8.5.2 Sonars with Fixed Beams 8.5.3 Mechanically Rotated Sonar Array Systems 8.5.4 Side-scan Sonars 8.5.5 Sub-bottom Profiling Systems 8.5.6 Sonars with Sectors Scanned Electronically 8.5.7 Remote Sensing Application of Sonar in Air References 9. Digital Picture Processing / PH. HARTL 9.1 Introduction 9.1.1 General Remarks 9.1.2 Relation between Image and Real Scene 9.1.3 Enhancement and Filtering 9.2 The Elements of an Image Data Processing and Analysis System 9.2.1 Data Acquisition Subsystem 9.2.2 Data Handling Subsystem 9.2.3 Data Preprocessing Subsystem 9.2.4 Data Storage and Retrieval Subsystem 9.3 Geometric Corrections 9.3.1 Linear Transformations 9.3.2 Quadratic and Higher Order Transformations 9.3.3 Reference Marks 9.3.4 Image Gridding 9.3.5 Image Registration 9.3.6 Geometric Correction Concepts 9.4 Image Enhancement and Filtering Processes 9.4.1 Enhancement Processes 9.4.2 Image Smoothing 9.4.3 Image Sharpening 9.4.4 Matched Filters 9.4.5 Ratio Mapping and Generalization of Image Combination Procedures 9.4.6 Pseudocolor Transformation 9.5 Feature Extraction and Classification 9.5.1 Spectral Features 9.5.2 Spatial Features 9.5.3 The Decision Process 9.5.4 The Decision Criteria 9.5.5 Unsupervised Classification 9.5.6 Recognizing of Bridges, Rivers, Lakes, and Islands 9.6 Appendix 1: The Image Signal in Spatial and Frequency Domain 9.6.1 Signals in the Spatial Domain 9.6.2 Signals in the Frequency Domain 9.7 Appendix 2: Numerical Example for Texture-context Features References Subject Index Color Plates
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    Pages: X, 320 S.
    Edition: 3. ed
    ISBN: 3540065709
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    Call number: AWI G6-22-94889
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 430 Seiten , Illustrationen , 24 cm
    ISBN: 3-540-06587-3 , 0-387-06587-3
    Series Statement: Anwendung von Isotopen in der organischen Chemie und Biochemie Band 2
    Language: German
    Note: Inhaltsverzeichnis Vorwort Adressenliste der Autoren A. Einleitung / H. SIMON und P. RAUSCHENBACH 1. Begriffe und Definitionen 1.1. Absorption, Ionisation, Anregung und Bremsstrahlung von β-Strahlung 1.2. γ- und Röntgen-Strahlung, Mechanismen der Absorption 1.3. Häufig verwendete radioaktive Isotope 1.4. Literatur und Bibliographie B. Allgemeines und Prinzipien der Radioaktivitätsmessung / H. SIMON und P. RAUSCHENBACH 1. Absolut- und Relativmessung von Radioaktivität 2. Ionisationskammern und Zählrohre 2.1. Ionisationskammern 2.2. Zählrohre 2.2.1. Zählrohre zur Messung von β-Strahlung 2.2.2. Zählrohre zur Messung von γ-Strahlung 3. Halbleiterdetektoren / R. TYKVA 4. Szintillationszähler 4.1. Allgemeines über Szintillationszähler 4.2. Messung mit flüssigen Szintillatoren 4.2.1. Lösungsmittel 4.2.2. Probengefäße 4.2.3. Szintillator-Substanzen 4.2.4. Löscheffekte, Phosphoreszenz und Chemolumineszenz 4.3. Messung durch Čerenkov-Strahlung 4.4. Messung von γ-Strahlern mit festen Szintillatoren 4.4.1. Impulshöhenverteilung, γ-Spektroskopie und Auflösungsvermögen 4.4.2. Einfluß verschiedener Parameter auf die Gestalt des Spektrums 5. Literatur C. Parameter, die auf Genauigkeit und Reproduzierbarkeit von Einfluß sind. Fehlerbetrachtung / P. RAUSCHENBACH 1. Der radioaktive Zerfall als statistischer Vorgang 2. Einfluß von Probenaktivität, Nulleffekt und Meßzeit auf den Fehler der Nettozählrate 2.1. Meßzeitoptimierung 3. Grenzempfindlichkeit und Gütezahl 4. Fehler von Ratemeter-Messungen 5. Ermittlung von Störeffekten an Meßanordnungen aufgrund nichtstatistischer Ergebnisse 6. Erkennung eines zu hohen Fehlers einer Einzelmessung 7. Literatur D. Präparation der Proben und deren Messung / P. RAUSCHENBACH und H. SIMON 1. Messung in fester oder flüssiger Form mit Zählrohren 1.1. T-, 14C-, 35S- und 45Ca-markierte Proben 2. Messung in der Gasphase nach Proben-Umwandlung 2.1. Tritium-markierte Proben 2.2. 14C- und T / 14C-doppelmarkierte Substanzen 2.3. Literatur 3. Flüssig-Szintillations-Messung 3.1. Probenpräparation 3.1.1. Direkt-Messung (ohne Probenumwandlung) 3.1.1.1. Homogene Meßsysteme 3.1.1.1.1. Messung ohne Lösungsvermittler 3.1.1.1.2. Messung mit Lösungsvermittlern 3.1.1.1.3. Messung von Wasser und wäßrigen Lösungen 3.1.1.1.4. Häufig verwendete Szintillatorsysteme 3.1.1.2. Heterogene Meßsysteme 3.1.1.2.1. Emulsionen 3.1.1.2.2. Suspensionen 3.1.1.2.3. Andere heterogene Materialien wie Papierstreifen, Dünnschicht- und Glasfaserproben 3.1.1.2.4. Häufig verwendete Szintillatorsysteme 3.1.2. Messung nach Probenumwandlung 3.1.2.1. Absorption gasförmiger Proben 3.1.2.2. Umwandlung in flüssiger Phase 3.1.2.2.1. Solubilisierung 3.1.2.2.2. Naß-Oxidation 3.1.2.3. Trockene Oxidation 3.1.2.3.1. Sauerstoff-Kolben-Verfahren 3.1.2.3.2. Sauerstoff-Strom-Verfahren 3.1.2.3.3. Oxidation im Bombenrohr oder in der Metallbombe 3.1.2.4. Spezielle Umwandlungsverfahren 3.2. Bestimmung der Zählausbeute (Löschkorrektur) 3.2.1. Interne Standardisierung 3.2.2. Löschkorrektur-Verfahren, aufgrund der Verschiebung des Proben-Impuls-Spektrums 3.2.2.1. Löschkompensation 3.2.2.2. Proben-Kanalverhältnis-Methode 3.2.2.3. Verstärkungsverhältnis-Methode 3.2.3. Externe Standardisierung 3.2.3.1. Verfahren basierend auf der Zählrate des externen Standards 3.2.3.1.1. Standard im Zählfläschchen angeordnet 3.2.3.1.2. Standard außerhalb des Zählfläschchens angeordnet 3.2.3.2. Externe Standard-Kanalverhältnis-Methode 3.2.3.2.1. Rechnerische Weiterverarbeitung der Meßwerte 3.2.4. Nachverstärkungs-Methode 3.2.5. Koinzidenz-Methoden 3.2.6. Verdünnungs-Methode 3.3. Datenverarbeitung 3.4. Literatur E. Die Bestimmung geringer Radioaktivität / R. TYKVA 1. Fragestellungen, welche die Bestimmung geringer Radioaktivität erfordern 2. Wahl der Bestimmungsmethode 3. Allgemeine Gesichtspunkte für ein Laboratorium zur Messung geringer Radioaktivität 3.1. Lokalisierung und Ausstattung 3.1.1. Konstruktionsmaterialien 3.1.2. Elektrische Entstörung der Meßeinrichtung 3.2. Erhöhung der Bestimmungsempfindlichkeit 3.2.1. Erniedrigung des Nulleffektes durch mechanische Abschirmung, Antikoinzidenz- oder Koinzidenzschaltung, Impulshöhen- und Anstiegszeitdiskrimination 3.2.2. Erhöhung der spezifischen Radioaktivität vor der Messung 4. Die einzelnen Meßverfahren 5. Literatur. F. Messung mehrfachmarkierter Proben / R. TYKVA 1. Beispiele für die Verwendung und das Vorkommen mehrerer Radionuklide in einem Versuchssystem 2. Prinzipien der Meßverfahren 2.1. Flüssig-Szintillations-Zählung 2.1.1. Messung nach vorangehender Trennung der Radionuklide 2.1.2. Gleichzeitige Messung aufgrund unterschiedlicher Impulshöhenspektren 2.1.2.1. Prinzip der Methode 2.1.2.2. Berechnung der Zerfallsraten der einzelnen Nuklide von doppelmarkierten Proben 2.1.2.3. Die Wahl optimaler Arbeitsbedingungen bei der Messung löslicher, wenig gelöschter Proben 2.1.2.4. Bestimmung unlöslicher oder stark gelöschter Proben 2.2. Ionisationsmethoden und Halbleiterdetektoren 3. Literatur G. Radiochromatographie / M. WENZEL 1. Einleitung 2. Papier- und Dünnschicht-Chromatographie 2.1. Allgemeine Aspekte 2.2. Direktmessung von Chromatogrammen und Elektropherogrammen 2.2.1. Papier-Chromatogramme und Elektropherogramme 2.2.2. Dünnschicht-Chromatogramme 2.2.3. Direktmessung von Parallel- und zweidimensionalen Chromatogrammen 2.2.4. Messung von doppelt-markierten Chromatogrammen 2.2.5. Zählausbeute und weitere Meßparameter bei der Direktmessung 2.2.6. Kombination verschiedener Parameter 2.3. Diskontinuierliche Messung von Chromatogrammen 2.3.1. Diskontinuierliche Messung von Papier- und Dünnschicht-Chromatogrammen 2.4. Autoradiographische Verfahren 2.4.1. Film-Autoradiographie 2.4.2. Autoradiographie mit der Funkenkammer 3. Auswertung von Gel-Elektropherogrammen 4. Säulen-Chromatographie mit radioaktiven Lösungen 4.1. Kontinuierliche Messung 4.1.1. Durchfluß-Zellen aus Szintillator-Schläuchen 4.1.2. Durchfluß-Zellen mit fester Szintillator-Füllung 4.1.3. Durchfluß-Zellen für homogene Systeme 4.1.4. Radioaktivitäts-Messung von Eluaten durch Čerenkov-Strahlung 4.2. Diskontinuierliche Messung 5. Radio-Gaschromatographie / H. SIMON 5.1. Einleitung 5.2. Einfluß verschiedener Parameter aufionisations-Detektoren 5.3. Apparatur und Arbeitsweise für hydrierende Crackung bzw. Oxidation 5.4. Grenzempfindlichkeiten 6. Verschiedene der Radiochromatographie verwandte Meßmethoden 6.1. Messung radioaktiver Zellsuspensionen auf Filtrierpapier 6.2. Messung radioaktiver Gewebe-Schnitte 6.3. In vivo Scanning bei Kleintieren (»Szintigraphie«) 7. Registriermöglichkeiten 7.1. Digitale und analoge Darstellung der Aktivitätsverteilung 7.2. Elektronische Peak-Integration 7.3. Darstellung der Aktivitätsverteilung und Peak-Integration mit einem Vielkanal-Analysator 8. Beispiele für Anwendung der Radiochromatographie zur Reinheitskontrolle radioaktiver Substanzen 8.1. Reinheitskontrolle von 131J-Hippuran und 131J-Thyroxin 8.2. Reinheitskontrolle bzw. Reinigung von (6, 7-T)-Östradiol 9. Literatur H. Analyse von stabil-isotop markierten Verbindungen / H.-L. SCHMIDT 1. Anwendungen stabiler Isotope und Grundlagen ihrer Analytik 2. Elementaranalytische Isotopen-Bestimmungen 2.1. Verfahren zum Aufschluß von markierten Verbindungen 2.1.1. Aufarbeitung von Proben zur Deuterium-Analyse 2.1.1.1. Verbrennung Deuterium-haltiger organischer Verbindungen und Isolierung des Wassers 2.1.1.2. Verbrennung organischer Substanzen und Reduktion von Wasser für die massenspektrometrische Deuterium-Analyse 2.1.1.3. Einstufen-Verfahren zur Gewinnung von Wasserstoff und automatisierte Wasser-Reduktion 2.1.1.4. Bestimmung von Deuterium in acidem Wasserstoff 2.1.2. Aufbereitung von Proben zur 13C-Analyse 2.1.2.1. Verbrennung von Kohlenstoff-haltigem Material nach dem Prinzip der organischen Elementaranalyse 2.1.2.2. Probenbereitung aus anorganischem Material und aus Wässern 2.1.3. Probenchemie zur 15N-Analyse 2.1.3.1. Kjeldahl-Aufschluß und Hypobromit-Oxidation 2.1.3.2. Ox
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    In: Elementarmathematik vom höheren Standpunkte aus
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    Pages: XIV, 362 S.
    Edition: 2. völlig neu bearb. Aufl. von Kurt Stange und Hans-Joachim Henning. Mit 78 Abb.
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    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: G 5641
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIX, 582 S. : Ill., graph. Darst
    Language: German
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 85
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: MOP 26002
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 104 S.
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 86
    Call number: 19/O 2011(67a) ; 2563
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 355 S. : graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften in Einzeldarstellungen mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Anwendungsgebiete 67
    Location: Reading room
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 87
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: 3229
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VII, 357 S. : graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Struktur und Eigenschaften der Materie in Einzeldarstellungen 21
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 88
    Call number: 19/O 2011(10/2)
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XX, 516 S.
    Edition: 2nd ed.
    Series Statement: Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften in Einzeldarstellungen in Einzeldarstellungen mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Anwendungsgebiete 10
    Location: Reading room
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  • 89
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: G 6200
    In: Verständliche Wissenschaft
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 158 S.
    Edition: 2. verb. Aufl.
    Series Statement: Verständliche Wissenschaft 37
    Language: German
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 90
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: MOP 19758
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VI, 171 S.
    Edition: 3., neubearb. Aufl.
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 91
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: MOP 17093
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XIII, 458 S. : Ill., graph. Darst.
    Series Statement: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften in Einzeldarstellungen 60
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 92
    Call number: MOP 15965
    In: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 11 S.
    Series Statement: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam 29
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
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  • 93
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: O 2330
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: VIII, 240 S.
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 94
    Call number: 19/O 2011(57)
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 796 S.
    Series Statement: Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften in Einzeldarstellungen mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Anwendungsgebiete 57
    Location: Reading room
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  • 95
    Call number: MOP 14657
    In: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 59 S.
    Series Statement: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam 19
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
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  • 96
    Call number: MOP 14713
    In: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 21 S.
    Series Statement: Mitteilungen des Astrophysikalischen Observatoriums Potsdam 16
    Location: MOP - must be ordered
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  • 97
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 12499
    In: Rechenmethoden der Quantentheorie
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: X, 240 S. : Ill.
    Series Statement: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 53
    Location: Upper compact magazine
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 98
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 19/O 2011(2)
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: XII, 582 S. : graph. Darst.
    Edition: 4. Aufl.
    Series Statement: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften 2
    Location: Reading room
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 99
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 1049/1 / Regal 12
    In: Vorlesungen über Differentialgeometrie
    In: Die Grundlehren der mathematischen Wissenschaften
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: IX, 311 S. : graph. Darst.
    Edition: 4., unveränd. Aufl.
    Location: Archive - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 100
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Berlin : Springer
    Call number: G 6238 / Regal 13
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 281 S. : graph. Darst.
    Location: Magazine - must be ordered
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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