Preprints

There are 4721 Preprints listed.

Traversing the academic ladder as an early career researcher in earth and environmental sciences

Danielle Alderson, Lucy Clarke, Daniel Schillereff, et al.

Published: 2022-01-21
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Environmental Sciences

There is growing concern in Higher Education around job security, work-life balance and inequalities, and early career academics must make difficult trade-offs and life choices. Ample literature confirms that women navigating academia face additional challenges. Few studies have sought to connect contractual circumstances, employment priorities and their impacts on the life choices of individual [...]

Deep-water cycling and the Magmatic History of the Earth

Johnny Seales, Adrian Lenardic, Mark Richards

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Planetary Sciences

Earth is a magmatically active planet. Magmatism connects Earth's interior to its atmosphere, hydrosphere, and biosphere through cycling of volatiles, greenhouse gasses, and nutrients. Earth's magmatic history is intertwined with its thermal and tectonic evolution. How magmatism has evolved and been maintained in the face of planetary cooling remains an open question. We address this question [...]

Bayesian differential moment tensor inversion: theory and application to the North Korea nuclear tests

Zhe Jia, Zhongwen Zhan, Don Helmberger

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Geophysics and Seismology

Moment tensors are key to seismic discrimination but often require accurate Green’s functions for estimation. This limits the regions, frequency bands, and wave types in moment tensor inversions. In this study, we propose a differential moment tensor inversion (diffMT) method that uses relative measurements to remove the path effects shared by clustered events, thereby improving the accuracy of [...]

A Comparison of Methods for Assessing Groundwater Flooding Due to Sea Level Rise

Daniel Rozell

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Hydrology

This technical note compares two groundwater flooding assessments for a site on the Rockaway Peninsula of New York City, a coastal barrier island subject to several climate change risks including groundwater flooding. One assessment was performed using a MODFLOW groundwater model while the other used an interpolated water table map constructed in GIS. The two methods showed minor differences in [...]

Frequency-Difference Backprojection of Earthquakes

Jing Ci Neo, Wenyuan Fan, Yihe Huang, et al.

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Earth Sciences

Back-projection has proven useful in imaging large earthquake rupture processes. The method is generally robust and does not require many assumptions about the fault geometry or the Earth velocity model. It can be applied in both the time and frequency domain. However, back-projection images are often obtained from records filtered in a narrow frequency range, limiting our ability to uncover the [...]

No unique scaling law for igneous dikes

Simon Philip Gill, Richard Walker, Ken McCaffrey, et al.

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

In linear elastic fracture mechanics (LEFM), veins, dikes, and sills grow in length when the stress intensity factor [K_I] at the tip reaches a critical value: the host rock fracture toughness [K_Ic]. This criterion is applied broadly in LEFM models for crack growth and assumes that the pressure inside the crack is uniform. When applied to intrusion length versus thickness scaling, a significant [...]

On Strictly Enforced Mass Conservation Constraints for Modeling the Rainfall-Runoff Process

Jonathan Frame, Paul Ullrich, Grey Nearing, et al.

Published: 2022-01-20
Subjects: Hydrology

It has been proposed that conservation laws might not be beneficial for accurate hydrological modeling due to errors in input (precipitation) and target (streamflow) data (particularly at the event time scale), and this might explain why deep learning models (which are not based on enforcing closure) can out-perform catchment-scale conceptual and process-based models at predicting streamflow. We [...]

Subsurface Flow Batteries: Concept, Benefits and Hurdles

David Waltham, Katherine Holt, Stefanie Kuenzel, et al.

Published: 2022-01-19
Subjects: Earth Sciences

Storage of flow-battery electrolytes in aquifers is a novel concept for storing electrical energy in the subsurface. Flow-batteries operate by electrochemical transformations of electrolytes, rather than of electrodes, and their energy capacity can therefore be increased indefinitely by using larger electrolyte tanks. Saline aquifers may be the cheapest way to provide large-scale storage for this [...]

Phanerozoic sedimentary cover history of the Hudson Platform: a heuristic modeling perspective

Kalin T. McDannell, Paul B. O'Sullivan, Kerry Gallagher, et al.

Published: 2022-01-19
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geochemistry, Geology, Geomorphology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics, Stratigraphy, Tectonics and Structure

Understanding the long-term erosion and burial history of cratons is challenging due to the incompleteness of the rock record. Low-temperature thermochronology is used to elucidate these surface histories by inverting thermochronological data for the time-temperature history and incorporating sparse constraints and other assumptions about the regional geologic evolution. However, imposing certain [...]

Thermal evolution of rocky exoplanets with a graphite outer shell

Kaustubh Hakim, Arie van den Berg, Allona Vazan, et al.

Published: 2022-01-18
Subjects: Astrophysics and Astronomy, Planetary Sciences

The presence of rocky exoplanets with a large refractory carbon inventory is predicted by chemical evolution models of protoplanetary disks of stars with photospheric C/O >0.65, and by models studying the radial transport of refractory carbon. High-pressure high-temperature laboratory experiments show that most of the carbon in these exoplanets differentiates into a graphite outer shell. Our aim [...]

A discontinuous Galerkin method for sequences of earthquakes and aseismic slip on multiple faults using unstructured curvilinear grids

Carsten Uphoff, Dave A May, Alice-Agnes Gabriel

Published: 2022-01-18
Subjects: Geophysics and Seismology

Physics-based simulations provide a path to overcome the lack of observational data which is hampering a holistic understanding of earthquake faulting and crustal deformation across the vastly varying space-time scales governing the seismic cycle. However, simulations of sequences of earthquakes and aseismic slip (SEAS) including more than one fault, complex geometries, and elastic [...]

Post-caldera volcanism reveals shallow priming of an intra-ocean arc andesitic caldera: Hunga volcano, Tonga, SW Pacific

Marco Brenna, Shane Cronin, Ian Smith, et al.

Published: 2022-01-18
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Intra-oceanic arcs are typically associated with intermediate (andesitic) cone volcanoes. However, caldera volcanoes may also form in these settings from very large eruptions, resulting in sudden changes to the magma reservoir. These reservoirs can then produce either semi-continuous or intermittent low-intensity volcanism between major caldera-producing or caldera-deepening eruptions, providing [...]

Nature Based Solutions for Sustainable Urban Storm Water Management in Global South: A Short Review

Fahad Ahmed, Shashwat Sharma, Loc Huu Ho, et al.

Published: 2022-01-16
Subjects: Engineering, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Rapid urbanization in the Global South exacerbates urban water management challenges such as urban flooding and water pollution, rendering many areas water-insecure. Our reliance on grey infrastructures to combat these water management challenges is not sustainable in the long run, due to which a better alternative must be sought. Nature-based Solution (NBS) promote ecosystem services and enhance [...]

Fully distributed rainfall-runoff modeling using spatial-temporal graph neural network

Zhongrun Xiang, Ibrahim Demir

Published: 2022-01-15
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Earth Sciences, Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Hydrology

Recent studies using latest deep learning algorithms such as LSTM (Long Short-Term Memory) have shown great promise in time-series modeling. There are many studies focusing on the watershed-scale rainfall-runoff modeling or streamflow forecasting, often considering a single watershed with limited generalization capabilities. To improve the model performance, several studies explored an integrated [...]

Climate Change and Ocean Acidification: Are We Just Treating The Symptoms?

David James Finlay

Published: 2022-01-15
Subjects: Life Sciences

The human caused rise in atmospheric greenhouse gases has been seen as the driver of both climate change and ocean acidification. However recent peer reviewed papers show that, while GHG emissions are part of the problem, the primary driver of both climate change and ocean acidification is human caused ecological degradation. Curbing greenhouse gas emissions, to date, has been an abject failure [...]

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