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Preprints

There are 6976 Preprints listed.

Characterizing and Correcting Phase Biases in Short-Term, Multilooked Interferograms

Yasser Maghsoudi, Andy Hooper, Tim J Wright, et al.

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology

Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) is widely used to measure deformation of the Earth’s surface over large areas and long time periods. A common strategy to overcome coherence loss in long-term interferograms is to use multiple multilooked shorter interferograms, which can cover the same time period but maintain coherence. However, it has recently been shown that using this strategy [...]

Combining shallow-water and analytical wake models for tidal array micro-siting

Connor Jordan, Davor Dundovic, Anastasia K. Fragkou, et al.

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Civil and Environmental Engineering, Civil Engineering, Engineering, Hydraulic Engineering, Oceanography

For tidal-stream energy to become a competitive renewable energy source, clustering multiple turbines into arrays is paramount. As a result, array optimisation is critical for achieving maximum power performance and reducing cost of energy. However, ascertaining an optimal array layout is a highly complex problem, subject to specific site hydrodynamics and multiple inter-disciplinary [...]

Salt welding during canopy advance and shortening in the Green Canyon Area, northern Gulf of Mexico

Christopher Aiden-Lee Jackson, Sian Lianne Evans, Turki Alshammasi

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Other Earth Sciences, Tectonics and Structure

Welds form due to tectonically-induced thinning and/or dissolution of salt, with their composition and completeness thought to at least partly reflect their structural position within the salt-tectonic system. Despite their importance as seals or migration pathways for accumulations of hydrocarbons and CO2, we have relatively few published examples of drilled subsurface welds; such examples would [...]

The world’s second-largest, recorded landslide event: lessons learnt from the landslides triggered during and after the 2018 Mw 7.5 Papua New Guinea earthquake

Hakan Tanyas, Kevin Hill, Luke Mahoney, et al.

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Geology, Geomorphology, Geophysics and Seismology, Hydrology, Other Earth Sciences

Widespread landslide events provide rare but valuable opportunities to investigate the spatial and size distributions of landslides in relation to seismic, climatic, geological and morphological factors. This study presents a unique event inventory for the co-seismic landslides induced by the February 25, 2018 Mw 7.5 Papua New Guinea earthquake as well as its post-seismic counterparts including [...]

Imprint of the Pacific Walker Circulation in global precipitation δ18O

Georgina Maja Falster, Bronwen Konecky, Midhun Madhavan, et al.

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Climate, Oceanography and Atmospheric Sciences and Meteorology, Physical Sciences and Mathematics

*This article is now published, and freely available from Journal of Climate at https://doi.org/10.1175/JCLI-D-21-0190.1* Characterising variability in the global water cycle is fundamental to predicting impacts of future climate change; understanding the role of the Pacific Walker circulation (PWC) in the regional expression of global water cycle changes is critical to understanding this [...]

A theory of spontaneous tropical cyclogenesis from quasi-random convection

Hao Fu, Morgan O'Neill

Published: 2021-07-30
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

How the cumulus clouds organize into a tropical cyclone remains poorly understood. The difficulty lies in that the deep convection is noisy at the kilometer scale, but follows the physical feedbacks at the mesoscale. We build a barotropic numerical model to understand the interaction of the stochastic and deterministic processes in the genesis of a tropical depression. Deep convection is [...]

Near-term forecasts of stream temperature using process-guided deep learning and data assimilation

Jacob Zwart, Samantha Kay Oliver, William David Watkins, et al.

Published: 2021-08-13
Subjects: Computer Sciences, Hydrology, Statistics and Probability, Water Resource Management

Near-term forecasts of environmental outcomes can inform real-time decision making. Data assimilation modeling techniques can be used for forecasts to leverage real-time data streams, where the difference between model predictions and observations can be used to adjust the model to make better predictions tomorrow. In this use case, we developed a process-guided deep learning and data [...]

Competition between 3D structural inheritance and kinematics during rifting: insights from analogue models

Frank Zwaan, Pauline Chenin, Duncan Erratt, et al.

Published: 2021-08-01
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

The competition between the impact of inherited weaknesses and plate kinematics determines the location and style of deformation during rifting, yet the relative impacts of these “internal” and “external” factors remain poorly understood, especially in 3D. In this study we used brittle-viscous analogue models to assess how multiphase rifting, i.e., changes in plate divergence rate or direction, [...]

Ice viscosity is more sensitive to stress than commonly assumed

Joanna Millstein, Brent Minchew, Samuel S Pegler

Published: 2021-08-12
Subjects: Glaciology

Accurate representation of the viscous flow of ice is fundamental to understanding glacier dynamics and projecting sea-level rise. Ice viscosity is often described by a simple but largely untested and uncalibrated constitutive relation, Glen’s Flow Law, wherein the rate of deformation is proportional to stress raised to the power n. The value n = 3 is commonly prescribed in ice-flow models, [...]

Cryoturbation leads to iron-organic carbon associations along a permafrost soil chronosequence in northern Alaska

Hanna Joss, Monique Sezanne Patzner, Markus Maisch, et al.

Published: 2021-08-02
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

In permafrost soils, substantial amounts of organic carbon (OC) are potentially protected from microbial degradation and transformation into greenhouse gases by association with reactive iron (Fe) minerals. As permafrost environments respond to climate change, increased drainage of thaw lakes in permafrost regions is predicted. Soils will subsequently develop on these drained thaw lakes, but the [...]

Making Drone Data FAIR Through a Community-Developed Information Framework

Andrea Thomer, Lindsay Barbieri, Jane Wyngaard, et al.

Published: 2021-08-02
Subjects: Computer and Systems Architecture, Library and Information Science

Small Uncrewed Aircraft Systems (sUAS) are an increasingly common tool for data collection in many scientific fields. However, there are few standards or best practices guiding the collection, sharing, or publication of data collected with these tools. This makes collaboration, data quality control, and reproducibility challenging. To that end, we have used iterative rounds of data modeling and [...]

On the overlooked impact of river dams on beach erosion worldwide

Marcan Graffin, Vincent Regard, Sébastien Carretier, et al.

Published: 2021-08-04
Subjects: Engineering

The current retreat of the world's coastline has a profound impact on human activities and ecosystems. The scientific community has primarily focused on the potential impact of sea level rise. At the global scale, the contribution of river sand loads to coastal erosion has been overlooked. Here we present the first global sand pathway model from land to sea. Our model reveals that sand tends to [...]

The role of surface processes in basin inversion and breakup unconformity

Luke Mondy, Patrice F Rey, Guillaume Duclaux

Published: 2021-08-03
Subjects: Earth Sciences, Geology, Stratigraphy, Tectonics and Structure

At divergent plate boundaries, extensional tectonics lead to subsidence, continental rifting and the formation of continental margins. Yet, within this extensional context, transient compressional structures (stress inversion) and phases of uplift (depth inversion) are frequently recorded with no corresponding change in plate motion. Changes in gravitational potential energy during the rifting [...]

Drivers of phytoplankton responses to summer storms in a stratified lake: a modelling study

Jorrit Padric Mesman, Ana I. Ayala, Stéphane Goyette, et al.

Published: 2021-08-03
Subjects: Hydrology, Other Environmental Sciences, Terrestrial and Aquatic Ecology

Extreme wind events affect lake phytoplankton amongst others by deepening the mixed layer and increasing internal nutrient loading. Both increases and decreases of phytoplankton biomass after storms have been observed, but the precise mechanisms driving these responses remain poorly understood or quantified. In this study, we coupled a one-dimensional physical model to a biogeochemical model to [...]

Geochemical constraints on the structure of the Earth’s deep mantle and the origin of the LLSVPs

Matthew Lloyd Morgan Gleeson, Caroline Soderman, Simon Matthews, et al.

Published: 2021-08-03
Subjects: Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Geophysical analysis of the Earth’s lower mantle has revealed the presence of two superstructures characterized by low shear wave velocities on the core-mantle boundary. These Large Low Shear Velocity Provinces (LLSVPs) play a crucial role in the dynamics of the lower mantle and act as the source region for deep-seated mantle plumes. However, their origin, and the characteristics of the [...]

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