Search results for "Ultra"

showing 10 items of 4451 documents

Temporal loudness weights in background noise: Data and models

2019

Previous studies consistently showed that human listeners primarily consider the beginning of a time-varying sound when judging its overall loudness, and place less weight on subsequent temporal portions. However, all experiments studying this primacy effect in temporal loudness weights presented the target sound in quiet. Here, we compared temporal weights when the target sound was either presented in quiet or in a continuous background noise, and for a variation in the level of the target sound across a range of 60 dB. The target sound was a time-varying narrowband noise, the background noise was a continuous bandpass-filtered noise. In all conditions, we observed the expected primacy eff…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAcoustics and UltrasonicsAcousticsLoudnessBackground noiseNoiseArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)QUIETRange (statistics)Exponential decayNarrowband noiseSound (geography)MathematicsThe Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
researchProduct

Xenoliths from the sub-volcanic lithosphere of Mt Taranaki, New Zealand

2010

Abstract Mount Taranaki is located 140 km west of the Taupo Volcanic Zone and represents the most westerly expression of subduction-related volcanism on the North Island of New Zealand. Taranaki is a predominantly high-K arc volcano but compositions range from basaltic andesite to andesite with minor dacite and basalt. The sub-volcanic basement under Taranaki is thought to comprise calc–alkaline plutonic and metamorphic rocks of the Median Batholith, overlain by a sequence of Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments. Taranaki lavas contain abundant xenoliths that represent samples of the upper to lower crust beneath the volcano. The xenolith suite has been initially organised into six groups based…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAndesiteGeochemistryTaranaki BasinVolcanic rockIgneous rockGeophysicsBasaltic andesiteGeochemistry and PetrologyBatholithUltramafic rockXenolithPetrologyGeologyJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
researchProduct

Emission of bromine and iodine from Mount Etna volcano

2005

[1] Constraining fluxes of volcanic bromine and iodine to the atmosphere is important given the significant role these species play in ozone depletion. However, very few such measurements have been made hitherto, such that global volcanic fluxes are poorly constrained. Here we extend the data set of volcanic Br and I degassing by reporting the first measurements of bromine and iodine emissions from Mount Etna. These data were obtained using filter packs and contemporaneous ultraviolet spectroscopic SO2 flux measurements, resulting in time-averaged emission rates of 0.7 kt yr−1 and 0.01 kt yr−1 for Br and I, respectively, from April to October 2004, from which we estimate global Br and I flu…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryBromineMineralogychemistry.chemical_elementmedicine.disease_causeIodineOzone depletionPlumeAtmosphereGeophysicsFlux (metallurgy)VolcanochemistryGeochemistry and PetrologymedicineGeologyUltravioletGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
researchProduct

Speciation and interactions of plutonium with humic substances and kaolinite in aquifer systems

2007

Abstract The speciation of plutonium (Pu) in contact with humic substances (HS) and kaolinite has been performed in aquifer systems. Mainly the redox behavior, complexation, and sorption of plutonium are discussed here. The redox behavior of Pu(VI) in contact with HS was studied and it was found that Pu(VI) is reduced to Pu(III) and Pu(IV) within a couple of weeks. The complexation constants (log  β LC ) of Pu(III) and Pu(IV) with HS have been determined by means of the ultrafiltration method. Furthermore, the sorption of Pu(III) and Pu(IV) onto kaolinite has been investigated as a function of pH by batch experiments under aerobic and anaerobic conditions.

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryChemistryMechanical Engineeringmedia_common.quotation_subjectMetals and AlloysUltrafiltrationchemistry.chemical_elementAquiferSorptionRedoxPlutoniumSpeciationMechanics of MaterialsMaterials ChemistryKaoliniteNuclear chemistrymedia_commonJournal of Alloys and Compounds
researchProduct

Crustal xenoliths from Cenozoic volcanic fields of West Germany: Implications for structure and composition of the continental crust

1991

Crustal xenoliths in three Cenozoic volcanic fields of West Germany, the Northern Hessian Depression (NHD), the Eifel and the Urach/Hegau, include medium to high-grade meta sedimentary and felsic to mafic meta-igneous rocks. Also present in all three suites are pyroxenites and hornblendites. For each volcanic field, a model crustal profile is proposed based on calculated or measured P-wave velocities of xenoliths and depth-Vp relationships (EGT Central Segment and Rhenish Massif traverses). The xenolith lithologies from the NHD and the Eifel show some similarities. The middle crust between the depths of about 10 and 25 km consists mainly of meta-sediments, felsic gneisses and granulites. Me…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryFelsic010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesContinental crustGeochemistryMassif15. Life on land010502 geochemistry & geophysicsGranulite01 natural sciencesGeophysicsUltramafic rockXenolithEclogiteMaficPetrologyGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTectonophysics
researchProduct

Carboniferous and Cretaceous mafic–ultramafic massifs in Inner Mongolia (China): A SHRIMP zircon and geochemical study of the previously presumed int…

2012

Abstract We present SHRIMP zircon ages and whole-rock geochemical data to identify mafic–ultramafic massifs of early Carboniferous and early Cretaceous ages from northern Inner Mongolia, China. The early Carboniferous massifs (Chongenshan–Xiaobaliang–Wusnihei) comprise predominantly lherzolite and minor gabbroic rocks. Zircons from a microgabbro (e Nd (t)  = 9.8) and a plagiogranite (e Nd (t)  = 9) yielded weighted mean 206 Pb/ 238 U ages of 354 ± 7 Ma and 333 ± 4 Ma, that we interpret as reflecting the time of zircon (and magma) crystallization. A volcanic breccia resting unconformably on the ultramafic rocks (serpentinites) has an eruption age of 300 ± 2 Ma and provides a younger minimum …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryGabbroSchistGeochemistryGeologyMassifOphioliteGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockCarboniferousMaficPetrologyGeologyZirconLithos
researchProduct

Mafic and ultramafic enclaves in Ustica Island lavas: Inferences on composition of lower crust and deep magmatic processes

2005

Abstract Ustica Island, southern Tyrrhenian Sea, is constituted of Quaternary alkaline volcanics. A variety of enclaves representative of deep to supra-crustal settings were recently found in a hawaiitic lava flow. Enclaves consist of: (i) Ultramafic meta-cumulates, i.e. clinopyroxenites and wherlites characterized by variably deformed porphyroclastic to granoblastic textures. (ii) Mafic cumulates, i.e. gabbros (± amphibole) and troctolites, the first often characterized by frequent amphibole breakdown coronas (olivine + Ti-augite + plagioclase + magnetite + ilmenite + rhonite) in response to an H 2 O decrease during the ascent, while the troctolites interpreted as meta-cumulates. (iii) Mic…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryLavaAnorthoclaseGeochemistryGeologyCrustengineering.materialVolcanic rockGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockMagmaengineeringMaficAmphiboleGeologyLithos
researchProduct

Intercomparison of SO2 camera systems for imaging volcanic gas plumes

2015

Abstract SO 2 camera systems are increasingly being used to image volcanic gas plumes. The ability to derive SO 2 emission rates directly from the acquired imagery at high time resolution allows volcanic process studies that incorporate other high time-resolution datasets. Though the general principles behind the SO 2 camera have remained the same for a number of years, recent advances in CCD technology and an improved understanding of the physics behind the measurements have driven a continuous evolution of the camera systems. Here we present an intercomparison of seven different SO 2 cameras. In the first part of the experiment, the various technical designs are compared and the advantage…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMeteorologyProcess (computing)Volcanic gas emissionsTime resolutionRemote sensingSpatial integrationPlumeSettore GEO/08 - Geochimica E VulcanologiaGeophysicsSO2 CameraVolcanoInstrument intercomparisonSulfur dioxideGeochemistry and PetrologyUltraviolet spectroscopyContinuous evolutionGeologyRemote sensing
researchProduct

Laminar Micrite Crusts and Associated Foreslope Processes, Red Sea

1991

ABSTRACT Forereef slopes in the Red Sea of Sudan exhibit a uniform biozonation that is independent from the topography of the slopes. Below - 120 m, ledges protrude horizontally from sleep cliffs of barrier reefs and atolls as well as from patches of in situ lithified slope sediment on inclined fringing reef slopes. Free surfaces and cavities within these ledges are partly covered by laminar micrite crusts of 7-20 mm thickness. The ledges are formed by an organic framework of living azooxanthellate corals, bryozoans, serpulids and fossil red algae. They are affected by repeated episodes of boring, infilling, and cementation which obliterate much of the original fabric. Concomitant cementati…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryMicriteBioerosionUltraviolet lightMineralogyGeologyCrustCementation (geology)ReefLithificationGeologySea levelSEPM Journal of Sedimentary Research
researchProduct

Os isotopes and highly siderophile elements (HSE) in the Ligurian Ophiolites, Italy.

2000

The Os isotopic and highly siderophile element (HSE) concentration systematics of the upper mantle have been the focus of much recent interest. However, little systematic study has addressed the combined HSE and Os isotopes in mantle rocks from MOR ophiolites. The Ligurian ophiolites in northern Italy represent an important class of ophiolites representing, like Zabargad or the Galicia margin, crust with clear ocean ridge affinity floored by older mantle with arguably more continental affinities [Rampone et al., J. Petrol. 36, 18–105, 1995; Rampone et al., Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 123, 61–67, 1996]. We have studied a suite of 15 geochemically and geologically well characterized mantle peri…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryProterozoicGeochemistryMid-ocean ridgeCrustMassifOphioliteMantle (geology)GeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockTransition zoneEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Geology
researchProduct