550 Geowissenschaften
Refine
Year of publication
- 2021 (95)
- 2016 (88)
- 2020 (68)
- 2022 (57)
- 2019 (56)
- 2010 (55)
- 2011 (54)
- 2015 (53)
- 2014 (50)
- 2013 (49)
- 2008 (48)
- 2009 (45)
- 2017 (44)
- 2018 (36)
- 2012 (34)
- 2005 (32)
- 2002 (27)
- 2007 (27)
- 2006 (26)
- 2023 (26)
- 2003 (25)
- 2001 (16)
- 2004 (15)
- 2024 (13)
- 2000 (12)
- 1998 (10)
- 1974 (9)
- 1980 (8)
- 1982 (7)
- 1995 (7)
- 1999 (7)
- 1993 (6)
- 1996 (6)
- 1986 (5)
- 1891 (4)
- 1895 (4)
- 1898 (4)
- 1908 (4)
- 1973 (4)
- 1981 (4)
- 1991 (4)
- 1885 (3)
- 1901 (3)
- 1905 (3)
- 1913 (3)
- 1919 (3)
- 1969 (3)
- 1979 (3)
- 1984 (3)
- 1987 (3)
- 1992 (3)
- 1761 (2)
- 1829 (2)
- 1832 (2)
- 1877 (2)
- 1889 (2)
- 1893 (2)
- 1897 (2)
- 1903 (2)
- 1911 (2)
- 1915 (2)
- 1921 (2)
- 1924 (2)
- 1925 (2)
- 1950 (2)
- 1964 (2)
- 1967 (2)
- 1976 (2)
- 1977 (2)
- 1983 (2)
- 1988 (2)
- 1990 (2)
- 1997 (2)
- 1728 (1)
- 1777 (1)
- 1785 (1)
- 1822 (1)
- 1831 (1)
- 1834 (1)
- 1835 (1)
- 1838 (1)
- 1839 (1)
- 1843 (1)
- 1853 (1)
- 1865 (1)
- 1869 (1)
- 1871 (1)
- 1872 (1)
- 1875 (1)
- 1879 (1)
- 1880 (1)
- 1883 (1)
- 1887 (1)
- 1888 (1)
- 1894 (1)
- 1899 (1)
- 1904 (1)
- 1907 (1)
- 1909 (1)
- 1910 (1)
- 1914 (1)
- 1922 (1)
- 1926 (1)
- 1929 (1)
- 1930 (1)
- 1933 (1)
- 1936 (1)
- 1940 (1)
- 1947 (1)
- 1958 (1)
- 1961 (1)
- 1962 (1)
- 1971 (1)
- 1978 (1)
Document Type
- Article (896)
- Doctoral Thesis (194)
- Contribution to a Periodical (32)
- Book (26)
- Working Paper (22)
- Part of Periodical (21)
- Conference Proceeding (18)
- Part of a Book (9)
- Diploma Thesis (8)
- diplomthesis (7)
Language
Keywords
- climate change (11)
- Klima (8)
- Climate change (7)
- Klimaänderung (7)
- Modellierung (7)
- COSMO-CLM (6)
- Klimawandel (6)
- Palaeoclimate (6)
- precipitation (6)
- Atmospheric chemistry (5)
Institute
- Geowissenschaften (778)
- Geowissenschaften / Geographie (138)
- Biodiversität und Klima Forschungszentrum (BiK-F) (62)
- Geographie (61)
- Senckenbergische Naturforschende Gesellschaft (56)
- Präsidium (44)
- Extern (28)
- Biowissenschaften (22)
- Institut für Ökologie, Evolution und Diversität (10)
- Physik (8)
This thesis presents the experimental and numerical analysis of seismic waves that are produced by wind farms. With the aim to develop renewable energies rapidly, the number of wind turbines has been increased in recent years. Ground motions induced by their operation can be observed by seismometers several kilometers away. Hence, the seismic noise level can be significantly increased at the seismic station. Therefore, this study combines long-term experiments and numerical simulations to improve the understanding of the seismic wavefields emitted by complete wind farms and to advance the prediction of signal amplitudes.
Firstly, wind-turbine induced signals that are measured at a small wind farm close to Würzburg (Germany) are correlated with the operational data of the turbines. The frequency-dependent decay of signal amplitudes with distance from the wind farm is modeled using an analytical method including the complex effects of interferences of the wavefields produced by the multiple wind turbines. Specific interference patterns significantly affect the wave propagation and therefore the signal amplitude in the far field of a wind farm. Since measurements inside the wind turbines show that the assumption of in-phase vibrating wind turbines is inappropriate, an approach to calculate representative seismic radiation patterns from multiple wind turbines, which allows the prediction of amplitudes in the far field of a complete wind farm, is proposed.
In a second study, signals with a frequency of 1.15 Hz, produced by the Weilrod wind farm (north of Frankfurt, Germany) are observed at the seismological observatory TNS (Taunus), which is located at a distance of 11 km from the wind farm. The propagation of the wavefield emitted by the wind farm is numerically modeled in 3D, using the spectral element method. It is shown that topographic effects can cause local signal amplitude reductions, but also signal amplification along the travel path of the seismic wave. The comparison of simulations with and without topography reveals that the reduction and amplification are spatially linked to the shape of the topography, which could be an explanation for the relatively high signal amplitude observed at TNS.
Finally, the reduction of the impact of wind turbines on seismic measurements using borehole installations is studied using 2D numerical models. Possible effects of the seismic velocity, attenuation, and layering of the subsurface are demonstrated. Results show that a borehole can be very effective in reducing the observed high-frequency signals emitted by wind turbines. However, a borehole might not be beneficial if signals with frequencies of about 1 Hz (or lower) are of interest, due significant wavelength-dependent effects. The estimations of depth-dependent amplitudes with a layered subsurface are validated with existing data from wind-turbine-induced signals measured at the top and bottom of two boreholes.
The experimental analysis of measurements conducted at wind farms and the advances of modeling such signals improve the understanding of the propagation of wind-farm induced seismic wave fields. Furthermore, the methods developed in this work have a high potential of universal application to the prediction of signal amplitudes at seismometers close to wind farms with arbitrary layout and geographic location.
Garnet xenocrysts from kimberlites provide unique insights into the composition, structure and evolution of the subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM). For example, different metasomatic events in the SCLM are reflected in compositional differences between garnet xenocrysts. As mantle metasomatism largely controls the physical and chemical properties of the SCLM, it exerts first order control over the genesis of kimberlitic magmas and diamond formation. However, dating mantle lithologies and processes is complicated by high ambient temperatures that allow the equilibration of most isotopic systems up to the time of kimberlite eruption. As a consequence, the temporal connection between metasomatic events in the mantle and kimberlite genesis is commonly ambiguous.
In this study, we applied LA-ICPMS U-Pb dating to 43 harzburgitic, lherzolithic and megacrystic garnet xenocrysts from the ~376 Ma diamondiferous V. Grib kimberlite, Russia, in order to investigate the link between different types of mantle metasomatism and kimberlite genesis.
Our results indicate that, with two possible exceptions, only harzburgitic garnet overlaps in age with the kimberlite eruption, whereas lherzolitic and megacrystic garnet crystals are ~20 to 130 million years older. Furthermore, garnet U-Pb ages and Ni-in-garnet temperatures of ~820 to 1200 °C do not correlate. This, and the high closure temperature of U-Pb in garnet (≥900 °C) suggests that the garnet U-Pb ages indeed reflect metasomatic events in the SCLM. However, the U-Pb ages could also reflect cooling ages. In this case, the metasomatic events recorded in the garnet crystals must still have occurred up to ~130 million years prior to the eruption of the V. Grib kimberlite.
These findings have far-reaching implications for the genesis of (diamondiferous) kimberlites, as they clearly show that the time lag between metasomatic events in the SCLM, as recorded in kimberlitic garnet xenocrysts, and kimberlite eruption may extend to tens of millions of years.
Beim Clusterprojekt ELEMENTS von Goethe-Universität, TU Darmstadt, Universität Gießen und GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung arbeiten Theorie und Experiment Hand in Hand, um die Struktur der Materie unter extremen Bedingungen zu verstehen. So wird ersichtlich, warum etwa Kollisionen von Neutronensternen viele der schweren Elemente auf unserem Planeten geliefert haben.
Vor mehr als vier Milliarden Jahren prägten heiße Magma-Ozeane die Oberfläche der Erde. Als die Erde allmählich abkühlte, bildeten sich an manchen Stellen Krusten, später die ersten Kontinente. Die Geowissenschaftlerin Dr. Sonja Aulbach erforscht die damals ablaufenden Prozesse anhand spezieller Gesteinsproben und mit hochmoderner Analysetechnik.
Upper mantle shear zones are complex systems where deformation is commonly closely interacting with metamorphic (solid-solid) and/or melt/fluid-rock reactions. Here, feedback processes between deformation, reactions, grain size reduction and phase mixing result in strain weakening and the localization of deformation. The expression of these interlinked processes is portrayed by the microfabrics of strained peridotites and pyroxenites. The present thesis is focusing on these processes and their impact on the deformation in three upper mantle shear zones situated in the peridotite massifs of Lanzo (Italian Alps), Erro-Tobbio (Italian Alps) and Ronda (Betic Cordillera, Spain). In all three shear zones, the presence of melt led to phase mixing either by interstitial crystallization of pyroxenes from a Si-saturated and partially also highly evolved melt or by melt-rock reactions of pyroxene porphyroclasts with a Si-undersaturated melt. The effect of melt on the localization of strain is twofold and variable. Enhanced deformation by melt-wetted boundaries is assumed for all shear zones. Additionally, phase mixing by crystallization of interstitial pyroxenes or melt-rock reactions reduce or maintain the grain size by the formation of fine grained neoblasts and secondary phase boundary pinning. In this regard, pre- to early syn-kinematic, map-scale percolation of OH-bearing, evolved melts in the NW Ronda peridotite massif and the associated crystallization of interstitial pyroxenes result in the activation of grain size sensitive deformation mechanisms in the entire melt-effected area. In the rocks collected at Erro-Tobbio, syn-kinematic melt-rock reactions of pyroxene porphyroclasts and Si-undersaturated melt led to the formation of ultramylonitic neoblast tails (grain size ~10 μm). Compared to the adjacent coarser-grained olivine-dominated matrix, the activation of diffusion creep led to an increase in the strain rate by an order of magnitude within interconnected ultramylonitic layers. Strain localization and softening in ultramylonitic layers are also documented in the Lanzo samples. Neoblast tails of pyroxene porphyroclasts were likewise identified as their precursor. The phase assemblage of the tails, including ortho- and clinopyroxene, olivine, plagioclase, and spinel (± amphibole), and their geochemical trends suggest, unlike in Erro-Tobbio, a formation by continuous net-transfer reactions enhanced by the spinel lherzolite to plagioclase lherzolite transition.
The new results obtained from the three studied shear zones underscore the importance of reactions for the interlinked processes of grain size reduction, phase mixing, strain localization and strain softening in upper mantle shear zones. Concerning strain localization, the nature of the reaction (solid-solid, melt/fluid-rock) seems to play a subordinate role compared to its timing. Pre- to early syn-kinematic melt-triggered reactions result in strain localization along map-scale shear zones. Late stage syn-kinematic melt-rock or metamorphic reactions under high stress conditions are capable of localizing the deformation along discrete, sub-centimeter thick ultramylonites.
Vladimir Vernadsky's concept of living matter is central to his biogeochemistry, the science he founded. For several reasons, his original understanding of living matter is one of the most complex notions in the history of the life sciences. First, biogeochemistry is by definition an interdisciplinary enterprise that embraces biology, including evolutionary theory, geology, and chemistry, and combines them into a unique research program. Second, if understood in the original sense as used by Vernadsky, living matter is a concept built into idiosyncratic metaphysics constructed around the so-called principle of life's eternity. Third, the concept of living matter reflects the specificity of Vernadsky's sophisticated philosophy of science as he insisted that 'scientific thought' is a planetary phenomenon as well as a geological force. In our contribution, we will introduce Vernadsky's concept of living matter in its historical context. Accordingly, we will also give some chronology of Vernadsky's work related to the growth of his biosphere concept highlighting the 'Ukrainian' period as it is in this period that he intensively elaborated on the notion of living matter. This will be followed by his theory of living matter as it was formulated in his major works of the later period. We are going to locate the notion of living matter within Vernadsky's theoretical system and demonstrate that he regarded his theory of the living as an evolutionary theory complementary to that of Charles Darwin from the very beginning. Additionally, we will briefly present Vladimir Beklemishev's concept of 'geomerida' which he developed at approximately the same time as Vernadsky was elaborating on his 'living matter' to highlight the specificity of the latter's methodology.
Semi-arid African ecosystems influence trends and variability in global terrestrial carbon dynamics. However, there are uncertainties in potential effects of future climates for semi-arid ecosystems, especially for niche ecosystems. At the same time, African ecosystems provide the livelihoods and ecosystem services for around 1.4 billion people. Future population growth and associated changes in land use pose a challenge for the protection of African biodiversity. Therefore, this work focussed on future impacts of climate change on African ecosystems and carbon dynamics and also for African protected areas (PAs), where they may cooccur with other global change factors. Another focus was on uncertainties associated with future projections and with modelling the Nama Karoo, as an example of a semi-arid niche ecosystem. Dynamic vegetation models (DVMs) were the main research tool.
In Chapter 2, we analysed climate change impacts on African ecosystems and carbon pools until the end of the 21st century and associated uncertainties based on an ensemble of vegetation simulations with the DVM adaptive dynamic vegetation model (aDGVM). We investigated the impact of increased atmospheric CO2 concentrations and two climate change scenarios (medium (RCP4.5) and high emissions (RCP8.5); RCP - representative concentration pathway) on vegetation changes. Differences in the simulated vegetation were primarily driven by assumptions about the influence of CO2 on plants. Elevated CO2 concentrations led to increased total aboveground vegetation biomass and shrub encroachment into grasslands and savannas for both climate scenarios. In simulations without the direct influence of CO2 on plants, there was hardly any shrub encroachment and vegetation biomass decreased or varied between a slight decrease in some cases and a slight increase in others. Based on these results, biome changes due to climate change are likely in Africa in the future. Due to the large uncertainties in future projections, strategies to adapt to climate change must be flexible.
The simulated vegetation in Chapter 2 represented potential, natural vegetation and is particularly suitable to investigate PAs. However, PAs do not exist isolated from their environment and social developments. In Chapter 3, the vegetation projections with CO2 effect from Chapter 2 were combined with projections for population density and land use. Except for many PAs in North Africa, most PAs were adversely affected by at least one of the three drivers by the end of the 21st century in both investigated scenarios ("middle-of-the-road" and "fossil-fuelled development"). Cooccurrence of the drivers varied by region and scenario for PAs. Both scenarios implied increasing challenges for the conservation of African biodiversity in PAs. The impact of climate change on vegetation is likely to be exacerbated by socio-economic change for most African PAs. Strong mitigation of future climate change together with equitable societal development may facilitate successful ecosystem conservation.
The simulations in Chapters 2 and 3 showed large-scale patterns of vegetation change, but their low resolution makes them unsuitable for local analyses. In Chapter 4, the challenges of simulating smaller scale, semi-arid ecosystems and their carbon cycle were analysed for the Nama Karoo with the aDGVM2 and its shrub module. The aDGVM2 is based on the aDGVM, but represents plants more flexibly. In all tested aDGVM2 configurations, the carbon fluxes improved compared to initial simulations but still overestimated them. The measured morphology of the dwarf shrubs and soil water dynamics were not reproduced in aDGVM2. Semi-arid soil water dynamics and coping strategies of semi-arid dwarf shrubs under drought stress are not adequately implemented in the aDGVM2. Further field research on semi-arid water and carbon dynamics of vegetation is necessary to parameterise the aDGVM2 for dwarf shrubs. If these challenges are overcome, DVMs can be a powerful tool for much-needed research on the impacts of climate change on the Nama Karoo.
The analyses have shown that climate change under medium to high emission scenarios is likely to lead to large-scale changes in ecosystems and the carbon balance in Africa. Because lower emissions scenarios come with less uncertainty, climate change adaptation strategies likely need to be less complex or extensive if climate change is minimised. For African PAs, the challenges of climate change may be exacerbated by socio-economic factors to a regionally varying extent. This research suggests that successful ecosystem conservation depends on climate change mitigation measures and ensuring equitable, sustainable development. The shown uncertainties, e.g., in the implementation of the CO2 effect on plants or vegetation dynamics in more niche ecosystems, help to focus future research efforts and increase our understanding of the range of plausible futures we may need to adapt to.
Global analysis of halogenated trace gases in the UTLS: from long-lived to short-lived substances
(2023)
In this dissertation, the distribution of chlorinated and brominated substances in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere is investigated. These substances contribute significantly to the catalytic decomposition of ozone and are involved in the recurrent formation of the polar ozone hole in the Antarctic winter and spring. The Montreal Protocol, a multilateral environmental treaty to protect the ozone layer, has successfully reduced emissions of long-lived chlorine- and bromine-containing substances. Short-lived chlorinated and brominated substances, some of which are natural and anthropogenic in origin, are not regulated by the Montreal Protocol and it can be assumed that their relative contribution to the stratospheric halogen budget will increase, while the contribution of long-lived compounds will steadily decrease. The distribution of long- and short-lived halogenated substances are part of current research. For the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere, the very short-lived substances are particularly important. The lower stratosphere needs special investigation in this respect, since its composition is influenced by different transport processes. The influences on ozone trends in the lower stratosphere are subject to great uncertainties. Especially in the Southern Hemisphere, the number of observations is very limited.
In this work, the GhOST (Gas chromatograph for Observational Studies using Tracers) instrument was used during the SouthTRAC measurement campaign on the German HALO (High Altitude and LOng range) research aircraft, providing observations of halogenated hydrocarbons in Antarctic late winter to early spring 2019, a generally poorly sampled region. The polar vortex was, compared to previous years, significantly weaker and shifted towards the eastern South Pacific and South America. From the airborne measurements of chlorinated source gases, inorganic chlorine (the sum of active chlorine and reservoir gases; Cly) could be inferred with the result that Cly within the vortex increased up to 1687 ± 19 ppt at 385 K potential temperature, accounting for about 50 % of the total chlorine within the vortex and only 15 % of the total chlorine in the southern mid-latitudes. A comparison with the Northern Hemisphere could be made using the PGS measurement campaign in the Arctic winter 2015/2016. Under comparable conditions (season and distance from the tropopause), only 40 % of the total chlorine was in the inorganic form within the Arctic polar vortex and about 20 % was found in the mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere. In addition, about 540 ppt more Cly was present in the Antarctic vortex than in the Arctic vortex, exceeding the annual variations previously reported for Antarctica.
The mean age of air plays an essential role in the derivation of Cly via the organic source gases, as was done in this work. A new method for determining the mean age of air from observational data has been introduced that accounts for extra-tropical input to the stratosphere in addition to tropical input. This new method was compared with the previously used method, which considered only the tropical input. The new method shows more realistic values especially near the tropopause. On average, the air of the lower stratosphere in the Northern Hemisphere was older than in the Southern Hemisphere by about 0.5 ± 0.3 years. About 65 K above the tropopause, the pattern changed with older air in the mid-latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere, but older air in high latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere, which implies differences in the strength and isolation of the respective polar vortex as well as the wave forcing in the shallow branch of the Brewer-Dobson circulation of the respective hemisphere. This is in good agreement with the distribution of Cly. The difference in the lower stratosphere was not clearly evident with the old method and it can be assumed that investigations of the differences in Cly of Northern and Southern Hemisphere will benefit from the new method.
Finally, the global and seasonal distribution of the two most important representatives of the short-lived brominated substances, CH2Br2 and CHBr3, was investigated. For this purpose, two additional HALO measurement campaigns have been used, the 2012 TACTS measurement campaign and the 2017 WISE measurement campaign, as well as the HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observations (HIPPO) and Atmospheric Tomography (ATom) measurement campaigns. Observations of CH2Br2 show a pronounced seasonality in the free and upper troposphere of both hemispheres with slightly larger values in the Northern Hemisphere. CHBr3, on the other hand, shows a generally higher variability and lower seasonality with larger mixing ratios at mid and high latitudes in the northern hemispheric winter and autumn. A comparison of the lower stratosphere is limited to autumn and spring of both hemispheres due to the limited data basis of the observations. The distributions in each spring are similar (less than 0.1 ppt differences for e.g., CH2Br2). In hemispheric autumn, larger differences are evident with substantially smaller mixing ratios in the southern hemispheric lower stratosphere. This suggests that the transport processes of the two hemispheres may be different and implies that the input of tropospheric air (flushing) to the Northern Hemisphere lowest stratosphere is more efficient than in the Southern Hemisphere. Vertical profiles of CH2Br2 and CHBr3 in the mid-latitudes of both hemispheres and resulting vertical gradients support this conjecture. However, the Southern Hemisphere data set is insufficient to quantify this difference and further measurements are needed.
Climatology of morphology and cloud-radiative properties of marine low-level mixed-phase clouds
(2023)
Marine stratocumuli cover about 40 - 60% of the ocean surface. They self-organize into different morphological regimes. The two organized cellular regimes are called open and closed mesoscale-cellular convective (MCC) clouds. In mid-to-high latitudes, open and closed cells are the two most frequent types of MCC clouds. In particular, many MCC clouds consist of a mixture of vapor, liquid droplets, and ice particles, referred to as mixed-phase clouds (MPCs). Even for the same cloud fraction, the albedo of open cells is, on average, lower than that of closed MCC clouds. Cloud phase and morphology individually influence the cloud radiative effect. Thus, this thesis investigates the relationships between the cloud phase, MCC organization, cell size, and differences regarding the cloud-radiative effect.
This thesis focuses on space-borne retrievals to achieve extensive temporal and spatial coverage. The liDAR-raDAR (DARDAR) version 2 product collocates two active and one passive satellite: CloudSat, Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO), and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS). The cloud phase of DARDAR is vertically integrated to establish a single cloud phase at each data point. The MCC classification data set based on the liquid water path (LWP) of MODIS scenes is collocated with the DARDAR product to determine the MCC organization. Cell-size statistics of both MCC clouds are obtained using a marker-based image segmentation method on MODIS reflectance scenes. In addition, based on MODIS reflectance scenes, a convolutional neural network (CNN) is developed to classify open and closed MCC scenes to avoid missing mature MPCs with a low LWP.
The first part of this thesis explores the relationships between cloud phase, morphology, and cloud albedo in the Southern Ocean (SO). At a given cloud-top temperature (CTT), seasonal changes in the mixed-phase fraction, defined as the number of MPCs divided by the sum of MPC and supercooled liquid cloud (SLC) pixels, are stronger than the morphological changes. Therefore, external factors seem to influence these changes instead of morphology. The dependence of cloud phase on cloud-top height (CTH) is more substantial than on CTT in clouds with CTHs below 2.5 km. The previously observed acceleration of closed-to-open transition in MPCs, known as preconditioning, is not the primary driver of climatological cloud morphology statistics in the SO. The morphological differences in cloud albedo are more pronounced in SLCs than in MPCs. This change in albedo alters the cloud radiative effect in the SO by 21Wm−2 to 39Wm−2 depending onseason and cloud phase.
Open and closed MCC clouds exhibit larger equivalent cell diameters in the MPCs than in SLCs in austral summer, whereas, in austral winter, the SLCs are larger. The cell’s aspect ratio accounts for varying CTHs. Closed cells have smaller aspect ratios than open cells, so their cell diameter is smaller, independent of CTH. While the seasonal differences in closed cells are due to changes in CTH, the seasonal aspect ratio differences in open cells are mainly caused by MPCs. With increasing aspect ratios, the cloud albedo decreases in both open and closed MCC clouds, with the most substantial decrease in open MPCs clouds. This leads to cloud-radiative changes of 60 - 75Wm−2 in the SO, depending on cloud phase and aspect ratio.
The established CNN exhibits a good accuracy of 80.6%, with even higher accuracies in the Open (85.5%) and Closed (87.3%) categories. The global MCC climatology based on the CNN generally agrees well with previous MCC distributions. The most notable difference occurs in the Northern Hemisphere (NH) in boreal winter, with a higher occurrence frequency of closed and open MCC clouds. This might indicate missing MPCs in previous studies based on the LWP and some restricted to warm cloud scenes. Thus, the developed CNN seems to better represent the different morphologies in MPCs than in previous classifications.
In conclusion, this thesis shows that understanding the dependencies of cloud phase, cloud morphology, and cell size is important to enhance predictions of the cloud-radiative effect and thus, it is important to evaluate how cloud phase, cloud morphology, and cellsize change in a warming climate.
In this dissertation, different aspects of turbulent transport and thermally driven flows over complex terrain are investigated. Two publications concentrate on the vertical heat and moisture exchange in the convective boundary layer over mountainous terrain. To study this, Large-Eddy Simulation (LES) is used. Both turbulent and advective transport mechanisms are evaluated over the simple orography of a quasi-two-dimensional, periodic valley with prescribed surface fluxes. Here, terrain elevation varies along only one of the horizontal coordinate axes. Even a relatively shallow orography, possibly unresolved in existing numerical weather prediction models, modifies the domain-averaged moisture and temperature profiles. For the analysis, the flow is decomposed into a local turbulent part, a local mean circulation, and a large-scale part. An analysis of the turbulent kinetic energy and turbulent heat and moisture flux budgets shows that the thermal circulation significantly contributes to the vertical transport. It is found that thermal upslope winds are important for the moisture transport from the valley to the mountain tops. In total, moisture export out of the valley is mostly accomplished by the mean circulation. On the temperature distribution, which is horizontally relatively homogeneous, the thermal circulation has a weaker impact. If an upper-level wind is present, it interacts with the thermal circulation. This weakens the vertical transport of moisture and thus reduces its export out of the valley. The heat transport is less affected by the upper-level wind because of its weaker dependence on the thermal circulation. These findings were corroborated in a more realistic experiment simulating the full diurnal cycle using radiation forcing and an interactive land surface model.
Based on these results, coherent turbulent structures in the convective boundary layer over non-flat terrain are studied in further detail. A conditional sampling method based on the concentration of a decaying passive tracer is implemented in order to identify the boundary-layer plumes objectively. Conditional sampling allows to quantify the contribution of plume structures to the vertical transport of heat and moisture. In case of the idealized valley, vertical transport by coherent structures is the dominant contribution to the turbulent components of both heat and moisture flux. It is comparable in magnitude to the advective transport by the mean slope-wind circulation, although it is more important for heat than for moisture transport. A set of less idealized simulations considers the flow over three-dimensional terrain. In this case, conditional sampling is carried out by using a simple domain-decomposition approach. We demonstrate that thermal updrafts are generally more frequent on hill tops than over the surroundings, but they are less persistent on the windward sides when large-scale winds are present in the free atmosphere.
The tools for flow decomposition and budget analysis are also applied in another idealized case with a quasi-two-dimensional valley featuring the stable boundary layer. Here, the formation of a low stratus cloud is investigated. The main driver for the cloud formation is radiative cooling due to outgoing longwave radiation. Despite a purely horizontal flow, the advection terms in the prognostic equations for heat and moisture produce vertical mixing across the upper cloud edge leading to a loss of cloud water content. However, this behavior is not due to any kind of thermally-driven circulation. Instead, this spurious mixing is caused by the diffusive error of the advection scheme in regions where the sloping surfaces of the terrain-following vertical coordinate intersect the cloud top. It is shown that the intensity of the (spurious) numerical diffusion strongly depends on the horizontal resolution, the order of advection, and the choice of the scalar advection scheme. A LES with 4 m horizontal resolution serves as a reference. For horizontal resolutions of a few hundred meters, carried out with a model setup as it is used in Numerical Weather Prediction, a strong reduction of the simulated liquid-water path is observed. In order to keep the (spurious) numerical diffusion at coarser resolutions small, at least a fifth-order advection scheme should be used. In the present case, a WENO scalar advection scheme turns out to increase the numerical diffusion along a sharp cloud edge compared to an upwind scheme. Furthermore, the choice of the vertical coordinate has a strong impact on the simulated liquid-water path over orography. With a modified definition of the terrain-following sigma coordinate, it is possible to produce cloud water where the classical sigma coordinate does not allow any cloud formation.
Highlights
• We find DBrfluid/melt = 1.19 to 3.92 for experimental Br degassing from basalt magma into aqueous fluids.
• D <1 under almost dry conditions propose only little Br degassing for dry intra-plate volcanism relative to volcanic arcs.
• An annual global Br flux of 23.5–72.9 × 109 g/y into the atmosphere was calculated.
Abstract
We present the first in-situ partitioning data for bromine between a natural basaltic melt and a coexisting fluid. For this study hydrothermal diamond anvil cell experiments at pressures up to 1.7 GPa were conducted. We combined laser heating to melt the basalt glass with external heating to lower the temperature gradient in the cell and to initiate circulation for the aqueous fluid. Bromine concentrations were measured in-situ with X-ray fluorescence in the basaltic melts, glasses, and in the fluid. From the results we calculated partition coefficients of DBrfluid/melt = 1.19 to 3.92 in the range of 0.4 to 1 GPa for aqueous fluids. Experiments with neon as the surrounding fluid (DBrfluid/melt = 0.38 ± 0.01 at 1.1 GPa) suggest that Br-release from a basalt into volatiles that have no bonding affinity with Br is weak. This should be the case for dry intra-plate volcanic eruptions. From the experimentally gained partition coefficients and from global Br concentration values in melt inclusions of arc magmas, we calculated an annual global Br flux of 23.5–72.9 × 109 g/y.
Highlights
• We show the first observations of seismo-acoustic tremor at Oldoinyo Lengai, the world's only active carbonatite volcano.
• We observe significant changes in seismic and acoustic tremor properties and their correlation in one year of data collection.
• Using satellite-based thermal data, we identify different volcanic processes (degassing, lava pond dynamics and spattering).
Abstract
We analyze volcanic tremor from Oldoinyo Lengai, Tanzania, which is currently the only active volcano on Earth producing carbonatitic lavas. Here, we use data from the recent SEISVOL deployment and focus on a co-located seismic and infrasound station about 200 m below the summit. We show the very first observations of seismo-acoustic tremor caused by carbonatitic eruptions. This seismo-acoustic tremor is highly variable throughout the ∼one year of data which we characterize by analyzing its seismic amplitude, duration, recurrence, dominant seismic frequency and harmonics. Frequency gliding occurs frequently and over short (minutes to hours) to long time scales (hours to days) and likely reflects different time-dependent mechanisms, such as evenly-spaced repeating events with a change in inter-event times, crater dynamics that alter resonators, and dike intrusions. Seismic and acoustic wavefields correlate well for stronger eruptive sequences but are only partially coherent which suggests that high-frequency seismic tremor (up to 25 Hz) may be caused by the low viscosity of the carbonatitic melt and not by ground-coupled airwaves. In addition, the comparison between seismic-acoustic and satellite InfraRed thermal data allows us to infer different volcanic activity styles which partially alternate throughout the year: intrusive activity and the construction of hornitos, degassing, activity from a lava pond, and varying styles of extrusive activity, in particular spattering. Our study provides important insights into the eruption dynamics of this peculiar volcano which suggests shallow melt storage within the crater floor.
High-pressure/high-temperature synthesis of the new boron-rich terbium hydroxyborate Tb3B12O19(OH)7
(2023)
Monoclinic Tb3B12O19(OH)7 was obtained by multianvil high-pressure/high-temperature syntheses at 6 GPa and 650 °C. The crystal structure was investigated by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods and space group C2 (no. 5) with the unit cell parameters a = 24.2299(5) Å, b = 4.4667(1) Å, c = 7.0964(2) Å, β = 94.58(1)°, and two formula units per cell were revealed. Powder X-ray diffraction, infrared spectroscopy and the investigation of its second harmonic generation properties support the proposed structural model.
Herein, the high-pressure/high-temperature synthesis (11 GPa, 650 °C) of Tb3B10O17(OH)5 in a modified Walker-type multianvil device is presented. The structure of this rare-earth borate was determined by single-crystal X-ray diffraction methods and was found to crystallize orthorhombically in the space group Pmn21 (no. 31) with the unit cell parameters a = 16.2527(4), b = 4.4373(1), and c = 8.8174(2) Å. The new compound was further characterized using infrared spectroscopy, energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy, second harmonic generation (SHG) measurements, and temperature-dependent X-ray powder diffraction. Tb3B10O17(OH)5 decomposes to β-Tb(BO2)3 at temperatures higher than 460 °C. With increasing temperatures, the formation of μ-TbBO3 was observed, which transforms to π-TbBO3 upon cooling.
Local climate change risk assessments (LCCRAs) are best supported by a quantitative integration of physical hazards, exposures and vulnerabilities that includes the characterization of uncertainties. We propose to use Bayesian Networks (BNs) for this task and show how to integrate freely-available output of multiple global hydrological models (GHMs) into BNs, in order to probabilistically assess risks for water supply. Projected relative changes in hydrological variables computed by three GHMs driven by the output of four global climate models were processed using MATLAB, taking into account local information on water availability and use. A roadmap to set up BNs and apply probability distributions of risk levels under historic and future climate and water use was co-developed with experts from the Maghreb (Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco) who positively evaluated the BN application for LCCRAs. We conclude that the presented approach is suitable for application in the many LCCRAs necessary for successful adaptation to climate change world-wide.
Die nachfolgende Dissertation wurde an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am Institut für Geowissenschaften (FB 11) in der Arbeitsgruppe Kristallographie und Mineralogie (AG Winkler) verfasst. Die Betreuung der hier durchgeführten Arbeiten erfolgte hauptsächlich durch Prof. B. Winkler in Zusammenarbeit mit Dr. L. Bayarjargal, PD Dr. E. Haussühl und PD Dr. V. Vinograd. Bei dem vorliegenden Manuskript handelt es sich um eine kumulative bzw. publikationsbasierte Dissertation, welche die Forschungsergebnisse verschiedener bereits veröffentlichter wissenschaftlicher Fachartikel zusammenfasst.
Die Arbeit beschreibt verschiedene Synthesen und Untersuchungen an Carbonaten und teilt sich im Wesentlichen in zwei Abschnitte. Zum einen wurden Experimente mit Carbonaten bei Extrembedingungen bzw. unter hohen Drücken und hohen Temperaturen durchgeführt, wie sie auch im Inneren der Erde zu finden sind. Im zweiten Teil wurden Carbonate bei Raumbedingungen synthetisiert und der Einbau von Seltenerdelementen untersucht. Grundsätzlich werden jedoch in beiden Teilen dieser Arbeit die Strukturen und Eigenschaften verschiedener Carbonate und eine mögliche Kationensubstitution bzw. die Synthese isostruktureller Verbindungen erforscht.