TORSION BALANCE STEP ANOMALIES IN NORTHERN TILLMAN COUNTY, OKLAHOMA

Geophysics ◽  
1945 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 507-525
Author(s):  
K. Klaus

The results of a semi‐detailed areal torsion balance survey in Southwestern Oklahoma are shown by means of a gradient‐curvature map, a gravity map, two second derivative contour maps, and gravity and second derivative profiles. Detailed quantitative calculations were made of a number of geological cross sections, two of which are shown in Figs. 8 and 9. Fig. 9 represents the subsurface situation with the highest probability rating, since it combines a high degree of geological probability with the fact that it will reproduce the gravity and second derivative curves of Figs. 6 and 7 very closely. This interpretation embodies a fault with a throw of the order of magnitude of 10,000 feet. If this interpretation is substantially correct, it implies a thick sedimentary section in the down‐thrown block, which might be of great economic interest in prospecting for oil. A comparison of the gravity and second derivative data may be of interest to the geophysicist. The geologist may find the results of this survey interesting because of their possible bearing on the orogeny of the Wichita Mountains.

Geophysics ◽  
1956 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 815-827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Raoul Vajk ◽  
George Walton

In 1951, the French Government granted an exclusive exploration permit to the Esso R.E.P. (a Standard Oil Company affiliate) over an area of 4,357,980 acres around Bordeaux in the northern part of the Aquitaine Basin, France. This area was investigated first by surface geology; then it was surveyed by the gravity meter. In checking the gravity anomalies by the reflection seismograph, a subsurface structure was found at Parentis in 1953, which was drilled in 1954, and was proved to be oil bearing. The Parentis oil field is the most important oil field, not only in France, but in all Europe outside the Iron Curtain. Gravity map, seismograph map, seismic profiles, telluric map and geological contour maps, and cross sections of the Parentis structure are presented.


Geophysics ◽  
1943 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 362-378
Author(s):  
H. Klaus

The results of an experimental torsion balance survey of the Billings Oilfield are shown by means of the conventional maps, and of second derivative contour maps. The latter show good and consistent anomalies, which are interpreted as faulting. The survey was made in July, 1937, some time after discovery of Ordovician production in the field, but long before faulting was clearly defined by drilling, and the results were communicated to several oil companies interested in the area or in the method of interpretation. In the meantime, one of the faults limiting the field has been defined in detail by drilling, and the present subsurface interpretation is compared with the original torsion balance predictions with respect to this fault. From the amount of agreement between the two sets of data, it is concluded that the torsion balance can still be used effectively for specialized purposes, particularly the investigation of faulting.


2017 ◽  
Vol 926 (8) ◽  
pp. 2-9
Author(s):  
V.V. Popadyev ◽  
D.A. Kuliev

The article studies the properties of the high-degree gravity field model EGM-2008 in the calculation of integral characteristics at large distances several times greater than the spatial resolution of the model. As an example of an indirect evaluation of a high-degree model, a gravimetric correction was computed into the sum of the measured elevations along the line of the high-precision I class leveling of the Krasnovodsk – Chardzhou line located in Turkmenistan. Using the calculator ICGEM, the Bouguer anomalies were calculated at each point of the line, then the attraction of the Bouguer layer (used heights are from catalog) excluded for the transition to free-air anomalies. In parallel, for a direct evaluation of the model, a regular grid of Bouguer anomalies with a step of 2 angular minutes within line area was also obtained, which were then compared with the anomalies from the gravity map J-40 of scale 1


Author(s):  
Joachim Wagner

SummaryThis paper contributes to the literature on the use of anonymized firm level data by reporting results from a replication study. To test for the practical usefulness of anonymized data I selected two of my published papers based on different cross sections of firm data. The data used there were anonymized by micro aggregation. I replicated the analyses reported in the papers with the anonymized data, and then compared the results to those produced with the original data. Frequently, the reported levels of statistical significance differ. Furthermore, statistically significant coefficients sometimes differ by order of magnitude. Therefore, at least for the moderate sample sizes used here micro-aggregated firm data should not be considered as a tool for empirical research.


2009 ◽  
Vol 24 (02n03) ◽  
pp. 450-453
Author(s):  
◽  
T. SKORODKO ◽  
M. BASHKANOV ◽  
D. BOGOSLOWSKY ◽  
H. CALÉN ◽  
...  

The two-pion production in pp-collisions has been investigated in exclusive measurements from threshold up to Tp = 1.36 GeV . Total and differential cross sections have been obtained for the channels pnπ+π0, ppπ+π-, ppπ0π0 and also nnπ+π+. For intermediate incident energies Tp > 1 GeV , i.e. in the region, which is beyond the Roper excitation but at the onset of ΔΔ excitation the total ppπ0π0 cross section falls behind theoretical predictions by as much as an order of magnitude near 1.2 GeV, whereas the nnπ+π+ cross section is a factor of five larger than predicted. A model-unconstrained isospin decompostion of the cross section points to a significant contribution of an isospin 3/2 resonance other than the Δ(1232). As a possible candidate the Δ(1600) is discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Zhou ◽  
Ai-Min Ren ◽  
Ji-Kang Feng ◽  
Xiao-Juan Liu

The one-photon absorption (OPA) properties of tetrabenzoporphyrins (TBPs) and phthalocyanines (Pcs) were studied using the semiempirical ZINDO method and time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT), respectively. The compared results confirmed that the semiempirical ZINDO method was reasonably reliable when calculating the OPA of tetrabenzoporphyrins and phthalocyanines. On the basis of the OPA properties obtained from the ZINDO method, two-photon absorption (TPA) properties of two series of molecules were investigated, using ZINDO and sum-over-states (SOS) methods. The results showed that the TPA cross-sections of all molecules were in the range of 220.6 × 10–50 – 345.9 × 10–50 cm4·s·photon–1, which were in the same order of magnitude as the values reported in the literature. The relatively larger δ(ω) value for Pcs with respect to that for corresponding TBPs originates from larger intramolecular charge transfer, which can be characterized by the difference of dipole moment between S0 and S1 and the transition dipole moment between S1 and S5.Key words: two-photon absorption, ZINDO, sum-over-states, tetrabenzoporphyrin, phthalocyanines.


The nucleon-antinucleon ( N-N ) problem is formulated in the new Tamm-Dancoff (NTD) approximation in the lowest order, and the integral equation for N-N̅ scattering derived, taking account of both the exchange and annihilation interactions. It is found convenient to represent the N-N̅ wave-function as a 4 x 4 matrix, rather than the usual 16 x 1 matrix for the nucleon-nucleon wave-function, and a complete correspondence is established between these two representations. The divergences associated with the annihilation interaction and their renormalization are discussed in detail in the following paper (Mitra & Saxena 1960; referred to as II). The integral equation with the exchange interaction alone, is then separated into eigenstates of T, J, L and S in the usual manner and the various phase shifts obtained. The results of II for the contribution of the annihilation term are then used to calculate the complete phase shifts from which the various cross-sections (scattering and charge exchange) are derived. The results indicate that while the exchange term alone gives too small values for the total cross-sections versus energy, inclusion of the annihilation interaction without renormalization effects makes the cross-sections nearly three times larger than those observed. On the other hand, inclusion of the finite effects of renormalization (which manifest themselves essentially as a suppression of the virtual meson propagator) brings down these cross-sections to the order of magnitude of the observed ones.


1985 ◽  
Vol 152 ◽  
pp. 49-66 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Dewey ◽  
D. J. McMillin

Shock fronts and fluid-particle trajectories throughout a two-dimensional shock wave flow have been measured by multiple schlieren photography in a detailed study of the Mach reflection from a 10° wedge of plane uniform shocks with Mach numbers of 1.105, 1.240 and 1.415. Correction of optical distortions throughout the field of view permitted the positions and shapes of the shock fronts and the magnitudes and directions of the particle velocities to be measured with a high degree of accuracy. No departure from self-similarity of the flow fields could be detected. The cross-sections of the reflected shocks were found to be circular and centred on a point which moved with the velocity of the flow behind the incident shock. The triple-point trajectories were linear. The velocity of the curved Mach stem shock was found to be constant at any one height above the wedge surface and to decrease monotonically with height. A deviation from perpendicularity was noticed where the Mach stems met the surface of the wedge, the shocks having a slight forward inclination of as much as 1°. The experimental results cannot be completely explained using the classical three-shock theory and an alternative model for weak Mach reflection is developed in Part 2 of this paper.


1983 ◽  
Vol 27 (03) ◽  
pp. 158-159
Author(s):  
C. von Kerczek

The method for analytically representing ship hulls by conformal mapping functions of the cross sections and lengthwise polynomial interpolation of the mappings, which was developed by von Kerczek and Tuck [1], has found useful applications to ship hydrodynamics (see references [2] and [3]) as well as ship design [4]. In both such applications, however, there have been two major criticisms of this type of representation of the underwater portion of the ship hull. The first criticism concerned the occurrence of undesirable waviness in the longitudinal direction of the cross sections of the ship. This waviness is due to fitting high-degree polynomials to very slowly varying data. This defect of the surface representation can be removed easily by abandoning the polynomial interpolation and substituting some form of spline interpolation. It has been found that interpolation by simple Hermite cubic splines works very well. Such modifications of the lengthwise interpolation scheme are well known and need no elaboration.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Felix Jungmann ◽  
Jens Teiser ◽  
Maximilian Kruss ◽  
Tobias Steinpilz ◽  
Kolja Joeris ◽  
...  

<p>In early phases of planet formation, bouncing and fragmentation barriers still represent major obstacles. Beginning at micrometer, dust can readily grow to sub-millimeter size in collisions due to cohesion before bouncing prevails. Later, streaming instabilities trigger further growth which might finally results into planetesimal formation by gravitational collapse. However, for streaming instabilities sub-millimeter grains might be too small, therefore there is gap of at least 1 order of magnitude in size which needs to be bridged.</p> <p>Here, we present our ongoing work how to bridge this gap by charge moderated aggregation [1]. When two (dielectric) grains collide they charge. This tribocharging or collisional charging is omnipresent in nature. We designed drop tower experiments in which we generated charges on glass and basalt grains by collisions in a shaker. In microgravity, the particle trajectories and collisions were observed, and charges were measured by applying an electric field.</p> <p>In early work, we analyzed millimeter-sized glass grain collisions with a copper plate. The coefficient of restitution increased with the charge on a single grain due to mirror charge forces. That means highly charged grains tend to stick more easily to surfaces than uncharged grains. The velocity where sticking is possible was increased by a factor of 100 up to several dm/s [2].<br /> <br />More recently, we used half millimeter basalt spheres and observed sticking events at several cm/s among grains themselves [3]. This is also way higher than predicted by adhesion. In a number of cases, we could observe the sequential formation of aggregates of up to ten single grains. During approach the grains are accelerated due to net charge Coulomb forces but likely also due to higher order charges on the surfaces in agreement to earlier measurements of strong permanent dipole moments [4]. Attraction increases collision cross-sections and the growth is sped up. Growth only stopped by the end of microgravity [3]. </p> <p>To observe the formation of still larger aggregates we developed a new setup, in which a dense cloud of 150 µm diameter basalt grains was continuously agitated slightly under microgravity and in vacuum. Here, the growth of a giant aggregate of centimeter size was observed collecting nearly all material in one cluster [5].</p> <p>To conclude, in experiments under various conditions, we see strong evidence that electrostatic charges on grains are able to conquer the bouncing barrier. We observed the bottom-up growth tracking individual particles, stable clusters emerging from dense regions and the formation of giant clusters during agitation. These are all bricks in the wall giving evidence that collisional charging might play a crucial role in planet formation.</p> <p><strong>References:</strong></p> <p>[1] Steinpilz, T.; Joeris, K.; Jungmann, F.; Wolf, D.; Brendel, L.; Teiser, J.; Shinbrot, T.; Wurm, G. Nature Physics 2020a, 16, 225-229.</p> <p>[2] Jungmann, F.; Steinpilz, T.; Teiser, J.; Wurm, G. Journal of Physics Communications 2018, 2 095009, 095009.</p> <p>[3] Jungmann, F.;Wurm, G. Astronomy and Astrophysics 2021, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202039430.</p> <p>[4] Steinpilz, T.; Jungmann, F.; Joeris, K.; Teiser, J.; Wurm, G. New Journal of Physics 2020b, 22, 093025.</p> <p>[5] Teiser, J.; Kruss, M.; Jungmann, F.; Wurm, G. The Astrophysical Journal Letters 2021, 908, L22.</p>


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