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Events on Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

Chaos & Complex Systems Seminar
Taking the pulse of the geodynamo
Time: 12:05 pm
Place: 4274 Chamberlin
Speaker: Brad S. Singer, UW Department of Geoscience
Abstract: During the past 2.6 million years Earth's outer core geodynamo has produced at least 18 geomagnetic excursions and 5 full polarity reversals. This record has been compiled from terrestrial volcanic rocks, including mainly basaltic lava flow sequences, but also two silicic ash beds, that have been analyzed using modern paleomagnetic techniques and dated using the 40Ar/39Ar variant of the K-Ar radio-isotopic clock. Several brief periods of field instability associated with excursions correlate with lows in paleointensity or directional changes recorded globally in marine sediments that are dated using astronomically-forced oxygen isotope signals or ice layer-counting. However, the lack of correlation of several excursions between marine and terrestrial records indicates that neither sediments, nor lava flows, are ideal recording media. Another factor complicating correlation is that some excursions may be geographically localized and not expressed globally. Despite decades of observation, these records remain fragmentary, especially when periods of millions of years are considered. Recent 40Ar/39Ar dating in our laboratory, that includes age determinations for the Mono Lake, Laschamp, Blake, Pringle Falls, Big Lost, West Eifel excursions, as well as the Halawa (C2r.2r-1) cryptochron, prompt us to critically review the terrestrial record of geodynamo instability and propose a Geomagnetic Instability Time Scale (GITS) for the Quaternary period. Both the ca. 4:1 ratio of excursions to reversals during the past 2.6 Ma as well as the temporal pattern of occurrence of these events provide fundamental input as to the long&#8209;term behavior and, possibly, the structure of the core dynamo. On the one hand, intervals of significant temporal clustering of excursions have highlighted a relatively stable period of high field strength lasting >250,000 years in the middle of the Brunhes chron during which time few, or no, excursions took place. On the other hand, successive paleomagnetic excursion records may be critical in regard to understanding the behaviors and interactions between the mantle&#8209;influenced field source in the shallow core (the hypothesized SCOR&#8209;field) and the deeper&#8209;held source of the axial dipole. If in fact a successful reversal attempt requires the axial dipole field source to be weakened below some threshold strength for substantial duration (ca. 10,000 &#8209;20,000 years), times of grouped excursions may also be the most probable times for a change in polarity.
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Astronomy Colloquium
Polarized FIR Emission from T Tauri Disks
Time: 3:30 pm - 5:00 pm
Place: 6515 Sterling Hall
Speaker: Jungyeon Cho, UW Astronomy Dept
Abstract: Recently far infra-red (FIR) polarization of the 850 micron continuum emission from T Tauri disks has been detected. The observed degree of polarization is around 3 % or less. Since thermal emission from dust grains dominates the spectral energy distribution at the FIR regime, dust grains might be the cause of the polarization. In the presence of magnetic field, dust grains
can get aligned by radiative torque and the aligned grains can produce polarized emission in infrared wavelengths. We explore alignment of dust grains by radiative torque in T Tauri disks and provide predictions for polarized emission for disks viewed at different wavelengths and viewing angles. Our study indicates
that multi-frequency infrared polarimetric studies of protostellar disks can provide good insights into the details of their magnetic structure. We also introduce the result and implications of a more recent observation at 350 microns.
Host: Professor Alex Lazarian
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NPAC (Nuclear/Particle/Astro/Cosmo) Forum
Recent Results from MINOS (Joint NPAC/HEP Seminar)
Time: 4:00 pm
Place: 5280 Chamberlin
Speaker: Christopher White, Illinois Institute of Technology
Abstract: MINOS (Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search) is a
mature neutrino experiment that has been accumulating data using the NuMI neutrino beam since 2005. Data from 7 x 1020 protons-on-target have been recorded, primarily in low-energy neutrino mode. An update on the charge-current analysis will be presented as well as the recent electron appearance result. Additional results will be briefly reviewed along with prospects for future running in anti-neutrino mode.
Host: Karsten Heeger
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