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Conflict-driven farmland abandonment in Syria leads to land uplift, study finds

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 15:40
The Syrian civil war, which began in 2011, caused widespread population displacement and infrastructure damage. However, it has also led to an unintended environmental effect with notable changes in the country's landscape, according to a new study published in Geophysical Research Letters. Among the concerns are the complex impacts of wars on water resources. These repercussions can be direct, such as wastewater pollution and destruction of water infrastructure, or indirect, including increased deforestation, soil erosion, and abrupt cropland losses.

Wisconsin-sized chunk of Alaskan permafrost is thawing: Geoscientists say climate may never be the same

Phys.org: Earth science - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 13:00
In a first-of-its-kind study, a team of researchers led by geoscientist Michael Rawlins at the University of Massachusetts Amherst has shown in fine-grained detail what happens when Arctic permafrost thaws. Focusing on a Wisconsin-sized area of Alaska's North Slope containing hundreds of rivers and streams flowing into the Beaufort Sea, the team analyzed 44 years of model data at one-kilometer grid resolution, revealing how massively runoff is increasing, the increased loads of previously frozen carbon flowing through northern Alaska's rivers and how the thawing season has extended into late-summer and fall.

Quantitative analysis of zonal flow influence on turbulent plasmas driven by trapped electrons

Physical Review E (Plasma physics) - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 10:00

Author(s): Jiheon Song, Jeff Candy, Emily Belli, and Jungpyo Lee

The role of zonal flow (ZF) in the turbulence saturation of trapped electron modes (TEM) in magnetically confined plasmas is revisited. In this study, we examine ZF excitation and saturation mechanisms in TEM turbulence using detailed free-energy transfer diagnostics from nonlinear gyrokinetic simul…


[Phys. Rev. E 113, 045201] Published Wed Apr 01, 2026

Characterization of time-dependent x-ray drive at the center of a cylindrical hohlraum

Physical Review E (Plasma physics) - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 10:00

Author(s): Xufei Xie et al.

Detailed investigation of the x-ray drive on the capsule at the center of the hohlraum is crucial to solve the “drive deficit” problem in inertial confinement fusion. A pioneering work for probing the drive flux at the hohlraum center by simultaneously measuring the re-emitted flux and shock velocit…


[Phys. Rev. E 113, 045202] Published Wed Apr 01, 2026

Linear stability analysis of radiative effects on compressible Rayleigh-Taylor instability

Physical Review E (Plasma physics) - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 10:00

Author(s): Cunbo Zhang, Zongqiang Ma, Yang Song, Cheng-quan Fu, Zhengfeng Fan, Anmin He, and Pei Wang

Within the equilibrium-diffusion approximation for radiation, we perform a linear stability analysis of the compressible Rayleigh-Taylor instability in a stratified, isothermal background. Radiation alters the growth rate by modulating the fluid's effective compressibility. Radiative diffusion enhan…


[Phys. Rev. E 113, 045203] Published Wed Apr 01, 2026

Characterization of icequake mechanisms on the Argentiére glacier by 3D elastic full waveform inversion

Geophysical Journal International - Wed, 04/01/2026 - 00:00
SummaryGlaciers are key components of the global climate system and sensitive indicators of environmental change. Their dynamics generate diverse seismic signals, whose source mechanisms offer valuable insights into their internal stress conditions. While moment tensor inversion has been applied to icequakes on a few alpine and polar glaciers, it had not yet been implemented on the Argentière Glacier (French Alps). In this study, we conduct a systematic characterization of icequake source mechanisms based on a dense dataset of 14 057 near-surface events recorded by 98 3-component sensors deployed at the surface of the glacier during the RESOLVE project. We apply a full waveform inversion method to jointly reconstruct the moment tensor and the source time wavelet for each event. The moment tensor Green’s functions used in the inversion are computed through numerical modeling of elastic wave propagation in a 3D medium, incorporating real surface topography. This approach allows us to exploit the full complexity of the recorded seismic signals and to move beyond previous analysis based on simplified models and single-component data. The results reveal a clear dominance of opening-type (tensile crack) mechanisms, consistent with extensional stress regimes at the crevasse locations, with principal stress direction almost perpendicular to the local crevasse orientations. The exceptional size of the catalog enables a detailed investigation of spatial patterns in source mechanisms, particularly highlighting structural complexity in the heavily crevassed downstream zone. The distribution of extensional and compressional mechanisms further indicates a highly heterogeneous stress field at the glacier surface, influenced by local crevasse geometry. Depth-dependent variations in the reconstructed moment tensors suggest that deeper events tend to involve more isotropic components, likely reflecting pressure-driven failure under overburden stress. These findings demonstrate the potential of full waveform inversion to characterize the source mechanisms associated with the icequakes on a glacier. This work represents a significant step toward integrating seismological modeling with glaciological interpretation in alpine environments.

Reservoirs are changing: What Landsat data reveal about water loss and gain

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 03/31/2026 - 21:40
Communities worldwide rely on reservoirs for drinking water, hydroelectric power, irrigation, and more. These critical freshwater resources are affected by seasonal and long-term changes; water levels in reservoirs can dip during hot summer months or due to prolonged drought, or can flood after a particularly strong storm. Despite their importance, there are key gaps in our knowledge of reservoir structure and dynamics. Two recent papers published in Scientific Data use Landsat data to help fill in those gaps.

Enhancement of mesopause zonal winds observed at middle latitude prior to the super geomagnetic storm in May 2024

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Yun Gong, Jiaxin Bao, Zheng Ma, Shaodong Zhang, Zhihao Peng

Detailed analysis of the NGC 2168 cluster, leveraging Gaia DR3

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Nasser M. Ahmed, Remziye Canbay, Deniz Cennet Çınar

Developing a Novel Model to Estimate Zenith Hydrostatic Delay Using Surface Meteorological Data for GNSS-PWV Retrieval

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Qinglan Zhang, Shirong Ye, Pengfei Xia, Peng Zhang, Zhanyi Sun, Junli Wu

Short-term forecasting of medium- and high-intensity solar flares: A comparison between transformers and classical models

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Juliana Sabino Ferreira, Andre Leon S. Gradvohl, Ana Estela Antunes da Silva, Guilherme Palermo Coelho, Tiago Cinto

Plasma irregularities at the equator mission concept

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Anastasia Newheart, John Noto, Scott Thaller, Ian Collett, Camella Nasr, Joseph Hughes, Lucas Anderson, Linden Howard, Charles Swenson, Federico Gasperini

Multidisciplinary Modeling and Dynamic Kriging Assisted Optimization for Suborbital Reusable Launch Vehicle

Publication date: Available online 20 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Teng Long, Haoda Li, Renhe Shi, Rong Chen, Baoshou Zhang, Nianhui Ye

Analysing single event upsets in low Earth orbit considering the geomagnetic field

Publication date: Available online 19 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Julia Zink, Christoph M. Nöldeke, Steffen Gaißer, Sabine Klinkner

A high-precision simulation method for the effect of random force on the linear orbital dynamics of the Taiji mission

Publication date: Available online 19 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): Jiafeng Zhang, Wenxin Yu, Weijie Liu, Liwei Yang, Chen Gao, Xin Ma, Xiaodong Peng, Wenlin Tang

New insight from modelling galactic deuterons over changing solar activity

Publication date: Available online 19 March 2026

Source: Advances in Space Research

Author(s): I.I. Ramokgaba, M.D. Ngobeni, D.C. Ndiitwani, O.P.M Aslam, M.S. Potgieter, R. Munini, M. Boezio, A. Lenni, A. Sotgiu, M. Martucci, F. Palma, D. MacTaggart

Circular economies should work for communities, not against them

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 03/31/2026 - 15:30
The circular economy concept is often thought of as a model to eliminate waste and pollution—but when applied thoughtfully, circular approaches can create jobs, strengthen local economies, improve public health and more, according to new research led by Charles Darwin University (CDU).

New index reveals global water resources' growing dependence on extreme rainfall

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 03/31/2026 - 13:40
As global temperatures climb, rainfall patterns are shifting in ways that could put water resources and agriculture under increasing strain, a new study published in Water Resources Research suggests.

How scientists prepare expeditions in remote environments

Phys.org: Earth science - Tue, 03/31/2026 - 01:10
Scientific expeditions require months of planning before scientists can acquire the first data. A bark cuts through the Arctic silence, waking Anna up. She slept only three hours after collecting the last sample. Anna reaches for her rifle, exits the tent, and steps onto the midnight ice. She pets the guard dog she rented a few days earlier. It might be a false alarm, but she scans the darkness for polar bears, hoping her training pays off. She cannot afford to lose the samples. Nor her life.

Shallow Slip Pattern of the Laohushan-Haiyuan Fault Zone Characterized by Geodetic and Seismicity Observations

Geophysical Journal International - Tue, 03/31/2026 - 00:00
SummaryKinematic characteristics (creeping or locked) and high-precision seismic catalogs can constrain the shallow (<20 km) slip pattern of active fault zone. We collect Sentinel-1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images and extract a high-resolution deformation velocity field along the active Laohushan-Haiyuan (LHS-HY) fault zone in the northeastern margin of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. We invert the shallow fault coupling and slip distribution using two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) models, indicating that the fault zone exhibits an alternating pattern of large strong coupling asperities and creeping zones, and the deep slip rate decreases from 5.2 mm/yr in the west to 3.4 mm/yr in the east, accompanied by a transition from strike-slip to dip-slip components. Then we calculate cumulative seismic energy release, seismic slip rate, and statistical parameters including $b - \textit{value}$, coefficient of variation of seismicity interevent times, and Nearest-Neighbor Distance (NND) with regional seismic catalog. The geodetic and seismic results demonstrate a complex shallow slip pattern in the fault zone. The following characteristics are highlighted. A significant throughgoing locked-creeping transition zone with variable depth range extends from the eastern part of the Laohushan segment (LHS) to the eastern segment of Haiyuan Fault (HYE). A shallow (<6 km) creeping zone with weak coupling and seismicity in the western HYE segment differs from the shallow part of the locked-creeping transition zone between the eastern LHS segment and the western part of the western segment of Haiyuan Fault (HYW). A transition zone with strong coupling and active seismicity in the eastern HYE segment ranges from 4 km to 12 km in depth. The results provide new insights into the shallow slip behavior of the LHS-HY fault zone, and offer valuable references for seismic hazard assessment in the region.

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