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Diego P. Fernandez

Researcher at University of Utah

Publications -  76
Citations -  2851

Diego P. Fernandez is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Trace element & Groundwater. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 70 publications receiving 2446 citations. Previous affiliations of Diego P. Fernandez include Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales & University of Buenos Aires.

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A Formulation for the Static Permittivity of Water and Steam at Temperatures from 238 K to 873 K at Pressures up to 1200 MPa, Including Derivatives and Debye–Hückel Coefficients

TL;DR: In this paper, a new formulation of the static relative permittivity or dielectric constant of water and steam, including supercooled and supercritical states, is presented, based on the ITS-90 temperature scale.
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Millennial-scale trends in west Pacific warm pool hydrology since the Last Glacial Maximum

TL;DR: The results suggest that convection over the western tropical Pacific weakened 18,000–20,000 years ago, as tropical Pacific and Antarctic temperatures began to rise during the early stages of deglaciation, and that the tropical Pacific hydrological cycle may have a central role in abrupt climate change events.
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Radiocarbon Variability in the Western North Atlantic During the Last Deglaciation

TL;DR: The deep-ocean record supports the notion of a bipolar seesaw with increased Northern-source deep-water formation linked to Northern Hemisphere warming and the reverse, and the more frequent radiocarbon variations in the intermediate/deep ocean are associated with roughly synchronous changes at the poles.
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A Database for the Static Dielectric Constant of Water and Steam

TL;DR: In this paper, all reliable sources of data for the static dielectric constant or relative permittivity of water and steam, many of them unpublished or inaccessible, have been collected, evaluated, corrected when required, and converted to the ITS•90 temperature scale.
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Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca vital effects correlated with skeletal architecture in a scleractinian deep-sea coral and the role of Rayleigh fractionation

TL;DR: This article measured detailed collocated Sr/Ca and Mg/Ca ratios, using a combination of micromilling and isotope-dilution ICP-MS across skeletal features in recent samples of Desmophyllum dianthus, a scleractinian coral that grows in the near constant environment of the deep-sea.