1,454 research outputs found
Local Isometric immersions of pseudo-spherical surfaces and evolution equations
The class of differential equations describing pseudo-spherical surfaces,
first introduced by Chern and Tenenblat [3], is characterized by the property
that to each solution of a differential equation, within the class, there
corresponds a 2-dimensional Riemannian metric of curvature equal to . The
class of differential equations describing pseudo-spherical surfaces carries
close ties to the property of complete integrability, as manifested by the
existence of infinite hierarchies of conservation laws and associated linear
problems. As such, it contains many important known examples of integrable
equations, like the sine-Gordon, Liouville and KdV equations. It also gives
rise to many new families of integrable equations. The question we address in
this paper concerns the local isometric immersion of pseudo-spherical surfaces
in from the perspective of the differential equations that give
rise to the metrics. Indeed, a classical theorem in the differential geometry
of surfaces states that any pseudo-spherical surface can be locally
isometrically immersed in . In the case of the sine-Gordon
equation, one can derive an expression for the second fundamental form of the
immersion that depends only on a jet of finite order of the solution of the
pde. A natural question is to know if this remarkable property extends to
equations other than the sine-Gordon equation within the class of differential
equations describing pseudo-spherical surfaces. In an earlier paper [11], we
have shown that this property fails to hold for all other second order
equations, except for those belonging to a very special class of evolution
equations. In the present paper, we consider a class of evolution equations for
of order describing pseudo-spherical surfaces. We show that
whenever an isometric immersion in exists, depending on a jet of
finite order of , then the coefficients of the second fundamental forms are
functions of the independent variables and only.Comment: Fields Institute Communications, 2015, Hamiltonian PDEs and
Applications, pp.N
Ant species that remove diaspores alone are more efficient removers
Secondary diaspore removal on the ground is an important ecosystem process. In this process, solitary foraging ants with larger body sizes are more efficient because they may remove more diaspores, faster and carry them at greater distances. Therefore, we sought to test the effects of the sizes of the morphological traits of ants, removal strategy, and nest distance on secondary diaspore removal, testing hypotheses related to the efficiency of this process. We evaluated the removal of artificial diaspores by ants in 15 areas of Cerrado sensu stricto (tropical savanna), collecting data on diaspore removal strategy (solitary or group), nest distance, diaspore discovery time, diaspore removal time, and the number of diaspores removed. Larger ants tended to remove diaspores alone and remove diaspores faster than smaller ones. Ants that removed diaspores alone removed more diaspores than ants that removed diaspores in groups. However, we did not find a linear relationship between ant size and diaspore removal. This is likely due to a limitation on, or a preference by larger ants for removing larger diaspores, while the smaller diaspores may have hindered manipulation or been less attractive to larger ants. Thus, the removal strategy was the best predictor of efficient diaspore removal performance, where the solitary foraging ants discover and remove diaspores quickly and remove more diaspores, mainly from the closest nests to the sampling point. However, the benefits (or not) of removing more diaspores still need to be evaluated
Temporal resolution in individuals with neurological disorders
OBJECTIVE:Temporal processing refers to the ability of the central auditory nervous system to encode and detect subtle changes in acoustic signals. This study aims to investigate the temporal resolution ability of individuals with mesial temporal sclerosis and to determine the sensitivity and specificity of the gaps-in-noise test in identifying this type of lesion.METHOD:This prospective study investigated differences in temporal resolution between 30 individuals with normal hearing and without neurological lesions (G1) and 16 individuals with both normal hearing and mesial temporal sclerosis (G2). Test performances were compared, and the sensitivity and specificity were calculated.RESULTS:There was no difference in gap detection thresholds between the two groups, although G1 revealed better average thresholds than G2 did. The sensitivity and specificity of the gaps-in-noise test for neurological lesions were 68% and 98%, respectively.CONCLUSIONS:Temporal resolution ability is compromised in individuals with neurological lesions caused by mesial temporal sclerosis. The gaps-in-noise test was shown to be a sensitive and specific measure of central auditory dysfunction in these patients
Survey About the Use of Bacterial Inoculants in Brazil: Effects on Silage Quality and Animal Performance
Our objective was to report the effect of bacterial inoculants on silage quality and animal responses in Brazil. A survey of bacterial inoculants utilization in Brazil was made based on a total of 178 published articles assessing a widely varied crops (alfalfa, cabbage, cassava, corn, grass, high-moisture corn (HMC), high-moisture sorghum, millet, oat, orange bagasse, peanut forage, sorghum, soybean, stylosantes Campo Grande, sugarcane, and sunflower). Sugarcane and grass silages comprised 58.1% of the total crops investigated. Homolactic inoculation reduced dry matter (DM) losses in alfalfa silages, but not in corn, grass, HMC, and sorghum silages. Heterolactic inoculation enhanced the aerobic stability of corn and HMC silages. The use of heterofermentative lactic acid-bacteria (LAB) was more effective to improve fermentation of sugarcane silages compared to homofermentative LAB. Inoculation impaired the DM intake in cattle fed corn, grass, and sugarcane silages, but DM intake increased in sheep due to inoculation. In some cases, silage digestibility was affected by inoculation. Positive responses to inoculation occurred most often when the compatibility between the bacterial inoculant and crop was better understood (e.g., homolactic inoculation for grass silage and heterolactic inoculation for sugarcane silage). The performance of animals consuming inoculated silages has been investigated in Brazil only a few times, but the data suggest a greater impact of bacterial inoculants on DM intake and weight gain in cattle and sheep than that indicated in temperate conditions
BIODIESEL PRODUCTION FROM MICROWAVE IRRADIATED REACTOR USING HOMOGENEOUS AND HETEROGENEOUS CATALYSIS
Biodiesel was successful produced in a microwave irradiation reactor using homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis. The biodiesel was production by the trasesterification reaction of soybean oil using metanol. Sodium methylate (30% solution in metanol) was used for the homogeneous catalyst and the heterogeneous catalyst was developed using wasted eggshells. The eggshells were calcined and tested pure and doped with potassium hydroxide in 10, 30 and 50% of weight. The power and temperature of the microwave were kept constant in every reaction being 800W and 200º Celsius, respectively. The reaction time was significantly reduced using microwave compared to the conventional process. In only one minute of reaction, the methyl ester (FAME) conversion obtained was 98.9% with the homogeneous catalyst and within 15 minutes, the heterogeneous catalysis accomplished 100%. For heterogeneous catalyst, the best results were acquired when the doped catalyst contained 50% of KOH. The results indicated that the eggshells treated with KOH has a great potential to be used for microwave-assisted transesterification reactions of oils with mild operations conditions: molar ratio oil/alcochol 1:6 and just 5% of catalyst. In addition, the heterogenous catalyst was recovered and reused in other reactions with a relatively satisfying results. The physico-chemical properties of the catalysts were characterized by X-ray diffraction and thermogravimectric analysis
Device-independent bounds for Hardy's experiment
In this Letter we compute an analogue of Tsirelson's bound for Hardy's test
of nonlocality, that is, the maximum violation of locality constraints allowed
by the quantum formalism, irrespective of the dimension of the system. The
value is found to be the same as the one achievable already with two-qubit
systems, and we show that only a very specific class of states can lead to such
maximal value, thus highlighting Hardy's test as a device-independent self-test
protocol for such states. By considering realistic constraints in Hardy's test,
we also compute device-independent upper bounds on this violation and show that
these bounds are saturated by two-qubit systems, thus showing that there is no
advantage in using higher-dimensional systems in experimental implementations
of such test.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Sistemas de cultivo e custos de produção de arroz irrigado em Iguatu (CE), na safra 2004/2005.
O presente trabalho teve como objetivos: (a) caracterizar os sistemas de cultivo de arroz irrigado praticados em Iguatu (CE); e (b) estimar os custos de produção destes sistemas de cultivo na safra 2004/2005.bitstream/CNPAF/23589/1/comt_102.pd
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