2,284 research outputs found
Lunar base CELSS: A bioregenerative approach
During the twenty-first century, human habitation of a self-sustaining lunar base could become a reality. To achieve this goal, the occupants will have to have food, water, and an adequate atmosphere within a carefully designed environment. Advanced technology will be employed to support terrestrial life-sustaining processes on the Moon. One approach to a life support system based on food production, waste management and utilization, and product synthesis is outlined. Inputs include an atmosphere, water, plants, biodegradable substrates, and manufacutured materials such as fiberglass containment vessels from lunar resources. Outputs include purification of air and water, food, and hydrogen (H2) generated from methane (CH4). Important criteria are as follows: (1) minimize resupply from Earth; and (2) recycle as efficiently as possible
On the exponential transform of lemniscates
It is known that the exponential transform of a quadrature domain is a
rational function for which the denominator has a certain separable form. In
the present paper we show that the exponential transform of lemniscate domains
in general are not rational functions, of any form. Several examples are given
to illustrate the general picture. The main tool used is that of polynomial and
meromorphic resultants.Comment: 19 pages, to appear in the Julius Borcea Memorial Volume, (eds.
Petter Branden, Mikael Passare and Mihai Putinar), Trends in Mathematics,
Birkhauser Verla
Production Systems Involving Stocker Cattle and Soft Red Winter Wheat
A three year study at the Livestock and Forestry Research Station near Batesville, Arkansas evaluated production systems involving stocker cattle and soft red winter wheat. Grazing of soft red winter wheat forage from October through February followed by harvesting wheat grain or grazing through April with stocker cattle offers an alternative to conventional farming. Soft red winter wheat, when planted by September 15, produces an ample supply of high-quality forage that supports rapid growth of stocker cattle during October through April. Net income from stocker cattle averaged over 75,000,000 per year if 750,000 acres of wheat are grazed
Neutral Evolution as Diffusion in phenotype space: reproduction with mutation but without selection
The process of `Evolutionary Diffusion', i.e. reproduction with local
mutation but without selection in a biological population, resembles standard
Diffusion in many ways. However, Evolutionary Diffusion allows the formation of
local peaks with a characteristic width that undergo drift, even in the
infinite population limit. We analytically calculate the mean peak width and
the effective random walk step size, and obtain the distribution of the peak
width which has a power law tail. We find that independent local mutations act
as a diffusion of interacting particles with increased stepsize.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures. Paper now representative of published articl
Non-neutral theory of biodiversity
We present a non-neutral stochastic model for the dynamics taking place in a
meta-community ecosystems in presence of migration. The model provides a
framework for describing the emergence of multiple ecological scenarios and
behaves in two extreme limits either as the unified neutral theory of
biodiversity or as the Bak-Sneppen model. Interestingly, the model shows a
condensation phase transition where one species becomes the dominant one, the
diversity in the ecosystems is strongly reduced and the ecosystem is
non-stationary. This phase transition extend the principle of competitive
exclusion to open ecosystems and might be relevant for the study of the impact
of invasive species in native ecologies.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figur
Coherent and incoherent atomic scattering: Formalism and application to pionium interacting with matter
The experimental determination of the lifetime of pionium provides a very
important test on chiral perturbation theory. This quantity is determined in
the DIRAC experiment at CERN. In the analysis of this experiment, the breakup
probabilities of of pionium in matter are needed to high accuracy as a
theoretical input. We study in detail the influence of the target electrons.
They contribute through screening and incoherent effects. We use Dirac-Hartree-
Fock-Slater wavefunctions in order to determine the corresponding form factors.
We find that the inner-shell electrons contribute less than the weakly bound
outer electrons. Furthermore, we establish a more rigorous estimate for the
magnitude of the contributions form the transverse current (magnetic terms thus
far neglected in the calculations).Comment: Journal of Physics B: Atomic, Molecular and Optical Physics;
(accepted; 22 pages, 6 figures, 26 references) Revised version: more detailed
description of DIRAC experiment; failure of simplest models for incoherent
scattering demonstrated by example
Integrating ecology into macroevolutionary research
On 9 March, over 150 biologists gathered in London for the Centre for Ecology and Evolution spring symposium, ‘Integrating Ecology into Macroevolutionary Research’. The event brought together researchers from London-based institutions alongside others from across the UK, Europe and North America for a day of talks. The meeting highlighted methodological advances and recent analyses of exemplar datasets focusing on the exploration of the role of ecological processes in shaping macroevolutionary patterns
On the Absorption of X-rays in the Interstellar Medium
We present an improved model for the absorption of X-rays in the ISM intended
for use with data from future X-ray missions with larger effective areas and
increased energy resolution such as Chandra and XMM, in the energy range above
100eV. Compared to previous work, our formalism includes recent updates to the
photoionization cross section and revised abundances of the interstellar
medium, as well as a treatment of interstellar grains and the H2molecule. We
review the theoretical and observational motivations behind these updates and
provide a subroutine for the X-ray spectral analysis program XSPEC that
incorporates our model.Comment: ApJ, in press, for associated software see
http://astro.uni-tuebingen.de/nh
Pareto versus lognormal: a maximum entropy test
It is commonly found that distributions that seem to be lognormal over a broad range change to a power-law (Pareto) distribution for the last few percentiles. The distributions of many physical, natural, and social events (earthquake size, species abundance, income and wealth, as well as file, city, and firm sizes) display this structure. We present a test for the occurrence of power-law tails in statistical distributions based on maximum entropy. This methodology allows one to identify the true data-generating processes even in the case when it is neither lognormal nor Pareto. The maximum entropy approach is then compared with other widely used methods and applied to different levels of aggregation of complex systems. Our results provide support for the theory that distributions with lognormal body and Pareto tail can be generated as mixtures of lognormally distributed units
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