3,137 research outputs found

    Results of a fish health survey of North Biscayne Bay, June 1976-June 1977

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    Fish were collected weekly in Biscayne Bay using a monofilament gill net set from a small skiff during 20-30 minute intervals. Although weekly sampling took place for 2.5 years, only the data from samples collected from June 1976 to June 1977 were used in this document. Abnormal external conditions of fins and body were observed on each fish and recorded. Fish were returned immediately to their habitats. Fish collected in the time period for this study numbered 3,765 and included 32 species. Of these, 16 species, totaling 3,556 fish, were caught in sufficient numbers (20 or more) to warrant data analysis. Only 3 of the 16 species could be considered relatively unafflicted: Aetobatus narinari (spotted eagle ray), Diodon hystrix (porcupinefish), and Selene vomer (lookdown). More than 80% of the examined specimens of these three species were unaffected. Less than 20% of the specimens of Diapterus plumieri (striped mojarra), Micropogonias undulatus (Atlantic croaker), and Pogonias cromis (black drum) displayed normal conditions. The three most afflicted species were Diapterus plumieri, striped mojarra; Micropogonias undulatus, Atlantic croaker; and Pogonias cromis, black drum. Only 7, 3, and 7% respectively showed no external evidence of disease. Data described in this document were originally tabulated in the mid-1970s, remained unpublished, and are no longer available. This document was based on archived unpublished text, a data summary table, and figures. Most of the text and cited references were the ones used in the original manuscript and no attempt was made to update them. (PDF contains 44 pages

    Utilizing remote sensing of Thematic Mapper data to improve our understanding of estuarine processes and their influence on the productivity of estuarine-dependent fisheries

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    LANDSAT thematic mapper (TM) data are being used to refine and validate a stochastic spatial computer model to be applied to coastal resource management problems in Louisiana. Two major aspects of the research are: (1) the measurement of area of land (or emergent vegetation) and water and the length of the interface between land and water in TM imagery of selected coastal wetlands (sample marshes); and (2) the comparison of spatial patterns of land and water in the sample marshes of the imagery to that in marshes simulated by a computer model. In addition to activities in these two areas, the potential use of a published autocorrelation statistic is analyzed

    Data-Based Decisions Guidelines for Teachers of Students with Severe Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities

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    Effective practices in student data collection and implementation of data-based instructional decisions are needed for all educators, but are especially important when students have severe intellectual and develop- mental disabilities. Although research in the area of data-based instructional decisions for students with severe disabilities shows benefits for using data, there is limited research to demonstrate teachers in applied settings can acquire the decision-making skills required. The purpose of this research was to demonstrate how teachers from five states acquired a set of data-based decisions implementation guidelines through online professional development. Recommendations for practice and future research are included

    Species Composition and Seasonality of the Smallest Size Class of Shrimp in the Tortugas Fishery of Florida

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    Shrimps from the smallest commercial size class (68 or more heads-off shrimp per 454 g) were analyzed from samples collected at the Tortugas fishing grounds from March 2002 through March 2004. Pink shrimp Farfantepenaeus duorarum and yellow roughneck shrimp Rimapenaeus similis occurred together in 90% of the samples, comprising 65.4% and 27.2% of individuals, respectively. Estimates of the proportion and seasonality of both species in the shrimp samples were combined with an analysis of the smallest size class in the Tortugas landings data. Our analysis suggested that yellow roughneck shrimp make up 23.6% by number of the smallest shrimp catch and constitute 6.6% by weight of total shrimp landings, very similar results to those from 1959. Results also indicated that there was a significant difference in the seasonality of each species during the collection period. A follow-up study of this unreported yellow roughneck shrimp is recommended to ensure sound data and good management for this important fishery

    Prospects for Direct CP Violaton in Exclusive and Inclusive Charmless B decays

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    Within the Standard Model, CP rate asymmetries for BKπ+,0B\to K^-\pi^{+,0} could reach 10%. With strong final state phases, they could go up to 20--30%, even for Kˉ0π\bar K^0\pi^- mode which would have opposite sign. We can account for Kπ+K^-\pi^{+}, Kˉ0π\bar K^0\pi^- and ϕK\phi K rate data with new physics enhanced color dipole coupling and destructive interference. Asymmetries could reach 40--60% for KπK\pi and ϕK\phi K modes and are all of the same sign. We are unable to account for Kπ0K^-\pi^0 rate. Our inclusive study supports our exclusive results.Comment: Minor changes, correct a small bug in Fig. 1(b). Version to appear in Phys. Rev. Let

    Combining exclusive semi-leptonic and hadronic B decays to measure |V_ub|

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    The Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa matrix element |V_ub| can be extracted from the rate for the semi-leptonic decay B -> pi + l + antineutrino_l, with little theoretical uncertainty, provided the hadronic form factor for the B -> pi transition can be measured from some other B decay. In here, we suggest using the decay B -> pi J\psi. This is a color suppressed decay, and it cannot be properly described within the usual factorization approximation; we use instead a simple and very general phenomenological model for the b d J\psi vertex. In order to relate the hadronic form factors in the B -> pi J\psi and B -> pi + l + antineutrino_l decays, we use form factor relations that hold for heavy-to-light transitions at large recoil.Comment: Latex, 7 pages, no figure

    An imaging time-of-propagation system for charged particle identification at a super B factory

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    Super B factories that will further probe the flavor sector of the Standard Model and physics beyond will demand excellent charged particle identification (PID), particularly K/pi separation, for momenta up to 4 GeV/c, as well as the ability to operate under beam backgrounds significantly higher than current B factory experiments. We describe an Imaging Time-of-Propagation (iTOP) detector which shows significant potential to meet these requirements. Photons emitted from charged particle interactions in a Cerenkov radiator bar are internally reflected to the end of the bar, where they are collected on a compact image plane using photodetectors with fine spatial segmentation in two dimensions. Precision measurements of photon arrival time are used to enhance the two dimensional imaging, allowing the system to provide excellent PID capabilities within a reduced detector envelope. Results of the ongoing optimization of the geometric and physical properties of such a detector are presented, as well as simulated PID performance. Validation of simulations is being performed using a prototype in a cosmic ray test stand at the University of Hawaii.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, submitted to TIPP09 proceeding

    Inclusive η\eta' production in B decays and the Enhancement due to charged technipions

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    The new contributions to the charmless B decay BXsηB \to X_{s}\eta^{\prime} from the unit-charged technipions P±P^{\pm} and P8±P^{\pm}_{8} are estimated. The technipions can provide a large enhancement to the inclusive branching ratio: Br(BXsη)7×104Br(B \to X_{s}\eta^{\prime}) \sim 7\times 10^{-4} for mp1=100GeVm_{p1}=100GeV and mp8=250350GeVm_{p8}=250 \sim 350 GeV when the effect of QCD gluon anomaly is also taken into account. The new physics effect is essential to interpret the CLEO data.Comment: Latex file, 7 pages with two EPS figure

    Semilinear mixed problems on Hilbert complexes and their numerical approximation

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    Arnold, Falk, and Winther recently showed [Bull. Amer. Math. Soc. 47 (2010), 281-354] that linear, mixed variational problems, and their numerical approximation by mixed finite element methods, can be studied using the powerful, abstract language of Hilbert complexes. In another recent article [arXiv:1005.4455], we extended the Arnold-Falk-Winther framework by analyzing variational crimes (a la Strang) on Hilbert complexes. In particular, this gave a treatment of finite element exterior calculus on manifolds, generalizing techniques from surface finite element methods and recovering earlier a priori estimates for the Laplace-Beltrami operator on 2- and 3-surfaces, due to Dziuk [Lecture Notes in Math., vol. 1357 (1988), 142-155] and later Demlow [SIAM J. Numer. Anal., 47 (2009), 805-827], as special cases. In the present article, we extend the Hilbert complex framework in a second distinct direction: to the study of semilinear mixed problems. We do this, first, by introducing an operator-theoretic reformulation of the linear mixed problem, so that the semilinear problem can be expressed as an abstract Hammerstein equation. This allows us to obtain, for semilinear problems, a priori solution estimates and error estimates that reduce to the Arnold-Falk-Winther results in the linear case. We also consider the impact of variational crimes, extending the results of our previous article to these semilinear problems. As an immediate application, this new framework allows for mixed finite element methods to be applied to semilinear problems on surfaces.Comment: 22 pages; v2: major revision, particularly sharpening of error estimates in Section

    Impact of D0-D0bar mixing on the experimental determination of gamma

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    Several methods have been devised to measure the weak phase gamma using decays of the type B+- --> D K+-, where it is assumed that there is no mixing in the D0-D0bar system. However, when using these methods to uncover new physics, one must entertain the real possibility that the measurements are affected by new physics effects in the D0-D0bar system. We show that even values of x_D and/or y_D around 10^{-2} can have a significant impact in the measurement of sin^2{gamma}. We discuss the errors incurred in neglecting this effect, how the effect can be checked, and how to include it in the analysis.Comment: 18 pages, Latex with epsfig, 8 figure
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