163 research outputs found
Interactions between Nuclear Polyhedrosis Virus and Three Larval Parasitoids of Helicoverpa armigera (HĂŒbner) (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae)
Interactions between a Helicoverpa nuclear polyhedrosis virus (NPV) and three larval parasitoids of H. armigera were recorded in laboratory studies. the parasitoids Microplitis demolitor, Cotesia kazak and Hyposoter didymator required a time advantage of at least 3 d at 25°C before the host was exposed to NPV to ensure successful completion of development. Helicoverpa larvae parasitised by C. kazak died from NPV after the parasitoids emerged from the host, and thus could provide a source of virus inoculum for secondary spread of the disease. On the other hand, as the interval between parasitisation and host exposure to NPV increased, the proportion of hosts parasitised by M. demolitor which died from NPV after emergence of the parasitoid decreased. It was also shown that as the time interval between host parasitisation by M. demolitor and exposure to virus increased, higher virus doses were required to kill parasitised hosts than were required for nonparasitised hosts of the same age
Moment tensor inversion of Explosive Long Period events recorded on Arenal Volcano, Costa Rica, constrained by synthetic tests
International audienceIn order to constrain the moment tensor solution of an explosive seismic event recorded on Arenal volcano, Costa Rica, we perform tests using synthetic data. These data are generated using a 3D model including the topography of the volcano and the best estimation of the velocity model available for Arenal. Solutions for (i) the moment tensor components, and (ii) the moment tensor plus single forces, are analyzed. When noisy data and mislocated sources are used in the inversion, spurious single forces are easily generated in the solution for the moment tensor components plus single forces. Forces also appear when the inversion is performed using an explosive event recorded on Arenal in 2005. Synthetic tests indicate that these forces might be spurious. However the mechanism is correctly retrieved by the inversion in both solutions. The ability to recover the explosive mechanism for the 2005 event combined with the interpretative aids from the synthetics tests will enable us to invert for the large variation in events observed on Arenal
Plastic Flow, Voltage Bursts, and Vortex Avalanches in Superconductors
We use large-scale parallel simulations to compute the motion of
superconducting magnetic vortices during avalanches triggered by small field
increases. We find that experimentally observable voltage bursts correspond to
pulsing vortex movement along branched channels or winding chains, and relate
vortex flow images to features of statistical distributions. As pin density is
increased, a crossover occurs from interstitial motion in narrow easy-flow
winding channels with typical avalanche sizes, to pin-to-pin motion in broad
channels, characterized by a very broad distribution of sizes. Our results are
consistent with recent experiments.Comment: 4 pages, Latex, 4 figures included. Movies available at
http://www-personal.engin.umich.edu/~nor
Seismic source mechanisms of tremor recorded on Arenal volcano, Costa Rica, retrieved by waveform inversion
International audienceMoment tensor inversions of volcanic tremor are synthetically tested and subsequently applied to a dataset recorded on Arenal volcano in 2005. We selected 15 harmonic tremor events showing an emergent but very clear onset with a fundamental frequency range of 0.8-1.5 Hz. These events constitute an excellent opportunity to broaden our knowledge of tremor generation models. The inversions were performed for a common source location, the position of which was retrieved through the evaluation of the joint probability density function of the misfit values obtained by the moment tensor inversion of all the events and all predefined source locations (grid search). Events are located beneath the summit crater, in a shallow position. The inversion procedure was tested through the use of synthetic tremor, generated using full wavefield numerical simulations. The maximum amplitude decomposition method is used to analyse the solutions of the synthetic tests. The results highlight the stability of the moment tensor solution when the whole length of the signal is used in the inversion procedure. Hence the whole length of the tremor is utilised to retrieve the source mechanism generating the 15 tremor events. A sliding window is utilised to investigate the time variability of our solution. A crack dipping 20° to the North-Northeast is reconcilable with all 15 tremor events. This mechanism is found to be constant for the entire length of each tremor and for different events
Internal avalanches in a pile of superconducting vortices
Using an array of miniature Hall probes, we monitored the spatiotemporal
variation of the internal magnetic induction in a superconducting niobium
sample during a slow sweep of external magnetic field. We found that a sizable
fraction of the increase in the local vortex population occurs in abrupt jumps.
The size distribution of these avalanches presents a power-law collapse on a
limited range. In contrast, at low temperatures and low fields, huge avalanches
with a typical size occur and the system does not display a well-defined
macroscopic critical current.Comment: 5 pages including 5 figure
In situ monitoring of GaSb, GaInAsSb, and AlGaAsSb
Suitability of silicon photodiode detector arrays for monitoring the spectral reflectance during epitaxial growths of GaSb, AlGaAsSb, and GaInAsSb, which have cutoff wavelengths of 1.7, 1.2, and 2.3 {micro}m, respectively, is demonstrated. These alloys were grown lattice matched to GaSb in a vertical rotating-disk reactor, which was modified to accommodate near normal reflectance without affecting epilayer uniformity. By using a virtual interface model, the growth rate and complex refractive index at the growth temperature are extracted for these alloys over the 600 to 950 nm spectral range. Excellent agreement is obtained between the extracted growth rate and that determined by ex-situ measurement. Optical constants are compared to theoretical predictions based on an existing dielectric function model for these materials. Furthermore, quantitative analysis of the entire reflectance spectrum yields valuable information on the approximate thickness of overlayers on the pregrowth substrate
Exact Solution for the Critical State in Thin Superconductor Strips with Field Dependent or Anisotropic Pinning
An exact analytical solution is given for the critical state problem in long
thin superconductor strips in a perpendicular magnetic field, when the critical
current density j_c(B) depends on the local induction B according to a simple
three-parameter model. This model describes both isotropic superconductors with
this j_c(B) dependence, but also superconductors with anisotropic pinning
described by a dependence j_c(theta) where theta is the tilt angle of the flux
lines away from the normal to the specimen plane
Disorder and thermally driven vortex-lattice melting in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} crystals
Magnetization measurements in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} crystals indicate vortex
order-disorder transition manifested by a sharp kink in the second
magnetization peak. The transition field exhibits unique temperature
dependence, namely a strong decrease with temperature in the entire measured
range. This behavior rules out the conventional interpretation of a
disorder-driven transition into an entangled vortex solid phase. It is shown
that the transition in La{2-x}Sr{x}CuO{4} is driven by both thermally- and
disorder-induced fluctuations, resulting in a pinned liquid state. We conclude
that vortex solid-liquid, solid-solid and solid to pinned-liquid transitions
are different manifestations of the same thermodynamic order-disorder
transition, distinguished by the relative contributions of thermal and
disorder-induced fluctuations.Comment: To be published in phys. Rev. B Rapid Com
Models of quintessence coupled to the electromagnetic field and the cosmological evolution of alpha
We study the change of the effective fine structure constant in the
cosmological models of a scalar field with a non-vanishing coupling to the
electromagnetic field. Combining cosmological data and terrestrial observations
we place empirical constraints on the size of the possible coupling and explore
a large class of models that exhibit tracking behavior. The change of the fine
structure constant implied by the quasar absorption spectra together with the
requirement of tracking behavior impose a lower bound of the size of this
coupling. Furthermore, the transition to the quintessence regime implies a
narrow window for this coupling around in units of the inverse Planck
mass. We also propose a non-minimal coupling between electromagnetism and
quintessence which has the effect of leading only to changes of alpha
determined from atomic physics phenomena, but leaving no observable
consequences through nuclear physics effects. In doing so we are able to
reconcile the claimed cosmological evidence for a changing fine structure
constant with the tight constraints emerging from the Oklo natural nuclear
reactor.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures, RevTex, new references adde
Condensate cosmology -- dark energy from dark matter
Imagine a scenario in which the dark energy forms via the condensation of
dark matter at some low redshift. The Compton wavelength therefore changes from
small to very large at the transition, unlike quintessence or metamorphosis. We
study CMB, large scale structure, supernova and radio galaxy constraints on
condensation by performing a 4 parameter likelihood analysis over the Hubble
constant and the three parameters associated with Q, the condensate field:
Omega_Q, w_f and z_t (energy density and equation of state today, and redshift
of transition). Condensation roughly interpolates between Lambda CDM (for large
z_t) and sCDM (low z_t) and provides a slightly better fit to the data than
Lambda CDM. We confirm that there is no degeneracy in the CMB between H and z_t
and discuss the implications of late-time transitions for the Lyman-alpha
forest. Finally we discuss the nonlinear phase of both condensation and
metamorphosis, which is much more interesting than in standard quintessence
models.Comment: 13 pages, 13 colour figures. Final version with discussion of TE
cross-correlation spectra for condensation and metamorphosis in light of the
WMAP result
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