1,012 research outputs found

    The global moduli theory of symplectic varieties

    Full text link
    We develop the global moduli theory of symplectic varieties {in the sense of Beauville}. We prove a number of analogs of classical results from the smooth case, including a global Torelli theorem. In particular, this yields a new proof of Verbitsky's global Torelli theorem in the smooth case (assuming b25b_2\geq 5) which does not use the existence of a hyperk\"ahler metric or twistor deformations.Comment: Some rearrangements, simplifications, and minor corrections. Comments welcome

    Metamodel for Tracing Concerns across the Life Cycle

    Get PDF
    Several aspect-oriented approaches have been proposed to specify aspects at different phases in the software life cycle. Aspects can appear within a phase, be refined or mapped to other aspects in later phases, or even disappear.\ud Tracing aspects is necessary to support understandability and maintainability of software systems. Although several approaches have been introduced to address traceability of aspects, two important limitations can be observed. First, tracing is not yet tackled for the entire life cycle. Second, the traceability model that is applied usually refers to elements of specific aspect languages, thereby limiting the reusability of the adopted traceability model.We propose the concern traceability metamodel (CTM) that enables traceability of concerns throughout the life cycle, and which is independent from the aspect languages that are used. CTM can be enhanced to provide additional properties for tracing, and be instantiated to define\ud customized traceability models with respect to the required aspect languages. We have implemented CTM in the tool M-Trace, that uses XML-based representations of the models and XQuery queries to represent tracing information. CTM and M-Trace are illustrated for a Concurrent Versioning System to trace aspects from the requirements level to architecture design level and the implementation

    A Hodge-theoretic proof of Hwang's theorem on base manifolds of Lagrangian fibrations

    Full text link
    We give a Hodge-theoretic proof of Hwang's theorem, which says that if the base of a Lagrangian fibration of an irreducible holomorphic symplectic manifold is smooth, it must be projective space.Comment: 22 pages. Comments welcome

    Long-term cross-scale comparison of grazing and mowing on plant diversity and community composition in a salt-marsh system

    Get PDF
    Land abandonment has been increasing in recent decades in Europe, usually accompanied by biodiversity decline. Whether livestock grazing and mowing can safeguard biodiversity across spatial scales in the long term is unclear. Using a 48-year experiment in a salt marsh, we compared land abandonment (without grazing and mowing) and seven management regimes including cattle grazing, early season mowing, late season mowing, both early and late season mowing, and grazing plus each of the mowing regimes on plant diversity at the local and larger scales (i.e. aggregated local communities). Also, we compared their effects on community composition (both in identities and abundances) in time and space. Under land abandonment, plant diversity declined in the local communities and this decline became more apparent at the larger scale, particularly for graminoids and halophytes. All management regimes, except for late season mowing, maintained plant diversity at these scales. Local plant communities under all treatments underwent different successional trajectories, in the end, diverged from their initial state except for that under grazing (a cyclic succession). Year-to-year changes in local community composition remained at a similar level over time under land abandonment and grazing plus early season mowing while it changed under other treatments. Vegetation homogenized at the larger scale over time under land abandonment while vegetation remained heterogeneous under all management regimes. Synthesis. Our experiment suggests that late season mowing may not be sustainable to conserve plant diversity in salt marshes. Other management regimes can maintain plant diversity across spatial scales and vegetation heterogeneity at the larger scale in the long term, but local community composition may change over time.Fil: Chen, Qingqing. University of Groningen; Países BajosFil: Bakker, Jan P.. University of Groningen; Países BajosFil: Alberti, Juan. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Mar del Plata. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras; ArgentinaFil: Bakker, Elisabeth S.. Netherlands Institute of Ecology; Países Bajos. University of Agriculture Wageningen; Países BajosFil: Smit, Christian. University of Groningen; Países BajosFil: Olff, Han. University of Groningen; Países Bajo

    Long-term management is needed for conserving plant diversity in a Wadden Sea salt marsh

    Get PDF
    Evaluation of long-term management regimes is important for guiding biodiversity conservation in salt marshes. However, such long-term experiments are sparse. Using a 46-year experiment in a salt marsh, we evaluated long-term effects of eight different management regimes (treatments; control, grazing, mowing, and their combinations) on the expansion of a late successional plant species (Elytrigia atherica), plant species richness and diversity, and community composition (species identities and dominance structure). Results show that E. atherica expanded strongly over time in the control treatment (without grazing or mowing) while plant species richness and diversity declined substantially. By contrast, E. atherica was greatly suppressed while plant species richness and diversity remained relatively unchanged in all other treatments except for the mowing, where species richness declined in the late season mowing treatment and plant diversity declined after 17 years in the both early and late season mowing treatment. Therefore, all management types except for the mowing were effective in conserving plant diversity. The trends for change in species identities reversed: change in species identities accumulated in the control treatment and exceeded that of other treatments 15 years after the start of the experiment. This suggests that results based on shorter-term (< 15 years) experiments may provide misleading conservation recommendations. Also, trends for change in dominance structure (taking abundance into account) were substantially different from those for species identities. Our results highlight the importance of long-term monitoring for guiding conservation management, and that monitoring should not only focus on the number of species but also community composition, to fully identify critical changes.Fil: Chen, Qingqing. University of Groningen; Países BajosFil: Bakker, Jan P.. University of Groningen; Países BajosFil: Alberti, Juan. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Mar del Plata. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras. Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras; ArgentinaFil: Smit, Christian. University of Groningen; Países Bajo

    Modèle multi-échelles et mesures de l'endommagement pour optimiser l'utilisation des structures composites stratifiées

    No full text
    International audienceBien que les modèles d'évolution et les mesures d'endommagement aient fait de grands progrès, la rupture des structures composites stratifiées reste un phénomène mal-maîtrisé, à la fois complexe et multi-échelle. En associant la modélisation et la mesure de l'endommagement, nous proposons une approche pour optimiser l'utilisation des structures composites stratifiées tout au long de leur durée de vie, depuis la validation de modèle jusqu'à l'analyse de la rupture. Cette approche s'appuie sur les mesures obtenues par micro-tomographie ainsi que sur le modèle développé au LMA. Ces mesures sont utilisées dans un premier temps pour valider le modèle de comportement. Dans un second temps, nous nous intéressons à l'estimation de la durée de vie des structures ainsi qu'à leur expertise post-rupture à partir de l'utilisation conjointe du modèle et des mesure d'endommagement

    Hydrophobic Molecules Slow Down the Hydrogen-Bond Dynamics of Water

    Get PDF
    We study the spectral and orientational dynamics of HDO molecules in solutions of tertiary-butyl-alcohol (TBA), trimethyl-amine-oxide (TMAO), and tetramethylurea (TMU) in isotopically diluted water (HDO:D2O and HDO:H2O). The spectral dynamics are studied with femtosecond two-dimensional infrared spectroscopy and the orientational dynamics with femtosecond polarization-resolved vibrational pump-probe spectroscopy. We observe a strong slowing down of the spectral diffusion around the central part of the absorption line that increases with increasing solute concentration. At low concentrations, the fraction of water showing slow spectral dynamics is observed to scale with the number of methyl groups, indicating that this effect is due to slow hydrogen-bond dynamics in the hydration shell of the methyl groups of the solute molecules. The slowing down of the vibrational frequency dynamics is strongly correlated with the slowing down of the orientational mobility of the water molecules. This correlation indicates that these effects have a common origin in the effect of hydrophobic molecular groups on the hydrogen-bond dynamics of water.
    corecore