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The eyes of suckermouth armoured catfish (Loricariidae, subfamily Hypostomus): pupil response, lenticular longitudinal spherical aberration and retinal topography
The dilated, round pupils of a species of suckermouth armoured catfish (Liposarcus pardalis) constrict slowly on illumination (over 35-40 min) to form crescent-shaped apertures. Ray tracing of He-Ne laser beams shows that the lenses of a related species (Pterygoplichthys etentaculus), which also has a crescent-shaped pupil, are well corrected for longitudinal spherical aberration, suggesting that the primary purpose of the irregular pupil in armoured catfish is not to correct such aberration. It is suggested that the iris operculum may serve to camouflage the pupil of these substrate-dwelling species. An examination of the catfish retina shows the photoreceptors to be exclusively single cones interspersed with elongate rods and demonstrates the presence of multiple optic nerve head papillae. Two areas of high ganglion cell density, each side of a vertically oriented falciform process, provide increased spatial resolving power along the axes examining the substrate in front of and behind the animal
Improved TPB-coated Light Guides for Liquid Argon TPC Light Detection Systems
Scintillation light produced in liquid argon (LAr) must be shifted from 128
nm to visible wavelengths in light detection systems used for liquid argon
time-projection chambers (LArTPCs). To date, LArTPC light collection systems
have employed tetraphenyl butadiene (TPB) coatings on photomultiplier tubes
(PMTs) or plates placed in front of the PMTs. Recently, a new approach using
TPB-coated light guides was proposed. In this paper, we report on light guides
with improved attenuation lengths above 100 cm when measured in air. This is an
important step in the development of meter-scale light guides for future
LArTPCs. Improvements come from using a new acrylic-based coating,
diamond-polished cast UV transmitting acrylic bars, and a hand-dipping
technique to coat the bars. We discuss a model for connecting bar response in
air to response in liquid argon and compare this to data taken in liquid argon.
The good agreement between the prediction of the model and the measured
response in liquid argon demonstrates that characterization in air is
sufficient for quality control of bar production. This model can be used in
simulations of light guides for future experiments.Comment: 25 pages, 20 figure
British American Tobacco and the "insidious impact of illicit trade'' in cigarettes across Africa
Objectives: To provide an overview of the complicity of British American Tobacco (BAT) in the illicit trade of cigarettes across the African continent in terms of rationale, supply routes and scale.Methods: Analysis of internal BAT documents and industry publications.Results: BAT has relied on illegal channels to supply markets across Africa since the 1980s. Available documents suggest smuggling has been an important component of BAT's market entry strategy in order to gain leverage in negotiating with governments for tax concessions, compete with other transnational tobacco companies, circumvent local import restrictions and unstable political and economic conditions and gain a market presence. BAT worked through distributors and local agents to exploit weak government capacity to gain substantial market share in major countries.Conclusions: Documents demonstrate that the complicity of BAT in cigarette smuggling extends to Africa, which includes many of the poorest countries in the world. This is in direct conflict with offers by the company to contribute to stronger international cooperation to tackle the illicit tobacco trade.</p
Clues to Quasar Broad Line Region Geometry and Kinematics
We present evidence that the high-velocity CIV lambda 1549 emission line gas
of radio-loud quasars may originate in a disk-like configuration, in close
proximity to the accretion disk often assumed to emit the low-ionization lines.
For a sample of 36 radio-loud z~2 quasars we find the 20--30% peak width to
show significant inverse correlations with the fractional radio core-flux
density, R, the radio axis inclination indicator. Highly inclined systems have
broader line wings, consistent with a high-velocity field perpendicular to the
radio axis. By contrast, the narrow line-core shows no such relation with R, so
the lowest velocity CIV-emitting gas has an inclination independent velocity
field. We propose that this low-velocity gas is located at higher
disk-altitudes than the high-velocity gas. A planar origin of the high-velocity
CIV-emission is consistent with the current results and with an accretion
disk-wind emitting the broad lines. A spherical distribution of randomly
orbiting broad-line clouds and a polar high-ionization outflow are ruled out.Comment: 5 Latex pages, 1 figure, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Intrinsic susceptibility and bond defects in the novel 2D frustrated antiferromagnet BaSnZnCrGaO
We present microscopic and macroscopic magnetic properties of the highly
frustrated antiferromagnet BaSnZnCrGaO,
respectively probed with NMR and SQUID experiments. The -variation of the
intrinsic susceptibility of the Cr frustrated kagom\'{e} bilayer,
, displays a maximum around 45 K. The dilution of the magnetic
lattice has been studied in detail for . Novel dilution
independent defects, likely related with magnetic bond disorder, are evidenced
and discussed. We compare our results to SrCrGaO. Both
bond defects and spin vacancies do not affect the average susceptibility of the
kagom\'{e} bilayers.Comment: Published in Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 217202 (2004). Only minor changes
as compared to previous version. 4 pages, 4 figure
Symmetries in Fluctuations Far from Equilibrium
Fluctuations arise universally in Nature as a reflection of the discrete
microscopic world at the macroscopic level. Despite their apparent noisy
origin, fluctuations encode fundamental aspects of the physics of the system at
hand, crucial to understand irreversibility and nonequilibrium behavior. In
order to sustain a given fluctuation, a system traverses a precise optimal path
in phase space. Here we show that by demanding invariance of optimal paths
under symmetry transformations, new and general fluctuation relations valid
arbitrarily far from equilibrium are unveiled. This opens an unexplored route
toward a deeper understanding of nonequilibrium physics by bringing symmetry
principles to the realm of fluctuations. We illustrate this concept studying
symmetries of the current distribution out of equilibrium. In particular we
derive an isometric fluctuation relation which links in a strikingly simple
manner the probabilities of any pair of isometric current fluctuations. This
relation, which results from the time-reversibility of the dynamics, includes
as a particular instance the Gallavotti-Cohen fluctuation theorem in this
context but adds a completely new perspective on the high level of symmetry
imposed by time-reversibility on the statistics of nonequilibrium fluctuations.
The new symmetry implies remarkable hierarchies of equations for the current
cumulants and the nonlinear response coefficients, going far beyond Onsager's
reciprocity relations and Green-Kubo formulae. We confirm the validity of the
new symmetry relation in extensive numerical simulations, and suggest that the
idea of symmetry in fluctuations as invariance of optimal paths has
far-reaching consequences in diverse fields.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
The Effects of Dissolved Methane upon Liquid Argon Scintillation Light
In this paper we report on measurements of the effects of dissolved methane
upon argon scintillation light. We monitor the light yield from an alpha source
held 20 cm from a cryogenic photomultiplier tube (PMT) assembly as methane is
injected into a high-purity liquid argon volume. We observe significant
suppression of the scintillation light yield by dissolved methane at the 10
part per billion (ppb) level. By examining the late scintillation light time
constant, we determine that this loss is caused by an absorption process and
also see some evidence of methane-induced scintillation quenching at higher
concentrations (50-100 ppb). Using a second PMT assembly we look for visible
re-emission features from the dissolved methane which have been reported in
gas-phase argon methane mixtures, and we find no evidence of visible
re-emission from liquid-phase argon methane mixtures at concentrations between
10 ppb and 0.1%.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures Updated to match published versio
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