2,446 research outputs found
Summing the strokes: energy economy in northern elephant seals during large-scale foraging migrations.
BackgroundThe energy requirements of free-ranging marine mammals are challenging to measure due to cryptic and far-ranging feeding habits, but are important to quantify given the potential impacts of high-level predators on ecosystems. Given their large body size and carnivorous lifestyle, we would predict that northern elephant seals (Mirounga angustirostris) have elevated field metabolic rates (FMRs) that require high prey intake rates, especially during pregnancy. Disturbance associated with climate change or human activity is predicted to further elevate energy requirements due to an increase in locomotor costs required to accommodate a reduction in prey or time available to forage. In this study, we determined the FMRs, total energy requirements, and energy budgets of adult, female northern elephant seals. We also examined the impact of increased locomotor costs on foraging success in this species.ResultsBody size, time spent at sea and reproductive status strongly influenced FMR. During the short foraging migration, FMR averaged 90.1 (SE = 1.7) kJ kg(-1)d(-1) - only 36 % greater than predicted basal metabolic rate. During the long migration, when seals were pregnant, FMRs averaged 69.4 (±3.0) kJ kg(-1)d(-1) - values approaching those predicted to be necessary to support basal metabolism in mammals of this size. Low FMRs in pregnant seals were driven by hypometabolism coupled with a positive feedback loop between improving body condition and reduced flipper stroking frequency. In contrast, three additional seals carrying large, non-streamlined instrumentation saw a four-fold increase in energy partitioned toward locomotion, resulting in elevated FMRs and only half the mass gain of normally-swimming study animals.ConclusionsThese results highlight the importance of keeping locomotion costs low for successful foraging in this species. In preparation for lactation and two fasting periods with high demands on energy reserves, migrating elephant seals utilize an economical foraging strategy whereby energy savings from reduced locomotion costs are shuttled towards somatic growth and fetal gestation. Remarkably, the energy requirements of this species, particularly during pregnancy, are 70-80 % lower than expected for mammalian carnivores, approaching or even falling below values predicted to be necessary to support basal metabolism in mammals of this size
A tool for implementing privacy in Nano
© 2020 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.We present a work in progress strategy for implementing privacy in Nano at the consensus level, that can be of independent interest. Nano is a cryptocurrency that uses an Open Representative Voting (ORV) as a consensus mechanism, a variant of Delegated Proof of Stake. Each transaction on the network is voted on by representatives, and each vote has a weight equal to the percentage of their total delegated balance. Every account can delegate their stake to any other account (including itself) and change it anytime it wants. The goal of this paper is to achieve a way for the consensus algorithm to function without knowing the individual balances of each account. The tool is composed of three different schemes. The first is a weighted threshold secret sharing scheme based on the Chinese Remainder Theorem for polynomial rings [1] and it's used to generate, in a distributed way, a secret that will be a private key of an additive ElGamal cryptosystem over elliptic curves (EC-EG) [2], which is additive homomorphic. The second scheme is the polynomials commitment scheme presented in [3] and is used to make the previous scheme verifiable, i.e., without the need of a trusted dealer. Finally, the third scheme is used to decrypt a ciphertext of the EC-EG cryptosystem without reconstructing the private key and, because of that, can be used multiple times.IEEEinfo:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersio
The origin of the hot metal-poor gas in NGC1291: Testing the hypothesis of gas dynamics as the cause of the gas heating
In this paper we test the idea that the low-metallicity hot gas in the centre
of NGC 1291 is heated via a dynamical process. In this scenario, the gas from
the outer gas-rich ring loses energy through bar-driven shocks and falls to the
centre. Heating of the gas to X-ray temperatures comes from the high velocity
that it reaches ( 700 \kms) as it falls to the bottom of the potential
well. This would explain why the stellar metallicity in the bulge region is
around solar while the hot gas metallicity is around 0.1 solar. We carried out
an observational test to check this hypothesis by measuring the metallicity of
HII regions in the outer ring to check whether they matched the hot gas
metallicity. For this purpose we obtained medium resolution long slit
spectroscopy with FORS1 on the ESO VLT at Paranal and obtained the
metallicities using emission line ratio diagnostics. The obtained metallicities
are compatible with the bulge stellar metallicities but very different from the
hot-gas metallicity. However, when comparing the different time-scales, the gas
in the ring had time enough to get enriched through stellar processes,
therefore we cannot rule out the dynamical mechanism as the heating process of
the gas. However, the blue colours of the outer ring and the dust structures in
the bar region could suggest that the origin of the X-ray hot gas is due to the
infall of material from further out.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. A&A accepte
Creencias sobre la diabetes mellitus tipo 2 de la etnia Wixarika del occidente de México
Introduction. There is a series of changes in the lifestyle of indigenous peoples that are caused by the processes of urbanization and westernization, which have generated modifications in the epidemiological profile of the people. These changes are an explanation to diseases that didn’t exist before in ethnic groups, such as the case of diabetes in the Wixarika people. Methodology. Exhaustive interviews were made, and from transcription they were codified with the aid of the Atlas-ti program. Subsequently, categories for interpretation and theorization were formulated. Results. Wixarika people were found to consider diabetes as a disease that belongs to mestizos and not to them, since this malady arrived to their communities along with the processes of modernization and the Western culture. Therefore, their marakames (curanderos) can’t heal it and only a mestizo physician can treat it. Conclusion. From the incorporation of the Wixarika people into the global processes, some cultural elements have been modified, such as the ways to produce food, eating and doing physical activity. Therefore, diseases like diabetes type II come up in their communities.Introducción. Existen una serie de cambios en los modos de vida de los pueblos originarios causados por procesos de urbanización y occidentalización que han generado modificaciones en el perfil epidemiológico, que explican las enfermedades que antes no existían en la etnia como es la diabetes. Metodología. Se realizaron entrevistas a profundidad, las cuales, a partir de la transcripción, se codificaron con ayuda del programa Atlas-ti, posteriormente se formaron categorías para su interpretación y teorización. Resultados. Se encontró que los Wixaritari consideran a la diabetes como una enfermedad que es del mestizo y no propia de su cultura, porque este padecimiento llegó a sus comunidades con los procesos de modernización y la cultura occidental, por lo que sus curanderos (Marakames) no la pueden curar, únicamente el médico mestizo la puede tratar. Conclusión. A partir de la incorporación del pueblo Wixárika a los procesos globales se han modificado elementos culturales como las formas de producir alimentos, de comer y de realizar actividad física y a consecuencia se presentan enfermedades que antes no existían en sus comunidades como la diabetes
Gamma-Rays and the Far-Infrared-Radio Continuum Correlation Reveal a Powerful Galactic Centre Wind
We consider the thermal and non-thermal emission from the inner 200 pc of the
Galaxy. The radiation from this almost star-burst-like region is ultimately
driven dominantly by on-going massive star formation. We show that this
region's radio continuum (RC) emission is in relative deficit with respect to
the expectation afforded by the Far- infrared-Radio Continuum Correlation
(FRC). Likewise we show that the region's gamma-ray emission falls short of
that expected given its star formation and resultant supernova rates. These
facts are compellingly explained by positing that a powerful (400-1200 km/s)
wind is launched from the region. This wind probably plays a number of
important roles including advecting positrons into the Galactic bulge thus
explaining the observed ~kpc extension of the 511 keV positron annihilation
signal around the GC. We also show that the large-scale GC magnetic field falls
in the range ~100-300 microG and that - in the time they remain in the region -
GC cosmic rays do not penetrate into the region's densest molecular material.Comment: Version accepted for publication in MNRAS Letters. Discussion
extended and references adde
Hydrodynamic Coupling of Two Brownian Spheres to a Planar Surface
We describe direct imaging measurements of the collective and relative
diffusion of two colloidal spheres near a flat plate. The bounding surface
modifies the spheres' dynamics, even at separations of tens of radii. This
behavior is captured by a stokeslet analysis of fluid flow driven by the
spheres' and wall's no-slip boundary conditions. In particular, this analysis
reveals surprising asymmetry in the normal modes for pair diffusion near a flat
surface.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Interpretation of radio continuum and molecular line observations of Sgr B2: free-free and synchrotron emission, and implications for cosmic rays
Recent ammonia (1,1) inversion line data on the Galactic star forming region
Sgr B2 show that the column density is consistent with a radial Gaussian
density profile with a standard deviation of 2.75 pc. Deriving a formula for
the virial mass of spherical Gaussian clouds, we obtain a virial mass of 1.9
million solar masses for Sgr B2. For this matter distribution, a reasonable
magnetic field and an impinging flux of cosmic rays of solar neighbourhood
intensity, we predict the expected synchrotron emission from the Sgr B2 giant
molecular cloud due to secondary electrons and positrons resulting from cosmic
ray interactions, including effects of losses due to pion production collisions
during diffusive propagation into the cloud complex.
We assemble radio continuum data at frequencies between 330 MHz and 230 GHz.
From the spectral energy distribution the emission appears to be thermal at
all frequencies. Before using these data to constrain the predicted synchrotron
flux, we first model the spectrum as free-free emission from the known ultra
compact HII regions plus emission from an envelope or wind with a radial
density gradient. This severely constrains the possible synchrotron emission by
secondary electrons to quite low flux levels. The absence of a significant
contribution by secondary electrons is almost certainly due to multi-GeV energy
cosmic rays being unable to penetrate far into giant molecular clouds. This
would also explain why 100 MeV--GeV gamma-rays (from neutral pion decay or
bremsstrahlung by secondary electrons) were not observed from Sgr B2 by EGRET,
while TeV energy gamma-rays were observed, being produced by higher energy
cosmic rays which more readily penetrate giant molecular clouds.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures. New section on diffusion of primary and
secondary cosmic ray electrons into and within the Sgr B2 Giant Molecular
Cloud added. Main corrections to proofs made in this versio
The ATLAS3D project - XXVII : Cold gas and the colours and ages of early-type galaxies
Date of Acceptance: 16/12/2013We present a study of the cold gas contents of the ATLAS3D early-type galaxies, in the context of their optical colours, near-ultraviolet colours and Hβ absorption line strengths. Early-type (elliptical and lenticular) galaxies are not as gas poor as previously thought, and at least 40 per cent of local early-type galaxies are now known to contain molecular and/or atomic gas. This cold gas offers the opportunity to study recent galaxy evolution through the processes of cold gas acquisition, consumption (star formation) and removal. Molecular and atomic gas detection rates range from 10 to 34 per cent in red sequence early-type galaxies, depending on how the red sequence is defined, and from 50 to 70 per cent in blue early-type galaxies. Notably, massive red sequence early-type galaxies (stellar masses >5 × 1010 M⊙, derived from dynamical models) are found to have H I masses up to M(H I)/M* ∼ 0.06 and H2 masses up to M(H2)/M* ∼ 0.01. Some 20 per cent of all massive early-type galaxies may have retained atomic and/or molecular gas through their transition to the red sequence. However, kinematic and metallicity signatures of external gas accretion (either from satellite galaxies or the intergalactic medium) are also common, particularly at stellar masses ≤5 × 1010 M⊙, where such signatures are found in ∼50 per cent of H2-rich early-type galaxies. Our data are thus consistent with a scenario in which fast rotator early-type galaxies are quenched former spiral galaxies which have undergone some bulge growth processes, and in addition, some of them also experience cold gas accretion which can initiate a period of modest star formation activity. We discuss implications for the interpretation of colour–magnitude diagramsPeer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
A step too far? Leader racism inhibits transgression credit
Prior research established that when in-group leaders commit serious transgressions, such as breaking enforceable rules or engaging in bribery, people treat them leniently compared with similarly transgressive regular group members or out-group leaders (‘transgression credit’). The present studies test a boundary condition of this phenomenon, specifically the hypothesis that transgression credit will be lost if a leader's action implies racist motivation. In study 1, in a corporate scenario, a transgressive in-group leader did or did not express racism. In study 2, in a sports scenario, an in-group or out-group leader or member transgressed rules with or without a racist connotation. Both studies showed that in-group transgressive leaders lost their transgression credit if their transgression included a racial connotation. Wider implications for constraining leaders' transgressions are discussed
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