924 research outputs found
Effect of the Presence of Seagrass and Nutrients on Growth Rates of Farmed Kappaphycus alvarezii and Eucheuma denticulatum(Rhodophyta)
The effects of seagrass cover and nutrients on seaweed cultivation were examined in tidal pools in Tanzania. The seaweeds Eucheuma denticulatumand Kappaphycus alvareziiwere cultivated from August 2006 - August 2007 in pools with and without seagrasses, and with and without added nutrients. Growth rates of fertilised E. denticulatumwere significantly lower in the presence of seagrasses (P <0.05) but there were no significant differences (P >0.05) in the rest of the treatments. Monthly growth was lowest during the hotter months (December-February) and heavy rains (March-May), and highest during the cooler months (June-August)
Spectroscopic survey of M--type asteroids
M-type asteroids, as defined in the Tholen taxonomy (Tholen, 1984), are
medium albedo bodies supposed to have a metallic composition and to be the
progenitors both of differentiated iron-nickel meteorites and enstatite
chondrites. We carried out a spectroscopic survey in the visible and near
infrared wavelength range (0.4-2.5 micron) of 30 asteroids chosen from the
population of asteroids initially classified as Tholen M -types, aiming to
investigate their surface composition. The data were obtained during several
observing runs during the years 2004-2007 at the TNG, NTT, and IRTF telescopes.
We computed the spectral slopes in several wavelength ranges for each observed
asteroid, and we searched for diagnostic spectral features. We confirm a large
variety of spectral behaviors for these objects as their spectra are extended
into the near-infrared, including the identification of weak absorption bands,
mainly of the 0.9 micron band tentatively attributed to orthopyroxene, and of
the 0.43 micron band that may be associated to chlorites and Mg-rich
serpentines or pyroxene minerals such us pigeonite or augite. A comparison with
previously published data indicates that the surfaces of several asteroids
belonging to the M-class may vary significantly. We attempt to constrain the
asteroid surface compositions of our sample by looking for meteorite spectral
analogues in the RELAB database and by modelling with geographical mixtures of
selected meteorites/minerals. We confirm that iron meteorites, pallasites, and
enstatite chondrites are the best matches to most objects in our sample, as
suggested for M-type asteroids. The presence of subtle absorption features on
several asteroids confirms that not all objects defined by the Tholen M-class
have a pure metallic composition.Comment: 10 figures, 6 tables; Icarus, in pres
Physical Investigation of the Potentially Hazardous Asteroid (144898) 2004 VD17
In this paper we present the observational campaign carried out at ESO NTT
and VLT in April and May 2006 to investigate the nature and the structure of
the Near Earth Object (144898) 2004 VD17. In spite of a great quantity of
dynamical information, according to which it will have a close approach with
the Earth in the next century, the physical properties of this asteroid are
largely unknown. We performed visible and near--infrared photometry and
spectroscopy, as well as polarimetric observations. Polarimetric and
spectroscopic data allowed us to classify 2004 VD17 as an E-type asteroid. A
good agreement was also found with the spectrum of the aubrite meteorite Mayo
Belwa. On the basis of the polarimetric albedo (p_v=0.45) and of photometric
data, we estimated a diameter of about 320 m and a rotational period of about 2
hours. The analysis of the results obtained by our complete survey have shown
that (144898) 2004 VD17 is a peculiar NEO, since it is close to the breakup
limits for fast rotator asteroids, as defined by Pravec and Harris (2000).
These results suggest that a more robust structure must be expected, as a
fractured monolith or a rubble pile in a "strength regime" (Holsapple 2002).Comment: 32 pages, 7 figure, paper accepted for publication in Icaru
Neuropsychological Sequelae of Brain Tumors
Investigation of the neuropsychological sequelae of brain tumors is extremely complex largely because the neurobehavioral consequences of brain tumors depend upon complex interactions among disease and treatment variables as well as patient characteristics. To illustrate some of these complexities, we present case studies of two patients in whom the behavioral outcome was not easily predictable on the basis of our current understanding of brain-behavior relationships in tumor patients. The case studies do illustrate how neuropsychological evaluation aids in identifying cognitive deficits which have implications for subsequent quality of life. Recommendations for future experiments and statistical analyses of neurobehavioral data of this population are given
Low delta-V near-Earth asteroids: A survey of suitable targets for space missions
In the last decades Near-Earth Objects (NEOs) have become very important
targets to study, since they can give us clues to the formation, evolution and
composition of the Solar System. In addition, they may represent either a
threat to humankind, or a repository of extraterrestrial resources for suitable
space-borne missions. Within this framework, the choice of next-generation
mission targets and the characterisation of a potential threat to our planet
deserve special attention. To date, only a small part of the 11,000 discovered
NEOs have been physically characterised. From ground and space-based
observations one can determine some basic physical properties of these objects
using visible and infrared spectroscopy. We present data for 13 objects
observed with different telescopes around the world (NASA-IRTF, ESO-NTT, TNG)
in the 0.4 - 2.5 um spectral range, within the NEOSURFACE survey
(http://www.oa-roma.inaf.it/planet/NEOSurface.html). Objects are chosen from
among the more accessible for a rendez-vous mission. All of them are
characterised by a delta-V (the change in velocity needed for transferring a
spacecraft from low-Earth orbit to rendez-vous with NEOs) lower than 10.5 km/s,
well below the Solar System escape velocity (12.3 km/s). We taxonomically
classify 9 of these objects for the first time. 11 objects belong to the
S-complex taxonomy; the other 2 belong to the C-complex. We constrain the
surface composition of these objects by comparing their spectra with meteorites
from the RELAB database. We also compute olivine and pyroxene mineralogy for
asteroids with a clear evidence of pyroxene bands. Mineralogy confirms the
similarity with the already found H, L or LL ordinary chondrite analogues.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, to be published in A&A Minor changes by language
edito
Inhomogeneities on the surface of 21 Lutetia, the asteroid target of the Rosetta mission
CONTEXT: In July 2010 the ESA spacecraft Rosetta will fly-by the main belt
asteroid 21 Lutetia. Several observations of this asteroid have been so far
performed, but its surface composition and nature are still a matter of debate.
For long time Lutetia was supposed to have a metallic nature due to its high
IRAS albedo. Later on it has been suggested to have a surface composition
similar to primitive carbonaceous chondrite meteorites, while further
observations proposed a possible genetic link with more evolved enstatite
chondrite meteorites. AIMS: In order to give an important contribution in
solving the conundrum of the nature of Lutetia, in November 2008 we performed
visible spectroscopic observations of this asteroid at the Telescopio Nazionale
Galileo (TNG, La Palma, Spain). METHODS: Thirteen visible spectra have been
acquired at different rotational phases. RESULTS: We confirm the presence of a
narrow spectral feature at about 0.47-0.48 micron already found by Lazzarin et
al. (2009) on the spectra of Lutetia. We also find a spectral feature at about
0.6 micron, detected by Lazzarin et al. (2004) on one of their Lutetia's
spectra. More importantly, our spectra exhibit different spectral slopes
between 0.6 and 0.75 micron and, in particular, we found that up to 20% of the
Lutetia surface could have flatter spectra. CONCLUSIONS: We detected a
variation of the spectral slopes at different rotational phases that could be
interpreted as possibly due to differences in the chemical/mineralogical
composition, as well as to inhomogeneities of the structure of the Lutetia's
surface (e.g., the presence of craters or albedo spots) in the southern
hemisphere.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics. Updated on 25 March 2010
Transversity studies with a polarized 3He target
A realistic study of the SiDIS process 3He(e , e
Ď€)X in the Bjorken
limit is briefly reviewed, showing that the nuclear effects, present in the extraction
of the neutron information, are largely under theoretical control, within an ImpulseApproximation approach. In view of the forthcoming experimental data, we shortly
present a novel Poincar´e covariant description of the nuclear target, implementing a
Light-Front analysis at finite Q2, within the Bakamijan-Thomas construction of the
Poincar´e generators. Furthermore, as a by-product of the introduction of a LightFront spin-dependent spectral function for a J = 1/2 system, we straightforwardly
extend our analysis to the quark-quark correlator, obtaining three new exact relations between the six leading-twist Transverse-Momentum–Dependent distributions
- …