1,896 research outputs found
Resistance by the blue tick (Boophilus decoloratus) to the synthetic pyrethroid, fenvalerate
The Shaw larval test, in conjunction with adult tick immersion and stall tests, was utilized to confirm that a
field strain of B. decoloratus, from Natal, is highly resistant to the ixodicide fenvalerate (Factor of resistance
4 744). This resistance developed over a reported 18 months of usage for cattle dipping.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.lmchunu2014mn201
The resistance spectrum shown by a fenvalerate-resistant strain of blue tick (Boophilus decoloratus) to a range of ixodicides
A strain of Boophilus decoloratus, resistant to fenvalerate, was subjected to larval immersion, adult immersion and stall tests using the following classes of ixodicides : organochlorines, organophosphates, a diamidide and pyrethroids. A susceptible reference strain of B. decoloratus was used for comparative purposes. The results indicated a high level of resistance to DDT and camphechlor, slight tolerance to dioxathion, chlorfenvinphos and pirimiphos ethyl, full susceptibility to bromophos ethyl and amitraz, but marked resistance to cyhalothrin, cypermethrin, deltamethrin and flumethrin. This marked resistance in the strain therefore appears to be widespread within the pyrethroid group of chemicals and may have developed as a result of organochlorine cross-resistance.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.lmchunu2014mn201
Exciting, Cooling And Vortex Trapping In A Bose-Condensed Gas
A straight forward numerical technique, based on the Gross-Pitaevskii
equation, is used to generate a self-consistent description of
thermally-excited states of a dilute boson gas. The process of evaporative
cooling is then modelled by following the time evolution of the system using
the same equation. It is shown that the subsequent rethermalisation of the
thermally-excited state produces a cooler coherent condensate. Other results
presented show that trapping vortex states with the ground state may be
possible in a two-dimensional experimental environment.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures. It's worth the wait! To be published in Physical
Review A, 1st February 199
Self-formed quantum wires and dots in GaAsP-GaAsP core-shell nanowires
Quantum structures designed using nanowires as a basis are excellent candidates to achieve novel design architectures. Here, triplets of quantum wires (QWRs) that form at the core–shell interface of GaAsP–GaAsP nanowires are reported. Their formation, on only three of the six vertices of the hexagonal nanowire, is governed by the three-fold symmetry of the cubic crystal on the (111) plane. In twinned nanowires, the QWRs are segmented, to alternating vertices, forming quantum dots (QDs). Simulations confirm the possibility of QWR and QD-like behavior from the respective regions. Optical measurements confirm the presence of two different types of quantum emitters in the twinned individual nanowires. The possibility to control the relative formation of QWRs or QDs, and resulting emission wavelengths of the QDs, by controlling the twinning of the nanowire core, opens up new possibilities for designing nanowire devices
Phase Equilibration and Magnetic Field Generation in U(1) Bubble Collisions
We present the results of lattice computations of collisions of two expanding
bubbles of true vacuum in the Abelian Higgs model with a first-order phase
transition. New time-dependent analytical solutions for the Abelian field
strength and the phase of the complex field are derived from initial conditions
inferred from linear superposition and are shown to be in excellent agreement
with the numerical solutions especially for the case where the initial phase
difference between the bubbles is small. With a step-function approximation for
the initial phase of the complex field, solutions for the Abelian field
strength and other gauge-invariant quantities are obtained in closed form.
Possible extensions of the solution to the case of the electroweak phase
transition and the generation of primordial magnetic fields are briefly
discussed.Comment: LaTeX, 41 pages, 6 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Magnetic monopoles from gauge theory phase transitions
Thermal fluctuations of the gauge field lead to monopole formation at the
grand unified phase transition in the early Universe, even if the transition is
merely a smooth crossover. The dependence of the produced monopole density on
various parameters is qualitatively different from theories with global
symmetries, and the monopoles have a positive correlation at short distances.
The number density of monopoles may be suppressed if the grand unified symmetry
is only restored for a short time by, for instance, nonthermal symmetry
restoration after preheating.Comment: 5 pages, updated to match the version published in PRD
(http://link.aps.org/abstract/PRD/v68/e021301) on 11 July 200
Continuous loading of a magnetic trap
We have realized a scheme for continuous loading of a magnetic trap (MT).
^{52}Cr atoms are continuously captured and cooled in a magneto-optical trap
(MOT). Optical pumping to a metastable state decouples atoms from the cooling
light. Due to their high magnetic moment (6 Bohr magnetons), low-field seeking
metastable atoms are trapped in the magnetic quadrupole field provided by the
MOT. Limited by inelastic collisions between atoms in the MOT and in the MT, we
load 10^8 metastable atoms at a rate of 10^8 atoms/s below 100 microkelvin into
the MT. After loading we can perform optical repumping to realize a MT of
ground state chromium atoms.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, version 2, modified references, included
additional detailed information, minor changes in figure 3 and in tex
What do young athletes implicitly understand about psychological skills?
One reason sport psychologists teach psychological skills is to enhance performance in sport; but the value of psychological skills for young athletes is questionable because of the qualitative and quantitative differences between children and adults in their understanding of abstract concepts such as mental skills. To teach these skills effectively to young athletes, sport psychologists need to appreciate what young athletes implicitly understand about such skills because maturational (e.g., cognitive, social) and environmental (e.g., coaches) factors can influence the progressive development of children and youth. In the present qualitative study, we explored young athletes’ (aged 10–15 years) understanding of four basic psychological skills: goal setting, mental imagery, self-talk, and relaxation. Young athletes (n = 118: 75 males and 43 females) completed an open-ended questionnaire to report their understanding of these four basic psychological skills. Compared with the older youth athletes, the younger youth athletes were less able to explain the meaning of each psychological skill. Goal setting and mental imagery were better understood than self-talk and relaxation. Based on these findings, sport psychologists should consider adapting interventions and psychoeducational programs to match young athletes’ age and developmental level
Age Constraints on Brane Models of Dark Energy
Inspired by recent developments in particle physics, the so-called brane
world cosmology seems to provide an alternative explanation for the present
dark energy problem. In this paper, we use the estimated age of high-
objects to constrain the value of the cosmological parameters in some
particular scenarios based on this large scale modification of gravity. We show
that such models are compatible with these observations for values of the
crossover distance between the 4 and 5 dimensions of the order of .Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, 1 table, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Loop-Generated Bounds on Changes to the Graviton Dispersion Relation
We identify the effective theory appropriate to the propagation of massless
bulk fields in brane-world scenarios, to show that the dominant low-energy
effect of asymmetric warping in the bulk is to modify the dispersion relation
of the effective 4-dimensional modes. We show how such changes to the graviton
dispersion relation may be bounded through the effects they imply, through
loops, for the propagation of standard model particles. We compute these bounds
and show that they provide, in some cases, the strongest constraints on
nonstandard gravitational dispersions. The bounds obtained in this way are the
strongest for the fewest extra dimensions and when the extra-dimensional Planck
mass is the smallest. Although the best bounds come for warped 5-D scenarios,
for which the 5D Planck Mass is O(TeV), even in 4 dimensions the graviton loop
can lead to a bound on the graviton speed which is comparable with other
constraints.Comment: 18 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures, uses revte
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