1,647 research outputs found
Variables influencing survival in four generations of captive-born muskoxen
Since 1967, four generations of muskoxen have been born in captivity in Alaska (399 live births, 18 abortions and 47 stillbirths), all derived from 20 females and 8 males captured on Nunivak Island. Analysis of juvenile survival was accomplished by dividing individuals into 7 classes (not born live, born live but not surviving 48 hours, survived 48 hours but < 1 week, survived 1 week but < 1 month, survived 1 month but < 6 months, survived 6 months but < 2 years, survived 2 years). Males were more frequent among live born calves (219:178, P=0.05), but greater numbers of females survived to 2 years (62:86, P<0.01). Birthweight (X=9.75 kg, N=155) did not differ between sexes nor did it significantly influence survival. Of 463 individuals, 131 showed some inbreeding but no coefficients of inbreeding exceeded 0.25 and most were less than 0.13. Analysis of variance (Kruskal-Wallis) showed a significant (P<0.05) difference between survival of inbred and non-inbred individuals. Chi-squared tests showed a greater proportion of non-inbred calves surviving to 2 years (P<0.05) but no significant differences in perinatal mortality. Offspring of the Nunivak Island cows survived significantly (P<.01) longer than those whose mothers were born in captivity, even when only non-inbred calves were compared
Investigation of the Stock Structure of Atlantic Walrus (Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus) in Canada and Greenland Using Dental Pb Isotopes Derived from Local Geochemical Environments
The chemical composition of animal tissues such as teeth appears to reflect an individual's exposure to its geochemical environment. In this study, the lead (Pb) isotope composition of dental cementum was used to investigate the stock structure of Atlantic walrus (Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus) in the Canadian Arctic and Greenland. The 12 communities providing walrus samples for this study represent most of the Canadian and Greenlandic villages where walrus still form an important part of the traditional Inuit diet. Significant differences between locations in mean Pb isotope ratios and the limited overlap of the ranges of values indicate that each village harvested walrus herds that exploited substantially different geological/geographical habitats. This geographic segregation based on isotopic signatures suggests that most walrus stocks (i.e., the groups of walrus that interact with hunters at each community) are more localized in their range than previously thought. 208Pb/207Pb and 208Pb/204Pb were the most important stock discriminators, reflecting the influence of local geological Th/U composition (i.e., 208Pb) on Pb isotope composition in walrus teeth. 204Pb-based isotope ratios in walrus were consistently higher (more radiogenic) and more homogeneous than those in regional terrestrial bedrock, a difference probably due to selective leaching of radiogenic Pb from mineral phases into seawater and mixing during weathering and transport. Dental Pb isotope signatures may have widespread application to stock discrimination of other coastal marine mammal species.La composition chimique de tissus animaux tels que les dents semble reflĂ©ter l'exposition d'un individu Ă son milieu gĂ©ochimique. Pour la prĂ©sente Ă©tude, on a utilisĂ© la composition isotopique du plomb (Pb) contenu dans le cĂ©ment pour examiner la structure du stock du morse de l'Atlantique (Odobenus rosmarus rosmarus) dans l'Arctique canadien et le Groenland. Les 12 communautĂ©s qui ont fourni les Ă©chantillons de morse pour ce projet reprĂ©sentent la majoritĂ© des villages canadiens et groenlandais oĂč le morse constitue toujours une grande partie du rĂ©gime alimentaire traditionnel des Inuits. Des diffĂ©rences marquĂ©es entre les sites dans la moyenne des rapports isotopiques du Pb et le faible recoupement des gammes de valeurs rĂ©vĂšlent que chaque village prĂ©levait des morses au sein de troupeaux qui exploitaient des habitats gĂ©ologiques/gĂ©ographiques bien distincts. Cette sĂ©grĂ©gation gĂ©ographique fondĂ©e sur des signatures isotopiques suggĂšre que la plupart des stocks de morses (c.-Ă -d. le groupe de morses qui interagit avec les chasseurs dans chaque communautĂ©) sont plus localisĂ©s dans leur territoire qu'on ne le pensait auparavant. 208Pb/207Pb et 208Pb/204Pb Ă©taient les grands caractĂšres discriminants des stocks, reflĂ©tant l'influence de la composition gĂ©ologique locale Th/U (c-Ă -d. 208Pb) sur la composition isotopique du Pb dans les dents du morse. Les rapports isotopiques fondĂ©s sur 204Pb Ă©taient constamment plus Ă©levĂ©s (plus radiogĂ©niques) et plus homogĂšnes que ceux du substratum terrestre, la diffĂ©rence Ă©tant probablement due Ă la lixiviation sĂ©lective du Pb radiogĂ©nique passant des phases minĂ©rales dans l'eau de mer et Ă son mĂ©lange durant la mĂ©tĂ©orisation et le transport. Les signatures isotopiques du plomb dentaire peuvent avoir de vastes applications dans la discrimination des stocks d'autres espĂšces de mammifĂšres marins cĂŽtiers
Gas damping force noise on a macroscopic test body in an infinite gas reservoir
We present a simple analysis of the force noise associated with the
mechanical damping of the motion of a test body surrounded by a large volume of
rarefied gas. The calculation is performed considering the momentum imparted by
inelastic collisions against the sides of a cubic test mass, and for other
geometries for which the force noise could be an experimental limitation. In
addition to arriving at an accurated estimate, by two alternative methods, we
discuss the limits of the applicability of this analysis to realistic
experimental configurations in which a test body is surrounded by residual gas
inside an enclosure that is only slightly larger than the test body itself.Comment: 8 pages. updated with correct translational damping coefficient for
cylinder on axis. added cylinder orthogonal to symmetry axis, force and
torque. slightly edited throughou
Collective excitations of a two-dimensional interacting Bose gas in anti-trap and linear external potentials
We present a method of finding approximate analytical solutions for the
spectra and eigenvectors of collective modes in a two-dimensional system of
interacting bosons subjected to a linear external potential or the potential of
a special form , where is the chemical
potential. The eigenvalue problem is solved analytically for an artificial
model allowing the unbounded density of the particles. The spectra of
collective modes are calculated numerically for the stripe, the rare density
valley and the edge geometry and compared with the analytical results. It is
shown that the energies of the modes localized at the rare density region and
at the edge are well approximated by the analytical expressions. We discuss
Bose-Einstein condensation (BEC) in the systems under investigations at and find that in case of a finite number of the particles the regime of BEC
can be realized, whereas the condensate disappears in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figures include
Phenomenological Consequences of Singlet Neutrinos
In this paper, we study the phenomenology of right-handed neutrino
isosinglets. We consider the general situation where the neutrino masses are
not necessarily given by , where and are the Dirac and
Majorana mass terms respectively. The consequent mixing between the light and
heavy neutrinos is then not suppressed, and we treat it as an independent
parameter in the analysis. It turns out that conversion is an important
experiment in placing limits on the heavy mass scale () and the mixing.
Mixings among light neutrinos are constrained by neutrinoless double beta
decay, as well as by solar and atmospheric neutrino experiments. Detailed
one-loop calculations for lepton number violating vertices are provided.Comment: Revtex file,TRI-PP-94-1,VPI-IHEP-94-1, 23 pages, a compressed for 8
figures is appende
Further Evidence Suggestive of a Solar Influence on Nuclear Decay Rates
Recent analyses of nuclear decay data show evidence of variations suggestive
of a solar influence. Analyses of datasets acquired at the Brookhaven National
Laboratory (BNL) and at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) both
show evidence of an annual periodicity and of periodicities with sidereal
frequencies in the neighborhood of 12.25 year^{-1} (at a significance level
that we have estimated to be 10^{-17}). It is notable that this implied
rotation rate is lower than that attributed to the solar radiative zone,
suggestive of a slowly rotating solar core. This leads us to hypothesize that
there may be an "inner tachocline" separating the core from the radiative zone,
analogous to the "outer tachocline" that separates the radiative zone from the
convection zone. The Rieger periodicity (which has a period of about 154 days,
corresponding to a frequency of 2.37 year^{-1}) may be attributed to an r-mode
oscillation with spherical-harmonic indices l=3, m=1, located in the outer
tachocline. This suggests that we may test the hypothesis of a solar influence
on nuclear decay rates by searching BNL and PTB data for evidence of a
"Rieger-like" r-mode oscillation, with l=3, m=1, in the inner tachocline. The
appropriate search band for such an oscillation is estimated to be 2.00-2.28
year^{-1}. We find, in both datasets, strong evidence of a periodicity at 2.11
year^{-1}. We estimate that the probability of obtaining these results by
chance is 10^{-12}.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, v2 has a color corrected Fig 6, a corrected
reference, and a corrected typ
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Sporormiella as a tool for detecting the presence of large herbivores in the Neotropics
The reliability of using the abundance of Sporormiella spores as a proxy for the presence and abundance of megaherbivores was tested in southern Brazil. Mud-water interface samples from nine lakes, in which cattle-use was categorized as high, medium, or low, were assayed for Sporormiella representation. The sampling design allowed an analysis of both the influence of the number of animals using the shoreline and the distance of the sampling site from the nearest shoreline. Sporormiella was found to be a reliable proxy for the presence of large livestock. The concentration and abundance of spores declined from the edge of the lake toward the center, with the strongest response being in sites with high livestock use. Consistent with prior studies in temperate regions, we find that Sporormiella spores are a useful proxy to study the extinction of Pleistocene megafauna or the arrival of European livestock in Neotropical landscapes
Observational constraint on dynamical evolution of dark energy
We use the Constitution supernova, the baryon acoustic oscillation, the
cosmic microwave background, and the Hubble parameter data to analyze the
evolution property of dark energy. We obtain different results when we fit
different baryon acoustic oscillation data combined with the Constitution
supernova data to the Chevallier-Polarski-Linder model. We find that the
difference stems from the different values of . We also fit the
observational data to the model independent piecewise constant parametrization.
Four redshift bins with boundaries at , 0.53, 0.85 and 1.8 were chosen
for the piecewise constant parametrization of the equation of state parameter
of dark energy. We find no significant evidence for evolving .
With the addition of the Hubble parameter, the constraint on the equation of
state parameter at high redshift isimproved by 70%. The marginalization of the
nuisance parameter connected to the supernova distance modulus is discussed.Comment: revtex, 16 pages, 5 figures, V2: published versio
Large-scale periodicity in the distribution of QSO absorption-line systems
The spatial-temporal distribution of absorption-line systems (ALSs) observed
in QSO spectra within the cosmological redshift interval z = 0.0--4.3 is
investigated on the base of our updated catalog of absorption systems. We
consider so called metallic systems including basically lines of heavy
elements. The sample of the data displays regular variations (with amplitudes ~
15 -- 20%) in the z-distribution of ALSs as well as in the eta-distribution,
where eta is a dimensionless line-of-sight comoving distance, relatively to
smoother dependences. The eta-distribution reveals the periodicity with period
Delta eta = 0.036 +/- 0.002, which corresponds to a spatial characteristic
scale (108 +/- 6) h(-1) Mpc or (alternatively) a temporal interval (350 +/- 20)
h(-1) Myr for the LambdaCDM cosmological model. We discuss a possibility of a
spatial interpretation of the results treating the pattern obtained as a trace
of an order imprinted on the galaxy clustering in the early Universe.Comment: AASTeX, 13 pages, with 9 figures, Accepted for publication in
Astrophysics & Space Scienc
Effect of Chaotic Noise on Multistable Systems
In a recent letter [Phys.Rev.Lett. {\bf 30}, 3269 (1995), chao-dyn/9510011],
we reported that a macroscopic chaotic determinism emerges in a multistable
system: the unidirectional motion of a dissipative particle subject to an
apparently symmetric chaotic noise occurs even if the particle is in a
spatially symmetric potential. In this paper, we study the global dynamics of a
dissipative particle by investigating the barrier crossing probability of the
particle between two basins of the multistable potential. We derive
analytically an expression of the barrier crossing probability of the particle
subject to a chaotic noise generated by a general piecewise linear map. We also
show that the obtained analytical barrier crossing probability is applicable to
a chaotic noise generated not only by a piecewise linear map with a uniform
invariant density but also by a non-piecewise linear map with non-uniform
invariant density. We claim, from the viewpoint of the noise induced motion in
a multistable system, that chaotic noise is a first realization of the effect
of {\em dynamical asymmetry} of general noise which induces the symmetry
breaking dynamics.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures, to appear in Phys.Rev.
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