1,113 research outputs found
Results of the Austrian-Ceylonese hydrobiological mission 1970 of the 1st Zoological Institute of the University of Vienna (Austria) and the Department of Zoology of the Vidyalankara University of Ceylon, Kelaniya. Pt. 10. Freshwater triclads (Turbellaria, Tricladida) from Ceylon
The collection of Triclads from the Austrian-Ceylonese hydrobiological mission originates from 23 streams in the mountains of the south of Sri Lanka. All collected animals are of the Dugesia gonocephala (Dug.) type. Unfortunately the determinable mature animals were very rare in the samples but it seems certain that all the Triclads, found by the mission, belong to Dugesia nannophallus, described by Ball in 1970 after two individuals from Dunhinda, Badulla (Prov. Uva, Sri Lanka)
TRICLADES TERRICOLES, TRICLADES PALUDICOLES, NEMERTIEN communiques par Ie Musee ZooIogique de Buitenzorg
ABSTRACT NOT AVAILABL
Spectroscopic confirmation of UV-bright white dwarfs from the Sandage Two-Color Survey of the Galactic Plane
We present spectroscopic observations confirming the identification of hot
white dwarfs among UV-bright sources from the Sandage Two-color Survey of the
Galactic plane and listed in the Lanning (Lan) catalog of such sources. A
subsample of 213 UV bright Lan sources have been identified as candidate white
dwarfs based on the detection of a significant proper motion. Spectroscopic
observations of 46 candidates with the KPNO 2.1m telescope confirm 30 sources
to be hydrogen white dwarfs with subtypes in the DA1-DA6 range, and with one of
the stars (Lan 161) having an unresolved M dwarf as a companion. Five more
sources are confirmed to be helium white dwarfs, with subtypes from DB3 to DB6.
One source (Lan 364) is identified as a DZ 3 white dwarf, with strong lines of
calcium. Three more stars are found to have featureless spectra (to within
detection limits), and are thus classified as DC white dwarfs. In addition,
three sources are found to be hot subdwarfs: Lan 20 and Lan 480 are classified
as sdOB, and Lan 432 is classified sdB. The remaining four objects are found to
be field F star interlopers. Physical parameters of the DA and DB white dwarfs
are derived from model fits.Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journa
Comparison between classical potentials and ab initio for silicon under large shear
The homogeneous shear of the {111} planes along the direction of bulk
silicon has been investigated using ab initio techniques, to better understand
the strain properties of both shuffle and glide set planes. Similar
calculations have been done with three empirical potentials, Stillinger-Weber,
Tersoff and EDIP, in order to find the one giving the best results under large
shear strains. The generalized stacking fault energies have also been
calculated with these potentials to complement this study. It turns out that
the Stillinger-Weber potential better reproduces the ab initio results, for the
smoothness and the amplitude of the energy variation as well as the
localization of shear in the shuffle set
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The impact of strabismus on quality of life in adults with and without diplopia: a systematic review
Strabismus affects approximately 4% of the adult population and can cause substantial physical disturbance and changes to appearance. This article aims to examine the impact of strabismus in adults both with and without diplopia, focusing primarily on quality of life (QoL). We highlight the value of measuring QoL, assess the ways in which it can be measured, and the impact the disease, diplopia, and surgery have on the patient. QoL differs for strabismus patients based on their diplopia status. Patients with diplopia tend to have more concerns relating to functional QoL, whereas patients without diplopia have primarily psychosocial concerns. Two diplopia-specific questionnaires have been designed to assess QoL and the perceived severity of symptoms. Further research is needed to identify the variables which influence QoL so that appropriate support can be given to all patients with strabismus to improve their QoL
Between overt and covert research: concealment and disclosure in an ethnographic study of commercial hospitality
This article examines the ways in which problems of concealment emerged in an ethnographic study of a suburban bar and considers how disclosure of the research aims, the recruitment of informants, and elicitation of information was negotiated throughout the fieldwork. The case study demonstrates how the social context and the relationships with specific informants determined overtness or covertness in the research. It is argued that the existing literature on covert research and covert methods provides an inappropriate frame of reference with which to understand concealment in fieldwork. The article illustrates why concealment is sometimes necessary, and often unavoidable, and concludes that the criticisms leveled against covert methods should not stop the fieldworker from engaging in research that involves covertness
Suppression of matching field effects by splay and pinning energy dispersion in YBa_2Cu_3O_7 with columnar defects
We report measurements of the irreversible magnetization M_i of a large
number of YBa_2Cu_3O_7 single crystals with columnar defects (CD). Some of them
exhibit a maximum in M_i when the density of vortices equals the density of
tracks, at temperatures above 40K. We show that the observation of these
matching field effects is constrained to those crystals where the orientational
and pinning energy dispersion of the CD system lies below a certain threshold.
The amount of such dispersion is determined by the mass and energy of the
irradiation ions, and by the crystal thickness. Time relaxation measurements
show that the matching effects are associated with a reduction of the creep
rate, and occur deep into the collective pinning regime.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Multi-wavelength study of a young open cluster NGC 7419
Using UBVRI Halpha CCD photometric observations and the archival NIR and
X-ray data, we have carried out a multi-wavelength study of a young star
cluster NGC 7419. An age of 22.5+/-3.0 Myr and a distance of 3230^{+330}_{-430}
pc are derived for the cluster with a higher value of color excess ratio
E(U-B)/E(B-V) than the normal one. There is an evidence for mass segregation in
this dynamically relaxed cluster with mass function slope is in agreement with
the Salpeter value. NIR and Halpha excess support the existence of a young (< 2
Myr) stellar population of Herbig Ae/Be stars (> 3.0 M_sun) indicating a second
episode of star formation in the cluster region. Using XMM-Newton observations,
we found several X-ray sources in the cluster region but none of the Herbig
Ae/Be stars is detected in X-rays. We compare the distribution of upper limits
for Herbig Ae/Be stars with the X-ray distribution functions of the T-Tauri and
the Herbig Ae/Be stars from previous studies, and found that the X-ray emission
level of these Herbig Ae/Be stars is not more than L_X ~5.2 x 10^{30} erg/s,
which is not significantly higher than for the T-Tauri stars. Therefore, X-ray
emission from Herbig Ae/Be stars could be the result of either unresolved
companion stars or a process similar to T-Tauri stars. We report an extended
X-ray emission from the cluster region NGC 7419, with a total L_X estimate of ~
1.8 x 10^31 erg/s/arcmin^2. Investigation of dust and CO map of 1 degree region
around the cluster indicates the presence of a foreground dust cloud which is
most likely associated with star forming region Sh2-154. This cloud harbors
uniformly distributed pre main sequence stars (0.1-2.0M_sun) and the star
formation in this cloud depend mostly upon the primordial fragmentation.Comment: 23 pages, 23 figures, 13 tables; Accepted for publication in MNRA
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