14,417 research outputs found
Limnological, Ichthyological, and Parasitological Investigations on Arkansas Reservoris in Relation to Water Quality
Lake Fort Smith, a 525 acre (212 ha) reservoir, was impounded in 1936 as a water supply for the city of Fort Smith. The reservoir is located on Clear Creek (Frog Bayou), a tributary of the Arkansas River, in the Boston Mountains 28 miles (45 km) northeast of the city of Fort Smith in Crawford County, Arkansas. A map and morphometric characteristics of Lake Fort Smith are given in Fig. 1 and Table I (Hoffman, 1951; Nelson, 1952). In 1956 Lake Shepherd Springs, a 750 acre (304 ha) impoundment, was created one mile upstream of Lake Fort Smith (Rorie, 1961). Both lakes have a shale substrate and are subject to periods of high turbidity. The 2 two lakes have a water shed of 65 square mile area (168 km ) of mountainous oak-hickory forest. Lake Shepherd Springs has not acted as a settling basin for sediments; thus, the upper portion of Lake Fort Smith has numerous shallow areas with a mud bottom supporting various submergent and emergent aquatic plants. The lower portion of the lake has a rocky, shale substrate with only limited emergent vegetation
A nonstationary generalization of the Kerr congruence
Making use of the Kerr theorem for shear-free null congruences and of
Newman's representation for a virtual charge ``moving'' in complex space-time,
we obtain an axisymmetric time-dependent generalization of the Kerr congruence,
with a singular ring uniformly contracting to a point and expanding then to
infinity. Electromagnetic and complex eikonal field distributions are naturally
associated with the obtained congruence, with electric charge being
necesssarily unit (``elementary''). We conjecture that the corresponding
solution to the Einstein-Maxwell equations could describe the process of
continious transition of the naked ringlike singularitiy into a rotating black
hole and vice versa, under a particular current radius of the singular ring.Comment: 6 pages, twocolum
Electromagnetic Properties of Kerr-Anti-de Sitter Black Holes
We examine the electromagnetic properties of Kerr-anti-de Sitter (Kerr-AdS)
black holes in four and higher spacetime dimensions. Assuming that the black
holes may carry a test electric charge we show that the Killing one-form which
represents the difference between the timelike generators in the spacetime and
in the reference background can be used as a potential one-form for the
associated electromagnetic field. In four dimensions the potential one-form and
the Kerr-AdS metric with properly re-scaled mass parameter solve the
Einstein-Maxwell equations, thereby resulting in the familiar Kerr-Newman-AdS
solution. We solve the quartic equation governing the location of the event
horizons of the Kerr-Newman-AdS black holes and present closed analytic
expressions for the radii of the horizons. We also compute the gyromagnetic
ratio for these black holes and show that it corresponds to g=2 just as for
ordinary black holes in asymptotically flat spacetime. Next, we compute the
gyromagnetic ratio for the Kerr-AdS black holes with a single angular momentum
and with a test electric charge in all higher dimensions. The gyromagnetic
ratio crucially depends on the dimensionless ratio of the rotation parameter to
the curvature radius of the AdS background. At the critical limit, when the
boundary Einstein universe is rotating at the speed of light, it tends to g=2
irrespective of the spacetime dimension. Finally, we consider the case of a
five dimensional Kerr-AdS black hole with two angular momenta and show that it
possesses two distinct gyromagnetic ratios in accordance with its two
orthogonal 2-planes of rotation. In the special case of two equal angular
momenta, the two gyromagnetic ratios merge into one leading to g=4 at the
maximum angular velocities of rotation.Comment: Typos corrected; 31 pages, REVTe
An off-shell I.R. regularization strategy in the analysis of collinear divergences
We present a method for the analysis of singularities of Feynman amplitudes
based on the Speer sector decomposition of the Schwinger parametric integrals
combined with the Mellin-Barnes transform. The sector decomposition method is
described in some details. We suggest the idea of applying the method to the
analysis of collinear singularities in inclusive QCD cross sections in the
mass-less limit regularizing the forward amplitudes by an off-shell choice of
the initial particle momenta. It is shown how the suggested strategy works in
the well known case of the one loop corrections to Deep Inelastic Scattering.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figure
Instabilities of one-dimensional stationary solutions of the cubic nonlinear Schrodinger equation
The two-dimensional cubic nonlinear Schrodinger equation admits a large
family of one-dimensional bounded traveling-wave solutions. All such solutions
may be written in terms of an amplitude and a phase. Solutions with piecewise
constant phase have been well studied previously. Some of these solutions were
found to be stable with respect to one-dimensional perturbations. No such
solutions are stable with respect to two-dimensional perturbations. Here we
consider stability of the larger class of solutions whose phase is dependent on
the spatial dimension of the one-dimensional wave form. We study the spectral
stability of such nontrivial-phase solutions numerically, using Hill's method.
We present evidence which suggests that all such nontrivial-phase solutions are
unstable with respect to both one- and two-dimensional perturbations.
Instability occurs in all cases: for both the elliptic and hyperbolic nonlinear
Schrodinger equations, and in the focusing and defocusing case.Comment: Submitted: 13 pages, 3 figure
Bose-Einstein Condensation of Magnons in Cs2CuCl4
We report on results of specific heat measurements on single crystals of the
frustrated quasi-2D spin-1/2 antiferromagnet Cs_2CuCl_4 (T_N=0.595 K) in
external magnetic fields B30 mK. Decreasing B from
high fields leads to the closure of the field-induced gap in the magnon
spectrum at a critical field B_c = 8.51 T and a magnetic phase transition is
clearly seen below B_c. In the vicinity to B_c, the phase transition boundary
is well described by the power-law T_c(B)\propto (B_c-B)^{1/\phi} with the
measured critical exponent \phi\simeq 1.5. These findings are interpreted as a
Bose-Einstein condensation of magnons.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, experiment and theor
Scattering of Straight Cosmic Strings by Black Holes: Weak Field Approximation
The scattering of a straight, infinitely long string moving with velocity
by a black hole is considered. We analyze the weak-field case, where the impact
parameter () is large, and obtain exact solutions to the equations of
motion. As a result of scattering, the string is displaced in the direction
perpendicular to the velocity by an amount , where . The second
term dominates at low velocities . The late-time
solution is represented by a kink and anti-kink, propagating in opposite
directions at the speed of light, and leaving behind them the string in a new
``phase''. The solutions are applied to the problem of string capture, and are
compared to numerical results.Comment: 19 pages, 5 figure
Infinite Kinematic Self-Similarity and Perfect Fluid Spacetimes
Perfect fluid spacetimes admitting a kinematic self-similarity of infinite
type are investigated. In the case of plane, spherically or hyperbolically
symmetric space-times the field equations reduce to a system of autonomous
ordinary differential equations. The qualitative properties of solutions of
this system of equations, and in particular their asymptotic behavior, are
studied. Special cases, including some of the invariant sets and the geodesic
case, are examined in detail and the exact solutions are provided. The class of
solutions exhibiting physical self-similarity are found to play an important
role in describing the asymptotic behavior of the infinite kinematic
self-similar models.Comment: 38 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in General Relativity &
Gravitatio
Vulnerability of Northern Prairie Wetlands to Climate Change
The prairie pothole region (PPR) lies in the heart of North America and contains millions of glacially formed, depressional wetlands embedded in a landscape matrix of natural grassland and agriculture. These wetlands provide valuable ecosystem services and produce 50% to 80% of the continent\u27s ducks. We explored the broad spatial and temporal patterns across the PPR between climate and wetland water levels and vegetation by applying a wetland simulation model (WETSIM) to 18 stations with 95-year weather records. Simulations suggest that the most productive habitat for breeding waterfowl would shift under a drier climate from the center of the PPR (the Dakotas and southeastern Saskatchewan) to the wetter eastern and northern fringes, areas currently less productive or where most wetlands have been drained. Unless these wetlands are protected and restored, there is little insurance for waterfowl against future climate warming. WETSIM can assist wetland managers in allocating restoration dollars in an uncertain climate future
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