333 research outputs found
Espèces nouvellement signalées pour la flore ptéridologique de la République Démocratique du Congo
Nous signalons la présence des espèces nouvellement reportées pour la flore Ptéridologique de la République Démocratique du Congo (RDC), découvertes lors de notre exploration dans la forêt des montagnes du Parc National de Kahuzi-Biega (PNKB), et indiquons leurs conditions écologiques et leurs distributions géographiques. La méthodologie utilisée est celle de traitement taxonomique d’herbier sur les observations macroscopique et microscopique, des analyses chorologique et écologique des spécimens récoltés au PNKB dans la zone des montagnes. Ces recherches ont conduit à signaler 22 espèces nouvelles pour la flore Ptéridologique de la RDC en général et du PNKB en particulier. Parmi ces espèces, la majorité sont Afromontagnardes africaines, certaines sont Plurirégionales africaines, tandis que Pteris repens et Triplophyllum varians montrent une large disjonction. Une espèce, Adiantum incisum, est Paléotropicale. Ces espèces vivent dans des endroits des milieux hydromorphes et humides, les autres sont exposées à la luminosité, tandis que certaines sont épilithes dans l’étage afro-subalpin. Les résultats obtenus montrent que la connaissance de la flore de la RDC reste encore fragmentaire malgré plus d’un siècle de multiples explorations et de récoltes végétales réalisées. © 2013 International Formulae Group. All rights reserved.Mots clés: Espèces nouvelles, Pteridophytes, RDC, flore d’Afrique Centrale
Automated LASCO CME catalog for solar cycle 23: are CMEs scale invariant?
In this paper we present the first automatically constructed LASCO CME
catalog, a result of the application of the Computer Aided CME Tracking
software (CACTus) on the LASCO archive during the interval September 1997 -
January 2007. We have studied the CME characteristics and have compared them
with similar results obtained by manual detection (CDAW CME catalog). On
average CACTus detects less than 2 events per day during solar minimum up to 8
events during maximum, nearly half of them being narrow (< 20 degrees).
Assuming a correction factor, we find that the CACTus CME rate is surprisingly
consistent with CME rates found during the past 30 years. The CACTus statistics
show that small scale outflow is ubiquitously observed in the outer corona. The
majority of CACTus-only events are narrow transients related to previous CME
activity or to intensity variations in the slow solar wind, reflecting its
turbulent nature. A significant fraction (about 15%) of CACTus-{\it only}
events were identified as independent events, thus not related to other CME
activity. The CACTus CME width distribution is essentially scale invariant in
angular span over a range of scales from 20 to 120 degrees while previous
catalogues present a broad maximum around 30 degrees. The possibility that the
size of coronal mass outflows follow a power law distribution could indicate
that no typical CME size exists, i.e. that the narrow transients are not
different from the larger well-defined CMEs.Comment: 13 pages. ApJ, accepte
Are the genera Hallea and mitragyna (Rubiaceae-coptosapelteae) pollen morpholically distinct?
FWN – Publicaties zonder aanstelling Universiteit Leide
Are the genera Hallea and mitragyna (Rubiaceae-coptosapelteae) pollen morpholically distinct?
FWN – Publicaties zonder aanstelling Universiteit Leide
Recent Developments of NEMO: Detection of Solar Eruptions Characteristics
The recent developments in space instrumentation for solar observations and
telemetry have caused the necessity of advanced pattern recognition tools for
the different classes of solar events. The Extreme ultraviolet Imaging
Telescope (EIT) of solar corona on-board SOHO spacecraft has uncovered a new
class of eruptive events which are often identified as signatures of Coronal
Mass Ejection (CME) initiations on solar disk. It is evident that a crucial
task is the development of an automatic detection tool of CMEs precursors. The
Novel EIT wave Machine Observing (NEMO) (http://sidc.be/nemo) code is an
operational tool that detects automatically solar eruptions using EIT image
sequences. NEMO applies techniques based on the general statistical properties
of the underlying physical mechanisms of eruptive events on the solar disc. In
this work, the most recent updates of NEMO code - that have resulted to the
increase of the recognition efficiency of solar eruptions linked to CMEs - are
presented. These updates provide calculations of the surface of the dimming
region, implement novel clustering technique for the dimmings and set new
criteria to flag the eruptive dimmings based on their complex characteristics.
The efficiency of NEMO has been increased significantly resulting to the
extraction of dimmings observed near the solar limb and to the detection of
small-scale events as well. As a consequence, the detection efficiency of CMEs
precursors and the forecasts of CMEs have been drastically improved.
Furthermore, the catalogues of solar eruptive events that can be constructed by
NEMO may include larger number of physical parameters associated to the dimming
regions.Comment: 12 Pages, 5 figures, submitted to Solar Physic
Coronal Fe XIV Emission During the Whole Heliosphere Interval Campaign
Solar Cycle 24 is having a historically long and weak start. Observations of
the Fe XIV corona from the Sacramento Peak site of the National Solar
Observatory show an abnormal pattern of emission compared to observations of
Cycles 21, 22, and 23 from the same instrument. The previous three cycles have
shown a strong, rapid "Rush to the Poles" (previously observed in polar crown
prominences and earlier coronal observations) in the parameter N(t,l,dt)
(average number of Fe XIV emission features per day over dt days at time t and
latitude l). Cycle 24 displays a weak, intermittent, and slow "Rush" that is
apparent only in the northern hemisphere. If the northern Rush persists at its
current rate, evidence from the Rushes in previous cycles indicates that solar
maximum will occur in early 2013 or late 2012, at least in the northern
hemisphere. At lower latitudes, solar maximum previously occurred when the time
maximum of N(t,l,365) reached approximately 20{\deg} latitude. Currently, this
parameter is at or below 30{\deg}and decreasing in latitude. Unfortunately, it
is difficult at this time to calculate the rate of decrease in N(t,l,365).
However, the southern hemisphere could reach 20{\deg} in 2011. Nonetheless,
considering the levels of activity so far, there is a possibility that the
maximum could be indiscernibleComment: 8 pages, 4 figures; Solar Physics Online First, 2011
http://www.springerlink.com/content/b5kl4040k0626647
Comprehensive Analysis of Coronal Mass Ejection Mass and Energy Properties Over a Full Solar Cycle
The LASCO coronagraphs, in continuous operation since 1995, have observed the
evolution of the solar corona and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) over a full
solar cycle with high quality images and regular cadence. This is the first
time that such a dataset becomes available and constitutes a unique resource
for the study of CMEs. In this paper, we present a comprehensive investigation
of the solar cycle dependence on the CME mass and energy over a full solar
cycle (1996-2009) including the first in-depth discussion of the mass and
energy analysis methods and their associated errors. Our analysis provides
several results worthy of further studies. It demonstrates the possible
existence of two event classes; 'normal' CMEs reaching constant mass for
R_{\sun} and 'pseudo' CMEs which disappear in the C3 FOV. It shows that the
mass and energy properties of CME reach constant levels, and therefore should
be measured, only above \sim 10 R_\sun. The mass density (g/R_\sun^2) of
CMEs varies relatively little ( order of magnitude) suggesting that the
majority of the mass originates from a small range in coronal heights. We find
a sudden reduction in the CME mass in mid-2003 which may be related to a change
in the electron content of the large scale corona and we uncover the presence
of a six-month periodicity in the ejected mass from 2003 onwards.Comment: 42 pages, 16 figures, To appear in Astrophysical Journa
Slow magnetoacoustic waves in coronal loops : EIT and TRACE
On May 13, 1998 the EIT (Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Telescope) on board of SoHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) and TRACE (Transition Region And Coronal Explorer) instruments produced simultaneous high cadence image sequences of the same active region (AR 8218). TRACE achieved a 25 s cadence in the FeIX (171 Ă…) bandpass while EIT achieved a 15 s cadence (operating in "shutterless mode", SoHO JOP 80) in the FeXII (195 Ă…) bandpass. These high cadence observations in two complementary wavelengths have revealed the existence of weak transient disturbances in an extended coronal loop system. These propagating disturbances (PDs) seem to be a common phenomenon in this part of the active region. The disturbances originate from small scale brightenings at the footpoints of the loops and propagate along the loops. The projected propagation speeds roughly vary between 65 and 150 km s-1 for both instruments which is close to and below the expected sound speed in the coronal loops. The measured slow magnetoacoustic propagation speeds seem to suggest that the transients are sound (or slow) wave disturbances. This work differs from previous studies in the sense that it is based on a multi-wavelength observation of an entire loop bundle at high cadence by two EUV imagers. The observation of sound waves along the same path shows that they propagate along the same loop, suggesting that loops contain sharp temperature gradients and consist of either concentric shells or thin loop threads, at different temperatures
Analyse de la distribution spatiale des Acanthaceae en Afrique Centrale et comparaison avec les théories phytogéographiques de Robyns, White et Ndjele.
Cette étude a pour but d\'analyser les modèles de distribution spatiale des Acanthaceae, récoltées en République Démocratique du Congo, au Rwanda et au Burundi et de comparer leur répartition spatiale avec les systèmes phytogéographiques qui couvrent cette zone. Elle porte sur 9181 échantillons regroupés en 48 genres et 310 espèces.
Un système d\'information géographique a été utilisé pour réaliser des cartes de distribution de chaque espèce. La méthode multi variée de classification, appuyée par deux indices de structure spatiale (équitabilité et fragmentation) a permis de stratifier la zone d\'étude afin de permettre une comparaison visuelle avec les systèmes phytogéographiques définis par Robyns, White et Ndjele. On note une large distribution spatiale pour certaines espèces sur l\'ensemble du territoire, alors que d\'autres sont inféodées à certains territoires phytogéographiques bien déterminés. Les savanes situées au Sud de l\'équateur contiennent des sites plus riches en Acanthaceae que celles situées au Nord. Les centres
d\'endémisme Guinéo-Congolais, Zambézien et Afromontagnard pourraient être les sources de migration des taxons. Les Acanthaceae suivent relativement bien le système phytogéographique de White et sont utilisables en tant que bioindicatrices afin de rapprocher la distribution spatiale des communautés végétales décrites par ce système.By means of 9181 samples representing 48 genus and 310 species, the spatial distribution models of the Acanthaceae family in Central Africa (Democratic Republic of Congo, Rwanda and Burundi) were analysed. Consequently, a comparison to existing phytogeographic systems for the study region was executed. Spatial distribution maps for
each species were created using a geographic information system. Subdivision of the study area was realised using a multivariate classification analysis. Using two indices of spatial pattern (fragmentation, class size evenness), the classification result was compared to the phytogeographic zones defined by Robyns, White and Ndjele. While certain
species showed a distribution throughout the study area, the presence of other species was found to be bound to one single phytogeographic territory in particular, or to a restricted number of them. The savannas situated in the southern part of the study area contained more Acanthaceae species than the zones situated north of the equator.
The Guineo-Congolian, the Zambezian and the Afromontane centre of endemism are suggested to be the origins of taxon migration. Since it was observed that the spatial pattern of the Acanthaceae species corresponded up a certain extent to the phytogeographic system proposed by White, it can be concluded that the Acanthaceae could be used as bio-indicators to proxy the spatial distribution of plant communities as described by this system. Keywords: phytogeography, spatial analysis, Acanthaceae, Central Africa, district, sector.Sciences & Nature Vol. 5 (2) 2008: pp. 101-11
Seismology of curved coronal loops with vertically polarised transverse oscillations
Aims. Using a model of vertically polarised fast magnetoacoustic waves in curved coronal loops, the method of coronal seismology is applied to observations of transverse loop oscillations.
Methods. A coronal loop is modeled as a curved magnetic slab in the zero plasma-β limit. For an arbitrary piece-wise continuous power law equilibrium density profile, the dispersion relation governing linear vertically polarised fast magnetoacoustic kink waves is derived. The ways in which this model can be used for coronal seismology are explored and applied to two observational examples.
Results. The Alfvén speed and equilibrium density profile are determined from observations. It is shown that the mechanism of lateral leakage of fast magnetoacoustic kink oscillations described in this model is efficient. In fact, the damping is so efficient that in order to match predicted values with observational ones, either the loop needs to be highly contrasted or the transverse Alfvén speed profile needs to be close to linear. Possible improvements to make the modeling of lateral wave leakage in loops more realistic, allowing a lower damping efficiency, are discussed
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