35,662 research outputs found
Journey of water in pine cones
Pine cones fold their scales when it rains to prevent seeds from short-distance dispersal. Given that the scales of pine cones consist of nothing but dead cells, this folding motion is evidently related to structural changes. In this study, the structural characteristics of pine cones are studied on micro-/macro-scale using various imaging instruments. Raindrops fall along the outer scales to the three layers (bract scales, fibers and innermost lignified structure) of inner pine cones. However, not all the layers but only the bract scales get wet and then, most raindrops move to the inner scales. These systems reduce the amount of water used and minimize the time spent on structural changes. The result shows that the pine cones have structural advantages that could influence the efficient motion of pine cones. This study provides new insights to understand the motion of pine cones and would be used to design a novel water transport system.119Ysciescopu
The Gauge Hierarchy Problem and Higher Dimensional Gauge Theories
We report on an attempt to solve the gauge hierarchy problem in the framework
of higher dimensional gauge theories. Both classical Higgs mass and
quadratically divergent quantum correction to the mass are argued to vanish.
Hence the hierarchy problem in its original sense is solved. The remaining
finite mass correction is shown to depend crucially on the choice of boundary
condition for matter fields, and a way to fix it dynamically is presented. We
also point out that on the simply-connected space even the finite mass
correction vanishes.Comment: LaTeX2e. 12 pages, 3 Postscript figures; Added references, some
comment
Mutation breeding of Phaseolus vulgaris L.: Studies on the effects of irradiation dosage to resolve a suitable procedure of handling M and M generations
Seedling growth studies on gamma-irradiated seeds of Phaseolus vulgaris were conducted in the
greenhouse and the field. No significant differences in germination scores between the unirradiated control
and the seeds exposed to 10, 20, 25, 30, 35 and 40 Krads of gamma radiation were obtained. Exposure
to 100 Krads, however, was lethal to the apical meristem. Growth of the epicotyl under greenhouse conditions
was the most affected by gamma radiation.
Based upon a 30% reduction in epicotyl length the optimum dose for irradiation was 30 Krads.
At this level of irradiation the survival score at harvest under field conditions was 50% of that of the
unirradiated control. Treatment with 30 Krads also gave the highest number of solid chlorophyll mutants.While not all the chlorophyll mutants were scored in the Bs (Sl gle seed bulk) populations, the %
occurrence was consistently higher than that for the corresponding Bp (single pod bulk) populations.
Based on these results, it is recommended that:
a) the most suitable level of gamma radiation to use in a mutation breeding programme is 30 Krads;
b) the M1 seeds should be field-planted at double the planting density of the control;
c) the M1 plants should be harvested such that the Bs (single seed bulk) population be used for screening
of the mutants
Can We See Lorentz-Violating Vector Fields in the CMB?
We investigate the perturbation theory of a fixed-norm, timelike
Lorentz-violating vector field. After consistently quantizing the vector field
to put constraints on its parameters, we compute the primordial spectra of
perturbations generated by inflation in the presence of this vector field. We
find that its perturbations are sourced by the perturbations of the inflaton;
without the inflaton perturbation the vector field perturbations decay away
leaving no primordial spectra of perturbations. Since the inflaton perturbation
does not have a spin-1 component, the vector field generically does not
generate any spin-1 ``vector-type'' perturbations. Nevertheless, it will modify
the amplitude of both the spin-0 ``scalar-type'' and spin-2 ``tensor-type''
perturbation spectra, leading to violations of the inflationary consistency
relationship.Comment: 36 pages, 1 fig, RevTex4, Submitted to PR
Influence of blade aerodynamic model on prediction of helicopter rotor aeroacoustic signatures
Brown’s vorticity transport model has been used to investigate how the local blade aerodynamic model influences the quality of the prediction of the high-frequency airloads associated with blade–vortex interactions, and thus the accuracy with which the acoustic signature of a helicopter rotor can be predicted. The vorticity transport model can accurately resolve the structure of the wake of the rotor and allows significant flexibility in the way that the blade loading can be represented. The Second Higher-Harmonic Control Aeroacoustics Rotor Test was initiated to provide experimental insight into the acoustic signature of a rotor in cases of strong blade–vortex interaction. Predictions of two models for the local blade aerodynamics are compared with the test data. A marked improvement in accuracy of the predicted high-frequency airloads and acoustic signature is obtained when a lifting-chord model for the blade aerodynamics is used instead of a lifting-line-type approach. Errors in the amplitude and phase of the acoustic peaks are reduced, and the quality of the prediction is affected to a lesser extent by the computational resolution of the wake, with the lifting-chord model producing the best representation of the distribution of sound pressure below the rotor
Unexpected phase locking of magnetic fluctuations in the multi-k magnet USb
The spin waves in the multi-k antiferromagnet USb soften and become quasielastic well below the antiferromagnetic ordering temperature TN. This occurs without a magnetic or structural transition. It has been suggested that this change is in fact due to dephasing of the different multi-k components: a switch from 3-k to 1-k behavior. In this work, we use inelastic neutron scattering with tridirectional polarization analysis to probe the quasielastic magnetic excitations and reveal that the 3-k structure does not dephase. More surprisingly, the paramagnetic correlations also maintain the same clear phase correlations well above TN (up to at least 1.4TN)
Finite temperature Casimir pistons for electromagnetic field with mixed boundary conditions and its classical limit
In this paper, the finite temperature Casimir force acting on a
two-dimensional Casimir piston due to electromagnetic field is computed. It was
found that if mixed boundary conditions are assumed on the piston and its
opposite wall, then the Casimir force always tends to restore the piston
towards the equilibrium position, regardless of the boundary conditions assumed
on the walls transverse to the piston. In contrary, if pure boundary conditions
are assumed on the piston and the opposite wall, then the Casimir force always
tend to pull the piston towards the closer wall and away from the equilibrium
position. The nature of the force is not affected by temperature. However, in
the high temperature regime, the magnitude of the Casimir force grows linearly
with respect to temperature. This shows that the Casimir effect has a classical
limit as has been observed in other literatures.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted by Journal of Physics
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