5,926 research outputs found

    Paradoxical Magnetic Cooling in a Structural Transition Model

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    In contrast to the experimentally widely used isentropic demagnetization process for cooling to ultra-low temperatures we examine a particular classical model system that does not cool, but rather heats up with isentropic demagnetization. This system consists of several magnetite particles in a colloidal suspension, and shows the uncommon behavior of disordering structurally while ordering magnetically in an increasing magnetic field. For a six-particle system, we report an uncommon structural transition from a ring to a chain as a function of magnetic field and temperature.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures. For recent information on physics of small systems see http://www.smallsystems.d

    Age constraints for clastic sediments from two caves in the Junee-Florentine karst

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    Uranium-thorium dating of speleothems from two caves in the Junee-Florentine karst, Tasmania, provides some age constraints for associated clastic sediments including coarse dolerite-rich fluvial gravels, which underlie the three oldest dated speleothems. The results suggest minimum ages of 15 ± 5 ka, ~325 ka and >350 ka (two dates) for the gravels, implying that they are considerably older than the early Last Glacial age suggested previously for some fluvial gravels in other Junee-Florentine caves

    Random-phase-approximation-based correlation energy functionals: Benchmark results for atoms

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    The random phase approximation (RPA) for the correlation energy functional of density functional theory has recently attracted renewed interest. Formulated in terms of the Kohn-Sham (KS) orbitals and eigenvalues, it promises to resolve some of the fundamental limitations of the local density and generalized gradient approximations, as for instance their inability to account for dispersion forces. First results for atoms, however, indicate that the RPA overestimates correlation effects as much as the orbital-dependent functional obtained by a second order perturbation expansion on the basis of the KS Hamiltonian. In this contribution, three simple extensions of the RPA are examined, (a) its augmentation by an LDA for short-range correlation, (b) its combination with the second order exchange term, and (c) its combination with a partial resummation of the perturbation series including the second order exchange. It is found that the ground state and correlation energies as well as the ionization potentials resulting from the extensions (a) and (c) for closed sub-shell atoms are clearly superior to those obtained with the unmodified RPA. Quite some effort is made to ensure highly converged RPA data, so that the results may serve as benchmark data. The numerical techniques developed in this context, in particular for the inherent frequency integration, should also be useful for applications of RPA-type functionals to more complex systems.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figure

    On the use of IR lidar and K(sub a)-band radar for observing cirrus clouds

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    Advances in lidar and radar technology have potential for providing new and better information on climate significant parameters of cirrus. Consequently, the NOAA Wave Propagation Lab. is commencing CLARET (Cloud Lidar And Radar Exploratory Test) to evaluate the promise of these new capabilities. Parameters under study include cloud particle size distribution, height of cloud bases, tops, and multiple layers, and cloud dynamics revealed through measurement of vertical motions. The first phase of CLARET is planned for Sept. 1989. The CO2 coherent Doppler lidar and the sensitive K sub a band radar hold promise for providing valuable information on cirrus that is beyond the grasp of current visible lidars

    Water quality in karstlands at Mole Creek, Tasmania

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    Samples from 28 sites at Mole Creek were analysed for a range of water quality indicators. Low or negligible bacterial counts were obtained for sites with mainly forested catchments; cleared catchments gave more variable and generally higher results. Higher turbidity and nitrate levels were recorded in cleared catchments, suggesting increased erosion and nutrient loading of streams. A comparison of water quality parameters at streamsinks and related springs shows that the karst aquifer is not an efficient water purifier. Rapid capture of surface run off via solutional openings, coupled with the pipe-like efficiency with which karst conduits transfer the water, constrains the potential for the karst aquifer to ameliorate water pollution problems. This connection between surface and underground environments is a key consideration for sustainable land management in karstlands. We conclude that karst aquifers have more in common with surface streams than non-karstic ground-water systems, in terms of their water purification properties. Water from two bores was found to be relatively free of microbiological pollution, despite being located in disturbed catchments. This suggests that ground-water sourced from bores is less affected by activities at the surface, although further work is required to confirm this

    Ownership-dependent mating tactics of minor males of the beetle Librodor japonicus (Nitidulidae) with intra-sexual dimorphism of mandibles

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    Intra-sexual dimorphism is found in the weapons of many male beetles. Different behavioral tactics to access females between major and minor males, which adopt fighting and alternative tactics, respectively, are thought to maintain the male dimorphism. In these species major males have enlarged weapons that they use in fights with rival males. Minor males also have small weapons in some of these species, and it is unclear why these males possess weapons. We examined the hypothesis that minor males might adopt a fighting tactic when their status was relatively high in comparison with that of other males (e.g., ownership of a territory). We observed the behavioral tactics of major and minor males of the beetle Librodor japonicus, whose males have a dimorphism of their mandibles. Major males fought for resources, whereas minor males adopted two status-dependent tactics, fighting and sneaking, to access females, depending on their ownership of a sap site. We suggest that ownership status-dependent mating tactics in minor males may maintain the intra-sexual dimorphism in this beetle.</p

    Phylogeny and comparative biogeography of Pionopsitta parrots and Pteroglossus toucans

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    Studies of Neotropical birds, and their distributions and areas of endemism, in particular, have been central in the formulation of hypotheses proposed to explain the high species diversity in the Neotropics. We used mtDNA sequence data (ATPase 6 and 8, COI, and cyt b) to reconstruct the species-level phylogenies for two genera, Pionopsitta (Aves: Psittacidae) and Pteroglossus (Aves: Ramphastidae), compare our results with previous morphology-based phylogenetic analyses, and estimate the absolute timing of lineage and biogeographic divergences. Both the Pionopsitta and Pteroglossus phylogenies support a hypothesis of area relationships in which a divergence of the Serra do Mar (Atlantic Forest, Brazil) region of endemism is followed by the divergence of cis- and trans-Andean regions, then a split between the upper and lower Amazon basin, next the divergence of the Guyana area, and finally diversification of taxa in the upper Amazon basin\u27s areas of endemism. Phylogenies of both genera support a hypothesis of area relationships that is similar to that proposed by Prum [XIX International Ornithological Congress (1988), 2562] for high-vagility species, but while they agree on the relative timing of area divergence (vicariance) events, they yield different absolute time estimates for those divergences when the typical avian mtDNA clock calibration is used. Taken at face value, the time estimates indicate that both genera began to diversify before the start of the Pleistocene, and that climatic and habitat shifts alone do not account for the diversification of these taxa. © 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved
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