1,458 research outputs found
An approach to estimating rockfish biomass based on larval production, with application to Sebastes jordani
An assessment of the total biomass of shortbelly rockfish (Sebastes jordani) off the central California coast is presented that is based on a spatially extensive but temporally restricted ichthyoplankton survey conducted during the 1991 spawning season. Contemporaneous samples of adults were obtained by trawl sampling in the study region. Daily larval production (7.56 Ă 1010 larvae/d) and the larval mortality rate (Z=0.11/d) during the cruise were estimated from a larval âcatch curve,â wherein the logarithm of total age-specific larval abundance was regressed against larval age. For this analysis, larval age compositions at each of the 150 sample sites were determined by examination of otolith microstructure from subsampled larvae (n=2203), which were weighted by the polygonal Sette-Ahlstrom area surrounding each station. Female population weight-specific fecundity was estimated through a life table analysis that incorporated sex-specific differences in adult growth rate, female maturity, fecundity, and natural mortality (M). The resulting statistic (102.17 larvae/g) was insensitive to errors in estimating M and to the pattern of recruitment. Together, the two analyses indicated that a total biomass equal to 1366 metric tons (t)/d of age-1+ shortbelly rockfish (sexes combined) was needed to account for the observed level of spawning output during the cruise. Given the long-term seasonal distribution of spawning activity in the study area, as elucidated from a retrospective examination of California Cooperative Oceanic Fisheries Investigation (CalCOFI) ichthyoplankton samples from 1952 to 1984, the âdailyâ total biomass was expanded to an annual total of 67,392 t. An attempt to account for all sources of error in the derivation of this estimate was made by application of the delta-method, which yielded a coefficient of variation of 19%. The relatively high precision of this larval production method, and the rapidity with which an absolute biomass estimate can be obtained, establishes that, for some species of rockfish (Sebastes spp.), it is an attractive alternative to traditional age-structured stock assessments
Paedophiles in the community: inter-agency conflict, news leaks and the local press
This article explores the leaking of confidential information about secret Home Office plans to house convicted paedophiles within a local community (albeit inside a prison). It argues that a politics of paedophilia has emerged in which inter-agency consensus on the issue of âwhat to doâ with high-profile sex offenders has broken down. Accordingly, the article situates newspaper âoutingâ of paedophiles in the community in relation to vigilante journalism and leaked information from official agencies. The article then presents research findings from a case study of news events set in train following a whistle-blowing reaction by Prison Officersâ Association officials to Home Office plans. Drawing from a corpus of 10 interviews with journalists and key protagonists in the story, the article discusses both the dynamics of whistle blowing about paedophiles and also what happens after the whistle has blown
Identification of new transitions and mass assignments of levels in Pr
The previously reported levels assigned to 151,152,153Pr have recently been
called into question regarding their mass assignment. The above questioned
level assignments are clarified by measuring g-transitions tagged with A and Z
in an in-beam experiment in addition to the measurements from 252Cf spontaneous
fission (SF) and establish new spectroscopic information from to
in the Pr isotopic chain. The isotopic chain 143-153Pr has been studied from
the spontaneous fission of 252Cf by using Gammasphere and also from the
measurement of the prompt g-rays in coincidence with isotopically-identified
fission fragments using VAMOS++ and EXOGAM at GANIL. The latter were produced
using 238U beams on a 9Be target at energies around the Coulomb barrier. The
g-g-g-g data from 252Cf (SF) and those from the GANIL in-beam A- and Z-gated
spectra were combined to unambiguously assign the various transitions and
levels in 151,152,153Pr and other isotopes. New transitions and bands in
145,147,148,149,150Pr were identified by using g-g-g and g-g-g-g coincidences
and A and Z gated g-g spectra. The transitions and levels previously assigned
to 151,153Pr have been confirmed by the (A,Z) gated spectra. The transitions
previously assigned to 152Pr are now assigned to 151Pr on the basis of the
(A,Z) gated spectra. Two new bands with 20 new transitions in 152Pr and one new
band with 7 new transitions in 153Pr are identified from the g-g-g-g
coincidence spectra and the (A,Z) gated spectrum. In addition, new g-rays are
also reported in 143-146Pr. New levels of 145,147-153Pr have been established,
reliable mass assignments of the levels in 151,152,153Pr have been reported and
new transitions have been identified in 143-146Pr showing the new avenues that
are opened by combining the two experimental approaches.Comment: Accepted in Phys. Rev.
Real space imaging of the metal - insulator phase separation in the band width controlled organic Mott system -(BEDT-TTF)Cu[N(CN)]Br
Systematic investigation of the electronic phase separation on macroscopic
scale is reported in the organic Mott system
-(BEDT-TTF)Cu[N(CN)]Br. Real space imaging of the phase
separation is obtained by means of scanning micro-region infrared spectroscopy
using the synchrotron radiation. The phase separation appears near the Mott
boundary and changes its metal-insulator fraction with the substitution ratio
in
-[(-BEDT-TTF)(-BEDT-TTF)]Cu[N(CN)]Br,
of which band width is controlled by the substitution ratio between the
hydrogenated BEDT-TTF molecule (-BEDT-TTF) and the deuterated one
(-BEDT-TTF). The phase separation phenomenon observed in this class of
organics is considered on the basis of the strongly correlated electronic phase
diagram with the first order Mott transition.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
The evolution of low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch stars and the formation of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars
We investigate the behaviour of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars between
metallicities Z = 10-4 and Z = 10-8 . We determine which stars undergo an
episode of flash-driven mixing, where protons are ingested into the intershell
convection zone, as they enter the thermally pulsing AGB phase and which
undergo third dredge-up. We find that flash-driven mixing does not occur above
a metallicity of Z = 10-5 for any mass of star and that stars above 2 M do not
experience this phenomenon at any metallicity. We find carbon ingestion (CI),
the mixing of carbon into the tail of hydrogen burning region, occurs in the
mass range 2 M to around 4 M . We suggest that CI may be a weak version of the
flash-driven mechanism. We also investigate the effects of convective
overshooting on the behaviour of these objects. Our models struggle to explain
the frequency of CEMP stars that have both significant carbon and nitrogen
enhancement. Carbon can be enhanced through flash-driven mixing, CI or just
third dredge up. Nitrogen can be enhanced through hot bottom burning and the
occurrence of hot dredge-up also converts carbon into nitrogen. The C/N ratio
may be a good indicator of the mass of the primary AGB stars.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, accepted by MNRA
Far-infrared vibrational properties of linear C60 polymers: A comparison between neutral and charged materials
We report the far-infrared transmittance spectrum of a pure phase of the orthorhombic high-temperature and high-pressure C-60 polymer and compare the results with a previously published spectrum of the charged RbC60 orthorhombic polymer. Assignments for both spectra are made with the aid of first-principles quantum molecular dynamics simulations of the two materials. We find that the striking spectral differences between the neutral and charged linear fullerene polymers can be fully accounted for by charge effects on the C-60 ball
Thermal Conductivity of superconducting (TMTSF)_2ClO_4: evidence for a nodeless gap
We report on the first measurements of thermal conductivity in the
superconducting state of (TMTSF)_2ClO_4. The electronic contribution to heat
transport is found to decrease rapidly below T_c, indicating the absence of
low-energy electronic excitations. We argue that this result provides strong
evidence for a nodeless superconducting gap function but does not exclude a
possible unconventional order parameter.Comment: 4 pages including 4 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
On-chain electrodynamics of metallic (TMTSF)_2 X salts: Observation of Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid response
We have measured the electrodynamic response in the metallic state of three
highly anisotropic conductors, (TMTSF)_2 X, where X=PF_6, AsF_6, or ClO_4, and
TMTSF is the organic molecule tetramethyltetraselenofulvalene. In all three
cases we find dramatic deviations from a simple Drude response. The optical
conductivity has two features: a narrow mode at zero frequency, with a small
spectral weight, and a mode centered around 200 cm^{-1}, with nearly all of the
spectral weight expected for the relevant number of carriers and single
particle bandmass. We argue that these features are characteristic of a nearly
one-dimensional half- or quarter-filled band with Coulomb correlations, and
evaluate the finite energy mode in terms of a one-dimensional Mott insulator.
At high frequencies (\hbar\omega > t_\perp, the transfer integral perpendicular
to the chains), the frequency dependence of the optical conductivity
\sigma_1(\omega) is in agreement with calculations based on an interacting
Tomonaga-Luttinger liquid, and is different from what is expected for an
uncorrelated one-dimensional semiconductor. The zero frequency mode shows
deviations from a simple Drude response, and can be adequately described with a
frequency dependent mass and relaxation rate.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures, RevTeX; minor corrections to text and
references; To be published in Phys. Rev. B, 15 July 199
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