24,454 research outputs found
A Descriptive Study of the Population Dynamics of Adult \u3ci\u3eDiabrotica Virgifera Virgifera\u3c/i\u3e (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) in Artificially Infested Corn Fields
The influence of corn plant phenology on the dynamics of adult western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, populations was studied during 1988 and 1989 in com fields artificially infested with eggs. Fifty percent of adult emergence from the soil occurred by day 194 in 1988 and day 203 in 1989. In both years, adult emergence was synchronized with corn flowering, eggs were recovered in soil samples approximately four days after reproductive females were first observed in the population, and oviposition was essentially complete about 25 days after it began. The number of reproductive female beetle-days accumulating per m2 was similar in both years. Approximately two times as many eggs were laid in 1988 (1239 eggs 1m2) as in 1989 (590 eggs 1m2). The difference in egg density may have been caused by differences among years in the temporal synchrony of reproductive beetles with flowering corn. Daily survival rates of adults were high while corn was flowering; exhibited a gradual decline during grain filling; and decreased rapidly during the grain drying stage
Genetic Differentiation Among Three Species of \u3ci\u3eParadosa\u3c/i\u3e (Arachnida: Lycosidae)
Allozymic variation in nine protein producing loci was examined in three species of Pardosa using starch gel electrophoresis. Allozyme frequencies showed a high degree of geographic uniformity among conspecific populations. Estimated heterozygosities for the three species ranged from 0.05 to 0.15. Rogers\u27 coefficients of genetic similarity based on allozyme frequencies averaged over conspecific populations ranged from 0.16 to 0.37 fo rthe three species
The experiments of LIPS 3
LIPS 3 is a member of the Living Plume Shield series of spacecraft. In each LIPS project, the plume shield, a simple sheet metal cone, was structurally stiffened, and an active satellite was then built around it. The original purpose of the plume shield was to prevent the plume from solid propellent engines, which are fired outside the atmosphere after the aerodynamic shroud is jettisoned, from reaching the primary payload. The surface of LIPS 3 facing the plume also functioned in this manner, but the anterior surfaces were unaffected, and it was there that all solar arrays, sensors, and experiments were mounted. The purpose of LIPS 3 was to provide a test bed for new space power sources. With the long delays projected for schedules of the STS and other major launch systems, it appeared that a decade might pass before long term flight data could be obtained on many new and innovative power sources. The fact that a launch scheduled for early in 1987 required a plume shield was seen as a unique opportunity to obtain some of this data in a timely manner. The LIPS 3 system, the experiments placed aboard, and the experiment data acquisition subsystem are described. Various problems were encountered during integration and after launch; those which appear to effect the accuracy of experimental results are discussed. A preliminary description is given of the accuracy of the flight experiment data
On the age of the magnetically active WW Psa and TX Psa members of the beta Pictoris association
There are a variety of different techniques available to estimate the ages of
pre-main-sequence stars. Components of physical pairs, thanks to their strict
coevality and the mass difference, such as the binary system analysed in this
paper, are best suited to test the effectiveness of these different techniques.
We consider the system WW Psa + TX Psa whose membership of the 25-Myr beta
Pictoris association has been well established by earlier works. We investigate
which age dating technique provides the best agreement between the age of the
system and that of the association. We have photometrically monitored WW Psa
and TX Psa and measured their rotation periods as P = 2.37d and P = 1.086d,
respectively. We have retrieved from the literature their Li equivalent widths
and measured their effective temperatures and luminosities. We investigate
whether the ages of these stars derived using three independent techniques are
consistent with the age of the beta Pictoris association. We find that the
rotation periods and the Li contents of both stars are consistent with the
distribution of other bona fide members of the cluster. On the contrary, the
isochronal fitting provides similar ages for both stars, but a factor of about
four younger than the quoted age of the association, or about 30% younger when
the effects of magnetic fields are included. We explore the origin of the
discrepant age inferred from isochronal fitting, including the possibilities
that either the two components may be unresolved binaries or that the basic
stellar parameters of both components are altered by enhanced magnetic
activity. The latter is found to be the more reasonable cause, suggesting that
age estimates based on the Li content is more reliable than isochronal fitting
for pre-main-sequence stars with pronounced magnetic activity.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy and Astrophysics on December 13, 2016. 13 pages
and 11 figure
Spin gaps and spin-flip energies in density-functional theory
Energy gaps are crucial aspects of the electronic structure of finite and
extended systems. Whereas much is known about how to define and calculate
charge gaps in density-functional theory (DFT), and about the relation between
these gaps and derivative discontinuities of the exchange-correlation
functional, much less is know about spin gaps. In this paper we give
density-functional definitions of spin-conserving gaps, spin-flip gaps and the
spin stiffness in terms of many-body energies and in terms of single-particle
(Kohn-Sham) energies. Our definitions are as analogous as possible to those
commonly made in the charge case, but important differences between spin and
charge gaps emerge already on the single-particle level because unlike the
fundamental charge gap spin gaps involve excited-state energies. Kohn-Sham and
many-body spin gaps are predicted to differ, and the difference is related to
derivative discontinuities that are similar to, but distinct from, those
usually considered in the case of charge gaps. Both ensemble DFT and
time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) can be used to calculate these spin discontinuities
from a suitable functional. We illustrate our findings by evaluating our
definitions for the Lithium atom, for which we calculate spin gaps and spin
discontinuities by making use of near-exact Kohn-Sham eigenvalues and,
independently, from the single-pole approximation to TDDFT. The many-body
corrections to the Kohn-Sham spin gaps are found to be negative, i.e., single
particle calculations tend to overestimate spin gaps while they underestimate
charge gaps.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, 3 table
Quantum atomic delocalization vs. structural disorder in amorphous silicon
Quantum effects on the atom delocalization in amorphous silicon have been
studied by path-integral Monte Carlo simulations from 30 to 800 K. The quantum
delocalization is appreciable vs. topological disorder, as seen from structural
observables such as the radial distribution function (RDF). At low
temperatures, the width of the first peak in the RDF increases by a factor of
1.5 due to quantum effects. The overall anharmonicity of the solid vibrations
at finite temperatures in amorphous silicon is clearly larger than in the
crystalline material. Low-energy vibrational modes are mainly located on
coordination defects in the amorphous material.Comment: 5 pages, 5 PS figures, REVTE
A comparative study of CO adsorption on flat, stepped and kinked Au surfaces using density functional theory
Our ab initio calculations of CO adsorption energies on low miller index
(111), (100), stepped (211), and kinked (532) gold surfaces show a strong
dependence on local coordination with a reduction in Au atom coordination
leading to higher binding energies. We find trends in adsorption energies to be
similar to those reported in experiments and calculations for other metal
surfaces. The (532) surface provides insights into these trends because of the
availability of a large number of kink sites which naturally have the lowest
coordination (6). We also find that, for all surfaces, an increase in CO
coverage triggers a decrease in the adsorption energy. Changes in the
work-function upon CO adsorption, as well as the frequencies of the CO
vibrational modes are calculated, and their coverage dependence is reported.Comment: 18 pages, 4 figure
Nonabelian density functional theory
Given a vector space of microscopic quantum observables, density functional
theory is formulated on its dual space. A generalized Hohenberg-Kohn theorem
and the existence of the universal energy functional in the dual space are
proven. In this context ordinary density functional theory corresponds to the
space of one-body multiplication operators. When the operators close under
commutation to form a Lie algebra, the energy functional defines a Hamiltonian
dynamical system on the coadjoint orbits in the algebra's dual space. The
enhanced density functional theory provides a new method for deriving the group
theoretic Hamiltonian on the coadjoint orbits from the exact microscopic
Hamiltonian.Comment: 1 .eps figur
- âŠ