1,660 research outputs found
The survival of fresh water algae during dry periods
An investigation which has tended to be extensive rather than intensive, of the survival of fresh water algae during dry periods has been carried out. From April 1953 to June 1955, five small ponds, two in Hertfordshire, two in Middlesex and one in Surrey, have been visited regularly. At these ponds, water levels, water temperatures and the pH of the water and marginal litter or mud were recorded. Litter and mud samples were taken for the estimation of moisture content. Water samples and samples of litter and mud exposed above the water level were collected and examined for algae. In addition, throughout the period of the whole investigation, samples of water, litter and mud have been taken from various other habitats at irregular intervals. A series of large- and small-scale drying experiments have been carried out to investigate the reactions of various algae to drought and the survival of species through drought periods. Some investigation was made of the stratification of algae in pond margin litter and mud. Two methods were employed, a buried-slide technique and a micro-sampling technique. The observations made suggest that certain algae are capable of surviving dry periods by methods other than by the existence of resistant spores. It has been found that more or less obviously modified vegetative cells of a number of algae will survive drought. Further, certain algae, both motile and non-motile, have been found to survive in the deeper layers of litter and mud at pond margins during exposure and drying. While an attempt has been made to cover an extensive field, more detailed observations have been made on a number of individual species of algae.<p
A new electron diffraction approach for structure refinement applied to Ca3Mn2O7
The digital large-angle convergent-beam electron diffraction (D-LACBED) technique is applied to Ca3Mn2O7 for a range of temperatures. Bloch-wave simulations are used to examine the effects that changes in different parameters have on the intensity in D-LACBED patterns, and atomic coordinates, thermal atomic displacement parameters and apparent occupancy are refined to achieve a good fit between simulation and experiment. The sensitivity of the technique to subtle changes in structure is demonstrated. Refined structures are in good agreement with previous determinations of Ca3Mn2O7 and show the decay of anti-phase oxygen octahedral tilts perpendicular to the c axis of the A21am unit cell with increasing temperature, as well as the robustness of oxygen octahedral tilts about the c axis up to ∼400°C. The technique samples only the zero-order Laue zone and is therefore insensitive to atom displacements along the electron-beam direction. For this reason it is not possible to distinguish between in-phase and anti-phase oxygen octahedral tilting about the c axis using the [110] data collected in this study
Utilisation of chimeric lyssaviruses to assess vaccine protection against highly divergent lyssaviruses
Lyssaviruses constitute a diverse range of viruses with the ability to cause fatal encephalitis known as rabies. Existing human rabies vaccines and post exposure prophylaxes (PEP) are based on inactivated preparations of, and neutralising antibody preparations directed against, classical rabies viruses, respectively. Whilst these prophylaxes are highly efficient at neutralising and preventing a productive infection with rabies virus, their ability to neutralise other lyssaviruses is thought to be limited. The remaining 15 virus species within the lyssavirus genus have been divided into at least three phylogroups that generally predict vaccine protection. Existing rabies vaccines afford protection against phylogroup I viruses but offer little to no protection against phylogroup II and III viruses. As such, work involving sharps with phylogroup II and III must be considered of high risk as no PEP is thought to have any effect on the prevention of a productive infection with these lyssaviruses. Whilst rabies virus itself has been characterised in a number of different animal models, data on the remaining lyssaviruses are scarce. As the lyssavirus glycoprotein is considered to be the sole target of neutralising antibodies we generated a vaccine strain of rabies using reverse genetics expressing highly divergent glycoproteins of West Caucasian Bat lyssavirus and Ikoma lyssavirus. Using these recombinants, we propose that recombinant vaccine strain derived lyssaviruses containing heterologous glycoproteins may be a suitable surrogate for wildtype viruses when assessing vaccine protection for the lyssaviruses
Review about populations of Be stars: stellar evolution of extreme stars
Among the emission-line stars, the classical Be stars known for their extreme
properties are remarkable. The Be stars are B-type main sequence stars that
have displayed at least once in their life emission lines in their spectrum.
Beyond this phenomenological approach some progresses were made on the
understanding of this class of stars. With high-technology techniques
(interferometry, adaptive optics, multi-objects spectroscopy,
spectropolarimetry, high-resolution photometry, etc) from different instruments
and space mission such as the VLTI, CHARA, FLAMES, ESPADONS-NARVAL, COROT,
MOST, SPITZER, etc, some discoveries were performed allowing to constrain the
modelling of the Be stars stellar evolution but also their circumstellar
decretion disks. In particular, the confrontation between theory and
observations about the effects of the stellar formation and evolution on the
main sequence, the metallicity, the magnetic fields, the stellar pulsations,
the rotational velocity, and the binarity (including the X-rays binaries) on
the Be phenomenon appearance is discussed. The disks observations and the
efforts made on their modelling is mentioned. As the life of a star does not
finish at the end of the main sequence, we also mention their stellar evolution
post main sequence including the gamma-ray bursts. Finally, the different new
results and remaining questions about the main physical properties of the Be
stars are summarized and possible ways of investigations proposed. The recent
and future facilities (XSHOOTER, ALMA, E-ELT, TMT, GMT, JWST, GAIA, etc) and
their instruments that may help to improve the knowledge of Be stars are also
briefly introduced.Comment: Review about Be stars populations at the IAUS27
Early-type objects in NGC6611 and Eagle Nebula
An important question about Be stars is whether Be stars are born as Be stars
or not. It is necessary to observe young clusters to answer this question.
Observations of stars in NGC6611 and the star-formation region of Eagle Nebula
have been carried out with the ESO-WFI in slitless spectroscopic mode and at
the VLT-GIRAFFE. The targets for the GIRAFFE observations were pre-selected
from the literature and our catalogue of emission-line stars (ELS) based on the
WFI study. GIRAFFE observations allowed us to study accurately the population
of the early-type stars with and without emission lines. For this study, we
determined the fundamental parameters of OBA stars. We also studied the status
of the objects (main sequence or pre-main sequence stars) by using IR data,
membership probabilities, and location in HR diagrams. The nature of the
early-type ELS in M16 is derived. The slitless observations with the WFI
clearly indicate a small number of ELS in M16. We observed with GIRAFFE 101 OBA
stars, among them 9 are ELS with circumstellar emission in Halpha. We found
that: W080 could be a new He-strong star, like W601. W301 is a possible
classical Be star, W503 is a mass-transfer eclipsing binary with an accretion
disk, and the other ones are possible Herbig Ae/Be stars. We also found that
the rotational velocities of main sequence B stars are 18% lower than those of
pre-main sequence B stars, in good agreement with theory about the evolution of
rotational velocities. Combining different indications and technics, we found
that 27% of the B-type stars are binaries. We also redetermined the age of
NGC6611 found equal to 1.2--1.8 Myears in good agreement with the most recent
determinations.Comment: Accepted by A&A, english not yet correcte
Fractional moment bounds and disorder relevance for pinning models
We study the critical point of directed pinning/wetting models with quenched
disorder. The distribution K(.) of the location of the first contact of the
(free) polymer with the defect line is assumed to be of the form
K(n)=n^{-\alpha-1}L(n), with L(.) slowly varying. The model undergoes a
(de)-localization phase transition: the free energy (per unit length) is zero
in the delocalized phase and positive in the localized phase. For \alpha<1/2 it
is known that disorder is irrelevant: quenched and annealed critical points
coincide for small disorder, as well as quenched and annealed critical
exponents. The same has been proven also for \alpha=1/2, but under the
assumption that L(.) diverges sufficiently fast at infinity, an hypothesis that
is not satisfied in the (1+1)-dimensional wetting model considered by Forgacs
et al. (1986) and Derrida et al. (1992), where L(.) is asymptotically constant.
Here we prove that, if 1/21, then quenched and annealed
critical points differ whenever disorder is present, and we give the scaling
form of their difference for small disorder. In agreement with the so-called
Harris criterion, disorder is therefore relevant in this case. In the marginal
case \alpha=1/2, under the assumption that L(.) vanishes sufficiently fast at
infinity, we prove that the difference between quenched and annealed critical
points, which is known to be smaller than any power of the disorder strength,
is positive: disorder is marginally relevant. Again, the case considered by
Forgacs et al. (1986) and Derrida et al. (1992) is out of our analysis and
remains open.Comment: 20 pages, 1 figure; v2: few typos corrected, references revised. To
appear on Commun. Math. Phy
Perceptual Pluralism
Perceptual systems respond to proximal stimuli by forming mental representations of distal stimuli. A central goal for the philosophy of perception is to characterize the representations delivered by perceptual systems. It may be that all perceptual representations are in some way proprietarily perceptual and differ from the representational format of thought (Dretske 1981; Carey 2009; Burge 2010; Block ms.). Or it may instead be that perception and cognition always trade in the same code (Prinz 2002; Pylyshyn 2003). This paper rejects both approaches in favor of perceptual pluralism, the thesis that perception delivers a multiplicity of representational formats, some proprietary and some shared with cognition. The argument for perceptual pluralism marshals a wide array of empirical evidence in favor of iconic (i.e., image-like, analog) representations in perception as well as discursive (i.e., language-like, digital) perceptual object representations
Spitzer/IRAC view of Sh 2-284: Searching for evidence of triggered star formation in an isolated region in the outer Milky Way
Using Spitzer/IRAC observations of a region to be observed by the CoRoT
satellite, we have unraveled a new complex star-forming region at low
metallicity in the outer Galaxy. We perform a study of S284 in order to outline
the chain of events in this star-forming region. We used four-band Spitzer/IRAC
photometry as well as Halpha imaging obtained with INT/WFC. Combining these
data with the optical photometry obtained in the frame of CoRoTs preparation
and the 2MASS catalog we analysed the properties and distribution of young
stellar objects (YSOs) associated with point-like sources. We also studied the
SEDs of regions of extended emission, complementing our dataset with IRAS and
MSX data. We find that S284 is unique in several ways: it is very isolated at
the end of a spiral arm and both the diffuse dust and ionized emission are
remarkably symmetric. We have partially resolved the central clusters of the
three bubbles present in this region. Despite the different scales present in
its multiple-bubble morphology, our study points to a very narrow spread of
ages among the powering high-mass clusters. In contrast, the particular
sawtooth structure of the extended emission at the rim of each ionized bubble
harbours either small lower-mass clusters with a younger stellar population or
individual young reddened protostars. In particular, triggered star formation
is considered to be at work in these regions.Comment: Accepted by A&A. 13 pages, 10 figures, 2 Table
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