446 research outputs found
Differential Galois Theory of Linear Difference Equations
We present a Galois theory of difference equations designed to measure the
differential dependencies among solutions of linear difference equations. With
this we are able to reprove Hoelder's Theorem that the Gamma function satisfies
no polynomial differential equation and are able to give general results that
imply, for example, that no differential relationship holds among solutions of
certain classes of q-hypergeometric functions.Comment: 50 page
A simple theory of molecular organization in fullerene containing liquid crystals
Systematic efforts to synthesise fullerene containing LCs have produced a
variety of successful model compounds. We present a simple molecular theory
relating the self-organisation observed in these systems to their molecular
structure. The interactions are modelled by dividing each molecule into a
number of sub-molecular blocks to which specific interactions are assigned.
Three types of blocks are introduced, corresponding to fullerene units,
mesogenic units, and non-mesogenic linkage units. The blocks are constrained to
move on a rectangular 3-dimensional lattice and molecular flexibility is
allowed by retaining a number of representative conformations within the block
representation of the molecule. Calculations are presented for a variety of
molecular architectures including twin mesogenic branch mono-adducts of C60,
twin dendro-mesogenic branch mono-adducts and conical (badminton shuttlecock)
multi-adducts of C60. In spite of its many simplifications, the theory accounts
remarkably well for the phase behaviour of these systems.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
Eurasian house mouse (Mus musculus L.) differentiation at microsatellite loci identifies the Iranian plateau as a phylogeographic hotspot
Background: The phylogeography of the house mouse (Mus musculus L.), an emblematic species for genetic and biomedical studies, is only partly understood, essentially because of a sampling bias towards its most peripheral populations in Europe, Asia and the Americas. Moreover, the present-day phylogeographic hypotheses stem mostly from the study of mitochondrial lineages. In this article, we complement the mtDNA studies with a comprehensive survey of nuclear markers (19 microsatellite loci) typed in 963 individuals from 47 population samples, with an emphasis on the putative Middle-Eastern centre of dispersal of the species.
Results: Based on correspondence analysis, distance and allele-sharing trees, we find a good coherence between geographical origin and genetic make-up of the populations. We thus confirm the clear distinction of the three best described peripheral subspecies, M. m. musculus, M. m. domesticus and M. m. castaneus. A large diversity was found in the Iranian populations, which have had an unclear taxonomic status to date. In addition to samples with clear affiliation to M. m. musculus and M. m. domesticus, we find two genetic groups in Central and South East Iran, which are as distinct from each other as they are from the south-east Asian M. m. castaneus. These groups were previously also found to harbor distinct mitochondrial haplotypes.
Conclusion: We propose that the Iranian plateau is home to two more taxonomic units displaying complex
primary and secondary relationships with their long recognized neighbours. This central region emerges as the area with the highest known diversity of mouse lineages within a restricted geographical area, designating it as the focal place to study the mechanisms of speciation and diversification of this species
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X-Ray Scattering Study of the to Transition
X-ray scattering measurements are reported for critical fluctuations along a line of second-order transitions between the and phases in mixtures of hexylphenyl cyanobenzoyloxy benzoate and terephthal-bis-butylaniline (TBBA). The measured exponents and are constant along the second-order line and agree with recent heat-capacity measurements and the scaling law, . They disagree with current theoretical expectations.Engineering and Applied Science
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X-Ray Studies of Transitions between Nematic, Phases
We report high-resolution x-ray scattering measurements of the critical fluctuations in mixtures of hexylphenyl cyanobenzoyloxy benzoate and terephtal-bis-butylaniline (TBBA). The phase sequence exhibited on cooling pure (or mixtures with a low concentration of TBBA), is nematic (N) to to . Mixtures with molar percent (mol %) of TBBA have a phase between the nematic and phases. For each of the second-order transitions the critical-temperature dependence of the susceptibility and correlation lengths are fit to power laws of the form where . For the transition in pure the susceptibility exponent and the parallel and perpendicular correlation-length exponents are and , respectively. Close to the multicritical point (12 mol% TBBA) where the second-order line meets the first-order portion of the line, the exponents are . The correlation length anisotropy persists along the entire line, with the observed exponents decreasing as the concentration approaches the multicritical point. The line has both first-order and second-order regions. All the measured exponents were invariant along the second-order portion of the line and the correlation-length exponents were isotropic . The measured exponents were , and . These numbers also held close to the tricritical point where the transition became first order.Engineering and Applied Science
Vicariance in a generalist fish parasite driven by climate and salinity tolerance of hosts
Acanthocephalans are parasites with complex lifecycles that are important components of
aquatic systems and are often model species for parasite-mediated host manipulation.
Genetic characterization has recently resurrected Pomphorhynchus tereticollis as a distinct species from Pomphorhynchus laevis, with potential implications for fisheries management and
host manipulation research. Morphological and molecular examinations of parasites from 7
English rivers across 9 fish species revealed that P. tereticollis was the only Pomphorhynchus
parasite present in Britain, rather than P. laevis as previously recorded. Molecular analyses
included two non-overlapping regions of the mitochondrial gene – cytochrome oxidase
and generated 62 sequences for the shorter fragment (295 bp) and 74 for the larger fragment
(583 bp). These were combined with 61 and 13 sequences respectively, from Genbank. A
phylogenetic analysis using the two genetic regions and all the DNA sequences available
for P. tereticollis identified two distinct genetic lineages in Britain. One lineage, possibly associated with cold water tolerant fish, potentially spread to the northern parts of Britain from
the Baltic region via a northern route across the estuarine area of what is now the North
Sea during the last Glaciation. The other lineage, associated with temperate freshwater fish,
may have arrived later via the Rhine/Thames fluvial connection during the last glaciation
or early Holocene when sea levels were low. These results raise important questions on this
generalist parasite and its variously environmentally adapted hosts, and especially in relation
to the consequences for parasite vicariance
Effects of habitat and livestock on nest productivity of the Asian houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii in Bukhara Province, Uzbekistan
To inform population support measures for the unsustainably hunted Asian houbara Chlamydotis macqueenii (IUCN Vulnerable) we examined potential habitat and land-use effects on nest productivity in the Kyzylkum Desert, Uzbekistan. We monitored 177 nests across different semi-arid shrub assemblages (clay-sand and salinity gradients) and a range of livestock densities (0–80 km-2). Nest success (mean 51.4%, 95% CI 42.4–60.4%) was similar across four years; predation caused 85% of those failures for which the cause was known, and only three nests were trampled by livestock. Nesting begins within a few weeks of arrival when food appears scarce, but later nests were more likely to fail owing to the emergence of a key predator, suggesting foraging conditions on wintering and passage sites may be important for nest productivity. Nest success was similar across three shrub assemblages and was unrelated to landscape rugosity, shrub frequency or livestock density, but was greater with taller mean shrub height (range 13–67 cm) within 50 m. Clutch size (mean = 3.2 eggs) and per-egg hatchability in successful nests (87.5%) did not differ with laying date, shrub assemblage or livestock density. We therefore found no evidence that livestock density reduced nest productivity across the range examined, while differing shrub assemblages appeared to offer similar habitat quality. Asian houbara appear well-adapted to a range of semi-desert habitats and tolerate moderate disturbance by pastoralism. No obvious in situ mitigation measures arise from these findings, leaving regulation and control as the key requirement to render hunting sustainable
Jean-Baptiste Bélanger, hydraulic engineer, researcher and academic
Jean-Baptiste BÉLANGER (1790-1874) worked as a hydraulic engineer at the beginning of his career. He developed the backwater equation to calculate gradually-varied open channel flow properties for steady flow conditions. Later, as an academic at the leading French engineering schools (Ecole Centrale des Arts et Manufactures, Ecole des Ponts et Chaussées, and Ecole Polytechnique), he developed a new university curriculum in mechanics and several textbooks including a seminal text in hydraulic engineering. His influence on his contemporaries was considerable, and his name is written on the border of one of the four facades of the Eiffel Tower. BÉLANGER's leading role demonstrated the dynamism of practicing engineers at the time, and his contributions paved the way to many significant works in hydraulics
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