479 research outputs found
Analysis of Gamma Radiation from a Radon Source: Indications of a Solar Influence
This article presents an analysis of about 29,000 measurements of gamma
radiation associated with the decay of radon in a sealed container at the
Geological Survey of Israel (GSI) Laboratory in Jerusalem between 28 January
2007 and 10 May 2010. These measurements exhibit strong variations in time of
year and time of day, which may be due in part to environmental influences.
However, time-series analysis reveals a number of periodicities, including two
at approximately 11.2 year and 12.5 year. We have previously
found these oscillations in nuclear-decay data acquired at the Brookhaven
National Laboratory (BNL) and at the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt
(PTB), and we have suggested that these oscillations are attributable to some
form of solar radiation that has its origin in the deep solar interior. A
curious property of the GSI data is that the annual oscillation is much
stronger in daytime data than in nighttime data, but the opposite is true for
all other oscillations. This may be a systematic effect but, if it is not, this
property should help narrow the theoretical options for the mechanism
responsible for decay-rate variability.Comment: 9 pages, 21 figure
K-Ar age determinations of some Miocene-Pliocene basalts in Israel: their significance to the tectonics of the Rift Valley
Thirty samples of Upper Tertiary basalts intruding marine and continental sequences were by the K-Ar method. Four volcanic phases are recorded: (a) 24.8±1.5 Ma of the Raqabat e Na'ame dike in Central Sinai; (b) 20.4±0.7 Ma of basalt intrusions in Central Sinai and the Arava. Some of these are offset by E-W to NE-SW dextral faults of the Central Sinai - Negev Shear Zone; (c) 14.5±0.3 to 4.9±1.3 Ma of basalt flows in the Eastern Galilee and the Coastal Plain; (d) 2.7±0.6 Ma of ‘En Yahav dike. These results contribute to the correlation between Tertiary continental formations from different areas, and put limits on the age of tectonic events, such as folding in the Syrian arc, faulting in the Central Sinai - Negev Shear Zone and shearing along the Jordan Rif
Polytopality and Cartesian products of graphs
We study the question of polytopality of graphs: when is a given graph the
graph of a polytope? We first review the known necessary conditions for a graph
to be polytopal, and we provide several families of graphs which satisfy all
these conditions, but which nonetheless are not graphs of polytopes. Our main
contribution concerns the polytopality of Cartesian products of non-polytopal
graphs. On the one hand, we show that products of simple polytopes are the only
simple polytopes whose graph is a product. On the other hand, we provide a
general method to construct (non-simple) polytopal products whose factors are
not polytopal.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figure
Theory of commensurable magnetic structures in holmium
The tendency for the period of the helically ordered moments in holmium to
lock into values which are commensurable with the lattice is studied
theoretically as a function of temperature and magnetic field. The
commensurable effects are derived in the mean-field approximation from
numerical calculations of the free energy of various commensurable structures,
and the results are compared with the extensive experimental evidence collected
during the last ten years on the magnetic structures in holmium. In general the
stability of the different commensurable structures is found to be in accord
with the experiments, except for the tau=5/18 structure observed a few degrees
below T_N in a b-axis field. The trigonal coupling recently detected in holmium
is found to be the interaction required to explain the increased stability of
the tau=1/5 structure around 42 K, and of the tau=1/4 structure around 96 K,
when a field is applied along the c-axis.Comment: REVTEX, 31 pages, 7 postscript figure
CP and related phenomena in the context of Stellar Evolution
We review the interaction in intermediate and high mass stars between their
evolution and magnetic and chemical properties. We describe the theory of
Ap-star `fossil' fields, before touching on the expected secular diffusive
processes which give rise to evolution of the field. We then present recent
results from a spectropolarimetric survey of Herbig Ae/Be stars, showing that
magnetic fields of the kind seen on the main-sequence already exist during the
pre-main sequence phase, in agreement with fossil field theory, and that the
origin of the slow rotation of Ap/Bp stars also lies early in the pre-main
sequence evolution; we also present results confirming a lack of stars with
fields below a few hundred gauss. We then seek which macroscopic motions
compete with atomic diffusion in determining the surface abundances of AmFm
stars. While turbulent transport and mass loss, in competition with atomic
diffusion, are both able to explain observed surface abundances, the interior
abundance distribution is different enough to potentially lead to a test using
asterosismology. Finally we review progress on the turbulence-driving and
mixing processes in stellar radiative zones.Comment: Proceedings of IAU GA in Rio, JD4 on Ap stars; 10 pages, 7 figure
Irreducible triangulations of surfaces with boundary
A triangulation of a surface is irreducible if no edge can be contracted to
produce a triangulation of the same surface. In this paper, we investigate
irreducible triangulations of surfaces with boundary. We prove that the number
of vertices of an irreducible triangulation of a (possibly non-orientable)
surface of genus g>=0 with b>=0 boundaries is O(g+b). So far, the result was
known only for surfaces without boundary (b=0). While our technique yields a
worse constant in the O(.) notation, the present proof is elementary, and
simpler than the previous ones in the case of surfaces without boundary
Small grid embeddings of 3-polytopes
We introduce an algorithm that embeds a given 3-connected planar graph as a
convex 3-polytope with integer coordinates. The size of the coordinates is
bounded by . If the graph contains a triangle we can
bound the integer coordinates by . If the graph contains a
quadrilateral we can bound the integer coordinates by . The
crucial part of the algorithm is to find a convex plane embedding whose edges
can be weighted such that the sum of the weighted edges, seen as vectors,
cancel at every point. It is well known that this can be guaranteed for the
interior vertices by applying a technique of Tutte. We show how to extend
Tutte's ideas to construct a plane embedding where the weighted vector sums
cancel also on the vertices of the boundary face
Brachionus rotundiformis tschugunoff, 1921 from the brachionus plicatilis species complex (Rotifera: Monogononta): A new record from galápagos archipelago, Ecuador
The presence of the rotifer species Brachionus rotundiformis from the B. plicatilis species complex in Lake Arcturo, a saline lake in the Genovesa Island of the Galápagos Islands, is here reported. This is the first record of the species for the rotifer fauna of Ecuador as well as of the species complex to the Galápagos Islands. This finding is consistent with the idea of high dispersion capacity, and of cosmopolitan distribution of this species complex. Because Genovesa Island is uninhabited, passive transport by wind currents and zoochory by migrant birds seem to emerge as the most plausible factors in this process of colonization. Integrative studies on the morphological variations, genetic, molecular, and ecological aspects are still required to further understand the process of dispersion and the ecology of this member of the B. plicatilis species complex in this remote and isolated locality, and the exact taxonomical position of the island’s population to the other members of the complex.</p
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