5,861 research outputs found
The effect of temperature-dependent solubility on the onset of thermosolutal convection in a horizontal porous layer
We consider the onset of thermosolutal (double-diffusive) convection of a binary fluid in a horizontal porous layer subject to fixed temperatures and chemical equilibrium on the bounding surfaces, in the case when the solubility of the dissolved component depends on temperature. We use a linear stability analysis to investigate how the dissolution or precipitation of this component affects the onset of convection and the selection of an unstable wavenumber; we extend this analysis using a Galerkin method to predict the structure of the initial bifurcation and compare our analytical results with numerical integration of the full nonlinear equations. We find that the reactive term may be stabilizing or destabilizing, with subtle effects particularly when the thermal gradient is destabilizing but the solutal gradient is stabilizing. The preferred spatial wavelength of convective cells at onset may also be substantially increased or reduced, and strongly reactive systems tend to prefer direct to subcritical bifurcation. These results have implications for geothermal-reservoir management and ore prospecting
Seabird Bycatch in Pelagic Longline Fisheries Is Grossly Underestimated when Using Only Haul Data
Hundreds of thousands of seabirds are killed each year as bycatch in longline fisheries. Seabirds are predominantly caught during line setting but bycatch is generally recorded during line hauling, many hours after birds are caught. Bird loss during this interval may lead to inaccurate bycatch information. In this 15 year study, seabird bycatch was recorded during both line setting and line hauling from four fishing regions: Indian Ocean, Southern Ocean, Coral Sea and central Pacific Ocean. Over 43,000 albatrosses, petrels and skuas representing over 25 species were counted during line setting of which almost 6,000 seabirds attempted to take the bait. Bait-taking interactions were placed into one of four categories. (i) The majority (57%) of bait-taking attempts were âunsuccessfulâ involving seabirds that did not take the bait nor get caught or hooked. (ii) One-third of attempts were âsuccessfulâ with seabirds removing the bait while not getting caught. (iii) One-hundred and seventy-six seabirds (3% of attempts) were observed being âcaughtâ during line setting, with three albatross species â Laysan (Phoebastria immutabilis), black-footed (P. nigripes) and black-browed (Thalassarche melanophrys)â dominating this category. However, of these, only 85 (48%) seabird carcasses were retrieved during line hauling. Most caught seabirds were hooked through the bill. (iv) The remainder of seabird-bait interactions (7%) was not clearly observed, but likely involved more âcaughtâ seabirds. Bait taking attempts and percentage outcome (e.g. successful, caught) varied between seabird species and was not always related to species abundance around fishing vessels. Using only haul data to calculate seabird bycatch grossly underestimates actual bycatch levels, with the level of seabird bycatch from pelagic longline fishing possibly double what was previously thought
The Friedel-Crafts Reaction with Long-Chained Alkyl Bromides (Abstract)
It has been reported that 1-bromooctadecane reacts with benzene 1md aluminum chloride to give a 50 per cent yield of 1-phenyloctadecane. [Gilman and Turck, J. A. Chem. Soc., 61, 478 (1939) J. We have found that 1-bromohexadeeane, 1-bromotetradecane and 1-bromododecane behave similarly. The case of 1-bromododecane was studied in more detail. Evidence was found that, in addition to 1-phenyldodecane, isomeric dodecylbenzenes were formed. Incidental to this work the six isomeric 2-naphthalene-sulfono-pn-dodecylanilides (B-C10H7.SO2.NH.C6H4.C12H25) were prepared for use in a study of the validity of the mixed melting point determinations with structurally similar long-chained compounds. Fractionation of the\u27 products of the reaction of 1-bromohexane, benzene and aluminum chloride (carried out at 0°) showed that 1-phenylhexane, 2-phenylhexanc and 3-phenylhexane were obtained. These hydrocarbons were characterized as their monacetamino and diacetamino derivatives [Ipatieff and Schmerling, ibid, 59, 1056 (1937) and as the sulfonamides. They were identified by comparison with synthetic specimens
Meteorological noise in wire strainmeter data from Parkfield, California
Four invar-wire strainmeters have been operated in shallow trench sites for 19 months beside the San Andreas Fault at Parkfield, California. Temperature and rainfall records were correlated with 1 yr of strainmeter data, and 90 per cent of the strain signal power at periods between 2 and 120 days was predicted entirely from these records, using a multi-channel, Wiener filtering technique. The residual strain series fluctuates with a peak-to-peak amplitude of nearly 10^(â6) strain. Anomalous strain signals taking place over several days would have to be larger than this to be identifiable. Previous work shows that signals of amplitude 10^(â7) strain are identifiable if they take place within hours. Deep creep events giving rise to such signals, which may occur as precursors to earthquakes, would need to be very large.
Other workers have shown that shallow, short-base line tiltmeters in California are also very sensitive to meteorological noise. Strainmeter and tiltmeter installations can be made less sensitive to meteorological noise, either by manufacturing instruments with long (âŒ1 km) base lines, or by using tunnel or borehole sites (âł100 m deep). Proven instruments of these types are costly, unless an underground site was already available. However, if networks of shallow, shortbase line strainmeters or tiltmeters are to be used for earthquake prediction, it is obviously desirable to invest in at least a few installations which are less sensitive to noise of meteorological origin
Determination of CKM phases through rigid polygons of flavor SU(3) amplitudes
Some new methods for the extraction of CKM phases and using
flavor SU(3) symmetry have been suggested through the construction of rigid
polygons in the complex plane with sides equal to the decay amplitudes of B
mesons into two mesons belonging to the light (charmless) pseudoscalar octet.
These rigid polygons incorporate all the possible amplitude triangles and,
being overdetermined, also serve as consistency checks and in estimating the
rates of some decay modes. The same techniques also lead to numerous useful
amplitude triangles when octet-singlet mixing has been taken into account and
nearly physical are used.Comment: A few detailed explanations added, some rearrangement of sections and
a few minor changes in notation. 19 pages, 1 PostScript figure, uses
psfig.st
Asymptotic estimation of some multiple integrals and the electromagnetic deuteron form factors at high momentum transfer
A theorem about asymptotic estimation of multiple integral of a special type
is proved for the case when the integrand peaks at the integration domain
bound, but not at a point of extremum. Using this theorem the asymptotic
expansion of the electromagnetic deuteron form factors at high momentum
transfers is obtained in the framework of two-nucleon model in both
nonrelativistic and relativistic impulse approximations. It is found that
relativistic effects slow down the decrease of deuteron form factors and result
in agreement between the relativistic asymptotics and experimental data at high
momentum transfers.Comment: 16 pages, 1 figur
SU(3) Decomposition of Two-Body B Decay Amplitudes
We present the complete flavor SU(3) decomposition of decay amplitudes for
decays of the triplet (B^+_u, B^0_d, B^0_s) of B mesons nonleptonically into
two pseudoscalar mesons. This analysis holds for arbitrarily broken SU(3) and
can be used to generate amplitude relations when physical arguments permit one
to neglect or relate any of the reduced amplitudes.Comment: 31 pages, revtex, no figure
Rho primes in analyzing e+e- annihilation, MARK III, LASS and ARGUS data
The results of an analysis are presented of some recent data on the reactions
, with the
subtracted events, , , , , the decays
,
, upon taking into account both the strong energy
dependence of the partial widths on energy and the previously neglected mixing
of the type resonances. The above effects are shown to exert an
essential influence on the specific values of masses and coupling constants of
heavy resonances and hence are necessary to be accounted for in establishing
their true nature.Comment: 20 pages, ReVTeX, 9 Postscript figures As compared to hep-ph/9607398,
new material concerning the analysis of the ARGUS data on the tau decays into
four pion hadronic states is adde
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