1,177 research outputs found
Foliar Water Uptake: Processes, Pathways, and Integration into Plant Water Budgets
Nearly all plant families, represented across most major biomes, absorb water directly through their leaves. This phenomenon is commonly referred to as foliar water uptake. Recent studies have suggested that foliar water uptake provides a significant water subsidy that can influence both plant water and carbon balance across multiple spatial and temporal scales. Despite this, our mechanistic understanding of when, where, how, and to what end water is absorbed through leaf surfaces remains limited. We first review the evidence for the biophysical conditions necessary for foliar water uptake to occur, focusing on the plant and atmospheric water potentials necessary to create a gradient for water flow. We then consider the different pathways for uptake, as well as the potential fates of the water once inside the leaf. Given that one fate of water from foliar uptake is to increase leaf water potentials and contribute to the demands of transpiration, we also provide a quantitative synthesis of observed rates of change in leaf water potential and total fluxes of water into the leaf. Finally, we identify critical research themes that should be addressed to effectively incorporate foliar water uptake into traditional frameworks of plant water movement
Water Abundance in Molecular Cloud Cores
We present Submillimeter Wave Astronomy Satellite (SWAS) observations of the
1_{10}-1_{01} transition of ortho-water at 557 GHz toward 12 molecular cloud
cores. The water emission was detected in NGC 7538, Rho Oph A, NGC 2024, CRL
2591, W3, W3(OH), Mon R2, and W33, and was not detected in TMC-1, L134N, and
B335. We also present a small map of the water emission in S140. Observations
of the H_2^{18}O line were obtained toward S140 and NGC 7538, but no emission
was detected. The abundance of ortho-water relative to H_2 in the giant
molecular cloud cores was found to vary between 6x10^{-10} and 1x10^{-8}. Five
of the cloud cores in our sample have previous water detections; however, in
all cases the emission is thought to arise from hot cores with small angular
extents. The water abundance estimated for the hot core gas is at least 100
times larger than in the gas probed by SWAS. The most stringent upper limit on
the ortho-water abundance in dark clouds is provided in TMC-1, where the
3-sigma upper limit on the ortho-water fractional abundance is 7x10^{-8}.Comment: 5 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aastex.cls, emulateapj5.sty
(included), and apjfonts.sty (included
The Distribution of Water Emission in M17SW
We present a 17-point map of the M17SW cloud core in the 1_{10}-1_{01}
transition of ortho-water at 557 GHz obtained with the Submillimeter Wave
Astronomy Satellite. Water emission was detected in 11 of the 17 observed
positions. The line widths of the water emission vary between 4 and 9 km
s^{-1}, and are similar to other emission lines that arise in the M17SW core. A
direct comparison is made between the spatial extent of the water emission and
the ^{13}CO J = 5\to4 emission; the good agreement suggests that the water
emission arises in the same warm, dense gas as the ^{13}CO emission. A spectrum
of the H_2^{18}O line was also obtained at the center position of the cloud
core, but no emission was detected. We estimate that the average abundance of
ortho-water relative to H_2 within the M17 dense core is approximately
1x10^{-9}, 30 times smaller than the average for the Orion core. Toward the H
II region/molecular cloud interface in M17SW the ortho-water abundance may be
about 5 times larger than in the dense core.Comment: 4 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aastex.cls, emulateapj5.sty
(included), and apjfonts.sty (included
A Mechanical Mass Sensor with Yoctogram Resolution
Nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMS) have generated considerable interest as
inertial mass sensors. NEMS resonators have been used to weigh cells,
biomolecules, and gas molecules, creating many new possibilities for biological
and chemical analysis [1-4]. Recently, NEMS-based mass sensors have been
employed as a new tool in surface science in order to study e.g. the phase
transitions or the diffusion of adsorbed atoms on nanoscale objects [5-7]. A
key point in all these experiments is the ability to resolve small masses. Here
we report on mass sensing experiments with a resolution of 1.7 yg (1 yg =
10^-24 g), which corresponds to the mass of one proton, or one hydrogen atom.
The resonator is made of a ~150 nm long carbon nanotube resonator vibrating at
nearly 2 GHz. The unprecedented level of sensitivity allows us to detect
adsorption events of naphthalene molecules (C10H8) and to measure the binding
energy of a Xe atom on the nanotube surface (131 meV). These ultrasensitive
nanotube resonators offer new opportunities for mass spectrometry,
magnetometry, and adsorption experiments.Comment: submitted version of the manuscrip
New Mechanics of Traumatic Brain Injury
The prediction and prevention of traumatic brain injury is a very important
aspect of preventive medical science. This paper proposes a new coupled
loading-rate hypothesis for the traumatic brain injury (TBI), which states that
the main cause of the TBI is an external Euclidean jolt, or SE(3)-jolt, an
impulsive loading that strikes the head in several coupled degrees-of-freedom
simultaneously. To show this, based on the previously defined covariant force
law, we formulate the coupled Newton-Euler dynamics of brain's micro-motions
within the cerebrospinal fluid and derive from it the coupled SE(3)-jolt
dynamics. The SE(3)-jolt is a cause of the TBI in two forms of brain's rapid
discontinuous deformations: translational dislocations and rotational
disclinations. Brain's dislocations and disclinations, caused by the
SE(3)-jolt, are described using the Cosserat multipolar viscoelastic continuum
brain model.
Keywords: Traumatic brain injuries, coupled loading-rate hypothesis,
Euclidean jolt, coupled Newton-Euler dynamics, brain's dislocations and
disclinationsComment: 18 pages, 1 figure, Late
Transmit Power Minimization for MIMO Systems of Exponential Average BER with Fixed Outage Probability
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Dian-Wu Yue, and Yichuang Sun, ‘Transmit Power Minimization for MIMO Systems of Exponential Average BER with Fixed Outage Probability’, Wireless Personal Communications, Vol. 90 (4): 1951-1970, first available online on 20 June 2016. Under embargo. Embargo end date: 20 June 2017. The final publication is available at Springer via https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11277-016-3432-4This paper is concerned with a wireless multiple-antenna system operating in multiple-input multiple-output (MIMO) fading channels with channel state information being known at both transmitter and receiver. By spatiotemporal subchannel selection and power control, it aims to minimize the average transmit power (ATP) of the MIMO system while achieving an exponential type of average bit error rate (BER) for each data stream. Under the constraints on each subchannel that individual outage probability and average BER are given, based on a traditional upper bound and a dynamic upper bound of Q function, two closed-form ATP expressions are derived, respectively, which can result in two different power allocation schemes. Numerical results are provided to validate the theoretical analysis, and show that the power allocation scheme with the dynamic upper bound can achieve more power savings than the one with the traditional upper bound.Peer reviewe
J D Bernal: philosophy, politics and the science of science
This paper is an examination of the philosophical and political legacy of John Desmond Bernal. It addresses the evidence of an emerging consensus on Bernal based on the recent biography of Bernal by Andrew Brown and the reviews it has received. It takes issue with this view of Bernal, which tends to be admiring of his scientific contribution, bemused by his sexuality, condescending to his philosophy and hostile to his politics. This article is a critical defence of his philosophical and political position
J D Bernal: philosophy, politics and the science of science
This paper is an examination of the philosophical and political legacy of John Desmond Bernal. It addresses the evidence of an emerging consensus on Bernal based on the recent biography of Bernal by Andrew Brown and the reviews it has received. It takes issue with this view of Bernal, which tends to be admiring of his scientific contribution, bemused by his sexuality, condescending to his philosophy and hostile to his politics. This article is a critical defence of his philosophical and political position
Extended warm and dense gas towards W49A: starburst conditions in our Galaxy?
The star formation rates in starburst galaxies are orders of magnitude higher
than in local star-forming regions, and the origin of this difference is not
well understood. We use sub-mm spectral line maps to characterize the physical
conditions of the molecular gas in the luminous Galactic star-forming region
W49A and compare them with the conditions in starburst galaxies. We probe the
temperature and density structure of W49A using H_2CO and HCN line ratios over
a 2'x2' (6.6x6.6 pc) field with an angular resolution of 15" (~0.8 pc) provided
by the JCMT Spectral Legacy Survey. We analyze the rotation diagrams of lines
with multiple transitions with corrections for optical depth and beam dilution,
and estimate excitation temperatures and column densities. Comparing the
observed line intensity ratios with non-LTE radiative transfer models, our
results reveal an extended region (about 1'x1', equivalent to ~3x3 pc at the
distance of W49A) of warm (> 100 K) and dense (>10^5 cm^-3) molecular gas, with
a mass of 2x10^4 - 2x10^5 M_Sun (by applying abundances derived for other
regions of massive star-formation). These temperatures and densities in W49A
are comparable to those found in clouds near the center of the Milky Way and in
starburst galaxies. The highly excited gas is likely to be heated via shocks
from the stellar winds of embedded, O-type stars or alternatively due to UV
irradiation, or possibly a combination of these two processes. Cosmic rays,
X-ray irradiation and gas-grain collisional heating are less likely to be the
source of the heating in the case of W49A.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A; 11 pages, 9 figure
Multiplicative Multi-Attribute Utility Function for the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 (HUI3) System: A Technical Report
This paper is of interest to analysts, policy makers and decision makers involved with descriptive clinical studies, clinical trials, programme evaluations, measuring population health, and planning assessments. It describes a recently developed system for measuring the overall health status and health-related quality of life of individuals, clinical groups and general populations. The measurement system is the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 (HUI3) and it consists of two components: the health status classification system; and the preference-based scoring system. The health status classification system was first published in 1995 and this paper focuses on the scoring system. The HUI3 is the latest member of the Health Utilities Index family developed by researchers at McMaster University during the past 20 years. HUI3 is a brief but comprehensive system for describing the health status of individuals and for assigning a preference score to that health status. The HUI3 is generic in the sense that it is designed to be applicable to all people. The scores are based on preference measures from a random sample of the general population. HUI3 is founded directly on multi-attribute utility theory. These scores are, therefore, referred to as utility scores and represent community preferences. Community preferences are considered an appropriate source of preferences for calculating quality-adjusted life years (QALYs) for use in cost-effectiveness or cost-utility analyses and for use in the measurement of population health. The HUI3 is also useful in clinical studies as a method of describing the health status of patients and tracking it over time. The HUI has been included in studies being undertaken by more than one hundred investigative teams based in major centres around the world. The HUI3 has also been included in every major Canadian general population health survey since 1990. The early inclusion of the HUI3 in population health surveys has placed Canada in the forefront of regional and local surveillance of population health, including health-related quality of life (HRQL) and health-adjusted life expectancy (HALE) measures. This technical report provides the first public release of the multiplicative multi-attribute utility function (MAUF) for the Health Utilities Index Mark 3 (HUI3). The report provides details of the study design, preference survey results, and modelling techniques. It also includes an appendix which presents the HUI3 utility scoring systems concisely for use by data managers and analysts. The purpose of the HUI3 MAUF is to provide a formula for calculating scores for all of the 972,000 health states defined by the HUI3 health status classification system. This report presents a HUI3 utility function on the conventional Dead = 0.00 to Perfect Health = 1.00 scale. This is the most appropriate scale for calculating aggregated indices of morbidity and mortality such as quality-adjusted life years (QALYs). Evidence to date indicates that the HUI3 measurement system is acceptable, reliable, valid, responsive and useful.
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