47,564 research outputs found
Mercury in Florida Bay fish: spatial distribution of elevated concentrations and possible linkages to Everglades restoration
Health advisories are now posted in northern Florida Bay, adjacent to the Everglades, warning of high mercury concentrations in some species of gamefish. Highest
concentrations of mercury in both forage fish and gamefish have been measured in the northeastern corner of Florida Bay, adjacent to the dominant freshwater inflows from the Everglades. Thirty percent of spotted seatrout (Cynoscion nebulosus Cuvier, 1830) analyzed exceeded Florida’s no consumption level of 1.5 μg g−1 mercury in this area. We hypothesized that freshwater draining the Everglades served
as the major source of methylmercury entering the food web supporting gamefish. A lack of correlation between mercury concentrations and salinity did not support this hypothesis, although enhanced bioavailability of methylmercury is possible as freshwater is diluted with estuarine water. Stable isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, and
sulfur were measured in fish to elucidate the shared pathways of methylmercury and nutrient elements through the food web. These data support a benthic source of both methylmercury and nutrient elements to gamefish within the eastern bay, as opposed to a dominant watershed source. Ecological characteristics of the eastern bay, including active redox cycling in near-surface sediments without excessive sulfide production are hypothesized to promote methylmercury formation and bioaccumulation in the benthos. Methylmercury may then accumulate in gamefish through a food web supported by benthic microalgae, detritus, pink shrimp (Farfantepenaeus duorarum Burkenroad, 1939), and other epibenthic feeders. Uncertainty remains as to the relative importance of watershed imports of methylmercury from the Everglades and in situ production in the bay, an uncertainty that needs resolution if the effects of Everglades restoration on mercury levels in fish are to be modeled and managed
Resource theory of non-Gaussian operations
Non-Gaussian states and operations are crucial for various
continuous-variable quantum information processing tasks. To quantitatively
understand non-Gaussianity beyond states, we establish a resource theory for
non-Gaussian operations. In our framework, we consider Gaussian operations as
free operations, and non-Gaussian operations as resources. We define
entanglement-assisted non-Gaussianity generating power and show that it is a
monotone that is non-increasing under the set of free super-operations, i.e.,
concatenation and tensoring with Gaussian channels. For conditional unitary
maps, this monotone can be analytically calculated. As examples, we show that
the non-Gaussianity of ideal photon-number subtraction and photon-number
addition equal the non-Gaussianity of the single-photon Fock state. Based on
our non-Gaussianity monotone, we divide non-Gaussian operations into two
classes: (1) the finite non-Gaussianity class, e.g., photon-number subtraction,
photon-number addition and all Gaussian-dilatable non-Gaussian channels; and
(2) the diverging non-Gaussianity class, e.g., the binary phase-shift channel
and the Kerr nonlinearity. This classification also implies that not all
non-Gaussian channels are exactly Gaussian-dilatable. Our resource theory
enables a quantitative characterization and a first classification of
non-Gaussian operations, paving the way towards the full understanding of
non-Gaussianity.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Comparison of Compression Schemes for CLARA
CLARA (Compact Linear Advanced Research Accelerator)at Daresbury Laboratory
is proposed to be the UK's national FEL test facility. The accelerator will be
a ~250 MeV electron linac capable of producing short, high brightness electron
bunches. The machine comprises a 2.5cell RF photocathode gun, one 2 m and three
5 m normal conducting S-band (2998MHz) accelerating structures and a variable
magnetic compression chicane. CLARA will be used as a test bed for novel FEL
configurations. We present a comparison of acceleration and compression schemes
for the candidate machine layout.Comment: 3 pages, 5 figures, IPAC 201
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