1,071 research outputs found
Reprint of: Preparation and UV/visible spectra of fullerenes C60 and C70
AbstractThe preparation and isolation of pure fullerene-60 and fullerene-70 is described. The solution UV/visible absorption spectra of the two molecules are presented
Post-Chernobyl 134Cs and 137Cs Levels at Some Localities in Northern Canada
Samples of lichen, moss and caribou meat from the high and central arctic regions of Canada were measured for 137Cs due to the Chernobyl accident of April 1986. They were compared to lichen samples from the boreal area of Wood Buffalo National Park, Alberta, and to moss samples from the temperate Niagara Escarpment of southern Ontario. Lichens from Ellesmere Island and mosses from the Niagara Escarpment had no detectable Chernobyl 137Cs. Lichens from the central Arctic showed a 137Cs increase of about 14% above the persistent burden from the past atmospheric nuclear weapons testing. Mosses and lichens from Wood Buffalo National Park showed an average 137Cs increase of 19% due to Chernobyl fallout. In absolute terms, the contribution of Chernobyl fallout over Canadian northern regions was non-significant compared to the depositions experienced by countries such as the U.S.S.R., Sweden, Norway and some Central European countries.Key words: Chernobyl, 134.137Cesium, fallout radionuclides in northern Canada, lichen samples, caribou samplesMots clés: Chernobyl, 1343137Césium, retombées de radionucléides dans le Nord canadien, échantillons de lichens, échantillons de caribo
Phylogenetic relationships of African Caecilians (Amphibia: Gymnophiona): insights from mitochondrial rRNA gene sequences
Africa (excluding the Seychelles) has a diverse caecilian fauna, including the endemic family Scolecomorphidae and six endemic genera of the more cosmopolitan Caeciliidae. Previous molecular phylogenetic studies have not included any caecilians from the African mainland. Partial 12S and 16S mitochondrial gene sequences were obtained for two species of the endemic African Scolecomorphidae and five species and four genera of African Caeciliids, aligned against previously reported sequences for 16 caecilian species, and analysed using parsimony, maximum likelihood, Bayesian and distance methods. Results are in agreement with traditional taxonomy in providing support for the monophyly of the African Caeciliid genera Boulengerula and Schistometopum and for the Scolecomorphidae. They disagree in indicating that the Caeciliidae is paraphyletic with respect to the Scolecomorphidae. Although more data from morphology and/or molecules will be required to resolve details of the interrelationships of the African caecilian genera, the data provide strong support for at least two origins of caecilians in which the eye is reduced and covered with bone, and do not support the hypotheses that the caecilian assemblages of Africa, and of East and of West Africa are monophyletic
Universal finite-size scaling analysis of Ising models with long-range interactions at the upper critical dimensionality: Isotropic case
We investigate a two-dimensional Ising model with long-range interactions
that emerge from a generalization of the magnetic dipolar interaction in spin
systems with in-plane spin orientation. This interaction is, in general,
anisotropic whereby in the present work we focus on the isotropic case for
which the model is found to be at its upper critical dimensionality. To
investigate the critical behavior the temperature and field dependence of
several quantities are studied by means of Monte Carlo simulations. On the
basis of the Privman-Fisher hypothesis and results of the renormalization group
the numerical data are analyzed in the framework of a finite-size scaling
analysis and compared to finite-size scaling functions derived from a
Ginzburg-Landau-Wilson model in zero mode (mean-field) approximation. The
obtained excellent agreement suggests that at least in the present case the
concept of universal finite-size scaling functions can be extended to the upper
critical dimensionality.Comment: revtex4, 10 pages, 5 figures, 1 tabl
On String Theory Duals of Lifshitz-like Fixed Points
We present type IIB supergravity solutions which are expected to be dual to
certain Lifshitz-like fixed points with anisotropic scale invariance. They are
expected to describe a class of D3-D7 systems and their finite temperature
generalizations are straightforward. We show that there exist solutions that
interpolate between these anisotropic solutions in the IR and the standard AdS5
solutions in the UV. This predicts anisotropic RG flows from familiar isotropic
fixed points to anisotropic ones. In our case, these RG flows are triggered by
a non-zero theta-angle in Yang-Mills theories that linearly depends on one of
the spatial coordinates. We study the perturbations around these backgrounds
and discuss the possibility of instability. We also holographically compute
their thermal entropies, viscosities, and entanglement entropies.Comment: 47 pages, 4 figure
Impact of Salmonid alphavirus infection in diploid and triploid Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) fry
With increasing interest in the use of triploid salmon in commercial aquaculture, gaining an understanding of how economically important pathogens affect triploid stocks is important. To compare the susceptibility of diploid and triploid Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) to viral pathogens, fry were experimentally infected with Salmonid alphavirus sub-type 1 (SAV1), the aetiological agent of pancreas disease (PD) affecting Atlantic salmon aquaculture in Europe. Three groups of fry were exposed to the virus via different routes of infection: intraperitoneal injection (IP), bath immersion, or cohabitation (co-hab) and untreated fry were used as a control group. Mortalities commenced in the co-hab challenged diploid and triploid fish from 11 days post infection (dpi), and the experiment was terminated at 17 dpi. Both diploid and triploid IP challenged groups had similar levels of cumulative mortality at the end of the experimental period (41.1 % and 38.9 % respectively), and these were significantly higher (p < 0.01) than for the other challenge routes. A TaqMan-based quantitative PCR was used to assess SAV load in the heart, a main target organ of the virus, and also liver, which does not normally display any pathological changes during clinical infections, but exhibited severe degenerative lesions in the present study. The median viral RNA copy number was higher in diploid fish compared to triploid fish in both the heart and the liver of all three challenged groups. However, a significant statistical difference (p < 0.05) was only apparent in the liver of the co-hab groups. Diploid fry also displayed significantly higher levels of pancreatic and myocardial degeneration than triploids. This study showed that both diploid and triploid fry are susceptible to experimental SAV1 infection. The lower virus load seen in the triploids compared to the diploids may possibly be related to differences in cell metabolism between the two groups, however, further investigation is necessary to confirm this and also to assess the outcome of PD outbreaks in other developmental stages of the fish when maintained in commercial production systems
Theory of band gap bowing of disordered substitutional II-VI and III-V semiconductor alloys
For a wide class of technologically relevant compound III-V and II-VI
semiconductor materials AC and BC mixed crystals (alloys) of the type
A(x)B(1-x)C can be realized. As the electronic properties like the bulk band
gap vary continuously with x, any band gap in between that of the pure AC and
BC systems can be obtained by choosing the appropriate concentration x, granted
that the respective ratio is miscible and thermodynamically stable. In most
cases the band gap does not vary linearly with x, but a pronounced bowing
behavior as a function of the concentration is observed. In this paper we show
that the electronic properties of such A(x)B(1-x)C semiconductors and, in
particular, the band gap bowing can well be described and understood starting
from empirical tight binding models for the pure AC and BC systems. The
electronic properties of the A(x)B(1-x)C system can be described by choosing
the tight-binding parameters of the AC or BC system with probabilities x and
1-x, respectively. We demonstrate this by exact diagonalization of finite but
large supercells and by means of calculations within the established coherent
potential approximation (CPA). We apply this treatment to the II-VI system
Cd(x)Zn(1-x)Se, to the III-V system In(x)Ga(1-x)As and to the III-nitride
system Ga(x)Al(1-x)N.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
UV and EUV Instruments
We describe telescopes and instruments that were developed and used for
astronomical research in the ultraviolet (UV) and extreme ultraviolet (EUV)
regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. The wavelength ranges covered by these
bands are not uniquely defined. We use the following convention here: The EUV
and UV span the regions ~100-912 and 912-3000 Angstroem respectively. The
limitation between both ranges is a natural choice, because the hydrogen Lyman
absorption edge is located at 912 Angstroem. At smaller wavelengths,
astronomical sources are strongly absorbed by the interstellar medium. It also
marks a technical limit, because telescopes and instruments are of different
design. In the EUV range, the technology is strongly related to that utilized
in X-ray astronomy, while in the UV range the instruments in many cases have
their roots in optical astronomy. We will, therefore, describe the UV and EUV
instruments in appropriate conciseness and refer to the respective chapters of
this volume for more technical details.Comment: To appear in: Landolt-Boernstein, New Series VI/4A, Astronomy,
Astrophysics, and Cosmology; Instruments and Methods, ed. J.E. Truemper,
Springer-Verlag, Berlin, 201
Open Dielectric Branes
We derive leading terms in the effective actions describing the coupling of
bulk supergravity fields to systems of arbitrary numbers of Dp-branes and
D(p+4)-branes in type IIA/IIB string theory. We use these actions to
investigate the physics of Dp-D(p+4) systems in the presence of weak background
fields. In particular, we construct various solutions describing collections of
Dp-branes blown up into open D(p+2)-branes ending on D(p+4)-branes. The
configurations are stabilized by the presence of background fields and
represent an open-brane analogue of the Myers dielectric effect. To deduce the
D-brane actions, we use supersymmetry to derive operators corresponding to
moments of various conserved currents in the Berkooz-Douglas matrix model of
M-theory in the presence of longitudinal M5-branes and then use dualities to
relate these operators to the worldvolume operators appearing in the
Dp-D(p+4)-brane effective actions.Comment: 55 pages, LaTeX, 6 figures, v2: references adde
Divergent consensuses on Arctic amplification influence on midlatitude severe winter weather
The article of record as published may be found at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41558-019-0662-yWe thank R. Blackport, C. Deser, L. Sun, J. Screen and D. Smith for discussions and
suggested revisions to the manuscript. We also thank J. Screen and L. Sun for model data.
A. Amin helped to create Fig. 2. US CLIVAR logistically and financially supported the
Arctic-Midlatitude Working Group and Arctic Change and its Influence on Mid-Latitude
Climate and Weather workshop that resulted in this article. J.C. is supported by the US
National Science Foundation grants AGS-1657748 and PLR-1504361, 1901352. M.W.
acknowledges funding by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft project no. 268020496–
TRR 172, within the Transregional Collaborative Research Center “Arctic Amplification:
Climate Relevant Atmospheric and Surface Processes, and Feedback Mechanisms (AC)3
”.
T.V. was supported by the Academy of Finland grant 317999. J.O. was supported by the
NOAA Arctic Research Program. J.F. was supported by the Woods Hole Research Center.
S.W. and H.G. are supported by the US DOE Award Number DE-SC0016605. J.Y. was
supported by the Korea Meteorological Administration Research and Development
Program under grant KMI2018-01015 and National Research Foundation grant
NRF_2017R1A2B4007480. D.H. is supported by the Helmholtz Association of German
Research Centers (grant FKZ HRSF-0036, project POLEX). The authors acknowledge the
World Climate Research Programme’s Working Group on Coupled Modelling, which is
responsible for CMIP, and thank the climate modelling groups (listed in Supplementary
Table 1) for producing and making available their model output. For CMIP, the US
Department of Energy’s PCMDI provides coordinating support and led development of
software infrastructure in partnership with the Global Organization for Earth System
Science Portals.The Arctic has warmed more than twice as fast as the global average since the late twentieth century, a phenomenon known as
Arctic amplification (AA). Recently, there have been considerable advances in understanding the physical contributions to AA,
and progress has been made in understanding the mechanisms that link it to midlatitude weather variability. Observational
studies overwhelmingly support that AA is contributing to winter continental cooling. Although some model experiments sup port the observational evidence, most modelling results show little connection between AA and severe midlatitude weather or
suggest the export of excess heating from the Arctic to lower latitudes. Divergent conclusions between model and observational
studies, and even intramodel studies, continue to obfuscate a clear understanding of how AA is influencing midlatitude weather
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