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Fluctuating thermal environments of shallow-water rocky reefs in the Gulf of California, Mexico.
As part of a broad-scale study of the biogeography of rocky reefs in the Gulf of California, Mexico (GOC), we collected a continuous 1-yr temperature time series at ~5 m water depth at 16 sites spanning 5° of latitude and ~700 km along the western boundary of the basin. Throughout the region, thermal conditions were most variable in summer with fluctuations concentrated at diurnal and semi-diurnal frequencies, likely associated with solar and wind forcing and vertical water column oscillations forced by internal waves. Temperatures in winter were less variable than in summer, and minimum temperatures also differed among sites. Thermal variability integrated across the diurnal and semi-diurnal frequency bands was greatest near the Midriff Islands in the northern GOC and decreased toward the southern sites. Diurnal variability was greater than semi-diurnal variability at 13 of the 16 sites. A statistic-of-extremes analysis indicated shortest return times for cooling events in summer, and reef organisms at many of the sites may experience anomalous 2 to 5 °C cooling events multiple times per month. The significant extent of local temperature variability may play important roles in limiting species occurrences among sites across this biogeographic region
Theory of plasma contactors in ground-based experiments and low Earth orbit
Previous theoretical work on plasma contactors as current collectors has fallen into two categories: collisionless double layer theory (describing space charge limited contactor clouds) and collisional quasineutral theory. Ground based experiments at low current are well explained by double layer theory, but this theory does not scale well to power generation by electrodynamic tethers in space, since very high anode potentials are needed to draw a substantial ambient electron current across the magnetic field in the absence of collisions (or effective collisions due to turbulence). Isotropic quasineutral models of contactor clouds, extending over a region where the effective collision frequency upsilon sub e exceeds the electron cyclotron frequency omega sub ce, have low anode potentials, but would collect very little ambient electron current, much less than the emitted ion current. A new model is presented, for an anisotropic contactor cloud oriented along the magnetic field, with upsilon sub e less than omega sub ce. The electron motion along the magnetic field is nearly collisionless, forming double layers in that direction, while across the magnetic field the electrons diffuse collisionally and the potential profile is determined by quasineutrality. Using a simplified expression for upsilon sub e due to ion acoustic turbulence, an analytic solution has been found for this model, which should be applicable to current collection in space. The anode potential is low and the collected ambient electron current can be several times the emitted ion current
An analytical and experimental evaluation of a Fresnel lens solar concentrator
An analytical and experimental evaluation of line focusing Fresnel lenses with application potential in the 200 to 370 C range was studied. Analytical techniques were formulated to assess the solar transmission and imaging properties of a grooves down lens. Experimentation was based on a 56 cm wide, f/1.0 lens. A Sun tracking heliostat provided a nonmoving solar source. Measured data indicated more spreading at the profile base than analytically predicted, resulting in a peak concentration 18 percent lower than the computed peak of 57. The measured and computed transmittances were 85 and 87 percent, respectively. Preliminary testing with a subsequent lens indicated that modified manufacturing techniques corrected the profile spreading problem and should enable improved analytical experimental correlation
Noise data for a twin-engine commercial jet aircraft flying conventional, steep, and two-segment approaches
Center-line noise measurements of a twin-engine commercial jet aircraft were made during steep landing approach profiles, and during two-segment approach profiles for comparison with similar measurements made during conventional approaches. The steep and two-segment approaches showed significant noise reductions when compared with the -3 deg base line. The measured noise data were also used to develop a method for estimating the noise under the test aircraft at thrust and altitude conditions typical of current landing procedures and of landing procedures under development for the Advanced Air Traffic Control System
EAGLE ISS - A modular twin-channel integral-field near-IR spectrograph
The ISS (Integral-field Spectrograph System) has been designed as part of the
EAGLE Phase A Instrument Study for the E-ELT. It consists of two input channels
of 1.65x1.65 arcsec field-of-view, each reconfigured spatially by an
image-slicing integral-field unit to feed a single near-IR spectrograph using
cryogenic volume-phase-holographic (VPH) gratings to disperse the image
spectrally. A 4k x 4k array detector array records the dispersed images. The
optical design employs anamorphic magnification, image slicing, VPH gratings
scanned with a novel cryo-mechanism and a three-lens camera. The mechanical
implementation features IFU optics in Zerodur, a modular bench structure and a
number of high-precision cryo-mechanisms.Comment: 12 pages, to be published in Proc SPIE 7735: Ground-based & Airborne
Instrumentation for Astronomy II
Nonlinear dynamics, rectification, and phase locking for particles on symmetrical two-dimensional periodic substrates with dc and circular ac drives
We investigate the dynamical motion of particles on a two-dimensional
symmetric periodic substrate in the presence of both a dc drive along a
symmetry direction of the periodic substrate and an additional circular ac
drive. For large enough ac drives, the particle orbit encircles one or more
potential maxima of the periodic substrate. In this case, when an additional
increasing dc drive is applied in the longitudinal direction, the longitudinal
velocity increases in a series of discrete steps that are integer multiples of
the lattice constant of the substrate times the frequency. Fractional steps can
also occur. These integer and fractional steps correspond to distinct stable
dynamical orbits. A number of these phases also show a rectification in the
positive or negative transverse direction where a non-zero transverse velocity
occurs in the absence of a dc transverse drive. We map out the phase diagrams
of the regions of rectification as a function of ac amplitude, and find a
series of tongues. Most of the features, including the steps in the
longitudinal velocity and the transverse rectification, can be captured with a
simple toy model and by arguments from nonlinear maps. We have also
investigated the effects of thermal disorder and incommensuration on the
rectification phenomena, and find that for increasing disorder, the
rectification regions are gradually smeared and the longitudinal velocity steps
are no longer flat but show a linearly increasing velocity.Comment: 14 pages, 17 postscript figure
Fractal to Nonfractal Phase Transition in the Dielectric Breakdown Model
A fast method is presented for simulating the dielectric-breakdown model
using iterated conformal mappings. Numerical results for the dimension and for
corrections to scaling are in good agreement with the recent RG prediction of
an upper critical , at which a transition occurs between branching
fractal clusters and one-dimensional nonfractal clusters.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures; corrections to scaling include
Barriers and Facilitators of Access to Early Intervention for Families With Children With Developmental Disabilities
Early identification and early intervention (EI) is important for families of children with developmental disabilities (DD). Access to EI has been shown to improve a range of child and family outcomes and is advocated in international policy. However, there are significant concerns regarding both the timeliness and levels of access to EI. The present review aimed to identify barriers and facilitators of access to EI. Methods: A literature review of research on the identification of needs and access to EI for families of children with DD was conducted. A general pathway of accessing EI, depicting the logical sequence of accessing support, was used to synthesise evidence on barriers and facilitators of access across three key phases: recognition of potential need; screening and/or formal identification of need; and access to EI. Results: Various factors which influenced the process of accessing EI were identified, such as system-wide processes, service design, referral procedures, funding streams, policies, and characteristics of the child, family and clinicians. Factors identified acted as barriers, facilitators, or modifiers of the process of accessing EI. Implications: Our results indicate that multiple factors appear to influence access to EI. Implications for the provision of EI and support for families of children with DD will be discussed in relation to facilitating access for families
Community Detection as an Inference Problem
We express community detection as an inference problem of determining the
most likely arrangement of communities. We then apply belief propagation and
mean-field theory to this problem, and show that this leads to fast, accurate
algorithms for community detection.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
The ground state of a class of noncritical 1D quantum spin systems can be approximated efficiently
We study families H_n of 1D quantum spin systems, where n is the number of
spins, which have a spectral gap \Delta E between the ground-state and
first-excited state energy that scales, asymptotically, as a constant in n. We
show that if the ground state |\Omega_m> of the hamiltonian H_m on m spins,
where m is an O(1) constant, is locally the same as the ground state
|\Omega_n>, for arbitrarily large n, then an arbitrarily good approximation to
the ground state of H_n can be stored efficiently for all n. We formulate a
conjecture that, if true, would imply our result applies to all noncritical 1D
spin systems. We also include an appendix on quasi-adiabatic evolutions.Comment: 9 pages, 1 eps figure, minor change
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