8,858 research outputs found
Studies on the generative reproduction of grapevine powdery mildew (Uncinula necator BERK.)
Morphology and factors influencing the development of Uncinula necator fruit bodies were studied.The resistance levels of hostplants and the amount of cleistothecia on their leaves were significantly correlated under field conditions.The number of cleistothecia was about 80 % lower on greenhouse plants than on field-grown vines with similar susceptibility.An UV irradiation (2 h) did not induce the opening of the cleistothecia after cold storage, neither did light or darkness. A longer UV treatment (5 h), however, decreased the percentage of open cleistothecia.Liquid water was essential for the opening process. An atmosphere with a 100 % relative humidity was not sufficient.The fruit bodies opened readily at +22 °C, but not at +5 °C and below.Cleistothecia contained up to 6 asci with an average content of 6 ascospores. About 50 % of the ascospores had still their full vitality after 6-weeks cold storage
The Problem of Mission Creep: Argumentation Theory meets Military History
At the outset ‘mission creep’ is a military phenomenon, denoting uncontrolled and unintended mission development. Even the best-laid plans may become obsolete if they run against the facts on the ground, and mission creep may result. Mission creep also plagues arguments, as when arguments end up in unrelated topics, larger targets, or clusters of topics. Our paper explores possible mutual benefits of applying the resources of argumentation theory and military theory to one another
Ages for illustrative field stars using gyrochronology: viability, limitations and errors
We here develop an improved way of using a rotating star as a clock, set it
using the Sun, and demonstrate that it keeps time well. This technique, called
gyrochronology, permits the derivation of ages for solar- and late-type main
sequence stars using only their rotation periods and colors. The technique is
clarified and developed here, and used to derive ages for illustrative groups
of nearby, late-type field stars with measured rotation periods. We first
demonstrate the reality of the interface sequence, the unifying feature of the
rotational observations of cluster and field stars that makes the technique
possible, and extends it beyond the proposal of Skumanich by specifying the
mass dependence of rotation for these stars. We delineate which stars it cannot
currently be used on. We then calibrate the age dependence using the Sun. The
errors are propagated to understand their dependence on color and period.
Representative age errors associated with the technique are estimated at ~15%
(plus possible systematic errors) for late-F, G, K, & early-M stars. Ages
derived via gyrochronology for the Mt. Wilson stars are shown to be in good
agreement with chromospheric ages for all but the bluest stars, and probably
superior. Gyro ages are then calculated for each of the active main sequence
field stars studied by Strassmeier and collaborators where other ages are not
available. These are shown to be mostly younger than 1Gyr, with a median age of
365Myr. The sample of single, late-type main sequence field stars assembled by
Pizzolato and collaborators is then assessed, and shown to have gyro ages
ranging from under 100Myr to several Gyr, and a median age of 1.2Gyr. Finally,
we demonstrate that the individual components of the three wide binaries
XiBooAB, 61CygAB, & AlphaCenAB yield substantially the same gyro ages.Comment: 58 pages, 18 color figures, accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journal; Age uncertainties slightly modified upon correcting an
algebraic error in Section
Epistemic Vigilance
Humans massively depend on communication with others, but this leaves them open to the risk of being accidentally or intentionally misinformed. To ensure that, despite this risk, communication remains advantageous, humans have, we claim, a suite of cognitive mechanisms for epistemic vigilance. Here we outline this claim and consider some of the ways in which epistemic vigilance works in mental and social life by surveying issues, research and theories in different domains of philosophy, linguistics, cognitive psychology and the social sciences
Color-Induced Displacement double stars in SDSS
We report the first successful application of the astrometric color-induced
displacement technique (CID, the displacement of the photocenter between
different bandpasses due to a varying contribution of differently colored
components to the total light), originally proposed by Wielen (1996) for
discovering unresolved binary stars. Using the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS)
Data Release 1 with 2.5 million stars brighter than 21m in the u and g bands,
we select 419 candidate binary stars with CID greater than 0.5 arcsec. The SDSS
colors of the majority of these candidates are consistent with binary systems
including a white dwarf and any main sequence star with spectral type later
than ~K7. The astrometric CID method discussed here is complementary to the
photometric selection of binary stars in SDSS discussed by Smolcic et al.
(2004), but there is considerable overlap (15%) between the two samples of
selected candidates. This overlap testifies both to the physical soundness of
both methods, as well as to the astrometric and photometric quality of SDSS
data.Comment: submitted to A&A, 13 pages, 6 figure
The orbit of the brown dwarf binary Gl 569B
We present photometric, astrometric and spectroscopic observations of the
nearby (9.8 pc) low-mass binary Gl 569Bab (in turn being a companion to the
early-M star Gl 569A), made with the Keck adaptive optics facility. Having
observed Gl 569Bab since August 1999, we are able to see orbital motion and to
determine the orbital parameters of the pair. We find the orbital period to be
892 +/- 25 days, the semi-major axis to be 0.90 +/- 0.02 AU, the eccentricity
to be 0.32 +/- 0.02 and the inclination of the system to be 34+/- 3 degrees
(1-sigma). The total mass is found to be 0.123 (-0.022/+0.027) Msun (3-sigma).
In addition, we have obtained low resolution (R=1500-1700) near-infrared
spectra of each of the components in the J- and K-bands. We determine the
spectral types of the objects to be M8.5V (Gl 569Ba) and M9V (Gl 569Bb) with an
uncertainty of half a subclass. We also present new J- and K-band photometry
which allows us to accurately place the objects in the HR diagram. Most likely
the binary system is comprised of two brown dwarfs with a mass ratio of 0.89
and with an age of approximately 300 Myr.Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, 28 pages, figures include
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