2,350 research outputs found
Dew-worms in white nights: High-latitude light constrains earthworm (Lumbricus terrestris) behaviour at the soil surface
Soil is an effective barrier to light penetration that limits the direct influence of light on belowground organisms. Variation in aboveground light conditions, however, is important to soil-dwelling animals that are periodically active on the soil surface. A prime example is the earthworm Lumbricus terrestris L. (the dew-worm), an ecosystem engineer that emerges nocturnally on the soil surface. In the summer, the northernmost populations of L. terrestris are exposed to a time interval with no daily dark period. During a two-week period preceding the summer solstice, we studied the constraints that boreal night illumination imposes on L. terrestris surface activity by comparing their behaviour under ambient light with artificially-induced darkness. Looking for evidence of geographical divergence in light response, we compared the behaviour of native L. terrestris (Jokioinen, S–W Finland; 60°48′N) with two markedly more southern populations, from Preston (Lancashire, UK; 53°47′N) and Coshocton (Ohio, USA; 40°22′N) where the nights have a period of darkness throughout the year (total latitudinal range ca. 2300 km). Under ambient light conditions, L. terrestris emergence on the soil surface was diminished by half compared with the darkened treatment and it peaked at the darkest period of the night. Also mating rate decreased considerably under ambient light. The native dew-worms were generally the most active under ambient light. They emerged earlier in the evening and ceased their activity later in the morning than dew-worms from the two more southerly populations. The differences in behaviour were, however, significant mainly between native and UK dew-worms. In the darkened treatment, the behaviour of the three earthworm origins did not differ. Under the experimental conditions light condition was the dominant environmental factor controlling surface activity, but elevated night-time air temperature and humidity also encouraged dew-worm emergence without discernible differences among geographical origins. Our results show, that in boreal summer, the high level of night illumination strongly limits soil-surface activity of dew-worms. Considering the important regulatory role of L. terrestris in many ecosystem processes, this can have significant corollaries in dew-worm impacts on the environment. Although evidence for geographical differentiation in behaviour was obtained, the results point to phenotypic flexibility in L. terrestris light response
Paired accelerated arames: The perfect interferometer with everywhere smooth wave amplitudes
Rindler's acceleration-induced partitioning of spacetime leads to a
nature-given interferometer. It accomodates quantum mechanical and wave
mechanical processes in spacetime which in (Euclidean) optics correspond to
wave processes in a ``Mach-Zehnder'' interferometer: amplitude splitting,
reflection, and interference. These processes are described in terms of
amplitudes which behave smoothly across the event horizons of all four Rindler
sectors. In this context there arises quite naturally a complete set of
orthonormal wave packet histories, one of whose key properties is their
"explosivity index". In the limit of low index values the wave packets trace
out fuzzy world lines. By contrast, in the asymptotic limit of high index
values, there are no world lines, not even fuzzy ones. Instead, the wave packet
histories are those of entities with non-trivial internal collapse and
explosion dynamics. Their details are described by the wave processes in the
above-mentioned Mach-Zehnder interferometer. Each one of them is a double slit
interference process. These wave processes are applied to elucidate the
amplification of waves in an accelerated inhomogeneous dielectric. Also
discussed are the properties and relationships among the transition amplitudes
of an accelerated finite-time detector.Comment: 38 pages, RevTex, 10 figures, 4 mathematical tutorials. Html version
of the figures and of related papers available at
http://www.math.ohio-state.edu/~gerlac
Entanglement properties of bound and resonant few-body states
Studying the physics of quantum correlations has gained new interest after it
has become possible to measure entanglement entropies of few body systems in
experiments with ultracold atomic gases. Apart from investigating trapped atom
systems, research on correlation effects in other artificially fabricated
few-body systems, such as quantum dots or electromagnetically trapped ions, is
currently underway or in planning. Generally, the systems studied in these
experiments may be considered as composed of a small number of interacting
elements with controllable and highly tunable parameters, effectively described
by Schr\"odinger equation. In this way, parallel theoretical and experimental
studies of few-body models become possible, which may provide a deeper
understanding of correlation effects and give hints for designing and
controlling new experiments. Of particular interest is to explore the physics
in the strongly correlated regime and in the neighborhood of critical points.
Particle correlations in nanostructures may be characterized by their
entanglement spectrum, i.e. the eigenvalues of the reduced density matrix of
the system partitioned into two subsystems. We will discuss how to determine
the entropy of entanglement spectrum of few-body systems in bound and resonant
states within the same formalism. The linear entropy will be calculated for a
model of quasi-one dimensional Gaussian quantum dot in the lowest energy
states. We will study how the entanglement depends on the parameters of the
system, paying particular attention to the behavior on the border between the
regimes of bound and resonant states.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
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PILGRM: an interactive data-driven discovery platform for expert biologists
PILGRM (the platform for interactive learning by genomics results mining) puts advanced supervised analysis techniques applied to enormous gene expression compendia into the hands of bench biologists. This flexible system empowers its users to answer diverse biological questions that are often outside of the scope of common databases in a data-driven manner. This capability allows domain experts to quickly and easily generate hypotheses about biological processes, tissues or diseases of interest. Specifically PILGRM helps biologists generate these hypotheses by analyzing the expression levels of known relevant genes in large compendia of microarray data. Because PILGRM is data-driven, it complements a user’s knowledge and literature analysis with mining of diverse functional genomic data, thereby generating novel predictions that can drive experimental follow-up. This server is free, does not require registration and is available for use at http://pilgrm.princeton.edu
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