330 research outputs found
Effect of changing flushing rates on development of late summer Aphanizomenon and Microcystis populations in a shallow lake, Müggelsee, Berlin, Germany
Müggelsee is a shallow lake in the suburban region of Berlin, Germany and included in the lake-river system of the river Spree, having an average annual retention time of 42 days which increases to > 100 days in the summer period. The summer equilibrium phase of phytoplankton results in the development of an Aphanizomenon flos-aquae dominated assemblage which, in some years, progresses towards a Microcystis dominated assemblage. Continuously high flushing (in range of 1%-2% of lake volume day (-1) does not prevent Aphanizomenon development but its biomass remains at low levels as compared to other summers with smaller average flushing. In such years (flushing remains < 1% of lake volume day (-1)) a flushing pulse of 1%-2% of lake volume day (-1) has been effectual to break development of cyanoprokaryotes and to decrease their biomass to low levels. The major reason of the decrease is not the dilution effect of flushing pulses but the intolerance of cyanoprokaryotes to sudden environmental changes. Considering the case of Müggelsee from the point of view of reservoir ecology it can be concluded that reservoirs with pulsed use are less exposed to development of cyanoprokaryotes if pulses occur in a sufficient frequency (20-30 days) and their intensity falls to the range of 1%-2% of reservoir volume day(-1). Reservoirs with continuous take off of water are more exposed to cyanoprokaryota development with all the consequences for water use
Effects Of Cold Working Under Pressure On Subsequent Yield
A method utilizing high pressure fluid environments is described whereby a three-dimensional subsequent yield surface was determined for 304 stainless steel cylindrical parent specimens of this material were prestrained in axial compression under fluid pressure and then small sub specimens were sectioned from these parent specimens. Finite element techniques were used to optimize the parent specimen size so that a zone of uniform axial stress woidd result during the prestraining. Longitudinal strains in this zone were monitored during the prestraining and the subspecimens were cut from this region in a manner that did not allow the machining to appreciably affect the properties of the specimens. Following this, conventional tension and compression tests were performed on the subspecimens in various fluid pressure environments to determine the yield strengths for the cold-worked material in the direction of the principal axis of prestrain and the two transverse axes. These data are used to construct the three-dimensional subsequent yield surface which clearly illustrates the effects on 304 stainless steel, of cold working under pressure. © 1972 by ASME
B-Spline Snakes: A Flexible Tool for Parametric Contour Detection
We present a novel formulation for B-spline snakes that can be used as a tool for fast and intuitive contour outlining. We start with a theoretical argument in favor of splines in the traditional formulation by showing that the optimal, curvature-constrained snake is a cubic spline, irrespective of the form of the external energy field. Unfortunately, such regularized snakes suffer from slow convergence speed because of a large number of control points, as well as from difficulties in determining the weight factors associated to the internal energies of the curve. We therefore propose an alternative formulation in which the intrinsic scale of the spline model is adjusted a priori; this leads to a reduction of the number of parameters to be optimized and eliminates the need for internal energies (i.e., the regularization term). In other words, we are now controlling the elasticity of the spline implicitly and rather intuitively by varying the spacing between the spline knots. The theory is embedded into a multi-resolution formulation demonstrating improved stability in noisy image environments. Validation results are presented, comparing the traditional snake using internal energies and the proposed approach without internal energies, showing the similar performance of the latter. Several biomedical examples of applications are included to illustrate the versatility of the method
The Large Quasar Reference Frame (LQRF) - an optical representation of the ICRS
The large number and all-sky distribution of quasars from different surveys,
along with their presence in large, deep astrometric catalogs,enables the
building of an optical materialization of the ICRS following its defining
principles. Namely: that it is kinematically non-rotating with respect to the
ensemble of distant extragalactic objects; aligned with the mean equator and
dynamical equinox of J2000; and realized by a list of adopted coordinates of
extragalatic sources. Starting from the updated and presumably complete LQAC
list of QSOs, the initial optical positions of those quasars are found in the
USNO B1.0 and GSC2.3 catalogs, and from the SDSS DR5. The initial positions are
next placed onto UCAC2-based reference frames, following by an alignment with
the ICRF, to which were added the most precise sources from the VLBA calibrator
list and the VLA calibrator list - when reliable optical counterparts exist.
Finally, the LQRF axes are inspected through spherical harmonics, contemplating
to define right ascension, declination and magnitude terms. The LQRF contains
J2000 referred equatorial coordinates for 100,165 quasars, well represented
across the sky, from -83.5 to +88.5 degrees in declination, and with 10 arcmin
being the average distance between adjacent elements. The global alignment with
the ICRF is 1.5 mas, and the individual position accuracies are represented by
a Poisson distribution that peaks at 139 mas in right ascension and 130 mas in
declination. It is complemented by redshift and photometry information from the
LQAC. The LQRF is designed to be an astrometric frame, but it is also the basis
for the GAIA mission initial quasars' list, and can be used as a test bench for
quasars' space distribution and luminosity function studies.Comment: 23 pages, 23 figures, 6 tables Accepted for publication by Astronomy
& Astrophysics, on 25 May 200
The Na I D resonance lines in main sequence late-type stars
We study the sodium D lines (D1: 5895.92 \AA; D2: 5889.95 \AA) in late-type
dwarf stars. The stars have spectral types between F6 and M5.5 (B-V between
0.457 and 1.807) and metallicity between [Fe/H] = -0.82 and 0.6. We obtained
medium resolution echelle spectra using the 2.15-m telescope at the argentinian
observatory CASLEO. The observations have been performed periodically since
1999. The spectra were calibrated in wavelength and in flux. A definition of
the pseudo-continuum level is found for all our observations. We also define a
continuum level for calibration purposes. The equivalent width of the D lines
is computed in detail for all our spectra and related to the colour index (B-V)
of the stars. When possible, we perform a careful comparison with previous
studies. Finally, we construct a spectral index (R_D') as the ratio between the
flux in the D lines, and the bolometric flux. We find that, once corrected for
the photospheric contribution, this index can be used as a chromospheric
activity indicator in stars with a high level of activity. Additionally, we
find that combining some of our results, we obtain a method to calibrate in
flux stars of unknown colour.Comment: 12 pages, including 14 figures and 4 tables. Accepted for publication
in MNRA
Spectrum Analysis of Bright Kepler Gamma Doradus Candidate Stars
Ground-based spectroscopic follow-up observations of the pulsating stars
observed by the Kepler satellite mission are needed for their asteroseismic
modelling. We aim to derive the fundamental parameters for a sample of 26 Gamma
Doradus candidate stars observed by the Kepler satellite mission to accomplish
one of the required preconditions for their asteroseismic modelling and to
compare our results with the types of pulsators expected from the existing
light curve analysis. We use the spectrum synthesis method to derive the
fundamental parameters like Teff, logg, [M/H], and vsini from newly obtained
spectra and compute the spectral energy distribution from literature photometry
to get an independent measure of Teff. We find that most of the derived Teff
values agree with the values given in the Kepler Input Catalogue. According to
their positions in the HR-diagram three stars are expected Gamma Dor stars, ten
stars are expected Delta Sct stars, and seven stars are possibly Delta Sct
stars at the hot border of the instability strip. Four stars in our sample are
found to be spectroscopic binary candidates and four stars have very low
metallicity where two show about solar C abundance. Six of the 10 stars located
in the Delta Sct instability region of the HR-diagram show both Delta Sct and
Gamma Dor-type oscillations in their light curves implying that Gamma Dor-like
oscillations are much more common among the Delta Sct stars than predicted by
theory. Moreover, seven stars showing periods in the Delta Sct and the Delta
Sct-Gamma Dor range in their light curves are located in the HR-diagram left of
the blue edge of the theoretical Delta Sct instability strip. The consistency
of these findings with recent investigations based on high-quality Kepler data
implies the need for a revision of the theoretical Gamma Dor and Delta Sct
instability strips.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, 7 tables; accepted for publication in MNRA
Mg II h + k emission lines as stellar activity indicators of main sequence F-K stars
The main purpose of this study is to use the IUE spectra in the analysis of
magnetic activity of main sequence F-K stars. Combining IUE observations of
MgII and optical spectroscopy of Ca II, the registry of ctivity of stars can be
extended in time. We retrieved all the high-resolution spectra of F, G, and K
main sequence stars observed by IUE (i.e. 1623 spectra of 259 F to K dwarf
stars). We obtained the continuum surface flux near the Mg II h+k lines near
2800 \AA and the MgII line-core surface flux from the IUE spectra. We obtained
a relation between the mean continuum flux near the MgII lines with the colour
of the star. For a set of 117 nearly simultaneous observations of Mg II
and Ca II fluxes of 21 F5 to K3 main sequence stars, we obtained a colour
dependent relation between the Mount Wilson CaII S-index and the MgII emission
line-core flux. As an application of this calibration, we computed the Mount
Wilson index for all the dF to dK stars which have high resolution IUE spectra.
For some of the most frequently observed main sequence stars, we analysed the
Mount Wilson index S from the IUE spectra, together with the ones derived from
visible spectra. We confirm the cyclic chromospheric activity of epsilon Eri
(HD 22049) and beta Hydri (HD 2151), and we find a magnetic cycle in alpha Cen
B (HD 128621). Complete abstract in the paper.Comment: 10 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Correlating corneal arcus with atherosclerosis in familial hypercholesterolemia
Abstract Background A relationship between corneal arcus and atherosclerosis has long been suspected but is controversial. The homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia patients in this study present a unique opportunity to assess this issue. They have both advanced atherosclerosis and corneal arcus. Methods This is a cross-sectional study of 17 patients homozygous for familial hypercholesterolemia presenting to the Clinical Center of the National Institutes of Health. Plasma lipoproteins, circumferential extent of arcus, thoracic aorta and coronary calcific atherosclerosis score, and Achilles tendon width were measured at the National Institutes of Health. Results Patients with corneal arcus had higher scores for calcific atherosclerosis (mean 2865 compared to 412), cholesterol-year score (mean 11830 mg-yr/dl compared to 5707 mg-yr/dl), and Achilles tendon width (mean 2.54 cm compared to 1.41 cm) than those without. Corneal arcus and Achilles tendon width were strongly correlated and predictive of each other. Although corneal arcus was correlated with calcific atherosclerosis (r = 0.67; p = 0.004), it was not as highly correlated as was the Achilles tendon width (r = 0.855; p Conclusion Corneal arcus reflects widespread tissue lipid deposition and is correlated with both calcific atherosclerosis and xanthomatosis in these patients. Patients with more severe arcus tend to have more severe calcific atherosclerosis. Corneal arcus is not as good an indicator of calcific atherosclerosis as Achilles tendon thickness, but its presence suggests increased atherosclerosis in these hypercholesterolemic patients.</p
- …