197 research outputs found

    Latitude, temperature, and habitat complexity predict predation pressure in eelgrass beds across the Northern Hemisphere

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    Latitudinal gradients in species interactions are widely cited as potential causes or consequences of global patterns of biodiversity. However, mechanistic studies documenting changes in interactions across broad geographic ranges are limited. We surveyed predation intensity on common prey (live amphipods and gastropods) in communities of eelgrass (Zostera marina) at 48 sites across its Northern Hemisphere range, encompassing over 37 degrees of latitude and four continental coastlines. Predation on amphipods declined with latitude on all coasts but declined more strongly along western ocean margins where temperature gradients are steeper. Whereas insitu water temperature at the time of the experiments was uncorrelated with predation, mean annual temperature strongly positively predicted predation, suggesting a more complex mechanism than simply increased metabolic activity at the time of predation. This large-scale biogeographic pattern was modified by local habitat characteristics; predation declined with higher shoot density both among and within sites. Predation rates on gastropods, by contrast, were uniformly low and varied little among sites. The high replication and geographic extent of our study not only provides additional evidence to support biogeographic variation in predation intensity, but also insight into the mechanisms that relate temperature and biogeographic gradients in species interactions

    Influence of GaInP ordering on the electronic quality of concentrator solar cells

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    The ordering phenomenon produces a reduction in the band gap of the GaInP material. Though a drawback for many optoelectronic applications, ordering can be used as an additional degree of material and device engineering freedom. The performance of the record efficiency GaInP/GaAs/Ge multijunction solar cells depends on the quality and design of the GaInP top cell, which can be affected also by ordering. The tradeoff existing between band gap and minority carrier properties, and the possibility of creating a back surface field (BSF) structure based on an order–disorder GaInP heterostructure makes the study of the ordering appealing for solar cell applications. In this work, the ordering dependency with the growth conditions and substrate orientation is studied. The results obtained are presented to enrich and extend the data available in the literature. Then the properties of order–disorder GaInP heterostructures are assessed by using them as BSF in GaInP concentrator solar cells. The external quantum efficiency (EQE) shows a good behavior of these BSF layers, but unexpectedly poor electronic quality in the active layers. Although the exact origin of this problem remains to be known, it is attributed to traps introduced by the ordered/disordered domains matrix or growth native defects. EQE measurements with bias light show a recovery of the minority carrier properties, presumably due to the saturation of the traps

    Deterministic polarization chaos from a laser diode

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    Fifty years after the invention of the laser diode and fourty years after the report of the butterfly effect - i.e. the unpredictability of deterministic chaos, it is said that a laser diode behaves like a damped nonlinear oscillator. Hence no chaos can be generated unless with additional forcing or parameter modulation. Here we report the first counter-example of a free-running laser diode generating chaos. The underlying physics is a nonlinear coupling between two elliptically polarized modes in a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser. We identify chaos in experimental time-series and show theoretically the bifurcations leading to single- and double-scroll attractors with characteristics similar to Lorenz chaos. The reported polarization chaos resembles at first sight a noise-driven mode hopping but shows opposite statistical properties. Our findings open up new research areas that combine the high speed performances of microcavity lasers with controllable and integrated sources of optical chaos.Comment: 13 pages, 5 figure

    Tunable variation of optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles

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    Optical properties of polymer capped gold nanoparticles of various sizes (diameter 3-6 nm) have been studied. We present a new scheme to extract size dependent variation of total dielectric function of gold nanoparticles from measured UV-Vis absorption data. The new scheme can also be used, in principle, for other related systems as well. We show how quantum effect, surface atomic co - ordination and polymer - nanoparticle interface morphology leads to a systematic variation in inter band part of the dielectric function of gold nanoparticles, obtained from the analysis using our new scheme. Careful analysis enables identification of the possible changes to the electronic band structure in such nanoparticles.Comment: 13 pages,7 figures, 1 tabl

    Simulated dynamics of optically pumped dilute nitride 1300 nm spin vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers

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    The authors report a theoretical analysis of optically pumped 1300 nm dilute nitride spin-polarised vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers (VCSELs) using the spin-flip model to determine the regions of stability and instability. The dependence of the output polarisation ellipticity on that of the pump is investigated, and the results are presented in twodimensional contour maps of the pump polarisation against the magnitude of the optical pump. Rich dynamics and various forms of oscillatory behaviour causing self-sustained oscillations in the polarisation of the spin-VCSEL subject to continuouswave pumping have been found because of the competition of the spin-flip processes and birefringence. The authors also reveal the importance of considering both the birefringence rate and the linewidth enhancement factor when engineering a device for high-frequency applications. A very good agreement is found with the experimental results reported by the authors' group. © The Institution of Engineering and Technology 2014

    Fully Gapped Single-Particle Excitations in the Lightly Doped Cuprates

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    The low-energy excitations of the lightly doped cuprates were studied by angle-resolved photoemission spectroscopy. A finite gap was measured over the entire Brillouin zone, including along the d_{x^2 - y^2} nodal line. This effect was observed to be generic to the normal states of numerous cuprates, including hole-doped La_{2-x}Sr_{x}CuO_{4} and Ca_{2-x}Na_{x}CuO_{2}Cl_{2} and electron-doped Nd_{2-x}Ce_{x}CuO_{4}. In all compounds, the gap appears to close with increasing carrier doping. We consider various scenarios to explain our results, including the possible effects of chemical disorder, electronic inhomogeneity, and a competing phase.Comment: To appear in Phys. Rev.

    Low-Altitude UAV Imaging Accurately Quantifies Eelgrass Wasting Disease From Alaska to California

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    Declines in eelgrass, an important and widespread coastal habitat, are associated with wasting disease in recent outbreaks on the Pacific coast of North America. This study presents a novel method for mapping and predicting wasting disease using Unoccupied Aerial Vehicle (UAV) with low-altitude autonomous imaging of visible bands. We conducted UAV mapping and sampling in intertidal eelgrass beds across multiple sites in Alaska, British Columbia, and California. We designed and implemented a UAV low-altitude mapping protocol to detect disease prevalence and validated against in situ results. Our analysis revealed that green leaf area index derived from UAV imagery was a strong and significant (inverse) predictor of spatial distribution and severity of wasting disease measured on the ground, especially for regions with extensive disease infection. This study highlights a novel, efficient, and portable method to investigate seagrass disease at landscape scales across geographic regions and conditions

    Latitude, temperature, and habitat complexity predict predation pressure in eelgrass beds across the Northern Hemisphere

    Get PDF
    Latitudinal gradients in species interactions are widely cited as potential causes or consequences of global patterns of biodiversity. However, mechanistic studies documenting changes in interactions across broad geographic ranges are limited. We surveyed predation intensity on common prey (live amphipods and gastropods) in communities of eelgrass (Zostera marina) at 48 sites across its Northern Hemisphere range, encompassing over 370 of latitude and four continental coastlines. Predation on amphipods declined with latitude on all coasts but declined more strongly along western ocean margins where temperature gradients are steeper. Whereas in situ water temperature at the time of the experiments was uncorrelated with predation, mean annual temperature strongly positively predicted predation, suggesting a more complex mechanism than simple increased metabolic activity at the time of predation. This large-scale biogeographic pattern was modified by local habitat characteristics; predation declined with higher shoot density both among and within sites. Predation rates on gastropods, by contrast, were uniformly low and varied little among sites. The high replication and geographic extent of our study not only provides additional evidence to support biogeographic variation in intensity, but also insight into the mechanisms that relate temperature and biogeographic gradients in species interactions
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