20,912 research outputs found
Crassulacean acid metabolism in the Gesneriaceae
The occurrence of the Crassulacean acid metabolism (CAM) was studied in four epiphytic species of the Gesneriaceae: two neotropical species, Codonanthe crassifolia and Columnea linearis, and two paleotropical species, Aoschynanthus pulcher and Saintpaulia ionantha. Gas exchange parameters, enzymology, and leaf anatomy, including mesophyll succulence and rel ative percent of the mesophyll volume occupied by airspace, were studied for each species. Codonanthe crassifolia was the only species to show nocturnal CO2 uptake and a diurnal organic acid fluctuation. According to these results, Codonanthe crassifolia shows CAM-cycling under well-watered conditions and when subjected to drought, it switches to CAM-idling. Other characteristics, such as leaf anatomy, mesophyll succulence, and PEP carboxylase and NADP malic enzyme activity, indicate attributes of the CAM pathway. All other species tested showed C3 photosynthesis. The most C3-like species is Columnea linearis, according to the criteria tested in this investigation. The other two species show mesophyll succulence and relative percent of the leaf volume occupied by airspace within the CAM range, but no other characters of the CAM pathway. The leaf structure of certain genera of the Gesneriaceae and of the genus Peperomia in the Piperaceae are similar, both having an upper succulent, multiple epidermis, a medium palisade of one or a few cell layers, and a lower, succulent spongy parenchyma not too unlike CAM photosynthetic tissue. We report ecophysiological similarities between these two distantly related families. Thus, the occurrence of CAM-cycling may be more common among epiphytic species than is currently known
A survey of cost-sensitive decision tree induction algorithms
The past decade has seen a significant interest on the problem of inducing decision trees that take account of costs of misclassification and costs of acquiring the features used for decision making. This survey identifies over 50 algorithms including approaches that are direct adaptations of accuracy based methods, use genetic algorithms, use anytime methods and utilize boosting and bagging. The survey brings together these different studies and novel approaches to cost-sensitive decision tree learning, provides a useful taxonomy, a historical timeline of how the field has developed and should provide a useful reference point for future research in this field
Elastodynamics of radially inhomogeneous spherically anisotropic elastic materials in the Stroh formalism
A method is presented for solving elastodynamic problems in radially
inhomogeneous elastic materials with spherical anisotropy, i.e.\ materials such
that in a spherical coordinate system
. The time harmonic displacement field is expanded in a separation of variables form with dependence on
described by vector spherical harmonics with -dependent
amplitudes. It is proved that such separation of variables solution is
generally possible only if the spherical anisotropy is restricted to transverse
isotropy with the principal axis in the radial direction, in which case the
amplitudes are determined by a first-order ordinary differential system.
Restricted forms of the displacement field, such as ,
admit this type of separation of variables solutions for certain lower material
symmetries. These results extend the Stroh formalism of elastodynamics in
rectangular and cylindrical systems to spherical coordinates.Comment: 15 page
Fabrication of a focusing soft X-ray collector payload
A large area X-ray focusing collector with arc minute resolution and a position sensitive detector capable of operating in the soft X-ray region was developed for use on sounding rockets in studying stellar X-ray sources. The focusing payload consists of the following components, which are described: (1) a crossed paraboloid mirror assembly; (2) an aspect camera and star tracker; (3) a focal plane assembly containing an imaging proportional counter and its preamplifiers, high voltage power supplies and gas system; (4) a fiducial system; and (5) housekeeping, data handling, instrumentation and telemetry electronics. The design, tests, and operation are described
WMAP constraints on the Intra-Cluster Medium
We devise a Monte-Carlo based, optimized filter match method to extract the
thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) signature of a catalog of 116 low-redshift
X-ray clusters from the first year data release of the Wilkinson Microwave
Anisotropy Probe (WMAP). We detect an over-all amplitude for the SZ signal at
the ~ 8-sigma level, yielding a combined constraint of f_{gas}h = 0.08 +/- 0.01
(ran) +/- 0.01 (sys) on the gas mass fraction of the Intra-Cluster Medium. We
also compile X-ray estimated gas fractions from the literature for our sample,
and find that they are consistent with the SZ estimates at the 2-sigma level,
while both show an increasing trend with X-ray temperature. Nevertheless, our
SZ estimated gas fraction is 30-40% smaller than the concordance LCDM cosmic
average. We also express our observations in terms of the SZ flux-temperature
relation, and compare it with other observations, as well as numerical studies.
Based on its spectral and spatial signature, we can also extract the
microwave point source signal of the clusters at the 3-sigma level, which puts
the average microwave luminosity (at ~ 41 GHz) of bright cluster members (M_K <
-21) at (2.4 +/- 0.8) x 10^{27} h^{-2} erg/s/Hz. Furthermore, we can constrain
the average dark matter halo concentration parameter to c_{vir}=3.4+0.6-0.9,
for clusters with T_x > 5 kev.
Our work serves as an example for how correlation of SZ surveys with cluster
surveys in other frequencies can significantly increase our physical
understanding of the intra-cluster medium.Comment: 34 pages, 6 ps figures, Extended discussion of theoretical
uncertainties, radio sources, and future prospects, Accepted for Publication
in Ap
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