3,061 research outputs found
Scientific results of the Bryotrop expedition to Zaire and Rwanda : 3., photosynthetic gas exchange of bryophytes from different forest types in eastern Central Africa.
During the BRYOTROP-Expedition to Zaire and Rwanda bryophytes were collected from a rainforest habitat at 800 m a.s.l. and from bamboo forest and tree-heath environments between 2200 and 3200 m. The microclimates influencing the mosses are different at the altitudinally separated locations. Conditions are rather constant with 24 °C, 100 % rel. hum. and PAR below 100 Όmol photons m-2 sec-1 at the lowland station, rather versatile in the mountains with six times higher daily sums of PAR, temperatures between 10 and 25 °C and relative humidities between 60 and 1oo %. In the bamboo forest epiphytic mosses dry out during the day to less than 70 % of their water content, but regain saturation from the vapor-saturated air during night. Bryophyte photosynthesis and respiration were studied by Warburg manometry with moisture saturated samples. Temperature curves of gas exchange peaked between 22 and 30 °C. Optima of the lowland species were somewhat higher than those from samples collected at the mountain sites. Habitat separation of characteristics of photosynthesis was more pronounced with respect to light responses. Saturation gas exchange rates were reached by all species still below 400 Όmol photons m-2 sec-1. But the slopes of the curves in the low-light range were distinctly steeper, and the light compensation points smaller in the lowland than in the highland species (compensation points of the former: 3 - 12 Όmol photons m-2 sec-1, of the latter: 8 - 20 Όmol photons m-2 sec-1). It is emphasized that bryophytes in the rainforest understory experience extremely high ambient C02 concentrations near the floor. This, their low light requirements for photosynthesis, and the permanently optimal temperature and humidity conditions for maximal carbon gain enable them to live successfully, but with less biomass development in this dark and damp environment. By contrast, bryophytes from the bamboo forest and tree-heath environments can utilize light conditions combined with variable temperatures and humidities similarly as species from extratropical vegetation types
Free-induction decay and envelope modulations in a narrowed nuclear spin bath
We evaluate free-induction decay for the transverse components of a localized
electron spin coupled to a bath of nuclear spins via the Fermi contact
hyperfine interaction. Our perturbative treatment is valid for special
(narrowed) bath initial conditions and when the Zeeman energy of the electron
exceeds the total hyperfine coupling constant : . Using one unified
and systematic method, we recover previous results reported at short and long
times using different techniques. We find a new and unexpected modulation of
the free-induction-decay envelope, which is present even for a purely isotropic
hyperfine interaction without spin echoes and for a single nuclear species. We
give sub-leading corrections to the decoherence rate, and show that, in
general, the decoherence rate has a non-monotonic dependence on electron Zeeman
splitting, leading to a pronounced maximum. These results illustrate the
limitations of methods that make use of leading-order effective Hamiltonians
and re-exponentiation of short-time expansions for a strongly-interacting
system with non-Markovian (history-dependent) dynamics.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figure
Correlated projection operator approach to non-Markovian dynamics in spin baths
The dynamics of an open quantum system is usually studied by performing a
weak-coupling and weak-correlation expansion in the system-bath interaction.
For systems exhibiting strong couplings and highly non-Markovian behavior this
approach is not justified. We apply a recently proposed correlated projection
superoperator technique to the model of a central spin coupled to a spin bath
via full Heisenberg interaction. Analytical solutions to both the
Nakajima-Zwanzig and the time-convolutionless master equation are determined
and compared with the results of the exact solution. The correlated projection
operator technique significantly improves the standard methods and can be
applied to many physical problems such as the hyperfine interaction in a
quantum dot
Analytic structure in the coupling constant plane in perturbative QCD
We investigate the analytic structure of the Borel-summed perturbative QCD
amplitudes in the complex plane of the coupling constant. Using the method of
inverse Mellin transform, we show that the prescription dependent Borel-Laplace
integral can be cast, under some conditions, into the form of a dispersion
relation in the a-plane. We also discuss some recent works relating resummation
prescriptions, renormalons and nonperturbative effects, and show that a method
proposed recently for obtaining QCD nonperturbative condensates from
perturbation theory is based on special assumptions about the analytic
structure in the coupling plane that are not valid in QCD.Comment: 14 pages, revtex4, 1 eps-figur
Clinical skills of veterinary students - a cross-sectional study of the self-concept and exposure to skills training in Hannover, Germany
Background: Students of veterinary medicine should achieve basic professional competences required to practise their profession. A main focus of veterinary education is on developing clinical skills. The present study used the guidelines of the "Day-One Skills" list of European Association of Establishments for Veterinary Education (EAEVE) to create an online questionnaire for assessing the skills acquired by students at the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover (TiHo). The theoretical and practical veterinary knowledge levels of the students and postgraduates are determined and compared. Results: In two batches, 607 people responded (response batch 1, 23.78%; response batch 2, 23.83%). From 49 defined skills, 28 are actually practised during training at the university and 21 activities are known only theoretically. Furthermore, the students showed great willingness to use simulators and models in a clinical skills lab. Conclusions: The results of this survey highlight that the opening of a clinical skills lab at the University of Veterinary Medicine Hannover and its incorporation into the study programme are ideal tools to promote practical competences and foster the motivation to learn
Reconstruction of the 1941 GLOF process chain at Lake Palcacocha (Cordillera Blanca, Peru)
The Cordillera Blanca in Peru has been the scene of rapid deglaciation for many decades. One of numerous lakes formed in the front of the retreating glaciers is the moraine-dammed Lake Palcacocha, which drained suddenly due to an unknown cause in 1941. The resulting Glacial Lake Outburst Flood (GLOF) led to dam failure and complete drainage of Lake Jircacocha downstream, and to major destruction and thousands of fatalities in the city of HuarĂĄz at a distance of 23âkm. We chose an integrated approach to revisit the 1941 event in terms of topographic reconstruction
and numerical back-calculation with the GIS-based open-source mass flow/process chain simulation framework r.avaflow, which builds on an enhanced version of the Pudasaini (2012) two-phase flow model. Thereby we consider four scenarios: (A) and (AX) breach of the moraine dam of Lake Palcacocha due to retrogressive erosion, assuming two different fluid characteristics; (B) failure of the moraine dam caused by the impact of a landslide on the lake; and (C) geomechanical failure and collapse of the moraine dam. The simulations largely yield empirically adequate results with physically plausible parameters, taking the documentation of the 1941 event and previous calculations of future scenarios as reference. Most simulation scenarios indicate travel times between 36 and 70âmin to reach
HuarĂĄz, accompanied with peak discharges above 10â000âm3âsâ1. The results of the scenarios indicate that the most likely initiation mechanism would be retrogressive erosion, possibly triggered by a minor impact wave and/or facilitated by a weak stability condition of the moraine dam. However, the involvement of Lake Jircacocha disguises part of the signal of process initiation farther downstream. Predictive simulations of possible future events have to be based on a
larger set of back-calculated GLOF process chains, taking into account the expected parameter uncertainties and appropriate strategies to deal with critical threshold effects
The liquid helix
From everyday experience, we all know that a solid edge can deflect a liquid
flowing over it significantly, up to the point where the liquid completely
sticks to the solid. Although important in pouring, printing and extrusion
processes, there is no predictive model of this so-called "teapot effect". By
grazing vertical cylinders with inclined capillary liquid jets, we here use the
teapot effect to attach the jet to the solid and form a new structure: the
liquid helix. Using mass and momentum conservation along the liquid stream, we
first quantitatively predict the shape of the helix and then provide a
parameter-free inertial-capillary adhesion model for the jet deflection and
critical velocity for helix formation.Comment: Accepted in Physical Review Letters, author versio
Convergence of the expansion of the Laplace-Borel integral in perturbative QCD improved by conformal mapping
The optimal conformal mapping of the Borel plane was recently used to
accelerate the convergence of the perturbation expansions in QCD. In this work
we discuss the relevance of the method for the calculation of the Laplace-Borel
integral expressing formally the QCD Green functions. We define an optimal
expansion of the Laplace-Borel integral in the principal value prescription and
establish conditions under which the expansion is convergent.Comment: 10 pages, no figure
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