1,364 research outputs found

    Collisional features in a model of a planetary ring

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    Images taken by the Cassini spacecraft display numerous “propellers”, telltale disturbances detected in Saturn’s outer A ring. In conventionally accepted models (Seiß, M., Spahn, F., Sremčević, M., Salo, H. [2005]. Geophys. Res. Lett. 32, L11205; Lewis, M., Stewart, G. [2009]. Icarus 199, 387–412), unseen moonlets are considered to generate these structures by gravitationally stirring the shearing Kepler flow of ring particles. The morphology and scale of these structures likely depend on both gravity and collisions. However, with a goal to understand one aspect of the development of real propellers, and motivated by similar features observed in terrestrial granular systems, we here study only the collisional effects on propeller-like feature formation, entirely omitting the gravitational attraction between the moonlet and the particles.\ud \ud Our investigation employs a combination of simulation and continuum analysis to examine the extent to which dissipative collisions between ring particles and with a large obstacle might cause such features to form. Our simple, heuristic two-dimensional numerical simulations demonstrate that propeller-like features having many of the features seen in gravitating systems can form. Our continuum theory predicts that, at observed ring densities, the magnitudes of relative particle speeds and thermal speeds (i.e., kinetic granular temperatures) imply that the flow with respect to the moonlet is supersonic. As a consequence, these propeller-like features could be interpreted as the locus of a granular shock across which the flow experiences significant, almost discontinuous, changes in flow properties\u

    Validation of spallation neutron production and propagation within Geant4

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    Using simulations to understand backgrounds from muon-induced neutrons is important in designing next-generation low-background underground experiments. Validation of relevant physics within the Geant4 simulation package has been completed by comparing to data from two recent experiments. Verification focused on the production and propagation of neutrons at energies important to underground experiments. Discrepancies were observed between experimental data and the simulation. Techniques were explored to correct for these discrepancies.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 5 tables, submitted to NIM A. 6 Aug 200

    Restocking of the Western School Prawn (Metapenaeus dalli) in the Swan Canning Riverpark

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    This report provides the first comprehensive investigation into the biology and ecology of the Western School Prawn (Metapenaeus dalli) in the Swan-Canning Estuary in south-western Australia. It provides knowledge to help manage the fishery and evaluate release strategies for the aquaculture-based enhancement of this species. The study involved Murdoch University, the Department of Biodiversity, Conservation and Attractions (DBCA) (formerly Department of Parks and Wildlife and the Swan River Trust) and the Australian Centre for Applied Aquaculture Research (ACAAR). It was designed to complement a concurrent project to develop aquaculture techniques to produce and release M. dalli and re-engage the local community with prawning and the estuary (led by ACAAR, DBCA’s Parks and Wildlife Service and the West Australian Fish Foundation), funded by the Recreational Fishing Initiatives Fund. The Fisheries Research and Development Corporation provided matching funds for the current study. Biological data on M. dalli were collected from 20 sites in nearshore and 16 in the offshore waters of the Swan-Canning Estuary, ranging from the mouth of the system to ~40 and 30 km upstream in the Swan and Canning rivers, respectively, in every lunar month between October 2013 and March 2016. Laboratory studies were also completed to investigate the survival and growth of larval prawns in different salinity, water temperature and algal food conditions. Results were presented as part of the Prawn Watch program to engage the community in the research and encourage stewardship of the fishery and the estuary

    Assessing reproductive and endocrine parameters in male largescale suckers (\u3ci\u3eCatostomus macrocheilus\u3c/i\u3e) along a contaminant gradient in the lower Columbia River, USA

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    Persistent organochlorine pollutants such as polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dichlorodiphenyldichloroethylene (p,p′-DDE), and polybrominated diphenyl ethers (PBDEs) are stable, bioaccumulative, and widely found in the environment, wildlife, and the human population. To explore the hypothesis that reproduction in male fish is associated with environmental exposures in the lower Columbia River (LCR), reproductive and endocrine parameters were studied inmale resident, non-anadromous largescale sucker (Catostomus macrocheilus) (LSS) inthe samehabitats as anadromous salmonids having conservation status. Testes, thyroid tissue and plasma collected in 2010 from Longview (LV), Columbia City (CC), and Skamania (SK; reference)were studied. Sperm morphologies and thyrocyte heights were measured by light microscopy, sperm motilities by computer-assisted sperm motion analysis, sperm adenosine triphosphate (ATP) with luciferase, and plasma vitellogenin (VTG), thyroxine (T4), and triiodothyronine (T3) by immunoassay. Sperm apoptosis, viability, mitochondrial membrane potential, nuclear DNA fragmentation, and reproductive stage were measured by flow cytometry. Sperm quality parameters (except counts) and VTG were significantly different among sites, with correlations between VTG and 7 spermparameters. Thyrocyte heights, T4, T3, gonadosomatic index and Fulton\u27s condition factor differed among sites, but not significantly. Sperm quality was significantly lower and VTG higherwhere liver contaminants and water estrogen equivalents were highest (LV site). Total PCBs (specifically PCB-138, -146, -151, -170, -174, -177, -180, -183, -187, -194, and -206) and total PBDEs (specifically BDE-47, -100, -153, and -154) were negatively correlated with sperm motility. PCB-206 and BDE-154 were positively correlated with DNA fragmentation, and pentachloroanisole and VTG were positively correlated with sperm apoptosis and negatively correlated with ATP. BDE-99 was positively correlated with sperm counts and motility; T4 was negatively correlated with counts and positively correlated with motility, thus indicating possible androgenic mechanisms and thyroid endocrine disruption. Male LSS proved to be an informativemodel for studying reproductive and endocrine biomarkers in the LCR

    Classification of Complex Polynomial Vector Fields in One Complex Variable

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    A classification of the global structure of monic and centered one-variable complex polynomial vector fields is presented.Comment: 57 pages, 35 figures, submitted to the Journal of Difference Equations and Application

    Polarized deep inelastic scattering at high energies and parity violating structure functions

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    A comprehensive analysis of deep inelastic scattering of polarized charged leptons on polarized nucleons is presented; weak interaction contributions, both in neutral and charged current processes, are taken into account and the parity violating polarized nucleon structure functions are studied. Possible ways of their measurements and their interpretations in the parton model are discussed.Comment: (slightly modified version, includes a few new references and corrects few misprints for publication), 14 pages in TeX (needs harvmac) no figure, DFTT 80/9

    Feline parvovirus seroprevalence is high in domestic cats from disease outbreak and non-outbreak regions in Australia

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    Multiple, epizootic outbreaks of feline panleukopenia (FPL) caused by feline parvovirus (FPV) occurred in eastern Australia between 2014 and 2018. Most affected cats were unvaccinated. We hypothesised that low population immunity was a major driver of re-emergent FPL. The aim of this study was to (i) determine the prevalence and predictors of seroprotective titres to FPV among shelter-housed and owned cats, and (ii) compare the prevalence of seroprotection between a region affected and unaffected by FPL outbreaks. FPV antibodies were detected by haemagglutination inhibition assay on sera from 523 cats and titres ≥1:40 were considered protective. Socioeconomic indices based on postcode and census data were included in the risk factor analysis. The prevalence of protective FPV antibody titres was high overall (94.3%), even though only 42% of cats were known to be vaccinated, and was not significantly different between outbreak and non-outbreak regions. On multivariable logistic regression analysis vaccinated cats were 29.94 times more likely to have protective FPV titres than cats not known to be vaccinated. Cats from postcodes of relatively less socioeconomic disadvantage were 5.93 times more likely to have protective FPV titres. The predictors identified for FPV seroprotective titres indicate targeted vaccination strategies in regions of socioeconomic disadvantage would be beneficial to increase population immunity. The critical level of vaccine coverage required to halt FPV transmission and prevent FPL outbreaks should be determined

    Classification of States in O(8) Proton-Neutron Pairing Model

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    Isoscalar (T=0) plus isovector (T=1) pairing hamiltonian in LS-coupling, which is important for heavy N=Z nuclei, is solvable in terms of a O(8) algebra for some special values of the mixing parameter that measures the competition between T=0 and T=1 pairing. The O(8) algebra is generated, amongst others, by the S=1,T=0S=1,T=0 and S=0,T=1S=0,T=1 pair creation and annihilation operators . Shell model algebras, with only number conserving operators, that are complementary to the O(8)OST(6)OS(3)OT(3)O(8) \supset O_{ST}(6) \supset O_S(3) \otimes O_T(3), O(8)[OS(5)OS(3)]OT(3)O(8) \supset [ O_S(5) \supset O_S(3) ] \otimes O_T(3) and O(8)[OT(5)OT(3)]OS(3)O(8) \supset [ O_T(5) \supset O_T(3)] \otimes O_S(3) sub-algebras are identified. The problem of classification of states for a given number of nucleons (called `plethysm' problem in group theory), for these group chains is solved explicitly for states with O(8) seniority v=0,1,2,3v=0, 1, 2, 3 and 4. Using them, band structures in isospin space are identified for states with v=0,1,2v=0, 1, 2 and 3.Comment: 52 pages, 12 table
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