28,824 research outputs found
On Urabe's criteria of isochronicity
We give a short proof of Urabe's criteria for the isochronicity of periodical
solutions of the equation . We show that apart from the
harmonic oscillator there exists a large family of isochronous potentials which
must all be non-polynomial and not symmetric (an even function of the
coordinate x).Comment: 8 page
Recurrence spectrum in smooth dynamical systems
We prove that for conformal expanding maps the return time does have constant
multifractal spectrum. This is the counterpart of the result by Feng and Wu in
the symbolic setting
On the susceptibility function of piecewise expanding interval maps
We study the susceptibility function Psi(z) associated to the perturbation
f_t=f+tX of a piecewise expanding interval map f. The analysis is based on a
spectral description of transfer operators. It gives in particular sufficient
conditions which guarantee that Psi(z) is holomorphic in a disc of larger than
one. Although Psi(1) is the formal derivative of the SRB measure of f_t with
respect to t, we present examples satisfying our conditions so that the SRB
measure is not Lipschitz.*We propose a new version of Ruelle's conjectures.* In
v2, we corrected a few minor mistakes and added Conjectures A-B and Remark 4.5.
In v3, we corrected the perturbation (X(f(x)) instead of X(x)), in particular
in the examples from Section 6. As a consequence, Psi(z) has a pole at z=1 for
these examples.Comment: To appear Comm. Math. Phy
Statistical severe storm nowcasting comparison of VAS and Rawinsonde soundings
The statistical severe storm nowcasting technique using upper air soundings (VAS or radiosonde) is translated to the IBM McIDAS system. The severe storm information content of Visible infrared spin scan radiometer Atmospheric Sounder (VAS) and rawinsonde sounding data is compared. The contours of the likelihood of severe storms based only upon upper air VAS and rawinsonde data are shown, as well as the outlook based upon surface data, radar, operational computer models, and other data sources
The International Linear Collider beam dumps
The ILC beam dumps are a key part of the accelerator design. At Snowmass
2005, the current status of the beam dump designs were reviewed, and the
options for the overall dump layout considered. This paper describes the
available dump options for the baseline and the alternatives and considers
issues for the dumps that require resolution.Comment: Prepared for 2005 International Linear Collider Physics and Detector
Workshop and 2nd ILC Accelerator Workshop, Snowmass, Colorado, 14-27 Aug 200
Resource supplements cause a change in colony sex-ratio specialization in the mound-building ant, Formica exsecta
We examine the role of food resources on split sex ratios in Formica exsecta. Models of resource-based sex allocation predict that greater resources will cause an increase in the production of reproductive females (gynes) and an increase in overall size of offspring. We experimentally increased food resources for a subset of colonies in a polygynous population with a very male-biased sex ratio. This increase in food availability caused colonies that were male specialists the prior year to switch to female production. Overall, a significantly greater proportion of food-supplemented colonies produced gynes, compared to control colonies. Moreover, food-supplemented colonies produced significantly larger workers and males (but not gynes), compared to those produced by control colonies. There was, however, no significant difference in the numerical productivity of food-supplemented and control colonies. We also measured the natural association between colony sex specialization and proximity to conifers, which typically harbor honeydew-bearing aphids (an important natural food source). In line with the view that resources play an important role for determining sex ratios in social insects, we found that female-producing colonies were significantly closer to conifers than were male-producing colonies
Near-Infrared, Adaptive Optics Observations of the T Tauri Multiple-Star System
With high-angular-resolution, near-infrared observations of the young stellar
object T Tauri at the end of 2002, we show that, contrary to previous reports,
none of the three infrared components of T Tau coincide with the compact radio
source that has apparently been ejected recently from the system (Loinard,
Rodriguez, and Rodriguez 2003). The compact radio source and one of the three
infrared objects, T Tau Sb, have distinct paths that depart from orbital or
uniform motion between 1997 and 2000, perhaps indicating that their interaction
led to the ejection of the radio source. The path that T Tau Sb took between
1997 and 2003 may indicate that this star is still bound to the presumably more
massive southern component, T Tau Sa. The radio source is absent from our
near-infrared images and must therefore be fainter than K = 10.2 (if located
within 100 mas of T Tau Sb, as the radio data would imply), still consistent
with an identity as a low-mass star or substellar object.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ
Queen recruitment and split sex ratios in polygynous colonies of the ant Formica exsecta
Sex ratios in social insects have become a general model for tests of inclusive fitness theory, sex ratio theory and parent-offspring conflict. In populations of Formica exsecta with multiple queens per colony, sex ratios vary greatly among colonies and the dry-weight sex ratio is extremely male-biased, with 89% of the colonies producing males but no gynes (reproductive females). Here we test the queen-replenishment hypothesis, which was proposed to explain sex ratio specialization in this and other highly polygynous ants (i.e. those with many queens per nest). This hypothesis proposes that, in such ants, colonies produce gynes to recruit them back into the colony when the number of resident queens falls below a given threshold limiting colony productivity or survival. We tested predictions of the queen-replenishment hypothesis by following V. exsecta colonies across two breeding seasons and relating the change in effective queen number with changes in sex ratio, colony size and brood production. As predicted by the queen-replenishment hypothesis, we found that colonies that specialized in producing females increased their effective queen number and were significantly more likely to specialize in male production the following year. The switch to male production also coincided with a drop in productivity per queen as predicted. However, adoption of new queens did not result in a significant increase in total colony productivity the following year. We suggest that this is because queen production comes at the expense of worker production and thus queen production leads to resource limitation the following year, buffering the effect of greater queen number on total productivity
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