36,300 research outputs found
Age structure, dispersion and diet of a population of stoats (Mustela erminea) in southern Fiordland during the decline phase of the beechmast cycle
The dispersion, age structure and diet of stoats (Mustela erminea) in beech forest in the Borland and Grebe Valleys, Fiordland National Park, were examined during December and January 2000/01, 20 months after a heavy seed-fall in 1999. Thirty trap stations were set along a 38-km transect through almost continuous beech forest, at least 1 km apart. Mice were very scarce (nights, C/100TN) along two standard index lines placed at either end of the transect, compared with November 1999 (>60/100TN), but mice were detected (from footprints in stoat tunnels) along an 8 km central section of the transect (stations 14-22). Live trapping with one trap per station (total 317.5 trap nights) in December 2000 caught 2 female and 23 male stoats, of which 10 (including both females) were radio collared. The minimum range lengths of the two females along the transect represented by the trap line were 2.2 and 6.0 km; those of eight radio-tracked males averaged 2.9 ± 1.7 km. Stations 14-22 tended to be visited more often, by more marked individual stoats, than the other 21 stations.
Fenn trapping at the same 30 sites, but with multiple traps per station (1333.5 trap nights), in late January 2001 collected carcasses of 35 males and 28 females (including 12 of the marked live-trapped ones). Another two marked males were recovered dead. The stoat population showed no sign of chronic nutritional stress (average fat reserve index = 2.8 on a scale of 1-4 where 4 = highest fat content); and only one of 63 guts analysed was empty. Nevertheless, all 76 stoats handled were adults with 1-3 cementum annuli in their teeth, showing that reproduction had failed that season. Prey categories recorded in descending frequency of occurrence were birds, carabid beetle (ground beetle), weta, possum, rat, and mouse. The frequencies of occurrence of mice and birds in the diet of these stoats (10% and 48%, respectively) were quite different from those in stoats collected in Pig Creek, a tributary of the Borland River (87%, 5%), 12 months previously when mice were still abundant. Five of the six stoat guts containing mice were collected within 1 km of stations 14-22
Radiatively-Driven Outflows and Avoidance of Common-Envelope Evolution in Close Binaries
Recent work on Cygnus X-2 suggests that neutron-star or black-hole binaries
survive highly super-Eddington mass transfer rates without undergoing
common-envelope evolution. We suggest here that the accretion flows in such
cases are radiation pressure-dominated versions of the "ADIOS" picture proposed
by Blandford and Begelman (1999), in which almost all the mass is expelled from
large radii in the accretion disk. We estimate the maximum radius from which
mass loss is likely to occur, and show that common-envelope evolution is
probably avoided in any binary in which a main-sequence donor transfers mass on
a thermal timescale to a neutron star or black hole, even though the mass
transfer rate may reach values of 0.001 solar masses per year. This conclusion
probably applies also to donors expanding across the Hertzsprung gap, provided
that their envelopes are radiative. SS433 may be an example of a system in this
state.Comment: 4 pages, submitted to Astrophysical Journal Letters, 26 March 199
On character generators for simple Lie algebras
We study character generating functions (character generators) of simple Lie
algebras. The expression due to Patera and Sharp, derived from the Weyl
character formula, is first reviewed. A new general formula is then found. It
makes clear the distinct roles of ``outside'' and ``inside'' elements of the
integrity basis, and helps determine their quadratic incompatibilities. We
review, analyze and extend the results obtained by Gaskell using the Demazure
character formulas. We find that the fundamental generalized-poset graphs
underlying the character generators can be deduced from such calculations.
These graphs, introduced by Baclawski and Towber, can be simplified for the
purposes of constructing the character generator. The generating functions can
be written easily using the simplified versions, and associated Demazure
expressions. The rank-two algebras are treated in detail, but we believe our
results are indicative of those for general simple Lie algebras.Comment: 50 pages, 11 figure
A new instability of accretion disks around compact magnetic stars
Aperiodic variability and Quasi Periodic Oscillations (QPOs) are observed
from accretion disks orbiting white dwarfs, neutron stars, and black holes,
suggesting that the flow is universally broken up into discrete blobs. We
consider the interaction of these blobs with the magnetic field of a compact,
accreting star, where diamagnetic blobs suffer a drag. We show that when the
magnetic moment is not aligned with the spin axis, the resulting force is
pulsed, and this can lead to resonance with the oscillation of the blobs around
the equatorial plane; a resonance condition where energy is effectively pumped
into non--equatorial motions is then derived. We show that the same resonance
condition applies for the quadrupolar component of the magnetic field. We
discuss the conditions of applicability of this result, showing that they are
quite wide. We also show that realistic complications, such as chaotic magnetic
fields, buoyancy, radiation pressure, evaporation, Kelvin--Helmholtz
instability, and shear stresses due to differential rotation do not affect our
results. In accreting neutron stars with millisecond periods, we show that this
instability leads to Lense-Thirring precession of the blobs, and that damping
by viscosity can be neglected.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. AASTeX LateX
needed. Two figure
Capacities of Grassmann channels
A new class of quantum channels called Grassmann channels is introduced and
their classical and quantum capacity is calculated. The channel class appears
in a study of the two-mode squeezing operator constructed from operators
satisfying the fermionic algebra. We compare Grassmann channels with the
channels induced by the bosonic two-mode squeezing operator. Among other
results, we challenge the relevance of calculating entanglement measures to
assess or compare the ability of bosonic and fermionic states to send quantum
information to uniformly accelerated frames.Comment: 33 pages, Accepted in Journal of Mathematical Physics; The role of
the (fermionic) braided tensor product for quantum Shannon theory, namely
capacity formulas, elucidated; The conclusion on the equivalence of Unruh
effect for bosons and fermions for quantum communication purposes made clear
and even more precis
Why Low-Mass Black-Hole Binaries Are Transient
We consider transient behavior in low-mass X-ray binaries. In short-period
neutron-star systems (orbital period less than ~ 1d) irradiation of the
accretion disk by the central source suppresses this except at very low mass
transfer rates. Formation constraints however imply that a significant fraction
of these neutron star systems have nuclear-evolved main-sequence secondaries
and thus mass transfer rates low enough to be transient. But most short-period
low-mass black-hole systems will form with unevolved main-sequence companions
and have much higher mass transfer rates. The fact that essentially all of them
are nevertheless transient shows that irradiation is weaker, as a direct
consequence of the fundamental black-hole property - the lack of a hard stellar
surface.Comment: 13 pages (including 3 figures); accepted for publication in Ap
Trimaximal neutrino mixing from vacuum alignment in A4 and S4 models
Recent T2K results indicate a sizeable reactor angle theta_13 which would
rule out exact tri-bimaximal lepton mixing. We study the vacuum alignment of
the Altarelli-Feruglio A4 family symmetry model including additional flavons in
the 1' and 1" representations and show that it leads to trimaximal mixing in
which the second column of the lepton mixing matrix consists of the column
vector (1,1,1)^T/sqrt{3}, with a potentially large reactor angle. In order to
limit the reactor angle and control the higher order corrections, we propose a
renormalisable S4 model in which the 1' and 1" flavons of A4 are unified into a
doublet of S4 which is spontaneously broken to A4 by a flavon which enters the
neutrino sector at higher order. We study the vacuum alignment in the S4 model
and show that it predicts accurate trimaximal mixing with approximate
tri-bimaximal mixing, leading to a new mixing sum rule testable in future
neutrino experiments. Both A4 and S4 models preserve form dominance and hence
predict zero leptogenesis, up to renormalisation group corrections.Comment: 24 pages, 2 figures, version to be published in JHE
Observation of a multimode plasma response and its relationship to density pumpout and edge-localized mode suppression
Density pumpout and edge-localized mode (ELM) suppression by applied n=2 magnetic fields in low-collisionality DIII-D plasmas are shown to be correlated with the magnitude of the plasma response driven on the high-field side (HFS) of the magnetic axis but not the low-field side (LFS) midplane. These distinct responses are a direct measurement of a multimodal magnetic plasma response, with each structure preferentially excited by a different n=2 applied spectrum and preferentially detected on the LFS or HFS. Ideal and resistive magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD) calculations find that the LFS measurement is primarily sensitive to the excitation of stable kink modes, while the HFS measurement is primarily sensitive to resonant currents (whether fully shielding or partially penetrated). The resonant currents are themselves strongly modified by kink excitation, with the optimal applied field pitch for pumpout and ELM suppression significantly differing from equilibrium field alignment.This material is based upon work supported by the U.S.
Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Fusion
Energy Sciences, using the DIII-D National Fusion Facility,
a DOE Office of Science user facility, under Awards No. DE-FC02-04ER54698, No. DE-AC02-09CH11466,
No. DE-FG02-04ER54761, No. DE-AC05-06OR23100,
No. DE-SC0001961, and No. DE-AC05-00OR22725.
S. R. H. was supported by AINSE and ANSTO
Tonic inhibition of accumbal spiny neurons by extrasynaptic 4 GABAA receptors modulates the actions of psychostimulants
Within the nucleus accumbens (NAc), synaptic GABAA receptors (GABAARs) mediate phasic inhibition of medium spiny neurons (MSNs) and influence behavioral responses to cocaine. We demonstrate that both dopamine D1- and D2-receptor-expressing MSNs (D-MSNs) additionally harbor extrasynaptic GABAARs incorporating α4, β, and δ subunits that mediate tonic inhibition, thereby influencing neuronal excitability. Both the selective δ-GABAAR agonist THIP and DS2, a selective positive allosteric modulator, greatly increased the tonic current of all MSNs from wild-type (WT), but not from δ−/− or α4−/− mice. Coupling dopamine and tonic inhibition, the acute activation of D1 receptors (by a selective agonist or indirectly by amphetamine) greatly enhanced tonic inhibition in D1-MSNs but not D2-MSNs. In contrast, prolonged D2 receptor activation modestly reduced the tonic conductance of D2-MSNs. Behaviorally, WT and constitutive α4−/− mice did not differ in their expression of cocaine-conditioned place preference (CPP). Importantly, however, mice with the α4 deletion specific to D1-expressing neurons (α4D1−/−) showed increased CPP. Furthermore, THIP administered systemically or directly into the NAc of WT, but not α4−/− or α4D1−/− mice, blocked cocaine enhancement of CPP. In comparison, α4D2−/− mice exhibited normal CPP, but no cocaine enhancement. In conclusion, dopamine modulation of GABAergic tonic inhibition of D1- and D2-MSNs provides an intrinsic mechanism to differentially affect their excitability in response to psychostimulants and thereby influence their ability to potentiate conditioned reward. Therefore, α4βδ GABAARs may represent a viable target for the development of novel therapeutics to better understand and influence addictive behaviors
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