3,126 research outputs found
Potato virus Y transmitting aphids in a Finnish seed potato area
The aphid-transmissible Potato virus Y is a major problem in seed potato production (Valkonen , 2007).
The aphid flight activity was monitored from mid-June to the end of August with a suction trap and with yellow pan traps in 2007 and 2008.
Previous studies have concluded that potato colonising aphids are not the main vectors of Potato virus Y
Application of a One-Dimensional Model to Lake Balaton
A one-dimensional, transient hydrodynamic model for Lake Balaton is presented. This is the simplest acceptable approach considering the elongated shape of the lake, which accounts for the fast dynamics of the system. The research reported here is a piece of harmonized efforts, the final objective of which is to describe the spatial mass exchange properly for the eutrophication study. In other words, the relative importance of water motion and the related transport should be weighed against that of the biochemical processes
Measuring non-Gaussian fluctuations through incoherent Cooper pair current
We study a Josephson junction (JJ) in the regime of incoherent Cooper pair
tunneling, capacitively coupled to a nonequilibrium noise source. The
current-voltage (I-V) characteristics of the JJ are sensitive to the excess
voltage fluctuations in the source, and can thus be used for wide-band noise
detection. Under weak driving, the odd part of the I-V can be related to the
second cumulant of noise, whereas the even part is due to the third cumulant.
After calibration, one can measure the Fano factors for the noise source, and
get information about the frequency dependence of the noise.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Series of Concentration-Induced Phase Transitions in Cholesterol/Phosphatidylcholine Mixtures
In lipid membranes, temperature-induced transition from gel-to-fluid phase increases the lateral diffusion of the lipid molecules by three orders of magnitude. In cell membranes, a similar phase change may trigger the communication between the membrane components. Here concentration-induced phase transition properties of our recently developed statistical mechanical model of cholesterol/phospholipid mixtures are investigated. A slight (<1%) decrease in the model parameter values, controlling the lateral interaction energies, reveals the existence of a series of first- or second-order phase transitions. By weakening the lateral interactions first, the proportion of the ordered (i.e., superlattice) phase (Areg) is slightly and continuously decreasing at every cholesterol mole fraction. Then sudden decreases in Areg appear at the 0.18–0.26 range of cholesterol mole fractions. We point out that the sudden changes in Areg represent first- or second-order concentration-induced phase transitions from fluid to superlattice and from superlattice to fluid phase. Sudden changes like these were detected in our previous experiments at 0.2, 0.222, and 0.25 sterol mole fractions in ergosterol/DMPC mixtures. By further decreasing the lateral interactions, the fluid phase will dominate throughout the 0.18–0.26 interval, whereas outside this interval sudden increases in Areg may appear. Lipid composition-induced phase transitions as specified here should have far more important biological implications than temperature- or pressure-induced phase transitions. This is the case because temperature and pressure in cell membranes are largely invariant under physiological conditions
Comparison of mean-field theories for vortices in trapped Bose-Einstein condensates
We compute structures of vortex configurations in a harmonically trapped
Bose-Einstein condensed atom gas within three different gapless self-consistent
mean-field theories. Outside the vortex core region, the density profiles for
the condensate and the thermal gas are found to differ only by a few percent
between the Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov-Popov theory and two of its recently
proposed gapless extensions. In the core region, however, the differences in
the density profiles are substantial. The structural differences are reflected
in the energies of the quasiparticle states localized near the vortex core.
Especially, the predictions for the energy of the lowest quasiparticle
excitation differ considerably between the theoretical models investigated.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
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A Riemann-Hilbert problem with a vanishing coefficient and applications to Toeplitz operators
We study the homogeneous Riemann-Hilbert problem with a vanishing scalar-valued continuous coefficient. We characterize non-existence of nontrivial solutions in the case where the coefficient has its values along several rays starting from the origin. As a consequence, some results on injectivity and existence of eigenvalues of Toeplitz operators in Hardy spaces are obtained
Supercurrent-induced temperature gradient across a nonequilibrium SNS Josephson junction
Using tunneling spectroscopy, we have measured the local electron energy
distribution function in the normal part of a superconductor-normal
metal-superconductor (SNS) Josephson junction containing an extra lead to a
normal reservoir. In the presence of simultaneous supercurrent and injected
quasiparticle current, the distribution function exhibits a sharp feature at
very low energy. The feature is odd in energy, and odd under reversal of either
the supercurrent or the quasiparticle current direction. The feature represents
an effective temperature gradient across the SNS Josephson junction that is
controllable by the supercurrent.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, corrected typos, added plot to figure
Nonequilibrium characteristics in all-superconducting tunnel structures
We study the nonequilibrium characteristics of superconducting tunnel
structures in the case when one of the superconductors is a small island
confined between large superconductors. The state of this island can be probed
for example via the supercurrent flowing through it. We study both the
far-from-equilibrium limit when the rate of injection for the electrons into
the island exceeds the energy relaxation inside it, and the quasiequilibrium
limit when the electrons equilibrate between themselves. We also address the
crossover between these limits employing the collision integral derived for the
superconducting case. The clearest signatures of the nonequilibrium limit are
the anomalous heating effects seen as a supercurrent suppression at low
voltages, and the hysteresis at voltages close to the gap edge ,
resulting from the peculiar form of the nonequilibrium distribution function.Comment: 8 pages, 10 figure
Thermal leptogenesis in a 5D split fermion scenario with bulk neutrinos
We study the thermal leptogenesis in a hybrid model, which combines the so
called split fermion model and the bulk neutrino model defined in five
dimensional spacetime. This model predicts the existence of a heavy neutrino
pair nearly degenerate in mass, whose decays might generate a CP violation
large enough for creating the baryon asymmetry of the universe through
leptogenesis. We investigate numerically the constraints this sets on the
parameters of the model such as the size of the compactified fifth dimension.Comment: 22 pages, 9 figure
Cellulose Fibre-Reinforced Biofoam for Structural Applications
Traditionally, polymers and macromolecular components used in the foam industry are mostly derived from petroleum. The current transition to a bio-economy creates demand for the use of more renewable feedstocks. Soybean oil is a vegetable oil, composed mainly of triglycerides, that is suitable material for foam production. In this study, acrylated epoxidized soybean oil and variable amounts of cellulose fibres were used in the production of bio-based foam. The developed macroporous bio-based architectures were characterised by several techniques, including porosity measurements, nanoindentation testing, scanning electron microscopy, and thermogravimetric analysis. It was found that the introduction of cellulose fibres during the foaming process was necessary to create the three-dimensional polymer foams. Using cellulose fibres has potential as a foam stabiliser because it obstructs the drainage of liquid from the film region in these gas-oil interfaces while simultaneously acting as a reinforcing agent in the polymer foam. The resulting foams possessed a porosity of approximately 56%, and the incorporation of cellulose fibres did not affect thermal behaviour. Scanning electron micrographs showed randomly oriented pores with irregular shapes and non-uniform pore size throughout the samples
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