248 research outputs found
Modalités de la compétition larvaire intraspécifique chez Bruchus affinis (Coleoptera, Bruchidae) dans les graines de Lathyrus sylvestris (Leguminosae, Fabaceae)
Summary. — In spring, a high concentration of Bruchus affinis eggs laid on the first appearing pods of Lathyrus sylvestris is responsible for an important intraspecific larval competition during the colonization of growing ovules. A single adult emerges from the seed, even if the seed has been infested by several larvae.
We studied the patterns of this competition. Growth and development of B. affinis larvae are concommitent with the ones of infested ovules, and two main characteristics can be pointed out : a first larval ecdysis after the colonization of a growing ovule and a larval tendency to settle down in the center of cotyledons. Larval competition is closely related to a noticeable territorial behaviour of the larvae.
Meetings of larvae moving towards the centre turn them in a situation of agression. When a larva casually meets another one from the side or the rear, it can hurt it with its mouth parts and kill it. Nevertheless, a larva which is already in the center of a wider gallery shows a greater mobility and kills more easily an approaching larva.
The bigger (or older) larva is not necessarily the «winner» of the competition even if it is generally favoured by its central position and greater mobility.Résumé. — Au printemps, la forte concentration des pontes de Bruchus affinis sur les premières gousses formées de Lathyrus sylvestris est à l'origine d'une importante compétition larvaire intra-spécifique au moment de la colonisation des ovules en croissance. Un seul adulte émerge de la graine même si celle-ci a été colonisée par plusieurs larves.
L'analyse des modalités de cette compétition est abordée. La croissance et le développement des larves de B. affinis sont concomitants de ceux des ovules colonisés et deux caractéristiques se dégagent : première mue larvaire après occupation d'un ovule en croissance et tendance larvaire à occuper le centre des cotylédons. La compétition larvaire est en relation étroite avec un comportement territorial très marqué de la larve.
Les rencontres fortuites par recoupement des galeries larvaires lors de la progression vers le centre mettent les larves en situation de compétition. Lorsque'une larve en rejoint fortuitement une autre sur le côté ou par derrière, elle peut la blesser avec ses pièces buccales et l'éliminer. Mais une larve, déjà au centre dans une galerie plus large, a une mobilité plus grande et élimine plus facilement toute autre larve tentant de la rejoindre.
La larve la plus grosse (ou la plus âgée) n'est pas nécessairement le «vainqueur» de la compétition, bien qu'elle soit en général plus favorisée par sa position au centre et sa meilleure mobilité.N'diaye Saliou, Fabres Gérard, Labeyrie Vincent. Modalités de la compétition larvaire intraspécifique chez Bruchus affinis (Coleoptera, Bruchidae) dans les graines de Lathyrus sylvestris (Leguminosae, Fabaceae). In: Bulletin de la Société entomologique de France, volume 97 (2), juin 1992. pp. 135-144
Femtolens Imaging of a Quasar Central Engine Using a Dwarf Star Telescope
We show that it is possible to image the structure of a distant quasar on
scales of AU by constructing a telescope which uses a nearby dwarf
star as its ``primary lens'' together with a satellite-borne ``secondary''. The
image produced by the primary is magnified by in one direction but
is contracted by 0.5 in the other, and therefore contains highly degenerate
one-dimensional information about the two-dimensional source. We discuss
various methods for extracting information about the second dimension including
``femtolens interferometry'' where one measures the interference between
different parts of the one-dimensional image with each other. Assuming that the
satellite could be dispatched to a position along a star-quasar line of sight
at a distance from the Sun, the nearest available dwarf-star primary is
likely to be at \sim 15\,\pc\,(r/40\,\rm AU)^{-2}. The secondary should
consist of a one-dimensional array of mirrors extending m to
achieve 1 AU resolution, or m to achieve 4 AU resolution.Comment: 12 pages including 3 embedded figure
Multiple imaging by gravitational waves
Gravitational waves act like lenses for the light propagating through them.
This phenomenon is described using the vector formalism employed for ordinary
gravitational lenses, which was proved to be applicable also to a
non-stationary spacetime, with the appropriate modifications. In order to have
multiple imaging, an approximate condition analogous to that for ordinary
gravitational lenses must be satisfied. Certain astrophysical sources of
gravitational waves satisfy this condition, while the gravitational wave
background, on average, does not. Multiple imaging by gravitational waves is,
in principle, possible, but the probability of observing such a phenomenon is
extremely low.Comment: 23 pages, LaTeX, no figures, to appear in Int. J. Mod. Phys.
Large Faraday rotation of resonant light in a cold atomic cloud
We experimentally studied the Faraday rotation of resonant light in an
optically-thick cloud of laser-cooled rubidium atoms. Measurements yield a
large Verdet constant in the range of 200 000 degrees/T/mm and a maximal
polarization rotation of 150 degrees. A complete analysis of the polarization
state of the transmitted light was necessary to account for the role of the
probe laser's spectrum
Speckle Statistics in Adaptively Corrected Images
(abridged) Imaging observations are generally affected by a fluctuating
background of speckles, a particular problem when detecting faint stellar
companions at small angular separations. Knowing the distribution of the
speckle intensities at a given location in the image plane is important for
understanding the noise limits of companion detection. The speckle noise limit
in a long-exposure image is characterized by the intensity variance and the
speckle lifetime. In this paper we address the former quantity through the
distribution function of speckle intensity. Previous theoretical work has
predicted a form for this distribution function at a single location in the
image plane. We developed a fast readout mode to take short exposures of
stellar images corrected by adaptive optics at the ground-based UCO/Lick
Observatory, with integration times of 5 ms and a time between successive
frames of 14.5 ms ( m). These observations temporally
oversample and spatially Nyquist sample the observed speckle patterns. We show,
for various locations in the image plane, the observed distribution of speckle
intensities is consistent with the predicted form. Additionally, we demonstrate
a method by which and can be mapped over the image plane. As the
quantity is proportional to the PSF of the telescope free of random
atmospheric aberrations, this method can be used for PSF calibration and
reconstruction.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepte
Shortcuts to adiabaticity for trapped ultracold gases
We study, experimentally and theoretically, the controlled transfer of
harmonically trapped ultracold gases between different quantum states. In
particular we experimentally demonstrate a fast decompression and displacement
of both a non-interacting gas and an interacting Bose-Einstein condensate which
are initially at equilibrium. The decompression parameters are engineered such
that the final state is identical to that obtained after a perfectly adiabatic
transformation despite the fact that the fast decompression is performed in the
strongly non-adiabatic regime. During the transfer the atomic sample goes
through strongly out-of-equilibrium states while the external confinement is
modified until the system reaches the desired stationary state. The scheme is
theoretically based on the invariants of motion and scaling equations
techniques and can be generalized to decompression trajectories including an
arbitrary deformation of the trap. It is also directly applicable to arbitrary
initial non-equilibrium states.Comment: 36 pages, 14 figure
The EMCCD-Based Speckle Interferometer of the BTA 6-m Telescope: Description and First Results
The description is given for the speckle interferometer of the BTA 6-m
telescope of the SAO RAS based on a new detector with an electron
multiplication CCD. The main components of the instrument are microscope
objectives, interference filters and atmospheric dispersion correction prisms.
The PhotonMAX-512B CCD camera using a back-illuminated CCD97 allows up to 20
speckle images (with 512512 pix resolution) per second storage on the
hard drive. Due to high quantum efficiency (93% in the maximum at 550 nm), and
high transmission of its optical elements, the new camera can be used for
diffraction-limited (0.02) image reconstruction of stars under
good seeing conditions. The main advantages of the new system over the previous
generation BTA speckle interferometer are examined.Comment: 18 pages, 14 figure
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