231 research outputs found
Thermo-elasticity for anisotropic media in higher dimensions
In this note we develop tools to study the Cauchy problem for the system of
thermo-elasticity in higher dimensions. The theory is developed for general
homogeneous anisotropic media under non-degeneracy conditions.
For degenerate cases a method of treatment is sketched and for the cases of
cubic media and hexagonal media detailed studies are provided.Comment: 33 pages, 5 figure
Trend analysis using non-stationary time series clustering based on the finite element method
In order to analyze low-frequency variability of climate, it is useful to
model the climatic time series with multiple linear trends and locate the
times of significant changes. In this paper, we have used non-stationary time
series clustering to find change points in the trends. Clustering in a
multi-dimensional non-stationary time series is challenging, since the
problem is mathematically ill-posed. Clustering based on the finite element
method (FEM) is one of the methods that can analyze multidimensional time
series. One important attribute of this method is that it is not dependent on
any statistical assumption and does not need local stationarity in the time
series. In this paper, it is shown how the FEM-clustering method can be used
to locate change points in the trend of temperature time series from in
situ observations. This method is applied to the temperature time
series of North Carolina (NC) and the results represent region-specific
climate variability despite higher frequency harmonics in climatic time
series. Next, we investigated the relationship between the climatic indices
with the clusters/trends detected based on this clustering method. It appears
that the natural variability of climate change in NC during 1950–2009 can be
explained mostly by AMO and solar activity
Prevalence of ruminant pestivirus infections in Namibia
Following several clinical cases of suspected bovine virus diarrhoea (BVD) on three Namibian cattle farms, a serological survey was conducted on bovine, ovine, caprine and wild ruminant sera originating from different regions of the country. Neutralizing antibodies to BVD virus (BVDV) were detected in 58% of 1 014 cattle sera, 14% of 618 sheep sera and 4,6% of 1 118 goat sera. Sera from seven of ten wildlife species were positive with kudu, eland and giraffe having prevalence rates greater than 40%. BVDV was isolated from six clinically affected bovines and three healthy heifers persistently infected with BVDV. The survey demonstrated that pestivirus infections are widespread in Namibia in both domestic and wild ruminants.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 600dpi.
Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.mn201
Theory of nonlinear optical properties of phenyl-substituted polyacetylenes
In this paper we present a theoretical study of the third-order nonlinear
optical properties of poly(diphenyl)polyacetylene (PDPA) pertaining to the
third-harmonic-generation (THG) process. We study the aforesaid process in
PDPA's using both the independent electron Hueckel model, as well as
correlated-electron Pariser-Parr-Pople (P-P-P) model. The P-P-P model based
calculations were performed using various configuration interaction (CI)
methods such as the the multi-reference-singles-doubles CI (MRSDCI), and the
quadruples-CI (QCI) methods, and the both longitudinal and the transverse
components of third-order susceptibilities were computed. The Hueckel model
calculations were performed on oligo-PDPA's containing up to fifty repeat
units, while correlated calculations were performed for oligomers containing up
to ten unit cells. At all levels of theory, the material exhibits highly
anisotropic nonlinear optical response, in keeping with its structural
anisotropy. We argue that the aforesaid anisotropy can be divided over two
natural energy scales: (a) the low-energy response is predominantly
longitudinal and is qualitatively similar to that of polyenes, while (b) the
high-energy response is mainly transverse, and is qualitatively similar to that
of trans-stilbene.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures (included), to appear in Physical Review B (April
15, 2004
Two-photon absorption spectra of luminescent conducting polymers measured over wide spectral range
Optical Science, Engineering and Instrumentation '97, 1997, San Diego, CA, United StatesRon K. Meyer, Martin Liess, Robert E. Benner, Werner Gellermann, Z. Valy Vardeny, Masanori Ozaki, Katsumi Yoshino, Yi Wei Ding, and Thomas J. Barton "Two-photon absorption spectra of luminescent conducting polymers measured over wide spectral range", Proc. SPIE 3145, Optical Probes of Conjugated Polymers, (1 December 1997). DOI: https://doi.org/10.1117/12.27927
Interspecific competition delays recovery of Daphnia spp. populations from pesticide stress
Xenobiotics alter the balance of competition between species and induce shifts in community composition. However, little is known about how these alterations affect the recovery of sensitive taxa. We exposed zooplankton communities to esfenvalerate (0.03, 0.3, and 3 μg/L) in outdoor microcosms and investigated the long-term effects on populations of Daphnia spp. To cover a broad and realistic range of environmental conditions, we established 96 microcosms with different treatments of shading and periodic harvesting. Populations of Daphnia spp. decreased in abundance for more than 8 weeks after contamination at 0.3 and 3 μg/L esfenvalerate. The period required for recovery at 0.3 and 3 μg/L was more than eight and three times longer, respectively, than the recovery period that was predicted on the basis of the life cycle of Daphnia spp. without considering the environmental context. We found that the recovery of sensitive Daphnia spp. populations depended on the initial pesticide survival and the related increase of less sensitive, competing taxa. We assert that this increase in the abundance of competing species, as well as sub-lethal effects of esfenvalerate, caused the unexpectedly prolonged effects of esfenvalerate on populations of Daphnia spp. We conclude that assessing biotic interactions is essential to understand and hence predict the effects and recovery from toxicant stress in communities
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