14,182 research outputs found

    The fishery for California market squid (Loligo opalescens) (Cephalopoda: Myopsida), from 1981 through 2003

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    The California market squid (Loligo opalescens) has been harvested since the 1860s and it has become the largest fishery in California in terms of tonnage and dollars since 1993. The fishery began in Monterey Bay and then shifted to southern California, where effort has increased steadily since 1983. The California Department of Fish and Game (CDFG) collects information on landings of squid, including tonnage, location, and date of capture. We compared landings data gathered by CDFG with sea surface temperature (SST), upwelling index (UI), the southern oscillation index (SOI), and their respective anomalies. We found that the squid fishery in Monterey Bay expends twice the effort of that in southern California. Squid landings decreased substantially following large El Niño events in 1982−83 and 1997−98, but not following the smaller El Niño events of 1987 and 1992. Spectral analysis revealed autocorrelation at annual and 4.5-year intervals (similar to the time period between El Niño cycles). But this analysis did not reveal any fortnightly or monthly spawning peaks, thus squid spawning did not correlate with tides. A paralarvae density index (PDI) for February correlated well with catch per unit of effort (CPUE) for the following November recruitment of adults to the spawning grounds. This stock– recruitment analysis was significant for 2000−03 (CPUE=8.42+0.41PDI, adjusted coefficient of determination, r2=0.978, P=0.0074). Surveys of squid paralarvae explained 97.8% of the variance for catches of adult squid nine months later. The regression of CPUE on PDI could be used to manage the fishery. Catch limits for the fishery could be set on the basis of paralarvae abundance surveyed nine months earlier

    Exact Quantum States for all Two-Dimensional Dilaton Gravity Theories

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    It is shown that the recently obtained quantum wave functionals in terms of the CJZ variables for generic 2d dilaton gravity are equivalent to the previously reported exact quantum wave functionals in geometrical variables. A third representation of these exact quantum states is also presented

    Long-Lived Double-Barred Galaxies From Pseudo-Bulges

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    A large fraction of barred galaxies host secondary bars that are embedded in their large-scale primary counterparts. These are common also in gas poor early-type barred galaxies. The evolution of such double-barred galaxies is still not well understood, partly because of a lack of realistic NN-body models with which to study them. Here we report a new mechanism for generating such systems, namely the presence of rotating pseudo-bulges. We demonstate with high mass and force resolution collisionless NN-body simulations that long-lived secondary bars can form spontaneously without requiring gas, contrary to previous claims. We find that secondary bars rotate faster than primary ones. The rotation is not, however, rigid: the secondary bars pulsate, with their amplitude and pattern speed oscillating as they rotate through the primary bars. This self-consistent study supports previous work based on orbital analysis in the potential of two rigidly rotating bars. The pulsating nature of secondary bars may have important implications for understanding the central region of double-barred galaxies.Comment: Paper submitted to ApJ

    Mean Field Fluid Behavior of the Gaussian Core Model

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    We show that the Gaussian core model of particles interacting via a penetrable repulsive Gaussian potential, first considered by Stillinger (J. Chem. Phys. 65, 3968 (1976)), behaves like a weakly correlated ``mean field fluid'' over a surprisingly wide density and temperature range. In the bulk the structure of the fluid phase is accurately described by the random phase approximation for the direct correlation function, and by the more sophisticated HNC integral equation. The resulting pressure deviates very little from a simple, mean-field like, quadratic form in the density, while the low density virial expansion turns out to have an extremely small radius of convergence. Density profiles near a hard wall are also very accurately described by the corresponding mean-field free-energy functional. The binary version of the model exhibits a spinodal instability against de-mixing at high densities. Possible implications for semi-dilute polymer solutions are discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 2 columns, ReVTeX epsfig,multicol,amssym, 15 figures; submitted to Phys. Rev. E (change: important reference added

    Influence of polymer excluded volume on the phase behavior of colloid-polymer mixtures

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    We determine the depletion-induced phase-behavior of hard sphere colloids and interacting polymers by large-scale Monte Carlo simulations using very accurate coarse-graining techniques. A comparison with standard Asakura-Oosawa model theories and simulations shows that including excluded volume interactions between polymers leads to qualitative differences in the phase diagrams. These effects become increasingly important for larger relative polymer size. Our simulations results agree quantitatively with recent experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures submitted to Physical Review Letter

    The Asakura-Oosawa model in the protein limit: the role of many-body interactions

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    We study the Asakura-Oosawa model in the "protein limit", where the penetrable sphere radius RAOR_{AO} is much greater than the hard sphere radius RcR_c. The phase behaviour and structure calculated with a full many-body treatment show important qualitative differences when compared to a description based on pair potentials alone. The overall effect of the many-body interactions is repulsive.Comment: 9 pages and 11 figures, submitted to J. Phys.: Condensed Matter, special issue "Effective many-body interactions and correlations in soft matter

    Direct Confirmation of Two Pattern Speeds in the Double Barred Galaxy NGC 2950

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    We present surface photometry and stellar kinematics of NGC 2950, which is a nearby and undisturbed SB0 galaxy hosting two nested stellar bars. We use the Tremaine-Weinberg method to measure the pattern speed of the primary bar. This also permits us to establish directly and for the first time that the two nested bars are rotating with different pattern speeds, and in particular that the rotation frequency of the secondary bar is higher than that of the primary one.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures. To appear in ApJ Letter

    Dispersion control for matter waves and gap solitons in optical superlattices

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    We present a numerical study of dispersion manipulation and formation of matter-wave gap solitons in a Bose-Einstein condensate trapped in an optical superlattice. We demonstrate a method for controlled generation of matter-wave gap solitons in a stationary lattice by using an interference pattern of two condensate wavepackets, which mimics the structure of the gap soliton near the edge of a spectral band. The efficiency of this method is compared with that of gap soliton generation in a moving lattice recently demonstrated experimentally by Eiermann et al. [Phys. Rev. Lett. 92, 230401 (2004)]. We show that, by changing the relative depths of the superlattice wells, one can fine-tune the effective dispersion of the matter waves at the edges of the mini-gaps of the superlattice Bloch-wave spectrum and therefore effectively control both the peak density and the spatial width of the emerging gap solitons.Comment: 8 pages, 9 figures; modified references in Section 2; minor content changes in Sections 1 and 2 and Fig. 9 captio

    The self-assembly of DNA Holliday junctions studied with a minimal model

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    In this paper, we explore the feasibility of using coarse-grained models to simulate the self-assembly of DNA nanostructures. We introduce a simple model of DNA where each nucleotide is represented by two interaction sites corresponding to the phosphate-sugar backbone and the base. Using this model, we are able to simulate the self-assembly of both DNA duplexes and Holliday junctions from single-stranded DNA. We find that assembly is most successful in the temperature window below the melting temperatures of the target structure and above the melting temperature of misbonded aggregates. Furthermore, in the case of the Holliday junction, we show how a hierarchical assembly mechanism reduces the possibility of becoming trapped in misbonded configurations. The model is also able to reproduce the relative melting temperatures of different structures accurately, and allows strand displacement to occur.Comment: 13 pages, 14 figure

    Shape optimization of pressurized air bearings

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    Use of externally pressurized air bearings allows for the design of mechanical systems requiring extreme precision in positioning. One application is the fine control for the positioning of mirrors in large-scale optical telescopes. Other examples come from applications in robotics and computer hard-drive manufacturing. Pressurized bearings maintain a finite separation between mechanical components by virtue of the presence of a pressurized flow of air through the gap between the components. An everyday example is an air hockey table, where a puck is levitated above the table by an array of vertical jets of air. Using pressurized bearings there is no contact between “moving parts” and hence there is no friction and no wear of sensitive components. This workshop project is focused on the problem of designing optimal static air bearings subject to given engineering constraints. Recent numerical computations of this problem, done at IBM by Robert and Hendriks, suggest that near-optimal designs can have unexpected complicated and intricate structures. We will use analytical approaches to shed some light on this situation and to offer some guides for the design process. In Section 2 the design problem is stated and formulated as an optimization problem for an elliptic boundary value problem. In Section 3 the general problem is specialized to bearings with rectangular bases. Section 4 addresses the solutions of this problem that can be obtained using variational formulations of the problem. Analysis showing the sensitive dependence to perturbations (in numerical computations or manufacturing constraints) of near-optimal designs is given in Section 5. In Section 6, a restricted class of “groove network” designs motivated by the original results of Robert and Hendriks is examined. Finally, in Section 7, we consider the design problem for circular axisymmetric air bearings
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