902 research outputs found

    Biological and climatic influences on the dace Leuciscus leuciscus in a southern chalk-stream

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    The dace, Leuciscus leuciscus (L.) is an important cyprinid in terms of population biomass in chalk streams of southern England. Dace recruitment has been shown to vary widely from year to year and it is thought that this variation is largely as a result of the influence of abiotic factors, chiefly water temperature. From 1968 to 1981 there was a thirteen-fold difference in the year class structure index between the minimum index (0.25 in 1972) and the maximum (3.21 in 1976). The problems of such variation, especially those that could ensue from a succession of poor year-classes, are offset by the spread of reproductive effort by each female over several years

    The bullhead Cottus gobio , a versatile and successful fish

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    A series of studies on the ecology of the bullhead, Cottus gobio is described. Habitat choice, growth rate and longevity, population density, biomass and production, reproduction, life history and feeding is compared at 8 sites in England and 1 site in Wales. Evidence suggests that in Cottus gobio the prevailing environmental conditions result in considerable modifications in longevity, growth rate and egg production. It also indicates that the advantages of fast growth and high reproductive effort in favourable habitats are offset, at least partially by increases in mortality

    DFR Perturbative Quantum Field theory on Quantum Space Time, and Wick Reduction

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    We discuss the perturbative approach a` la Dyson to a quantum field theory with nonlocal self-interaction :phi*...*phi:, according to Doplicher, Fredenhagen and Roberts (DFR). In particular, we show that the Wick reduction of non locally time--ordered products of Wick monomials can be performed as usual, and we discuss a very simple Dyson diagram.Comment: 15 pages, pdf has active hyperlinks. To appear in the proceedings of the conference on "Rigorous quantum Field Theory", held at Saclay on July 19-21, 2004, on the occasion of Jacques Bros' 70th birthda

    Vector Meson Dominance and gρππg_{\rho\pi\pi} at Finite Temperature from QCD Sum Rules

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    A Finite Energy QCD sum rule at non-zero temperature is used to determine the q2q^2- and the T-dependence of the ρππ\rho \pi \pi vertex function in the space-like region. A comparison with an independent QCD determination of the electromagnetic pion form factor FπF_{\pi} at T0T \neq 0 indicates that Vector Meson Dominance holds to a very good approximation at finite temperature. At the same time, analytical evidence for deconfinement is obtained from the result that gρππ(q2,T)g_{\rho \pi \pi}(q^{2},T) vanishes at the critical temperature TcT_c, independently of q2q^{2}. Also, by extrapolating the ρππ\rho \pi \pi form factor to q2=0q^2 = 0, it is found that the pion radius increases with increasing TT, and it diverges at T=TcT=T_c.Comment: 7 pages, Latex, 3 figures to be delivered from the authors by request, to appear in Phys. Lett.

    The seesaw mechanism at TeV scale in the 3-3-1 model with right-handed neutrinos

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    We implement the seesaw mechanism in the 3-3-1 model with right-handed neutrinos. This is accomplished by the introduction of a scalar sextet into the model and the spontaneous violation of the lepton number. We identify the Majoron as a singlet under SUL(2)UY(1)SU_L(2)\otimes U_Y(1) symmetry, which makes it safe under the current bounds imposed by electroweak data. The main result of this work is that the seesaw mechanism works already at TeV scale with the outcome that the right-handed neutrino masses lie in the electroweak scale, in the range from MeV to tens of GeV. This window provides a great opportunity to test their appearance at current detectors, though when we contrast our results with some previous analysis concerning detection sensitivity at LHC, we conclude that further work is needed in order to validate this search.Comment: about 13 pages, no figure

    Theory of Melting and the Optical Properties of Gold/DNA Nanocomposites

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    We describe a simple model for the melting and optical properties of a DNA/gold nanoparticle aggregate. The optical properties at fixed wavelength change dramatically at the melting transition, which is found to be higher and narrower in temperature for larger particles, and much sharper than that of an isolated DNA link. All these features are in agreement with available experiments. The aggregate is modeled as a cluster of gold nanoparticles on a periodic lattice connected by DNA bonds, and the extinction coefficient is computed using the discrete dipole approximation. Melting takes place as an increasing number of these bonds break with increasing temperature. The melting temperature corresponds approximately to the bond percolation threshold.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure. To be published in Phys. Rev.

    The ρ\rho Meson and the Thermal Behavior of an Effective Hadronic Coupling Constant

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    Vector Meson Dominance ideas together with a Finite Energy QCD sum rule allows for the determination of the q2q^{2}- and the TT- dependence of the effective hadronic coupling constant gρππg_{\rho \pi \pi} in the space-like region. It turns out that gρππ(q2,T)g_{\rho \pi \pi}(q^{2},T) vanishes at the critical temperature TcT_{c}, independently of q2q^{2}. A comparison with a previous independent QCD determination of the electromagnetic pion form factor at finite temperature supports the validity of Vector Meson Dominance at finite temperature. We find also thet the pion radius increases with TT, having a divergent behavior at TcT_{c}.Comment: 4 pages, Latex.One figure, to be requested by from the author

    Light quarks masses and condensates in QCD

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    We review some theoretical and phenomenological aspects of the scenario in which the spontaneous breaking of chiral symmetry is not triggered by a formation of a large condensate . Emphasis is put on the resulting pattern of light quark masses, on the constraints arising from QCD sum rules and on forthcoming experimental tests.Comment: 23 pages, 12 Postscript figures, LaTeX, uses svcon2e.sty, to be published in the Proceedings of the Workshop on Chiral Dynamics 1997, Mainz, Germany, Sept. 1-5, 199

    Summer CO2 evasion from streams and rivers in the Kolyma River basin, north-east Siberia

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    Inland water systems are generally supersaturated in carbon dioxide (CO2) and are increasingly recognized as playing an important role in the global carbon cycle. The Arctic may be particularly important in this respect, given the abundance of inland waters and carbon contained in Arctic soils; however, a lack of trace gas measurements from small streams in the Arctic currently limits this understanding.We investigated the spatial variability of CO2 evasion during the summer low-flow period from streams and rivers in the northern portion of the Kolyma River basin in north-eastern Siberia. To this end, partial pressure of carbon dioxide (pCO2) and gas exchange velocities (k) were measured at a diverse set of streams and rivers to calculate CO2 evasion fluxes. We combined these CO2 evasion estimates with satellite remote sensing and geographic information system techniques to calculate total areal CO2 emissions. Our results show that small streams are substantial sources of atmospheric CO2 owing to high pCO2 and k, despite being a small portion of total inland water surface area. In contrast, large rivers were generally near equilibrium with atmospheric CO2. Extrapolating our findings across the Panteleikha-Ambolikha sub-watersheds demonstrated that small streams play a major role in CO2 evasion, accounting for 86% of the total summer CO2 emissions from inland waters within these two sub-watersheds. Further expansion of these regional CO2 emission estimates across time and space will be critical to accurately quantify and understand the role of Arctic streams and rivers in the global carbon budget

    Multipartite entangled coherent states

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    We propose a scheme for generating multipartite entangled coherent states via entanglement swapping, with an example of a physical realization in ion traps. Bipartite entanglement of these multipartite states is quantified by the concurrence. We also use the NN--tangle to compute multipartite entanglement for certain systems. Finally we establish that these results for entanglement can be applied to more general multipartite entangled nonorthogonal states.Comment: 7 pages, two figures. We added more detail discussions on the generation of multipartite entangled coherent states and multipartite entangelemen
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