30 research outputs found

    The Theory of Brown Dwarfs and Extrasolar Giant Planets

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    Straddling the traditional realms of the planets and the stars, objects below the edge of the main sequence have such unique properties, and are being discovered in such quantities, that one can rightly claim that a new field at the interface of planetary science and and astronomy is being born. In this review, we explore the essential elements of the theory of brown dwarfs and giant planets, as well as of the new spectroscopic classes L and T. To this end, we describe their evolution, spectra, atmospheric compositions, chemistry, physics, and nuclear phases and explain the basic systematics of substellar-mass objects across three orders of magnitude in both mass and age and a factor of 30 in effective temperature. Moreover, we discuss the distinctive features of those extrasolar giant planets that are irradiated by a central primary, in particular their reflection spectra, albedos, and transits. Aspects of the latest theory of Jupiter and Saturn are also presented. Throughout, we highlight the effects of condensates, clouds, molecular abundances, and molecular/atomic opacities in brown dwarf and giant planet atmospheres and summarize the resulting spectral diagnostics. Where possible, the theory is put in its current observational context.Comment: 67 pages (including 36 figures), RMP RevTeX LaTeX, accepted for publication in the Reviews of Modern Physics. 30 figures are color. Most of the figures are in GIF format to reduce the overall size. The full version with figures can also be found at: http://jupiter.as.arizona.edu/~burrows/papers/rm

    The ascidians of Australia Patricia kott

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    The work comprises a systematic review of the aplousobranch family Polyclinidae and includes discussions on the relationships of Indo-Pacific and West Pacific species of the family. Thirty-seven species taken from Australian waters are described, of which 15 are new. Their geographical distribution is briefly discussed

    Ecological and sexual variation in Drosophila rubida inversion polymorphism

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    A natural translocation in drosophila

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    DESPITE the extensive work done on the cytogenetics of natural populations of Drosophila, only four examples of natural translocations are known besides the case recorded here, due, apparently, to the very heavy selection against the condition1. Homozygous translocations may lead to inviability or infertility as a result of some kind of position effect2. Heterozygous translocations have both disjunction and crossing-over affected3. The first two cases were in D. ananassae4,5, the third in D. prosalterns6,7 and the fourth in D. ananassae8. Only the D. ananassae translocation discovered by Dobzhansky and Pavan has been detected more than once, namely, in two out of seven females tested. These translocations have all been detected in material from Brazil except Kikkawa's D. ananassae translocation, which was in material from Japan
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