126 research outputs found
Whole body counter surveys of Miharu-town school children for four consecutive years after the Fukushima NPP accident
Comprehensive whole-body counter surveys of Miharu town school children have
been conducted for four consecutive years, in 2011-2014. This represents the
only long-term sampling-bias-free study of its type conducted after the
Fukushima Dai-ichi accident. For the first time in 2014, a new device called
the Babyscan, which has a low Cs MDA of Bq/body, was used to
screen the children shorter than 130 cm. No child in this group was found to
have detectable level of radiocesium. Using the MDAs, upper limits of daily
intake of radiocesium were estimated for each child. For those screened with
the Babyscan, the upper intake limits were found to be <1 Bq/day for
Cs. Analysis of a questionnaire filled out by the children's parents
regarding their food and water consumption shows that the majority of Miharu
children regularly consume local and/or home-grown rice and vegetables. This
however does not increase the body burden.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Rhynchothorax mediterraneus, the First Record of Rhynchothoracidae (Pycnogonida) from Japan
Several specimens of a pycnogonid, Rhynchothorax mediterraneus Costa, 1861 were found in collections from Tanabe Bay. This is the first record of the family Rhynchothoracidae from Japanese waters and considerably extends the species' distribution
Characterization of sulfate mineral deposits in central Thailand
In this paper we present petrographic and geochemical data of sulfate mineral deposits in northeast Nakhon Sawan, central Thailand, and provide new constraints on their age. The deposits are made up mainly of strongly deformed nodular and massive gypsum in the upper part, and less deformed layered anhydrite in the lower part. They are intruded by andesitic dikes that contain Middle Triassic zircons (ca 240 Ma). These dikes are probably part of the regional magmatic activity of the Sukhothai Arc during the Early to Middle Triassic. Sulfur (δ34S) and strontium (87Sr/86Sr) isotopic compositions of the sulfates range from 15.86‰ to 16.26‰ and from 0.70810 to 0.70817, respectively. Comparisons with the Phanerozoic seawater isotopic evolution curve indicate that those values are best explained by precipitation of the sulfates from Carboniferous seawater, in particular seawater of late Mississippian age (ca 326 Ma), and this would be consistent with previous studies of calcareous fossils in the limestones that crop out around this site. Our interpretation is that evaporitic gypsum was originally precipitated from hypersaline seawater on a shallow lagoon or shelf on the Khao Khwang Platform during the Serpukhovian, and that this gypsum changed to anhydrite during early burial. The anhydrite was then cut by andesitic dikes during the Middle Triassic, and more recently the upper part of which was rehydrated during exhumation to form secondary gypsum near the surface
Cosmic shear statistics in the Suprime-Cam 2.1 sq deg field: Constraints on Omega_m and sigma_8
We present measurements of the cosmic shear correlation in the shapes of
galaxies in the Suprime-Cam 2.1 deg^2 R_c-band imaging data. As an estimator of
the shear correlation originated from the gravitational lensing, we adopt the
aperture mass variance. We detect a non-zero E mode variance on scales between
2 and 40arcmin. We also detect a small but non-zero B mode variance on scales
larger than 5arcmin. We compare the measured E mode variance to the model
predictions in CDM cosmologies using maximum likelihood analysis. A
four-dimensional space is explored, which examines sigma_8, Omega_m, Gamma and
zs (a mean redshift of galaxies). We include three possible sources of error:
statistical noise, the cosmic variance estimated using numerical experiments,
and a residual systematic effect estimated from the B mode variance. We derive
joint constraints on two parameters by marginalizing over the two remaining
parameters. We obtain an upper limit of Gamma0.9 (68% confidence).
For a prior Gamma\in[0.1,0.4] and zs\in[0.6,1.4], we find
sigma_8=(0.50_{-0.16}^{+0.35})Omega_m^{-0.37} for flat cosmologies and
sigma_8=(0.51_{-0.16}^{+0.29})Omega_m^{-0.34}$ for open cosmologies (95%
confidence). If we take the currently popular LCDM model, we obtain a
one-dimensional confidence interval on sigma_8 for the 95.4% level,
0.62<\sigma_8<1.32 for zs\in[0.6,1.4]. Information on the redshift distribution
of galaxies is key to obtaining a correct cosmological constraint. An
independent constraint on Gamma from other observations is useful to tighten
the constraint.Comment: 12 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Environmental history of Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica collected in Miyako Bay, northeastern Japan
The environmental history in combination with age of the Japanese eel, Anguilla japonica, collected in Miyako Bay along the Sanriku Coast of Japan, was examined using the otolith microstructure and analysis of strontium (Sr) and calcium (Ca) concentrations with wavelength dispersive X-ray spectrometry by an electron microprobe. The line analysis of Sr : Ca ratios along the life history transect of each otolith showed a peak (ca 12-17×10^) between the core and elver mark, which corresponded to the period of their leptocephalus and early glass eel stages in the ocean. The mean Sr : Ca ratios from the elver mark to the otolith edge indicated that there were eels with several general categories of migratory history, that included sea eels that never entered freshwater (average Sr : Ca ratios, >6.0×10^) and others that had entered freshwater for brief periods, but returned to the estuary or bay. This evidence of the occurrence of sea eels indicates that Japanese eels in this northern area do not necessarily migrate into freshwater rivers during recruitment as glass eels at the beginning of their growth phase, and even those that do enter freshwater may later return to the marine environment
- …