964 research outputs found
An Agent Based Model for the Simulation of Transport Demand and Land Use
Agent based modelling has emerged as a promising tool to provide planners with insights on social behaviour and
the interdependencies characterising urban system, particularly with respect to transport and infrastructure planning.
This paper presents an agent based model for the simulation of land use and transport demand of an urban area
of Sydney, Australia. Each individual in the model has a travel diary which comprises a sequence of trips the person
makes in a representative day as well as trip attributes such as travel mode, trip purpose, and departure time.
Individuals are associated with each other by their household relationship, which helps define the interdependencies
of their travel diary and constrains their mode choice. This allows the model to not only realistically reproduce how
the current population uses existing transport infrastructure but more importantly provide comprehensive insight into
future transport demands. The router of the traffic micro-simulator TRANSIMS is incorporated in the model to inform
the actual travel time of each trip and changes of traffic density on the road network. Simulation results show very
good agreement with survey data in terms of the distribution of trips done by transport modes and by trip purposes,
as well as the traffic density along the main road in the study area
Non-Unitary Neutrino Propagation From Neutrino Decay
Neutrino propagation in space-time is not constrained to be unitary if very
light states - lighter than the active neutrinos - exist into which neutrinos
may decay. If this is the case, neutrino flavor-change is governed by a handful
of extra mixing and "oscillation" parameters, including new sources of
CP-invariance violation. We compute the transition probabilities in the two-
and three-flavor scenarios and discuss the different phenomenological
consequences of the new physics. These are qualitatively different from other
sources of unitarity violation discussed in the literature.Comment: 8 pages, no figure
Production cross sections from 82Se fragmentation as indications of shell effects in neutron-rich isotopes close to the drip-line
Production cross sections for neutron-rich nuclei from the fragmentation of a
82Se beam at 139 MeV/u were measured. The longitudinal momentum distributions
of 126 neutron-rich isotopes of elements 11 <= Z <= 32 were scanned using an
experimental approach of varying the target thickness. Production cross
sections with beryllium and tungsten targets were determined for a large number
of nuclei including several isotopes first observed in this work. These are the
most neutron-rich nuclides of the elements 22 <= Z <= 25 (64Ti, 67V, 69Cr,
72Mn). One event was registered consistent with 70Cr, and another one with
75Fe. The production cross sections are correlated with Qg systematics to
reveal trends in the data. The results presented here confirm our previous
result from a similar measurement using a 76Ge beam, and can be explained with
a shell model that predicts a subshell closure at N = 34 around Z = 20. This is
demonstrated by systematic trends and calculations with the Abrasion-Ablation
model that are sensitive to separation energies.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, accepted to Phys.Rev.
Production cross sections of neutron rich isotopes from a 82Se beam
Production cross sections for neutron-rich nuclei from the fragmentation of a
82Se beam at 139 MeV/u were measured. The longitudinal momentum distributions
of 122 neutron-rich isotopes of elements were determined by
varying the target thickness. Production cross sections with beryllium and
tungsten targets were determined for a large number of nuclei including several
isotopes first observed in this work. These are the most neutron-rich nuclides
of the elements (64Ti, 67V, 69Cr, 72Mn). One event was
registered consistent with 70Cr, and another one with 75Fe. A one-body Qg
systematics is used to describe the production cross sections based on thermal
evaporation from excited prefragments. The current results confirm those of our
previous experiment with a 76Ge beam: enhanced production cross sections for
neutron-rich fragments near Z=20.Comment: Talk given at the 11th International Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus
Collisions (NN2012), San Antonio, Texas, USA, May 27-June 1, 2012. To appear
in the NN2012 Proceedings in Journal of Physics: Conference Series (JPCS
Climate Effects and Feedback Structure Determining Weed Population Dynamics in a Long-Term Experiment
Pest control is one of the areas in which population dynamic theory has been successfully applied to solve practical problems. However, the links between population dynamic theory and model construction have been less emphasized in the management and control of weed populations. Most management models of weed population dynamics have emphasized the role of the endogenous process, but the role of exogenous variables such as climate have been ignored in the study of weed populations and their management. Here, we use long-term data (22 years) on two annual weed species from a locality in Central Spain to determine the importance of endogenous and exogenous processes (local and large-scale climate factors). Our modeling study determined two different feedback structures and climate effects in the two weed species analyzed. While Descurainia sophia exhibited a second-order feedback and low climate influence, Veronica hederifolia was characterized by a first-order feedback structure and important effects from temperature and rainfall. Our results strongly suggest the importance of theoretical population dynamics in understanding plant population systems. Moreover, the use of this approach, discerning between the effect of exogenous and endogenous factors, can be fundamental to applying weed management practices in agricultural systems and to controlling invasive weedy species. This is a radical change from most approaches currently used to guide weed and invasive weedy species managements
Platforms to differentiate exotic pathovars of plant bacteria
Many of the EPPs that pose the biggest threat to the biosecurity of Australia’s plant industries are bacterial, but difficulties in identification to the subspecific or ‘ pathovar ’ level can seriously delay incursion management and affect market access. Pathovars are defined by host specificity so bio assays remain the definitive means of identification, but these require high level physical containment and can be slow and subjective , delaying diagnosis . Some pathovar - specific serological and molecular tests are available but better diagnostic methods are often required. This project used proteomics and metabolomics, platforms that identify functional molecules potentially associated with plant - pathogen interactions, to identify biomarkers that differentiate pathovars in species of Xanthomonas .
Membrane - associated proteins from a collection of bacterial isolates were compared on 2Dimensional gels. Proteins that were found to be differentially expressed between distinct pathovars may be important modulators of host specificity so they were identified and the genes that encode them located by reference to genomic sequences . DNA - based assays targeting these genes were designed and validated for their specificity to the pathovar level . We have developed two new assays that provide levels of specificity not reported elsewhere in the literature. These assays specifically target the bacteria causing the different forms of citrus canker, but without cross - reaction to the closely - related organisms causing bacterial blight on cotton and Citrus Bacterial Spot. The molecular assays will be incorporated into the National Diagnostic Protocol for citrus canker through the SPHDS process.
The metabolomics component has analysed metabolite expression in selected bacterial pathovars. Results showed separation between the different pathovars based on differential levels of expression of particular metabolites. These metabolites may be important determinants of pathogenicity.
Neither proteomics nor metabolomics had been implemented before in the study of phytopathogenic bacteria and whilst both proved to be technically demanding, each delivered new biomarkers that differentiate phytopathogenic bacteria to a subspecific level . This confirmed the viability of these approaches as platforms to discover novel diagnostic targets. The new methods developed will be implemented into the national incursion response capability , improving the specificity of diagnostic testing available and reducing the possibility of false positive diagnosis .
The project has fostered new collaborative partnerships both nationally (NSW, Victoria, WA) and internationally (to Thailand and the USA). The next phase of this work will provide a strong start - up project to the Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre ( PBCRC ) . This project has directly enhanced the plant bacteriology capacity of NSW and Australia trough the recruitment and training of science professionals and an undergraduate student , and supported the specialist training of a Thai scientist through allied project CRC20093
Covalent bond shortening and distortion induced by pressurization of thorium, uranium, and neptunium tetrakis aryloxides
Covalency involving the 5f orbitals is regularly invoked to explain the reactivity, structure and spectroscopic properties of the actinides, but the ionic versus covalent nature of metal-ligand bonding in actinide complexes remains controversial. The tetrakis 2,6-di-tert-butylphenoxide complexes of Th, U and Np form an isostructural series of crystal structures containing approximately tetrahedral MO(4) cores. We show that up to 3 GPa the Th and U crystal structures show negative linear compressibility as the OMO angles distort. At 3 GPa the angles snap back to their original values, reverting to a tetrahedral geometry with an abrupt shortening of the M-O distances by up to 0.1 Å. The Np complex shows similar but smaller effects, transforming above 2.4 GPa. Electronic structure calculations associate the M-O bond shortening with a change in covalency resulting from increased contributions to the M-O bonding by the metal 6d and 5f orbitals, the combination promoting MO(4) flexibility at little cost in energy
- …