979 research outputs found
Experimental comparison of coherent polarization-switched QPSK to polarization-multiplexed QPSK for 10 x 100 km WDM transmission
Polarization-switched quadrature phase-shift keying has been demonstrated experimentally at 40.5Gb/s with a coherent receiver and digital signal processing. Compared to polarization-multiplexed QPSK at the same bit rate, its back-to-back sensitivity at 10-3 bit-error-ratio shows 0.9dB improvement, and it tolerates about 1.6dB higher launch power for 10 × 100km, 50GHz-spaced WDM transmission allowing 1dB penalty in required optical-signal-to-noise ratio relative to back-to-back
Examining environmental drivers of spatial variability in aflatoxin accumulation in Kenyan maize: potential utility in risk prediction models
Maize, a staple food in most African countries, is prone to contamination by aflatoxins, toxic secondary metabolites mainly produced by Aspergillus flavus and A. parasiticus. Aflatoxins are known to cause liver cancer, and chronic exposure has been linked to other adverse health outcomes including growth faltering in children. To mitigate exposure in maize-dependent populations, there is need to identify the factors associated with aflatoxin contamination. This is difficult, however, because of high sampling cost and lack of affordable and accurate analytical methods. Publicly available, remotely-sensed data on vegetation, precipitation, and soil properties could be useful in predicting locations at risk for aflatoxin contamination in maize. This study investigates the utility of publicly available remotely-sensed data on rainfall, vegetation cover (indicated by normalized difference vegetation index or NDVI), and soil characteristics as potential predictors of aflatoxin contamination in Kenyan maize. Aflatoxin was analyzed in maize samples (n=2466) that were collected in 2009 and 2010 at 243 local hammer mills in eastern and western Kenya. Overall, 60% of maize samples had detectable aflatoxin. Global positioning system coordinates of each mill location were linked to remotely-sensed, spatially explicit indicators of average monthly NDVI, total monthly rainfall, and soil properties. Higher rainfall and vegetation cover during the maize pre-flowering period were significantly associated with higher prevalence of aflatoxin contamination. Conversely, higher rainfall and vegetation cover during the maize flowering and post-flowering periods (not including harvest) were associated with lower prevalence of aflatoxin contamination. Water stress throughout the growing season may cause increased plant susceptibility to fungal colonization and aflatoxin accumulation. Soil organic carbon content, pH, total exchangeable bases, salinity, texture, and soil type were significantly associated with aflatoxin. In conclusion, this study shows that remotely-sensed data can be regressed on available aflatoxin data highlighting important potential predictors that could reduce the cost of data collection and the cost of aflatoxin risk forecasting models.Keywords: Aflatoxin, GIS, NDVI, soil characteristics, rainfall, mycotoxins, East Africa, Keny
On the Erasure and Regeneration of the Primordial Baryon Asymmetry by Sphalerons
We show that a cosmological baryon asymmetry generated at the GUT scale,
which would be destroyed at lower temperatures by sphalerons and possible new
B- or L-violating effects, can naturally be preserved by an asymmetry in the
number of right-handed electrons. This results in a significant softening of
previously derived baryogenesis-based constraints on the strength of exotic B-
or L-violating interactions.Comment: 10 pp. LaTex (2 figures, included) UMN-TH-1201/9
Suppressing the and neutrino masses by a superconformal force
The idea of Nelson and Strassler to obtain a power law suppression of
parameters by a superconformal force is applied to understand the smallness of
the parameter and neutrino masses in R-parity violating supersymmetric
standard models. We find that the low-energy sector should contain at least
another pair of Higgs doublets, and that a suppression of \lsim O(10^{-13})
for the parameter and neutrino masses can be achieved generically. The
superpotential of the low-energy sector happens to possess an anomaly-free
discrete R-symmetry, either or , which naturally suppresses certain
lepton-flavor violating processes, the neutrinoless double beta decays and also
the electron electric dipole moment. We expect that the escape energy of the
superconformal sector is \lsim O(10) TeV so that this sector will be
observable at LHC. Our models can accommodate to a large mixing among neutrinos
and give the same upper bound of the lightest Higgs mass as the minimal
supersymmetric standard model.Comment: 24 page
Constraints on Baryon-Nonconserving Yukawa Couplings in a Supersymmetric Theory
The 1-loop evolution of couplings in the minimal supersymmetric standard
model, extended to include baryon nonconserving operators through
explicit -parity violation, is considered keeping only
superpotential terms involving the maximum possible number of third generation
superfields. If all retained Yukawa couplings are required to remain in
the perturbative domain upto the scale of gauge group unification,
upper bounds ensue on the magnitudes of the coupling strengths at
the supersymmetry breaking scale, independent of the model of unification. They
turn out to be similar to the corresponding fixed point values reached from a
wide range of (including all greater than unity) at the unification
scale. The coupled evolution of the top and Yukawa couplings results
in a reduction of the fixed point value of the former.Comment: PRL-TH-94/8 and TIFR/TH/94-7, 15 pages, LaTe
Fermion Masses and Gauge Mediated Supersymmetry Breaking from a Single U(1)
We present a supersymmetric model of flavor. A single U(1) gauge group is
responsible for both generating the flavor spectrum and communicating
supersymmetry breaking to the visible sector. The problem of Flavor Changing
Neutral Currents is overcome, in part using an `Effective Supersymmetry'
spectrum among the squarks, with the first two generations very heavy. All
masses are generated dynamically and the theory is completely renormalizable.
The model contains a simple Froggatt-Nielsen sector and communicates
supersymmetry breaking via gauge mediation without requiring a separate
messenger sector. By forcing the theory to be consistent with SU(5) Grand
Unification, the model predicts a large tan beta and a massless up quark. While
respecting the experimental bounds on CP violation in the K-system, the model
leads to a large enhancement of CP violation in B-(B bar) mixing as well as in
B decay amplitudes.Comment: LaTeX, 25 pages, 8 figure
Adaptation of Autocatalytic Fluctuations to Diffusive Noise
Evolution of a system of diffusing and proliferating mortal reactants is
analyzed in the presence of randomly moving catalysts. While the continuum
description of the problem predicts reactant extinction as the average growth
rate becomes negative, growth rate fluctuations induced by the discrete nature
of the agents are shown to allow for an active phase, where reactants
proliferate as their spatial configuration adapts to the fluctuations of the
catalysts density. The model is explored by employing field theoretical
techniques, numerical simulations and strong coupling analysis. For d<=2, the
system is shown to exhibits an active phase at any growth rate, while for d>2 a
kinetic phase transition is predicted. The applicability of this model as a
prototype for a host of phenomena which exhibit self organization is discussed.Comment: 6 pages 6 figur
Einstein, incompleteness, and the epistemic view of quantum states
Does the quantum state represent reality or our knowledge of reality? In
making this distinction precise, we are led to a novel classification of hidden
variable models of quantum theory. Indeed, representatives of each class can be
found among existing constructions for two-dimensional Hilbert spaces. Our
approach also provides a fruitful new perspective on arguments for the
nonlocality and incompleteness of quantum theory. Specifically, we show that
for models wherein the quantum state has the status of something real, the
failure of locality can be established through an argument considerably more
straightforward than Bell's theorem. The historical significance of this result
becomes evident when one recognizes that the same reasoning is present in
Einstein's preferred argument for incompleteness, which dates back to 1935.
This fact suggests that Einstein was seeking not just any completion of quantum
theory, but one wherein quantum states are solely representative of our
knowledge. Our hypothesis is supported by an analysis of Einstein's attempts to
clarify his views on quantum theory and the circumstance of his otherwise
puzzling abandonment of an even simpler argument for incompleteness from 1927.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, 1 recipe for cupcakes; comments welcom
Pliocene and pleistocene volcanic interaction with cordilleran ice sheets, damming of the Yukon River and vertebrate palaeontology, Fort Selkirk volcanic group, west-central Yukon, Canada
Romeo Sherpa green journal. Permission to archive accepted author manuscriptNeogene volcanism in the Fort Selkirk area began with eruptions in the Wolverine Creek basin ca. 4.3 Ma
and persisted to ca. 3.0 Ma filling the ancestral Yukon River valley with at least 40 m of lava flows.
Activity at the Ne Ch’e Ddhäwa eruptive center overlapped with the last stages of the Wolverine Creek
eruptive centers. Hyaloclastic tuff was erupted between ca. 3.21 and 3.05 Ma. This eruption caused or
was coincident with damming of Yukon River. The first demonstrable incursion of a Cordilleran ice sheet
into the Fort Selkirk area was coincident with a second eruption of the Ne Ch’e Ddhäwa eruptive center
ca. 2.1 Ma. The Ne Ch’e Ddhäwa subglacial mound was erupted beneath at least 300 m of glacial ice (Ne
Ch’e Ddhäwa Glaciation). The Eruption of the Fort Selkirk center occurred between the last eruption of
Ne Ch’e Ddhäwa and Fort Selkirk Glaciation (ca. 2.1e1.5 Ma). Till and outwash from Fort Selkirk Glaciation
are conformably overlain by nonglacial sediments that contain the Fort Selkirk tephra (fission track
dated at ca. 1.5 Ma). These nonglacial sediments also preserve a short magnetic reversal (reversed to
normal) identified as the Gilsá polarity excursion. Temporal control and sedimentology constrain Fort
Selkirk Glaciation and the Fort Selkirk Local Fauna to marine isotope stage 54. Rapid and extensive
eruption of the Pelly eruptive center filled the Yukon River valley with 70 m of lava which buried these
glacial and nonglacial sediments and dammed Yukon River. Local striations and erratic pebbles occur on
the last of these lava flows. They document a subsequent incursion of glacial ice during the last 500 ka of
the Matuyama Chron (Forks Glaciation). The last major eruption of mafic lava occurred in the middle
Pleistocene west of (early Holocene) Volcano Mountain in basin of Black Creek: lava flowed down the
valley presently occupied by Black Creek and dammed Yukon River in the area of the Black Creek
confluence. This eruption predated the middle Pleistocene Reid Glaciation. Minor volcanism has
continued in this area since the middle Pleistocene at Volcano Mountain.Ye
- …