22,935 research outputs found
Uni-directional polymerization leading to homochirality in the RNA world
The differences between uni-directional and bi-directional polymerization are
considered. The uni-directional case is discussed in the framework of the RNA
world. Similar to earlier models of this type, where polymerization was assumed
to proceed in a bi-directional fashion (presumed to be relevant to peptide
nucleic acids), left-handed and right-handed monomers are produced via an
autocatalysis from an achiral substrate. The details of the bifurcation from a
racemic solution to a homochiral state of either handedness is shown to be
remarkably independent of whether the polymerization in uni-directional or
bi-directional. Slightly larger differences are seen when dissociation is
allowed and the dissociation fragments are being recycled into the achiral
substrate.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Astrobiolog
Electrically detected interferometry of Majorana fermions in a topological insulator
We show how a chiral Dirac fermion (a massless electron or hole) can be
converted into a pair of neutral chiral Majorana fermions (a particle equal to
its own antiparticle). These two types of fermions exist on the metallic
surface of a topological insulator, respectively, at a magnetic domain wall and
at a magnet-superconductor interface. Interferometry of Majorana fermions is a
key operation in topological quantum computation, but the detection is
problematic since these particles have no charge. The Dirac-Majorana converter
enables electrical detection of the interferometric signal.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
The role of singletons in compactifications
We derive the isometry irrep content of squashed seven-sphere
compactifications of eleven-dimensional supergravity, i.e., the left-squashed
() with and right-squashed () with supersymmetry, in a manner completely independent of the round sphere.
Then we compare this result with the spectrum obtained by Higgsing the round
sphere spectrum. This way we discover features of the spectra which makes it
possible to argue that the only way the round spectrum can be related by a
Higgs mechanism to the one of is if the singletons are included in the
round sphere spectrum. For this to work also in the case it seems that
the gravitino of the spectrum must be replaced by a fermionic singleton
present in the spectrum.Comment: 24 pages including appendix with 12 figure, v2 minor typos correcte
Extreme value modelling of storm damage in Swedish forests
International audienceForests cover about 56% of the land area in Sweden and forest damage due to strong winds has been a recurring problem. In this paper we analyse recorded storm damage in Swedish forests for the years 1965?2007. During the period 48 individual storm events with a total damage of 164 Mm³ have been reported with the severe storm on 8 to 9 January 2005, as the worst with 70 Mm³ damaged forest. For the analysis, storm damage data has been normalised to account for the increase in total forest volume over the period. We show that, within the framework of statistical extreme value theory, a Poisson point process model can be used to describe these storm damage events. Damage data supports a heavy-tailed distribution with great variability in damage for the worst storm events. According to the model, and in view of available data, the return period for a storm with damage in size of the severe storm of January 2005 is approximately 80 years, i.e. a storm with damage of this magnitude will happen, on average, once every eighty years. To investigate a possible temporal trend, models with time-dependent parameters have been analysed but give no conclusive evidence of an increasing trend in the normalised storm damage data for the period. Using a non-parametric approach with a kernel based local-likelihood method gives the same result
Faithful fermionic representations of the Kondo lattice model
We study the Kondo lattice model using a class of canonical transformations
that allow us to faithfully represent the model entirely in terms of fermions
without constraints. The transformations generate interacting theories that we
study using mean field theory. Of particular interest is a new manifestly
O(3)-symmetric representation in terms of Majorana fermions at half-filling on
bipartite lattices. This representation suggests a natural O(3)-symmetric trial
state that is investigated and characterized as a gapped spin liquid.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, minor update
Redshift constraints for RGB 0136+391 and PKS 0735+178 from deep optical imaging
We present the results of deep I-band imaging of two BL Lacerate objects, RGB
0136+391 and PKS 0735+178, during an epoch when the optical nucleus was in a
faint state in both targets. In PKS 0735+178 we find a significant excess over
a point source, which, if fitted by the de Vaucouleurs model, corresponds to a
galaxy with I = 18.64 +- 0.11 and r_eff = 1.8 +- 0.4 arcsec. Interpreting this
galaxy as the host galaxy of PKS 0735+178 we derive z = 0.45 +- 0.06 using the
host galaxy as a "standard candle". We also discuss the immediate optical
environment of PKS 0735+178 and the identity of the MgII absorber at z = 0.424.
Despite of the optimally chosen epoch and deep imaging we find the surface
brightness profile of RGB 0136+391 to be consistent with a point source. By
determining a lower limit for the host galaxy brightness by simulations, we
derive z > 0.40 for this target.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Energy Reserves, Information Need and a Pinch of Personality Determine Decision-Making on Route in Partially Migratory Blue Tits
In facultative partial migrants some individuals in a population are migratory and others are resident and individuals decide each year anew which strategy to choose. While the proportion of birds migrating is in part determined by environmental conditions and competitive abilities, the timing of individual departure and behaviours on route are little understood. Individuals encounter different environmental conditions when migrating earlier or later. Based on cost/ benefit considerations we tested whether behaviours on route were affected by time constraints, personality and/or age in a partially migrating population of Blue tits (Cyanistes caeruleus). We captured female Blue tits on migration at the Southern tip of Sweden during early, peak and late migration and measured latency to feed in an unfamiliar environment, exploration of a novel object and hesitation to feed beside a novel object (neophobia). Lean birds and birds with long wings started feeding earlier when released into the cage indicating that foraging decisions were mainly determined by energetic needs (lean and large birds). However, juveniles commenced feeding later with progression of the migratory season in concordance with predictions about personality effects. Furthermore, lean birds started to explore earlier than birds with larger fat reserves again indicating an effect of maintaining threshold energy reserves. Moreover, late migrating juveniles, started to explore earlier than early migrating juveniles possibly due to time constraints to find high-quality foraging patches or a suitable winter home. Finally, neophobia did not change over the migratory season indicating that this behaviour is not compromised by time constraints. The results overall indicate that decisions on route are mainly governed by energetic requirements and current needs to learn about the environment and only to a small extent by differences in personality
Heat capacity mapping mission project HCM-051
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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Characterizing HV XLPE cables by electrical, chemical and microstructural measurements on cable peeling: Effects of surface roughness, thermal treatment and peeling location
Characterization of the electrical, chemical, and microstructural properties of high voltage cables was the first step of the European project “ARTEMIS”, which has the aim of investigating degradation processes and constructing aging models for the diagnosis of cross-linked polyethylene (XLPE) cables. Cables produced by two different manufacturers were subjected to a large number of electrical, microstructural, and chemical characterizations, using cable peelings, instead of lengths of whole cables, as specimens for the measurements. Here the effect of surface deformation and roughness due to peeling and the relevance and significance of thermal pre-treatment prior to electrical and other measurements is discussed. Special emphasis is put on space charge, conduction current and luminescence measurements. We also consider the dependence of these properties on the spatial position of the specimen within the cable. It is shown that even though the two faces of the cable peel specimens have different roughness, the low-field electrical properties seem quite insensitive to surface roughness, while significant differences are detectable at high fields. Thermal pre-treatment is required to stabilize the insulating material to enable us to obtain reproducible results and reliable inter-comparisons throughout the whole project. The spatial position of the specimens along the cable radius can also have a non-negligible influence on the measured properties, due to differential microstructure and chemical composition
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