3,237 research outputs found

    Preliminary results on two-dimensional interferometry of HL Tau

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    Preliminary two-dimensional speckle interferometry results of HL Tau were found to be qualitatively similar to those found with one-dimensional slit scanning techniques; results consist of a resolved component (approximately 0.7 arcsec in size) and an unresolved component. Researchers are currently reducing the rest of the data (taken on three different telescopes and at three different wavelengths) and are also exploring other high resolution methods like the shift and add technique and selecting only the very best images for processing. The availability of even better two-dimensional arrays within the next couple of years promises to make speckle interferometry and other high resolution techniques very powerful and exiting tools for probing a variety of objects in the subarcsec regime

    Decline in an Atlantic Puffin population : evaluation of magnitude and mechanisms

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    Funding: This study was funded annually by Fair Isle Bird Observatory Trust (www.fairislebirdobs.co.uk) with contributions from the Joint Nature Conservation Committee (jncc.defra.gov.uk). Funding was received from these two sources by Fair Isle Bird Observatory from 1986 to 2013. The Joint Nature Conservation Committee and Fair Isle Bird Observatory Trust supplied guidance on study design, data collection, analyses, preparation of the manuscript and the decision to publish.Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    Long-term decline and geographical variation in the numbers of moulting Common Eiders Somateria mollissima in Shetland

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    The 1977 survey was funded and led by the Nature Conservancy Council. Surveys from 1980 to 2019 were funded by the Sullom Voe Association and led by the Shetland Oil Terminal Environmental Advisory Group (SOTEAG).Capsule: Numbers of moulting Common EidersĀ Somateria mollissimaĀ counted in Shetland during surveys from 1977 to 2019 decreased from approximately 14,500 to an estimated 3600 individuals, a 75% population decline. Aims: To report results of extensive surveys of Eiders across Shetland during the annual complete moult period, review historical surveys, and evaluate long-term population changes and the possible underlying causes for change. Methods: Extensive areas of coastal Shetland were surveyed for Eiders during the annual moult period from July to September, every one to five years from 1977 to 2019. Spatial sampling was variable between surveys from 1977 to 1993 but more systematic and standardised during all surveys from 1996 to 2019. Overall population change, changes in numbers of birds within areas categorised as either exposed or sheltered coast, and change in the proportion of adult males to females/juveniles were assessed. Results: Surveys from 1977 to 1993 indicated a 55% decrease, from approximately 14,500ā€“6500 individuals, and surveys from 1996 to 2019 showed a 45% decrease, from an estimated 6700ā€“3600 individuals, indicating an overall population decrease of approximately 75% from 1977 to 2019. From 1996 to 2019, Eider numbers decreased in areas of exposed coast by approximately 90% but increased by at least 70% in the more sparsely populated sheltered areas, and the overall proportion of adult males to females/juveniles reduced by one-third. Conclusion: From 1977 to 2019, a substantial decline of approximately 75% occurred in the Shetland Eider population at the time of moult. Shetland Eiders are notĀ S. m. mollissimaĀ but morphologically and genetically akin toĀ S. m. faeroeensis, the Faroese subspecies, the rarest subspecies worldwide, so this decline is of high conservation concern. Causes of the decline largely remain unknown, but ecological datasets on Shetland Eiders are few and detailed studies, including remote tracking of individualsā€™ movements throughout the year, would be worthwhile.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Magnetic fluctuations in the itinerant ferromagnet LaCrGe3 studied by 139La NMR

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    LaCrGe3 is an itinerant ferromagnet with a Curie temperature of T C = 85 K and exhibits an avoided ferromagnetic quantum critical point under pressure through a modulated antiferromagnetic phase as well as tricritical wing structure in its temperature-pressure-magnetic field ( T ā€“ p ā€“ H) phase diagram. In order to understand the static and dynamical magnetic properties of LaCrGe3 , we carried out 139 La nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements. Based on the analysis of NMR data, using the self-consistent-renormalization (SCR) theory, the spin fluctuations in the paramagnetic state are revealed to be isotropic ferromagnetic and three dimensional (3D) in nature. Furthermore, the system is found to follow the generalized Rhodes-Wohlfarth relation which is expected in 3D itinerant ferromagnetic systems. As compared to other similar itinerant ferromagnets, the Cr 3 d electrons and their spin fluctuations are characterized to have a relatively high degree of localization in real space

    Quantifying full phenological event distributions reveals simultaneous advances, temporal stability and delays in spring and autumn migration timing in long-distance migratory birds

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    Acknowledgements We thank all Fair Isle Bird Observatory staff and volunteers for help with data collection and acknowledge the foresight of George Waterston and Ken Williamson in instigating the observatory and census methodology. We thank all current and previous directors of Fair Isle Bird Observatory Trust for their contributions, particularly Dave Okill and Mike Wood for their stalwart support for the long-term data collection and for the current analyses. Dawn Balmer and Ian Newton provided helpful guidance on manuscript drafts. We thank Ally Phillimore and two anonymous referees for helpful comments. This study would have been impossible without the Fair Isle community's invaluable support and patience over many decades, which is very gratefully acknowledged. WTSM and JMR designed and undertook analyses, wrote the paper and contributed to data collection and compilation, MB contributed to analysis and editing, all other authors oversaw and undertook data collection and compilation and contributed to editing.Peer reviewedPostprin

    Some Navigation Rules for D-Brane Monodromy

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    We explore some aspects of monodromies of D-branes in the Kahler moduli space of Calabi-Yau compactifications. Here a D-brane is viewed as an object of the derived category of coherent sheaves. We compute all the interesting monodromies in some nontrivial examples and link our work to recent results and conjectures concerning helices and mutations. We note some particular properties of the 0-brane.Comment: LaTeX2e, 28 pages, 4 figures, some typos corrected and refs adde

    Semiclassical Stability of the Extreme Reissner-Nordstrom Black Hole

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    The stress-energy tensor of a free quantized scalar field is calculated in the extreme Reissner-Nordstr\"{o}m black hole spacetime in the zero temperature vacuum state. The stress-energy appears to be regular on the event horizon, contrary to the suggestion provided by two-dimensional calculations. An analytic calculation on the event horizon for a thermal state shows that if the temperature is nonzero then the stress-energy diverges strongly there.Comment: 10 pages, REVTeX, 4 figures in separate uuencoded compressed fil

    Ursinus College Alumni Journal, May 1952

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    President\u27s page ā€¢ Dr. Paisley honored as layman-of-the-year ā€¢ Dr. Creese to deliver commencement address ā€¢ New students enroll for second semester ā€¢ Dr. Lachman presents bust of Washington ā€¢ Anne Hughes speaks at Ursinus Color Day ā€¢ Jeanne Careless is Queen of the May ā€¢ Summer sessions to open June 9, July 21 ā€¢ F.B.I. applications ā€¢ Alumni Day is Saturday, May 31, 1952 ā€¢ Alumni to entertain seniors at dinner ā€¢ Nominating committee names candidates ā€¢ Philadelphia alumni group to reorganize ā€¢ New York alumni to meet May 7 ā€¢ Next journal to be mailed November 1952 ā€¢ Webb enjoys Olympics ā€¢ Rusty Garlock stars on court for Guam ā€¢ S. S. Laucks president of York Bar Association ā€¢ Women\u27s Club enjoys busy spring season ā€¢ Miss Omwake accepts position at Yale ā€¢ Bill Daniels returns from work in China ā€¢ Lt. Col. Bare in Korea ā€¢ Incidents in the life of a missionary ā€¢ Sports review: Matmen win 3, lose 4; Alumni asked for Ursinus trophies; Veteran team aims at successful 1952 baseball; Courtmen end season with 7 wins, 10 losses; Badminton team tallies 3 wins, 3 losses; Tennis team faces strong opposition; Mermaids win 3, lose 4; 1952 track prospects look promising; Girls end successful basketball season ā€¢ Alumni placement at Ursinus ā€¢ News about ourselves ā€¢ Necrologyhttps://digitalcommons.ursinus.edu/alumnijournal/1044/thumbnail.jp

    Amongā€species variation in six decades of changing migration timings explained through ecology, lifeā€history and local migratory abundance

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    We thank all Fair Isle residents for their long-term support, and W.T.S. Miles and I.J. Andrews for database construction and management. V.R.D was funded by a UK NERC SUPER DTP PhD studentship supported by University of Aberdeen and Fair Isle Bird Observatory Trust.Species exploiting seasonal environments must alter timings of key lifeā€history events in response to largeā€scale climatic changes in order to maintain trophic synchrony with required resources. Yet, substantial amongā€species variation in longā€term phenological changes has been observed. Advancing from simply describing such variation towards predicting future phenological responses requires studies that rigorously quantify and explain variation in the direction and magnitude of changing timings across diverse species in relation to key ecological and lifeā€history variables. Accordingly, we fitted multiā€quantile regressions to 59 years of multiā€species data on spring and autumn bird migration timings through northern Scotland. We demonstrate substantial variation in changes in timings among 72 species, and tested whether such variation can be explained by species ecology, lifeā€history and changes in local abundance. Consistent with predictions, species that advanced their migration timing in one or both seasons had more seasonally restricted diet types, fewer suitable breeding habitat types, shorter generation lengths and capability to produce multiple offspring broods per year. In contrast, species with less seasonally restricted diet types and that produce single annual offspring broods, showed no change. Meanwhile, contrary to prediction, longā€distance and shortā€distance migrants advanced migration timings similarly. Changes in migration timing also varied with changes in local migratory abundance, such that species with increasing seasonal abundance apparently altered their migration timing, whilst species with decreasing abundance did not. Such patterns broadly concur with expectation given adaptive changes in migration timing. However, we demonstrate that similar patterns can be generated by numerical sampling given changing local abundances. Any apparent phenologyā€abundance relationships should, therefore, be carefully validated and interpreted. Overall, our results show that migrant bird species with differing ecologies and lifeā€histories showed systematically differing phenological changes over six decades contextualised by largeā€scale environmental changes, potentially facilitating future predictions and altering temporal dynamics of seasonal species coā€occurrences.Peer reviewe
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