1,891 research outputs found
Star Formation in Viscous Galaxy Disks
The Lin and Pringle model (1987) of galactic disk formation postulates that if star formation proceeds on the same timescale as the viscous redistribution of mass and angular momentum in disk galaxies, then the stars attain an exponential density profile. Their claim is that this result holds generally: regardless of the disk galaxy's initial gas and dark matter distribution and independent of the nature of the viscous processes acting in the disk. We present new results from a set of 2D hydro-simulations which investigate their analytic result
Lossof a chloroplast encoded function could influence species range in kelp
Kelps are important providers and constituents of marine ecological niches, the
coastal kelp forests. Kelp species have differing distribution ranges, but mainly thrive
in temperate and arctic regions. Although the principal factors determining biogeographic
distribution ranges are known, genomics could provide additional answers to
this question.
We sequenced DNA from two Laminaria species with contrasting distribution
ranges, Laminaria digitata and Laminaria solidungula. Laminaria digitata is found in the
Northern Atlantic with a southern boundary in Brittany (France) or Massachusetts
(USA) and a northern boundary in the Arctic, whereas L. solidungula is endemic to the
Arctic only. From the raw reads of DNA, we reconstructed both chloroplast genomes
and annotated them. A concatenated data set of all available brown algae chloroplast
sequences was used for the calculation of a robust phylogeny, and sequence variations
were analyzed.
The two Laminaria chloroplast genomes are collinear to previously analyzed kelp
chloroplast genomes with important exceptions. Rearrangements at the inverted repeat
regions led to the pseudogenization of ycf37 in L. solidungula, a gene possibly
required under high light conditions. This defunct gene might be one of the reasons
why the habitat range of L. solidungula is restricted to lowlight sublittoral sites in the
Arctic. The inheritance pattern of single nucleotide polymorphisms suggests incomplete
lineage sorting of chloroplast genomes in kelp species.
Our analysis of kelp chloroplast genomes shows that not only evolutionary information
could be gleaned from sequence data. Concomitantly, those sequences can
also tell us something about the ecological conditions which are required for species
well‐being
Tracking of Salmonella Positive Pigs from Farm to Fork in the Republic of Ireland
In this study, individual pigs from selected herds of known Salmonella serological status were tracked through the slaughter and dressing process. From all tracked animals, caecal contents, rectal faeces, carcasses (before washing and chilling and after chilling) and pork primal cuts were examined for the presence of Salmonella. All samples were screened for Salmonella using real time PCR and all suspect positive samples were confirmed using the ISO 6579 method for Salmonella. To determine the relationship between Salmonella isolates from different parts of the chain , all isolates are being characterised by Pulse Field Gel Electrophoresis (PFGE). The results suggest that the slaughter and dressing operations have a significant effect on the incidence of Salmonella and that even if pigs are presented for slaughter with caecal or rectal carriage of Salmonella then good slaughter practices can prevent carcass contamination. All data generated in the study is being fed into a quantitative risk assessment model for Salmonella in pork
Monitoring and Pay: An Experiment on Employee Performance under Endogenous Supervision
We present an experimental test of a shirking model where monitoring intensity is endogenous and effort a continuous variable. Wage level, monitoring intensity and consequently the desired enforceable effort level are jointly determined by the maximization problem of the firm. As a result, monitoring and pay should be complements. In our experiment, between and within treatment variation is qualitatively in line with the normative predictions of
the model under standard assumptions. Yet, we also find evidence for reciprocal behavior. Our data analysis shows, however, that it does not pay for the employer to solely rely on the reciprocity of employees
An Euler Solver Based on Locally Adaptive Discrete Velocities
A new discrete-velocity model is presented to solve the three-dimensional
Euler equations. The velocities in the model are of an adaptive nature---both
the origin of the discrete-velocity space and the magnitudes of the
discrete-velocities are dependent on the local flow--- and are used in a finite
volume context. The numerical implementation of the model follows the
near-equilibrium flow method of Nadiga and Pullin [1] and results in a scheme
which is second order in space (in the smooth regions and between first and
second order at discontinuities) and second order in time. (The
three-dimensional code is included.) For one choice of the scaling between the
magnitude of the discrete-velocities and the local internal energy of the flow,
the method reduces to a flux-splitting scheme based on characteristics. As a
preliminary exercise, the result of the Sod shock-tube simulation is compared
to the exact solution.Comment: 17 pages including 2 figures and CMFortran code listing. All in one
postscript file (adv.ps) compressed and uuencoded (adv.uu). Name mail file
`adv.uu'. Edit so that `#!/bin/csh -f' is the first line of adv.uu On a unix
machine say `csh adv.uu'. On a non-unix machine: uudecode adv.uu; uncompress
adv.tar.Z; tar -xvf adv.ta
Examining the Effects of One- and Three-Dimensional Spatial Filtering Analyses in Magnetoencephalography
Spatial filtering, or beamforming, is a commonly used data-driven analysis technique in the field of Magnetoencephalography (MEG). Although routinely referred to as a single technique, beamforming in fact encompasses several different methods, both with regard to defining the spatial filters used to reconstruct source-space time series and in terms of the analysis of these time series. This paper evaluates two alternative methods of spatial filter construction and application. It demonstrates how encoding different requirements into the design of these filters has an effect on the results obtained. The analyses presented demonstrate the potential value of implementations which examine the timeseries projections in multiple orientations at a single location by showing that beamforming can reconstruct predominantly radial sources in the case of a multiple-spheres forward model. The accuracy of source reconstruction appears to be more related to depth than source orientation. Furthermore, it is shown that using three 1-dimensional spatial filters can result in inaccurate source-space time series reconstruction. The paper concludes with brief recommendations regarding reporting beamforming methodologies in order to help remove ambiguity about the specifics of the techniques which have been used
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Local Effects in the X-ray Absorption Spectrum of CaCl2, MgCl2, and NaCl Solutions
Both first principles molecular dynamics and theoretical X-ray absorption spectroscopy have been used to investigate the aqueous solvation of cations in 0.5 M MgCl{sub 2}, CaCl{sub 2}, and NaCl solutions. We focus here on the species-specific effects that Mg{sup 2+}, Ca{sup 2+}, and Na{sup +}, have on the X-ray absorption spectrum of the respective solutions. For the divalent cations, we find that the hydrogen bonding characteristics of the more rigid magnesium first shell water molecules differ from those in the more flexible solvation shell surrounding calcium. In particular, the first solvation shell water molecules of calcium are accessible to forming acceptor hydrogen bonds, and this results in an enhancement of a post-edge peak near 540 eV. The absence of acceptor hydrogen bonds for magnesium first shell water molecules provides an explanation for the experimental and theoretical observation of a lack of enhancement at the post-main-edge peak. For the sodium monovalent cation we find that the broad tilt angle distribution results in a broadening of post-edge features, despite populations in donor-and-acceptor configurations consistent with calcium. We also present the re-averaged spectra of the MgCl{sub 2}, CaCl{sub 2}, and NaCl solutions and show that trends apparent with increasing concentration (0.5 M, 2.0 M, 4.0 M) are consistent with experiment. Finally, we examine more closely both the effect that cation coordination number has on the hydrogen bonding network and the relative perturbation strength of the cations on lone pair oxygen orbitals
Short photoperiod-induced decrease of histamine H3 receptors facilitates activation of hypothalamic neurons in the Siberian Hamster
Nonhibernating seasonal mammals have adapted to temporal changes in food availability through behavioral and physiological mechanisms to store food and energy during times of predictable plenty and conserve energy during predicted shortage. Little is known, however, of the hypothalamic neuronal events that lead to a change in behavior or physiology. Here we show for the first time that a shift from long summer-like to short inter-like photoperiod, which induces physiological adaptation to winter in the Siberian hamster, including a body weight decrease of up to 30%, increases neuronal activity in the dorsomedial region of the arcuate nucleus (dmpARC) assessed by electro physiological patch-clamping recording. Increased neuronal activity in short days is dependent on a photoperiod-driven down-regulation of H3 receptor expression and can be mimicked in long-day dmpARC neurons by the application of the H3 receptor antagonist, clobenproprit. Short-day activation of dmpARC neurons results in increased c-Fos expression. Tract tracing with the trans-synaptic retrograde tracer, pseudorabies virus, delivered into adipose tissue reveals a multisynaptic neuronal sympathetic outflow from dmpARC to white adipose tissue. These data strongly suggest that increased activity of dmpARC neurons, as a consequence of down-regulation of the histamine H3 receptor, contributes to the physiological adaptation of body weight regulation in seasonal photoperiod
Astrophysical evidence for the existence of black holes
Following a short account of the history of the idea of black holes, we
present a review of the current status of the search for observational evidence
of their existence aimed at an audience of relativists rather than astronomers
or astrophysicists. We focus on two different regimes: that of stellar-mass
black holes and that of black holes with the masses of galactic nuclei.Comment: 23 pages, 3 figures, TeX forma
Resonant Lifetime of Core-Excited Organic Adsorbates from First Principles
We investigate by first-principles simulations the resonant electron-transfer
lifetime from the excited state of an organic adsorbate to a semiconductor
surface, namely isonicotinic acid on rutile TiO(110). The
molecule-substrate interaction is described using density functional theory,
while the effect of a truly semi-infinite substrate is taken into account by
Green's function techniques. Excitonic effects due to the presence of
core-excited atoms in the molecule are shown to be instrumental to understand
the electron-transfer times measured using the so-called core-hole-clock
technique. In particular, for the isonicotinic acid on TiO(110), we find
that the charge injection from the LUMO is quenched since this state lies
within the substrate band gap. We compute the resonant charge-transfer times
from LUMO+1 and LUMO+2, and systematically investigate the dependence of the
elastic lifetimes of these states on the alignment among adsorbate and
substrate states.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures, to appear in Journal of Physical Chemistry
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