253 research outputs found
Bibliographie des lagunes et du littoral de Côte d'Ivoire (Afrique de l'Ouest)
The present bibliography collects references on lagoon and coastal environments in Côte d'Ivoire. It is mainly based on: - the draft bibliography prepared by Charles-Dominique and Durand in 1979, edited in the Archives Scientifiques du Centre de Recherches Océanographiques d'Abidjan (vol. 5 no. 2); - the synthesis on the marine environment, published in 1993 (LeLoeuff, Marchal and Amon-Kothias editors); - and the synthesis on the lagoon environment, published in 1994 (Durand, Dufour, Guiral and Zabi editors). In spite of a careful check of the available documents, it is more than possible that references are lacking or erroneous. That's why this bibliography is still a draft, and the author will be glad to receive complements and/or corrections from lectors. After these contributions, a more comprehensive version will be proposed. Remarks can be sent to this e-mail: [email protected] or to the postal address
Estimation des niveaux de pollution organique et bacterienne des eaux à proximité des berges de la ville d'Abidjan (Lagune Ebrié - Côte d'Ivoire)
This article presents the results of three surveys, which were undertaken in order to estimate the levels of organic and bacterial pollutions of the Ebrié lagoon banks in the urban area of Abidjan
Incidences de la modification de la circulation des eaux sur l'hydrochimie et le degré de contamination bacterienne d'un estuaire eutrophe tropical
In order to control the proliferation of floating aquatic vegetation in Côte d'Ivoire, a coastal inlet, allowing a direct communication between the Comoe river and the ocean, was created in September 1987. The impact of this operation on the hydrochemistry (salinity, nutrients, algal biomass) and the bacterial contamination level was studied in the area close to the Vridi canal
Heat Transport and the Nature of the Order Parameter in Superconducting
Recent thermal conductivity data on the heavy fermion superconductor
have been interpreted as offering support for an model of the order
parameter as opposed to an model. In this paper, we analyze this issue
from a theoretical standpoint including the detailed effects of Fermi surface
and gap anisotropy. Our conclusion is that although current data put strong
constraints on the gap anisotropy, they cannot definitively distinguish between
these two models. Measurements on samples of varying quality could be decisive
in this regard, however.Comment: 8 pages, revtex, 15 uunencoded postscript figure
Nonmonotonous Magnetic Field Dependence and Scaling of the Thermal Conductivity for Superconductors with Nodes of the Order Parameter
We show that there is a new mechanism for nonmonotonous behavior of magnetic
field dependence of the electronic thermal conductivity of clean
superconductors with nodes of the order parameter on the Fermi surface. In
particular, for unitary scatterers the nonmonotony of relaxation time takes
place. Contribution from the intervortex space turns out to be essential for
this effect even at low temperatures. Our results are in a qualitative
agreement with recent experimental data for superconducting UPt_3. For
E_{2u}-type of pairing we find approximately the scaling of the thermal
conductivity in clean limit with a single parameter x=T/T_c\sqrt{B_{c2}/B} at
low fields and low temperatures, as well as weak low-temperature dependence of
the anisotropy ratio K_{zz}/K_{yy} in zero field. For E_{1g}-type of pairing
deviations from the scaling are more noticeable and the anisotropy ratio is
essentially temperature dependent.Comment: 37 pages, 8 Postscript figures, REVTE
Theory of Thermal Conductivity in YBa_2Cu_3O_{7-\delta}
We calculate the electronic thermal conductivity in a d-wave superconductor,
including both the effect of impurity scattering and inelastic scattering by
antiferromagnetic spin fluctuations. We analyze existing experiments,
particularly with regard to the question of the relative importance of
electronic and phononic contributions to the heat current, and to the influence
of disorder on low-temperature properties. We find that phonons dominate heat
transport near T_c, but that electrons are responsible for most of the peak
observed in clean samples, in agreement with a recent analysis of Krishana et
al. In agreement with recent data on YBa_2(Cu_1-xZn_x)_3O_7-\delta the peak
position is found to vary nonmonotonically with disorder.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. Let
Response, relaxation and transport in unconventional superconductors
We investigate the collision-limited electronic Raman response and the
attenuation of ultrasound in spin-singlet d-wave superconductors at low
temperatures. The dominating elastic collisions are treated within a t-matrix
approximation, which combines the description of weak (Born) and strong
(unitary) impurity scattering. In the long wavelength limit a two-fluid
description of both response and transport emerges. Collisions are here seen to
exclusively dominate the relaxational dynamics of the (Bogoliubov)
quasiparticle system and the analysis allows for a clear connection of response
and transport phenomena. When applied to quasi-2-d superconductors like the
cuprates, it turns out that the transport parameter associated with the Raman
scattering intensity for B1g and B2g photon polarization is closely related to
the corresponding components of the shear viscosity tensor, which dominates the
attenuation of ultrasound. At low temperatures we present analytic solutions of
the transport equations, resulting in a non-power-law behavior of the transport
parameters on temperature.Comment: 22 pages, 3 figure
Electron-Phonon Interaction and Ultrasonic Attenuation in the Ruthenate and Cuprate superconductors
This article derives an electron-phonon interaction suitable for interpreting
ultrasonic attenuation measurements in the ruthenate and cuprate
superconductors. The huge anisotropy found experimentally (Lupien et al., 2001)
in Sr2RuO4 in the normal state is accounted for in terms of the layered
square-lattice structure of Sr2RuO4, and the dominant contribution to the
attenuation in Sr2RuO4 is found to be due to electrons in the gamma band. The
experimental data in the superconducting state is found to be inconsistent with
vertical lines nodes in the gap in either (100) or (110) planes. Also, a
general method, based on the use of symmetry, is developed to allow for the
analysis of ultrasonic attenuation experiments in superconductors in which the
electronic band structure is complicated or not known. Our results, both for
the normal-state anisotropy, and relating to the positions of the gap nodes in
the superconducting state, are different from those obtained from analyses
using a more traditional model for the electron-phonon interaction in terms of
an isotropic electron stress tensor. Also, a brief discussion of the ultrasonic
attenuation in UPt3 is given.Comment: 12 pages. Comments have been added to the original version of this
article showing how, for the ultrasonic attenuation for a hexagonal crystal
(which must be isotropic with respect to rotations about the c axis) our
approach reproduces the results of the traditional isotropic electron stress
tensor mode
Not poles apart: Antarctic soil fungal communities show similarities to those of the distant Arctic
Antarctica's extreme environment and geographical isolation offers a useful platform for testing the relative roles of environmental selection and dispersal barriers influencing fungal communities. The former process should lead to convergence in community composition with other cold environments, such as those in the Arctic. Alternatively, dispersal limitations should minimise similarity between Antarctica and distant northern landmasses. Using high-throughput sequencing, we show that Antarctica shares significantly more fungi with the Arctic, and more fungi display a bipolar distribution, than would be expected in the absence of environmental filtering. In contrast to temperate and tropical regions, there is relatively little endemism, and a strongly bimodal distribution of range sizes. Increasing southerly latitude is associated with lower endemism and communities increasingly dominated by fungi with widespread ranges. These results suggest that micro-organisms with well-developed dispersal capabilities can inhabit opposite poles of the Earth, and dominate extreme environments over specialised local specie
- …
