508 research outputs found
FeH Absorption in the Near-Infrared Spectra of Late M and L Dwarfs
We present medium-resolution z-, J-, and H-band spectra of four late-type
dwarfs with spectral types ranging from M8 to L7.5. In an attempt to determine
the origin of numerous weak absorption features throughout their near-infrared
spectra, and motivated by the recent tentative identification of the E 4\Pi- A
^4\Pi system of FeH near 1.6 microns in umbral and cool star spectra, we have
compared the dwarf spectra to a laboratory FeH emission spectrum. We have
identified nearly 100 FeH absorption features in the z-, J-, and H-band spectra
of the dwarfs. In particular, we have identified 34 features which dominate the
appearance of the H-band spectra of the dwarfs and which appear in the
laboratory FeH spectrum. Finally, all of the features are either weaker or
absent in the spectrum of the L7.5 dwarf which is consistent with the weakening
of the known FeH bandheads in the spectra of the latest L dwarfs.Comment: accepted by Ap
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A Comparative Study of Energy Storage Systems and Active Front Ends for Networks of Two Electrified RTG Cranes
The global consumerism trend and the increase in worldwide population is increasing the need to improve the efficiency of marine container transportation. The high operating costs, pollution and noise of the diesel yard equipment is leading sea ports to move towards replacing diesel RTG cranes with electric Rubber Tyre Gantry (RTG) cranes which offer reduced environmental impact and higher energy efficiency. However, ports will require smarter solutions to meet the increased demand on the electrical distribution network due to the electrification of RTGs. This paper aims to highlight the peak demand problem in the two electrical cranes network and attempts to increase the energy saving at ports by using two different technologies: Energy Storage System (ESS) and Active Front End (AFE). This article introduces one of the first extensive investigations into different networks of RTG crane models and compares the benefits of using either AFE or ESS. The proposed RTG crane models and network parameters are validated using data collected at the Port of Felixstowe, UK. The results of the proposed RTG cranes network show a significant peak demand reduction and energy cost saving
Can behaviour impede evolution? Persistence of singing effort after morphological song loss in crickets
Funding: Natural Environmental ResearchCouncil for funding (NE/L011255/1) (N.W.B.).Evolutionary loss of sexual signals is widespread. Examining the consequences for behaviours associated with such signals can provide insight into factors promoting or inhibiting trait loss. We tested whether a behavioural component of a sexual trait, male calling effort, has been evolutionary reduced in silent populations of Hawaiian field crickets (Teleogryllus oceanicus). Cricket song requires energetically costly wing movements, but âflatwingâ males have feminized wings that preclude song and protect against a lethal, eavesdropping parasitoid. Flatwing males express wing movement patterns associated with singing but, in contrast with normal-wing males, sustained periods of wing movement cannot confer sexual selection benefits and should be subject to strong negative selection. We developed an automated technique to quantify how long males spend expressing wing movements associated with song. We compared calling effort among populations of Hawaiian crickets with differing proportions of silent males and between male morphs. Contrary to expectation, silent populations invested as much in calling effort as non-silent populations. Additionally, flatwing and normal-wing males from the same population did not differ in calling effort. The lack of evolved behavioural adjustment following morphological change in silent Hawaiian crickets illustrates how behaviour might sometimes impede, rather than facilitate, evolution.PostprintPeer reviewe
Topographic methods of the United States Geological Survey
Thesis (CE)--University of Illinois, 1913TypescriptIncludes bibliographical reference
The persistence and evolutionary consequences of vestigial behaviours
N.W.B. and J.G.R. were supported by the Natural Environment Research Council (NE/T0006191/1).Behavioural traits are often noted to persist after relaxation or removal of associated selection pressure, whereas it has been observed that morphological traits under similar conditions appear to decay more rapidly. Despite this, persistent non-adaptive, âvestigialâ behavioural variation has received little research scrutiny. Here we review published examples of vestigial behavioural traits, highlighting their surprising prevalence, and argue that their further study can reveal insights about the widely debated role of behaviour in evolution. Some vestigial behaviours incur fitness costs, so may act as a drag on adaptive evolution when that adaptation occurs via trait loss or reversal. In other cases, vestigial behaviours can contribute to future evolutionary trajectories, for example by preserving genetic and phenotypic variation which is later co-opted by selection during adaptive evolution or diversification, or through re-emergence after ancestral selection pressures are restored. We explore why vestigial behaviours appear prone to persistence. Behavioural lag may be a general phenomenon arising from relatively high levels of non-genetic variation in behavioural expression, and pleiotropic constraint. Long-term persistence of non-adaptive behavioural traits could also result when their expression is associated with morphological features which might be more rapidly lost or reduced. We propose that vestigial behaviours could provide a substrate for co-option by novel selective forces, and advocate further study of the fate of behavioural traits following relaxed and reversed selection. Vestigial behaviours have been relatively well studied in the context of antipredator behaviours, but they are far from restricted to this ecological context, and so deserve broader consideration. They also have practical importance, with mixed evidence, for example, as to whether predator/parasite-avoidance behaviours are rapidly lost in wildlife refuges and captivity. We identify important areas for future research to help determine whether vestigial behaviours essentially represent a form of evolutionary lag, or whether they have more meaningful evolutionary consequences distinct from those of other vestigial and behavioural traits.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
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Analysis of energy usage for RTG cranes
The purpose of this paper is to study and analyse the energy that is used by the various motors of a crane of the Rubber Tyred Gantry type. For this reason a single Rubber Tyred Gantry (RTG) crane has been instrumented at port of Felixstowe and data has been collected during normal operation for eight days. This data has been analysed in terms of active and idle modes and also in terms of energy usage by the various motors. From this analysis it is possible to determine that on average about half of the energy consumed is potentially recoverable. It is also estimated that the recovery of this proportion of energy could lead to savings of 32,600 L of fuel and 8100 tonnes of CO2 per year at Port of Felixstowe
A Method of Correcting Near-Infrared Spectra for Telluric Absorption
We present a method for correcting near-infrared medium-resolution spectra
for telluric absorption. The method makes use of a spectrum of an A0V star,
observed near in time and close in airmass to the target object, and a
high-resolution model of Vega, to construct a telluric correction spectrum that
is free of stellar absorption features. The technique was designed specifically
to perform telluric corrections on spectra obtained with SpeX, a 0.8-5.5
micron, medium-resolution cross-dispersed spectrograph at the NASA Infrared
Telescope Facility, and uses the fact that for medium resolutions there exist
spectral regions uncontaminated by atmospheric absorption lines. However, it is
also applicable (in a somewhat modified form) to spectra obtained with other
near-infrared spectrographs. An IDL-based code that carries out the procedures
is available for downloading via the World Wide Web from the IRTF website.Comment: 39 pages, 10 figures, To appear in the Feb 2003 issue of PASP; IDL
source code, as well as full resolution versions of the figures, are
available at http://irtfweb.ifa.hawaii.edu/Facility/spex
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