7,655 research outputs found
Pseudo-rotations of the open annulus
In this paper, we study pseudo-rotations of the open annulus, \emph{i.e.}
conservative homeomorphisms of the open annulus whose rotation set is reduced
to a single irrational number (the angle of the pseudo-rotation). We prove in
particular that, for every pseudo-rotation of angle , the rigid
rotation of angle is in the closure of the conjugacy class of . We
also prove that pseudo-rotations are not persistent in topology for any
.Comment: 25 page
Some fossil ginkgophytes and a possible vojnovskyalean element from the Glossopteris flora of Vereeniging, Transvaal
Main articleA short historical review is given of previously described sites where plant fossils
occur in Lower Karroo beds at Vereeniging in the Southern Transvaal. Reference is made to the importance of these sites because of the outstanding discoveries made here in the past. Some new material from the same sites is described and several unusual elements in the Glossopteris flora of Vereeniging are recorded for the first time.
Leaves of a plant not previously recorded from Gondwanaland are provisionally
described under the term cf. Nephropsis on account of a strong resemblance to leaves of
the Russian Permian genus Nephropsis Zalessky.
The remaining specimens in the assemblage are tentatively placed in the genera
Ginkgoites Seward and Psygmophyllum Schimper respectively. Owing to the paucity of
material, type numbers are assigned in certain cases, instead of specific names. Specific
identification is attempted, however, in the case of four of the specimens, which are
provisionally assigned to Psygmophyllum kidstoni Seward.Non
On some "northern" elements in the Lower Gondwana flora of Vereeniging, Transvaal
Main articleA small assemblage of plant elements from the Lower Permian of Vereeniging, in the southern Transvaal, is described here. The assemblage is constituted of form-genera normally only found in the palaeo floristic regions of the northern hemisphere. The genera concerned are: Pecopteris (Asterotheca), Cladophlebis, Sphenophyllum and Psygmophyllum. The intermingling of these "Northern" elements with
the Glossopteris flora of Vereeniging serves to illustrate the mixed nature of this flora. Reference is made to similar mixed Gondwana floras elsewhere in Africa and also in South America.Non
Strain versus stress in a model granular material: a Devil's staircase
The series of equilibrium states reached by disordered packings of rigid,
frictionless discs in two dimensions, under gradually varying stress, are
studied by numerical simulations. Statistical properties of trajectories in
configuration space are found to be independent of specific assumptions ruling
granular dynamics, and determined by geometry only. A monotonic increase in
some macroscopic loading parameter causes a discrete sequence of
rearrangements. For a biaxial compression, we show that, due to the statistical
importance of such events of large magnitudes, the dependence of the resulting
strain on stress direction is a Levy flight in the thermodynamic limit.Comment: REVTeX, 4 pages, 5 included PostScript figures. New version altered
throughout text, very close to published pape
A Model for Granular Texture with Steric Exclusion
We propose a new method to characterize the geometrical texture of a granular
packing at the particle scale including the steric hindrance effect. This
method is based on the assumption of a maximum disorder (entropy) compatible
both with strain-induced anisotropy of the contact network and steric
exclusions. We show that the predicted statistics for the local configurations
is in a fairly agreement with our numerical data.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Scattering by a toroidal coil
In this paper we consider the Schr\"odinger operator in with
a long-range magnetic potential associated to a magnetic field supported inside
a torus . Using the scheme of smooth perturbations we construct
stationary modified wave operators and the corresponding scattering matrix
. We prove that the essential spectrum of is an
interval of the unit circle depending only on the magnetic flux across
the section of . Additionally we show that, in contrast to the
Aharonov-Bohm potential in , the total scattering cross-section
is always finite. We also conjecture that the case treated here is a typical
example in dimension 3.Comment: LaTeX2e 17 pages, 1 figur
Optical brain imaging using a semi-transparent organic light-emitting diode
We report optical brain imaging using a semi-transparent organic light-emitting diode (OLED) based on the orange light-emitting polymer (LEP) Livilux PDO-124. The OLED serves as a compact, extended light source which is capable of uniformly illuminating the cortical surface when placed across a burr hole in the skull. Since all layers of the OLED are substantially transparent to photons with energies below the optical gap of the LEP, light emitted or reflected by the cortical surface may be efficiently transmitted through the OLED and into the objective lens of a low magnification microscope ('macroscope'). The OLED may be placed close to the cortical surface, providing efficient coupling of incident light into the brain cavity; furthermore, the macroscope may be placed close to the upper surface of the OLED, enabling efficient collection of reflected/emitted light from the cortical surface. Hence the use of a semi-transparent OLED simplifies the optical setup, while at the same time maintaining high sensitivity. The OLED is applied here to one of the most demanding forms of optical brain imaging, namely extrinsic optical imaging involving a voltage sensitive dye (VSD). Specifically, we carry out functional imaging of the primary visual cortex (V1) of a rat, using the voltage sensitive dye RH-1691 as a reporter. Imaging through the OLED light-source, we are able to resolve small (~ 0.1 %) changes in the fluorescence intensity of the dye due to changes in the neuronal membrane potential following a visual stimulus. Results are obtained on a single trial basis -- i.e. without averaging over multiple measurements -- with a time-resolution of ten milliseconds
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