14 research outputs found
Generalizations of Yang-Mills Theory with Nonlinear Constitutive Equations
We generalize classical Yang-Mills theory by extending nonlinear constitutive
equations for Maxwell fields to non-Abelian gauge groups. Such theories may or
may not be Lagrangian. We obtain conditions on the constitutive equations
specifying the Lagrangian case, of which recently-discussed non-Abelian
Born-Infeld theories are particular examples. Some models in our class possess
nontrivial Galilean (c goes to infinity) limits; we determine when such limits
exist, and obtain them explicitly.Comment: Submitted to the Proceedings of the 3rd Symposium on Quantum Theory
and Symmetries (QTS3) 10-14 September 2003. Preprint 9 pages including
reference
Contribuição à biologia de serpentes da Bahia, Brasil: I. vivíparas Contribution to reproductive biology of snakes in Bahia, Brazil: I. viviparous
<abstract language="eng">Great part of lhe avaiable data about snakes reprodution refers to species coming from subtropical and temperate regions. In Brazil, the data is rather rare and can be found in various works where information is restricted. Results from studies developed with five viviparous snakes - Crotalus durissus cascavella (Wagler, 1824). Bothrops erythromelas(Amaral, 1923), B. leucurus (Wagler, 1824), Helicops leopardinus (Schlegel, 1873) and Thamnodynastes strigilis (Thiinberg, 1787) - which come from the Northeast of Brazil (Bahia) are described. Data about pregnancy and birth, number, sex ratio, length and weight of neonates is given and discussed
Structure II gas hydrates found below the bottom-simulating reflector
Gas hydrates are a major component in the organic carbon cycle. Their stability is controlled by temperature, pressure, water chemistry, and gas composition. The bottom-simulating reflector (BSR) is the primary seismic indicator of the base of hydrate stability in continental margins. Here we use seismic, well log, and core data from the convergent margin offshore NW Borneo to demonstrate that the BSR does not always represent the base of hydrate stability and can instead approximate the boundary between structure I hydrates above and structure II hydrates below. At this location, gas hydrate saturation below the BSR is higher than above and a process of chemical fractionation of the migrating free gas is responsible for the structure I-II transition. This research shows that in geological settings dominated by thermogenic gas migration, the hydrate stability zone may extend much deeper than suggested by the BSR