2,005 research outputs found
Stock Assessment of Ballot's saucer scallop (Ylistrum balloti) in Queensland, Australia, with data to October 2022
The Queensland east coast Ballot’s saucer scallop (Ylistrum balloti, formerly Amusium balloti) is a marine bivalve mollusc with a hinged shell. They are mainly found between 22 degrees South and 27 degrees South in shelf water depths of 20 to 60 metres. Saucer scallops can potentially grow to about 12 to 14 cm in shell height and, in some instances, live for up to 4 years. Scallops generally mature between 11 and 18 months of age.
This stock assessment indicates that biomass declined between 1956 and 2016 to 10% unfished biomass. In 2022, the stock level was estimated to be 15% unfished biomass (95% confidence interval 10–25%)
Structured waves near the plasma frequency observed in three auroral rocket flights
We present observations of waves at and just above the plasma frequency (<i>f<sub>pe</sub></i>) from three high frequency electric field experiments on three recent rockets launched to altitudes of 300&ndash;900 km in active aurora. The predominant observed HF waves just above <i>f<sub>pe</sub></i> are narrowband, short-lived emissions with amplitudes ranging from &lt;1 mV/m to 20 mV/m, often associated with structured electron density. The nature of these HF waves, as determined from frequency-time spectrograms, is highly variable: in some cases, the frequency decreases monotonically with time as in the "HF-chirps" previously reported (McAdams and LaBelle, 1999), but in other cases rising frequencies are observed, or features which alternately rise and fall in frequency. They exhibit two timescales of amplitude variation: a short timescale, typically 50&ndash;100 ms, associated with individual discrete features, and a longer timescale associated with the general decrease in the amplitudes of the emissions as the rocket moves away from where the condition <i>f</i>~<i>f<sub>pe</sub></i> holds. The latter timescale ranges from 0.6 to 6.0 s, corresponding to distances of 2&ndash;7 km, assuming the phenomenon to be stationary and using the rocket velocity to convert time to distance
On the Persistent Shape and Coherence of Pulsating Auroral Patches
The pulsating aurora covers a broad range of fluctuating shapes that are
poorly characterized. The purpose of this paper is therefore to provide
objective and quantitative measures of the extent to which pulsating auroral
patches maintain their shape, drift and fluctuate in a coherent fashion. We
present results from a careful analysis of pulsating auroral patches using
all-sky cameras. We have identified four well-defined individual patches that
we follow in the patch frame of reference. In this way we avoid the space-time
ambiguity which complicates rocket and satellite measurements. We find that the
shape of the patches is remarkably persistent with 85-100% of the patch being
repeated for 4.5-8.5 min. Each of the three largest patches has a temporal
correlation with a negative dependence on distance, and thus does not fluctuate
in a coherent fashion. A time-delayed response within the patches indicates
that the so-called streaming mode might explain the incoherency. The patches
appear to drift differently from the SuperDARN-determined
X convection velocity.
However, in a nonrotating reference frame the patches drift with 230-287 m/s in
a north eastward direction, which is what typically could be expected for the
convection return flow
Random local strain effects in homovalent-substituted relaxor ferroelectrics: a first-principles study of BaTi0.74Zr0.26O3
We present first-principles supercell calculations on BaTi0.74Zr0.26O3, a
prototype material for relaxors with a homovalent substitution. From a
statistical analysis of relaxed structures, we give evidence for four types of
Ti-atom polar displacements: along the , , or
directions of the cubic unit cell, or almost cancelled. The type of a Ti
displacement is entirely determined by the Ti/Zr distribution in the adjacent
unit cells. The underlying mechanism involves local strain effects that ensue
from the difference in size between the Ti4+ and Zr4+ cations. These results
shed light on the structural mechanisms that lead to disordered Ti
displacements in BaTi(1-x)Zr(x)O3 relaxors, and probably in other BaTiO3-based
relaxors with homovalent substitution.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figure
Statistics of Auroral Langmuir Waves
The Physics of Auroral Zone Electrons II (PHAZE II) sounding rocket was launched in February 1997 into active pre-midnight aurora. The resulting high frequency wave data are dominated by Langmuir waves. Consistent with many previous observations the Langmuir waves are sporadic, occurring in bursts lasting up to a few hundred ms. We compute statistics of the electric field amplitudes of these Langmuir waves, with two results. First, the shape of the distribution of running averages of the electric field amplitudes remains approximately stationary for a large range of widths of running average less than ~0.3 ms and for a large range of widths exceeding about 1 ms. The interpretation of this transition timescale is unclear but appears unlikely to be of instrumental origin. Second, for 2.6-ms running averages, corresponding to the latter range, the distribution of the logarithm of electric field amplitudes matches a Gaussian form very well for all nine cases studied in detail, hence the statistics are lognormal. These distributions are consistent with stochastic growth theory (SGT)
Statistics of auroral Langmuir waves
The Physics of Auroral Zone Electrons II (PHAZE II) sounding rocket was launched in February 1997 into active pre-midnight aurora. The resulting high frequency wave data are dominated by Langmuir waves. Consistent with many previous observations the Langmuir waves are sporadic, occurring in bursts lasting up to a few hundred ms. We compute statistics of the electric field amplitudes of these Langmuir waves, with two results. First, the shape of the distribution of running averages of the electric field amplitudes remains approximately stationary for a large range of widths of running average less than ~0.3 ms and for a large range of widths exceeding about 1 ms. The interpretation of this transition timescale is unclear but appears unlikely to be of instrumental origin. Second, for 2.6-ms running averages, corresponding to the latter range, the distribution of the logarithm of electric field amplitudes matches a Gaussian form very well for all nine cases studied in detail, hence the statistics are lognormal. These distributions are consistent with stochastic growth theory (SGT)
A combined theoretical and experimental study of the low temperature properties of BaZrO3
Low temperature properties of BaZrO3 are revealed by combining experimental
techniques (X-ray diffraction, neutron scattering and dielectric measurements)
with theoretical first-principles-based methods (total energy and linear
response calculations within density functional theory, and effective
Hamiltonian approaches incorporating/neglecting zero-point phonon vibrations).
Unlike most of the perovskite systems, BaZrO3 does not undergo any
(long-range-order) structural phase transition and thus remains cubic and
paraelectric down to 2 K, even when neglecting zero-point phonon vibrations. On
the other hand, these latter pure quantum effects lead to a negligible thermal
dependency of the cubic lattice parameter below ~ 40 K. They also affect the
dielectricity of BaZrO3 by inducing an overall saturation of the real part of
the dielectric response, for temperatures below ~ 40 K. Two fine structures in
the real part, as well as in the imaginary part, of dielectric response are
further observed around 50-65 K and 15 K, respectively. Microscopic origins
(e.g., unavoidable defects and oxygen octahedra rotation occurring at a local
scale) of such anomalies are suggested. Finally, possible reasons for the facts
that some of these dielectric anomalies have not been previously reported in
the better studied KTaO3 and SrTiO3 incipient ferroelectrics are also
discussed.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Physical Review
Giant Electroresistance in Ferroelectric Tunnel Junctions
The interplay between the electron transport in metal/ferroelectric/metal
junctions with ultrathin ferroelectric barriers and the polarization state of a
barrier is investigated. Using a model which takes into account screening of
polarization charges in metallic electrodes and direct quantum tunneling across
a ferroelectric barrier we calculate the change in the tunneling conductance
associated with the polarization switching. We find the conductance change of a
few orders of magnitude for metallic electrodes with significantly different
screening lengths. This giant electroresistance effect is the consequence of a
different potential profile seen by transport electrons for the two opposite
polarization orientations.Comment: 4 page
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