860 research outputs found
Organochlorine Chemical Residues in Fish from the Mississippi River Basin, 1995
µ≤≥
Fish were collected in late 1995 from 34 National Contaminant Biomonitoring Program (NCBP) stations and 13 National Water Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA) stations in the Mississippi River basin (MRB) and in late 1996 from a reference site in West Virginia. Four composite samples, each comprising (nominally) 10 adult common carp (Cyprinus carpio) or black bass (Micropterus spp.) of the same sex, were collected from each site and analyzed for organochlorine chemical residues by gas chromatography with electron capture detection. At the NCBP stations, which are located on relatively large rivers, concentrations of organochlorine chemical residues were generally lower than when last sampled in the mid-1980s. Residues derived from DDT (primarily p,p-DDE) were detected at all sites (including the reference site); however, only traces (≤ 0.02 µg/g) of the parent insecticide (p,p- DDT) were present, which indicates continued weathering of residual DDT from past use. Nevertheless, concentrations of DDT (as p,p-DDE) in fish from the cotton-farming regions of the lower MRB were great enough to constitute a hazard to fish-eating wildlife and were especially high at the NAWQA sites on the lower-order rivers and streams of the Mississippi embayment. Mirex was detected at only two sites, both in Louisiana, and toxaphene was found exclusively in the lower MRB. Most cyclodiene pesticides (dieldrin, chlordane, and heptachlor epoxide) were more widespread in their distributions, but concentrations were lower than in the 1980s except at a site on the Mississippi River near Memphis, TN. Concentrations were also somewhat elevated at sites in the Corn Belt. Endrin was detected exclusively at the Memphis site. PCB concentrations generally declined, and residues were detected (≥ 0.05 µg/g) at only 35% of the stations, mostly in the more industrialized parts of the MRB
Organochlorine Chemical Residues in Fish from the Mississippi River Basin, 1995
µ≤≥
Fish were collected in late 1995 from 34 National Contaminant Biomonitoring Program (NCBP) stations and 13 National Water Quality Assessment Program (NAWQA) stations in the Mississippi River basin (MRB) and in late 1996 from a reference site in West Virginia. Four composite samples, each comprising (nominally) 10 adult common carp (Cyprinus carpio) or black bass (Micropterus spp.) of the same sex, were collected from each site and analyzed for organochlorine chemical residues by gas chromatography with electron capture detection. At the NCBP stations, which are located on relatively large rivers, concentrations of organochlorine chemical residues were generally lower than when last sampled in the mid-1980s. Residues derived from DDT (primarily p,p-DDE) were detected at all sites (including the reference site); however, only traces (≤ 0.02 µg/g) of the parent insecticide (p,p- DDT) were present, which indicates continued weathering of residual DDT from past use. Nevertheless, concentrations of DDT (as p,p-DDE) in fish from the cotton-farming regions of the lower MRB were great enough to constitute a hazard to fish-eating wildlife and were especially high at the NAWQA sites on the lower-order rivers and streams of the Mississippi embayment. Mirex was detected at only two sites, both in Louisiana, and toxaphene was found exclusively in the lower MRB. Most cyclodiene pesticides (dieldrin, chlordane, and heptachlor epoxide) were more widespread in their distributions, but concentrations were lower than in the 1980s except at a site on the Mississippi River near Memphis, TN. Concentrations were also somewhat elevated at sites in the Corn Belt. Endrin was detected exclusively at the Memphis site. PCB concentrations generally declined, and residues were detected (≥ 0.05 µg/g) at only 35% of the stations, mostly in the more industrialized parts of the MRB
A possible cooling effect in high temperature superconductors
We show that an adiabatic increase of the supercurrent along a superconductor
with lines of nodes of the order parameter on the Fermi surface can result in a
cooling effect. The maximum cooling occurs if the supercurrent increases up to
its critical value. The effect can also be observed in a mixed state of a bulk
sample. An estimate of the energy dissipation shows that substantial cooling
can be performed during a reasonable time even in the microkelvin regime.Comment: 5 pages, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Can surface flux transport account for the weak polar field in cycle 23?
To reproduce the weak magnetic field on the polar caps of the Sun observed
during the declining phase of cycle 23 poses a challenge to surface flux
transport models since this cycle has not been particularly weak. We use a
well-calibrated model to evaluate the parameter changes required to obtain
simulated polar fields and open flux that are consistent with the observations.
We find that the low polar field of cycle 23 could be reproduced by an increase
of the meridional flow by 55% in the last cycle. Alternatively, a decrease of
the mean tilt angle of sunspot groups by 28% would also lead to a similarly low
polar field, but cause a delay of the polar field reversals by 1.5 years in
comparison to the observations.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, Space Science Reviews, accepte
Quantitative Trait Locus Analysis of Mating Behavior and Male Sex Pheromones in Nasonia Wasps.
A major focus in speciation genetics is to identify the chromosomal regions and genes that reduce hybridization and gene flow. We investigated the genetic architecture of mating behavior in the parasitoid wasp species pair Nasonia giraulti and Nasonia oneida that exhibit strong prezygotic isolation. Behavioral analysis showed that N. oneida females had consistently higher latency times and broke off the mating sequence more often in the mounting stage when confronted with N. giraulti males compared with males of their own species. N. oneida males produce a lower quantity of the long-range male sex pheromone, (4R,5S)-5-hydroxy-4-decanolide (RS-HDL). Crosses between the two species yielded hybrid males with various pheromone quantities and these males were used in mating trials with females of either species to measure female mate discrimination rates. A quantitative trait locus (QTL) analysis involving 475 recombinant hybrid males (F2), 2148 reciprocally backcrossed females (F3), and a linkage map of 52 equally spaced neutral single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) markers plus SNPs in 40 candidate mating behavior genes revealed four QTL for male pheromone amount depending on partner species. Our results demonstrate that the RS-HDL pheromone plays a role in the mating system of N. giraulti and N. oneida, but also that additional communication cues are involved in mate choice. No QTL were found for female mate discrimination which points at a polygenic architecture of female choice with strong environmental influences
Impurity-Induced Virtual Bound States in d-Wave Superconductors
It is shown that a single, strongly scattering impurity produces a bound or a
virtual bound quasiparticle state inside the gap in a -wave superconductor.
The explicit form of the bound state wave function is found to decay
exponentially with angle-dependent range. These states provide a natural
explanation of the second Cu NMR rate arising from the sites close to Zn
impurities in the cuprates. Finally, for finite concentration of impurities in
a -wave superconductor, we reexamine the growth of these states into an
impurity band, and discuss the Mott criterion for this band.Comment: 12 pages and 2 figures, RevTex, LA-UR-94-194
Pair fluctuation induced pseudogap in the normal phase of the two-dimensional attractive Hubbard model at weak coupling
One-particle spectral properties in the normal phase of the two-dimensional
attractive Hubbard model are investigated in the weak coupling regime using the
non-selfconsistent T-matrix approximation. The corresponding equations are
evaluated numerically directly on the real frequency axis. For temperatures
sufficiently close to the superconducting transition temperature a pseudogap in
the one-particle spectral function is observed, which can be assigned to the
increasing importance of pair fluctuations.Comment: 22 pages, 13 figure
Macroscopic quantum superpositions in highly-excited strongly-interacting many-body systems
We demonstrate a break-down in the macroscopic (classical-like) dynamics of
wave-packets in complex microscopic and mesoscopic collisions. This break-down
manifests itself in coherent superpositions of the rotating clockwise and
anticlockwise wave-packets in the regime of strongly overlapping many-body
resonances of the highly-excited intermediate complex. These superpositions
involve many-body configurations so that their internal interactive
complexity dramatically exceeds all of those previously discussed and
experimentally realized. The interference fringes persist over a time-interval
much longer than the energy relaxation-redistribution time due to the
anomalously slow phase randomization (dephasing). Experimental verification of
the effect is proposed.Comment: Title changed, few changes in the abstract and in the main body of
the paper, and changes in the font size in the figure. Uses revTex4, 4 pages,
1 ps figur
Non-magnetic impurity scattering in a superconductor near a van Hove point: Zn versus Ni in the cuprates
We consider the effect of non-magnetic impurities in a
superconductor with \ef close to a van Hove singularity. It is shown that the
non-trivial density of states (DOS) allows for resonant scattering already at
intermediate potential strengths eV. The residual DOS at
\ef, and the \tc suppression rate are found to strongly depend on the carrier
concentration. Quantitative agreement with experiments on Zn and Ni doped
cuprates is obtained by adjusting a single parameter, .Comment: 4 pages uuencoded compressed Postscript (Minor changes
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