2,539 research outputs found
Elevated CO<sub>2</sub> affects embryonic development and larval phototaxis in a temperate marine fish
As an effect of anthropogenic CO2 emissions, the chemistry of the world's oceans is changing. Understanding how this will affect marine organisms and ecosystems are critical in predicting the impacts of this ongoing ocean acidification. Work on coral reef fishes has revealed dramatic effects of elevated oceanic CO2 on sensory responses and behavior. Such effects may be widespread but have almost exclusively been tested on tropical reef fishes. Here we test the effects elevated CO2 has on the reproduction and early life history stages of a temperate coastal goby with paternal care by allowing goby pairs to reproduce naturally in an aquarium with either elevated (ca 1400 μatm) CO2 or control seawater (ca 370 μatm CO2). Elevated CO2 did not affect the occurrence of spawning nor clutch size, but increased embryonic abnormalities and egg loss. Moreover, we found that elevated CO2 significantly affected the phototactic response of newly hatched larvae. Phototaxis is a vision-related fundamental behavior of many marine fishes, but has never before been tested in the context of ocean acidification. Our findings suggest that ocean acidification affects embryonic development and sensory responses in temperate fishes, with potentially important implications for fish recruitment
Scale Anomaly Induced Instanton Interaction
The binary interaction of large size instantons in a SU(2) Yang-Mills theory
is obtained from the one-loop effective action for the field strength. The
instanton interaction is calculated as a function of the instanton separation
and in dependence on radius and relative orientation of the instantons. Two
equally oriented instantons with radii large compared with the scale defined by
the gluon condensate have purely attractive interaction, whereas the
interaction of maximal disoriented instantons is repulsive. We argue that the
medium range attractive interaction of the instantons generally holds and is
solely due to the instability of the perturbative vacuum.Comment: 11 LaTex pages (3 figures available on request), in press by Physics
Letters B, UNITUE-THEP-4-199
Heat kernel estimates and spectral properties of a pseudorelativistic operator with magnetic field
Based on the Mehler heat kernel of the Schroedinger operator for a free
electron in a constant magnetic field an estimate for the kernel of E_A is
derived, where E_A represents the kinetic energy of a Dirac electron within the
pseudorelativistic no-pair Brown-Ravenhall model. This estimate is used to
provide the bottom of the essential spectrum for the two-particle
Brown-Ravenhall operator, describing the motion of the electrons in a central
Coulomb field and a constant magnetic field, if the central charge is
restricted to Z below or equal 86
Blood Parasite Infection Differentially Relates to Carotenoid-Based Plumage and Bill Color in the American Goldfinch
Male and female American goldfinches (Spinus tristis) express condition-dependent carotenoid-based plumage and bill coloration. Plumage color is relatively static, as pigments incorporated into feathers during the spring molt cannot be mobilized thereafter. In contrast, bill color is dynamic, reflecting changes in condition over short time periods. Previous studies have shown that male and female ornaments, though similar in expression, are differentially related to measures of immunocompetence, suggesting that the relationship between ornamentation and parasite infection may differ between the sexes. In this study, we evaluate the relationship between condition-dependent ornamentation (plumage and bill color) and blood parasite infection in male and female American goldfinches. We captured goldfinches after completion of the pre-alternate molt and prior to the onset of nesting and assessed prevalence of Trypanosoma parasites via blood smears. Plumage color strongly predicted trypanosome infection: Birds with more colorful plumage were less likely to present infections. In contrast, we detected no relationship between infection and bill color, which in other studies has been shown to dynamically reflect current condition. Sex did not affect the relationship between infection status and either ornament. Together, these results suggest that physiological pathways linking carotenoid ornamentation and infection may vary even within a single species
Correleation of the SAGE III on ISS Thermal Models in Thermal Desktop
The Stratospheric Aerosol and Gas Experiment III (SAGE III) instrument is the fifth in a series of instruments developed for monitoring aerosols and gaseous constituents in the stratosphere and troposphere. SAGE III was launched on February 19, 2017 and mounted to the International Space Station (ISS) to begin its three-year mission. A detailed thermal model of the SAGE III payload, which consists of multiple subsystems, has been developed in Thermal Desktop (TD). Correlation of the thermal model is important since the payload will be expected to survive a three-year mission on ISS under varying thermal environments. Three major thermal vacuum (TVAC) tests were completed during the development of the SAGE III Instrument Payload (IP); two subsystem-level tests and a payload-level test. Additionally, a characterization TVAC test was performed in order to verify performance of a system of heater plates that was designed to allow the IP to achieve the required temperatures during payload-level testing; model correlation was performed for this test configuration as well as those including the SAGE III flight hardware. This document presents the methods that were used to correlate the SAGE III models to TVAC at the subsystem and IP level, including the approach for modeling the parts of the payload in the thermal chamber, generating pre-test predictions, and making adjustments to the model to align predictions with temperatures observed during testing. Model correlation quality will be presented and discussed, and lessons learned during the correlation process will be shared
Momentum-space Monte Carlo
Using the quenched, reduced form of large-N field theories, we show that it is possible to directly measure momentum-space Green functions, via Monte Carlo, without going through the intermediate step of measurement in position space plus Fourier transformation. This promises to be useful tool for investigating the infrared structure of planar field theories. As an application (and test) of the method, we compute mass-gaps in the quenched U(N) x U(N) lattice chiral model, in D = 1 and 2 dimensions.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/24595/1/0000003.pd
Superfluid Phase Transitions in Dense Neutron Matter
The phase transitions in a realistic system with triplet pairing, dense
neutron matter, have been investigated. The spectrum of phases of the
model, which adequately describes pairing in this system, is
analytically constructed with the aid of a separation method for solving BCS
gap equation in states of arbitrary angular momentum. In addition to solutions
involving a single value of the magnetic quantum number (and its negative),
there exist ten real multicomponent solutions. Five of the corresponding
angle-dependent order parameters have nodes, and five do not. In contrast to
the case of superfluid He, transitions occur between phases with nodeless
order parameters. The temperature dependence of the competition between the
various phases is studied.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Homocysteine Levels, Haemostatic Risk Factors and Patency Rates after Endovascular Treatment of the Above-Knee Femoro-Popliteal Artery
AbstractObjectives. To investigate the relationship between plasma homocysteine and other haemostatic variables and restenoses or reocclusions after endovascular treatment of symptomatic atherosclerosis of the above-knee femoro-popliteal artery.Design. Prospective observational study.Setting. University hospital.Patients and methods. The study included 103 patients (116 limbs), treated with subintimal angioplasty in 58 cases (50%) and with intraluminal PTA in 58 (50%): 39 (34%) patients were treated for critical limb ischaemia. Blood samples for analyses of fasting plasma values of homocysteine, fibrinogen, D-dimer, activated protein C resistance were drawn upon admission. Median follow-up for all procedures was 11 months (range 0–42 months). Outcome events (arterial patency) were defined as ≥50% restenosis or reocclusion in the treated arterial segment. Patency rates were estimated with the product limit method and Kaplan–Meier curves. Variables found to be related significantly to patency were included in multivariate analysis performed with the Cox proportional hazard model.Results. The 1-year cumulative primary patency rate for all procedures was 48%. One-year limb salvage rate in cases of critical ischaemia was 74%. Multivariate analysis demonstrated significant independent associations between patency rates and plasma D-dimer, diabetes mellitus, the nature of the lesion treated (stenosis vs. occlusion) and antithrombotic therapy with aspirin after the procedure. Plasma levels of homocysteine, fibrinogen or activated protein C resistance were not associated with patency rates. Homocysteine levels were higher in patients with critical limb ischaemia than those with intermittent claudication.Conclusions. Early restenosis or reocclusion after endovascular intervention of lesions in the above-knee femoro-popliteal artery was more frequent following treatment of occlusion (versus stenosis), for patients with diabetes, patients with elevated D-dimer and those without antithrombotic therapy after the procedure. Plasma homocysteine did not appear to influence the outcome of endovascular intervention
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