706 research outputs found
Aquatic Vegetation, Largemouth Bass and Water Quality Responses to Low-Dose Fluridone Two Years Post Treatment
Whole-lake techniques are increasingly being used to selectively
remove exotic plants, including Eurasian watermilfoil
(
Myriophyllum spicatum
L.). Fluridone (1-methyl-3-phenyl-
5-[3-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]-4(1
H
)-pyridinone), a systemic
whole-lake herbicide, is selective for Eurasian watermilfoil
within a narrow low concentration range. Because fluridone
applications have the potential for large effects on plant assemblages
and lake food webs, they should be evaluated at
the whole-lake scale. We examined effects of low-dose (5 to 8
ppb) fluridone applications by comparing submersed plant
assemblages, water quality and largemouth bass (
Micropterus
salmoides
) growth rates and diets between three reference
lakes and three treatment lakes one- and two-years post treatment.
In the treatment lakes, fluridone reduced Eurasian watermilfoil
cover without reducing native plant cover, although
the duration of Eurasian watermilfoil reduction varied among
treatment lakes. (PDF has 11 pages.
A strategy to qualify the performance of radiographic monitors
The purpose of this work was to compare standard desktop display systems with dedicated medical display systems. The set of image tests proposed by the American Association of Physicists in Medicine (AAPM TG18) was used to assess a Philips 107S desktop display system and a Siemens medical display. Three observers performed the subjective assessment, in a non-concerted manner. The objective assessment was performed using a CCD camera according to the AAPM TG18 procedure. The results clearly demonstrate the inadequacy of standard desktop display systems in the framework of diagnostic radiology. Moreover, a good correlation between the subjective and objective assessment methods was obtaine
Early Evidence of Natal-Habitat Preference: Juvenile Loons Feed on Natal-Like Lakes After Fledging
Many species show natal habitat preference induction (NHPI), a behavior in which young adults select habitats similar to those in which they were raised. However, we know little about how NHPI develops in natural systems. Here, we tested for NHPI in juvenile common loons (Gavia immer) that foraged on lakes in the vicinity of their natal lake after fledging. Juveniles visited lakes similar in pH to their natal lakes, and this significant effect persisted after controlling for spatial autocorrelation. On the other hand, juveniles showed no preference for foraging lakes of similar size to their natal one. When lakes were assigned to discrete classes based on size, depth, visibility, and trophic complexity, both juveniles from large lakes and small lakes preferred to visit large, trophically diverse lakes, which contained abundant food. Our results contrast with earlier findings, which show strict preference for lakes similar in size to the natal lake among young adults seeking to settle on a breeding lake. We suggest that NHPI is relaxed for juveniles, presumably because they select lakes that optimize short‐term survival and growth. By characterizing NHPI during a poorly studied life stage, this study illustrates that NHPI can take different forms at different life stages
The Canada-UK Deep Submillimetre Survey: The Survey of the 14-hour field
We have used SCUBA to survey an area of 50 square arcmin, detecting 19
sources down to a 3sigma sensitivity limit of 3.5 mJy at 850 microns. We have
used Monte-Carlo simulations to assess the effect of source confusion and noise
on the SCUBA fluxes and positions, finding that the fluxes of sources in the
SCUBA surveys are significantly biased upwards and that the fraction of the 850
micron background that has been resolved by SCUBA has been overestimated. The
radio/submillmetre flux ratios imply that the dust in these galaxies is being
heated by young stars rather than AGN. We have used simple evolution models
based on our parallel SCUBA survey of the local universe to address the major
questions about the SCUBA sources: (1) what fraction of the star formation at
high redshift is hidden by dust? (2) Does the submillimetre luminosity density
reach a maximum at some redshift? (3) If the SCUBA sources are
proto-ellipticals, when exactly did ellipticals form? However, we show that the
observations are not yet good enough for definitive answers to these questions.
There are, for example, acceptable models in which 10 times as much
high-redshift star formation is hidden by dust as is seen at optical
wavelengths, but also acceptable ones in which the amount of hidden star
formation is less than that seen optically. There are acceptable models in
which very little star formation occurred before a redshift of three (as might
be expected in models of hierarchical galaxy formation), but also ones in which
30% of the stars have formed by this redshift. The key to answering these
questions are measurements of the dust temperatures and redshifts of the SCUBA
sources.Comment: 41 pages (latex), 17 postscript figures, to appear in the November
issue of the Astronomical Journa
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Needs and opportunities in mineral evolution research
Progress in understanding mineral evolution, Earth’s changing near-surface mineralogy through time, depends on the availability of detailed information on mineral localities of known ages and geologic settings. A comprehensive database including this information, employing the mindat.org web site as a platform, is now being implemented. This resource will incorporate software to correlate a range of mineral occurrences and properties vs. time, and it will thus facilitate studies of the chang- ing diversity, distribution, associations, and characteristics of individual minerals as well as mineral groups. The Mineral Evolution Database thus holds the prospect of revealing mineralogical records of important geophysical, geochemical, and biological events in Earth history.Organismic and Evolutionary Biolog
Red Parkes-Quasars: Evidence for Soft X-ray Absorption
The Parkes Half-Jansky Flat Spectrum Sample contains a large number of
sources with unusually red optical-to-near-infrared continua. If this is to be
interpreted as extinction by dust in the line-of-sight, then associated
material might also give rise to absorption in the soft X-ray regime. This
hypothesis is tested using broadband (0.1-2.4 keV) data from the {\it ROSAT}
All-Sky Survey provided by Siebert et al. (1998). Significant (
confidence level) correlations between optical (and near-infrared)--to--soft
X-ray continuum slope and optical extinction are found in the data, consistent
with absorption by material with metallicity and a range in gas-to-dust ratio
as observed in the local ISM. Under this simple model, the soft X-rays are
absorbed at a level consistent with the range of extinctions (
magnitudes) implied by the observed optical reddening. Excess X-ray absorption
by warm (ionised) gas, (ie. a `warm absorber') is not required.Comment: 23 pages of text, 3 figures, to appear in Jan 10 (1999) issue of The
Astrophysical Journa
High-performance diamond-based single-photon sources for quantum communication
Quantum communication places stringent requirements on single-photon sources.
Here we report a theoretical study of the cavity Purcell enhancement of two
diamond point defects, the nickel-nitrogen (NE8) and silicon-vacancy (SiV)
centers, for high-performance, near on-demand single-photon generation. By
coupling the centers strongly to high-finesse optical photonic-bandgap cavities
with modest quality factor Q = O(10^4) and small mode volume V = O(\lambda^3),
these system can deliver picosecond single-photon pulses at their zero-phonon
lines with probabilities of 0.954 (NE8) and 0.812 (SiV) under a realistic
optical excitation scheme. The undesirable blinking effect due to transitions
via metastable states can also be suppressed with O(10^{-4}) blinking
probability. We analyze the application of these enhanced centers, including
the previously-studied cavity-enhanced nitrogen-vacancy (NV) center, to
long-distance BB84 quantum key distribution (QKD) in fiber-based, open-air
terrestrial and satellite-ground setups. In this comparative study, we show
that they can deliver performance comparable with decoy state implementation
with weak coherent sources, and are most suitable for open-air communication.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, 3 tables, revisions to excitation parameter
Removing Orbital Debris with Lasers
Orbital debris in low Earth orbit (LEO) are now sufficiently dense that the
use of LEO space is threatened by runaway collisional cascading. A problem
predicted more than thirty years ago, the threat from debris larger than about
1 cm demands serious attention. A promising proposed solution uses a high power
pulsed laser system on the Earth to make plasma jets on the objects, slowing
them slightly, and causing them to re-enter and burn up in the atmosphere. In
this paper, we reassess this approach in light of recent advances in low-cost,
light-weight modular design for large mirrors, calculations of laser-induced
orbit changes and in design of repetitive, multi-kilojoule lasers, that build
on inertial fusion research. These advances now suggest that laser orbital
debris removal (LODR) is the most cost-effective way to mitigate the debris
problem. No other solutions have been proposed that address the whole problem
of large and small debris. A LODR system will have multiple uses beyond debris
removal. International cooperation will be essential for building and operating
such a system.Comment: 37 pages, 15 figures, in preparation for submission to Advances in
Space Researc
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