1,983 research outputs found
Winter Ecology of Common Ravens in Southern Wyoming and the Effects of Raven Removal on Greater Sage-Grouse Populations
My research focused on common raven (Corvus corax; hereafter raven) winter ecology and removal, and how raven removal aids Greater sage-grouse (Centrocerus urophasiansu; hereafter sage-grouse) populations. Raven winter ecology in the western US has not been described in detail. I researched raven use of landfills for foraging and raven use of anthropogenic structures for roosting, as well as dispersal of ravens in the spring. In all 22% of radio-marked ravens (n=73) used landfills during the day, and 68%(n=73) roosted at anthropogenic roost sites during the evening. Correlations between landfill and roost counts of ravens were stronger (0.4\u3err20 km. In the spring, ravens dispersed, on average, 38 km from landfills where they were caught.
Large congregations of ravens at a few sites in winter may present opportunities to initiate raven population reduction methods to alleviate later problems. I analyzed raven survival and behaviour when USDA/APHIS Wildlife Services (WS) removed ravens using DRC-1339 during winter months. The number of ravens killed annually was 7-34% of the local population. Ravens did not avoid landfills, yet they switched roosts more frequently after an application of the toxicant.
Raven removal improves sage-grouse nest success; however, data were not available to examine how raven removal improves sage-grouse abundance. I analyzed changes in raven density with regard to WS removal, and then related these changes with changes in sage-grouse lek counts the following year. Raven densities decreased by 50% from 2008-2014 where WS conducted removal programs. Sage-grouse lek counts improved in area where WS lowered raven abundance, in comparison to areas farther away, during the latter half of the study (2013-2015), when WS removal efforts intensified. Thereafter, a 10% decline in raven abundance was associated with a 2% increase in sage-grouse lek counts. Overall, ravens in souther Wyoming used anthropogenic resources during the winter, and removal of ravens at these locations, combined with removal in the spring, minimally impacted raven populations annually and was associated with increases in sage-grouse abundance
Dynamics of a Dark Matter Field with a Quartic Self-Interaction Potential
It may prove useful in cosmology to understand the behavior of the energy
distribution in a scalar field that interacts only with gravity and with itself
by a pure quartic potential, because if such a field existed it would be
gravitationally produced, as a squeezed state, during inflation. It is known
that the mean energy density in such a field after inflation varies with the
expansion of the universe in the same way as radiation. I show that if the
field initially is close to homogeneous, with small energy density contrast
delta rho /rho and coherence length L, the energy density fluctuations behave
like acoustic oscillations in an ideal relativistic fluid for a time on the
order of L/|delta rho /rho|. This ends with the appearance of features that
resemble shock waves, but interact in a close to elastic way that reversibly
disturbs the energy distribution.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys Rev
Effects of P-wave Annihilation on the Angular Power Spectrum of Extragalactic Gamma-rays from Dark Matter Annihilation
We present a formalism for estimating the angular power spectrum of
extragalactic gamma-rays produced by dark matter annihilating with any general
velocity-dependent cross section. The relevant density and velocity
distribution of dark matter is modeled as an ensemble of smooth, universal,
rigid, disjoint, spherical halos with distribution and universal properties
constrained by simulation data. We apply this formalism to theories of dark
matter with p-wave annihilation, for which the relative-velocity-weighted
annihilation cross section is \sigma v=a+bv^2. We determine that this
significantly increases the gamma-ray power if b/a >> 10^6. The effect of
p-wave annihilation on the angular power spectrum is very similar for the
sample of particle physics models we explored, suggesting that the important
effect for a given b/a is largely determined by the cosmic dark matter
distribution. If the dark matter relic from strong p-wave theories is thermally
produced, the intensities of annihilation gamma-rays are strongly p-wave
suppressed, making them difficult to observe. If an angular power spectrum
consistent with a strong p-wave were to be observed, it would likely indicate
non-thermal production of dark matter in the early Universe.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
The finite element machine: An experiment in parallel processing
The finite element machine is a prototype computer designed to support parallel solutions to structural analysis problems. The hardware architecture and support software for the machine, initial solution algorithms and test applications, and preliminary results are described
Particle linear theory on a self-gravitating perturbed cubic Bravais lattice
Discreteness effects are a source of uncontrolled systematic errors of N-body
simulations, which are used to compute the evolution of a self-gravitating
fluid. We have already developed the so-called "Particle Linear Theory" (PLT),
which describes the evolution of the position of self-gravitating particles
located on a perturbed simple cubic lattice. It is the discrete analogue of the
well-known (Lagrangian) linear theory of a self-gravitating fluid. Comparing
both theories permits to quantify precisely discreteness effects in the linear
regime. It is useful to develop the PLT also for other perturbed lattices
because they represent different discretizations of the same continuous system.
In this paper we detail how to implement the PLT for perturbed cubic Bravais
lattices (simple, body and face-centered) in a cubic simulation box. As an
application, we will study the discreteness effects -- in the linear regime --
of N-body simulations for which initial conditions have been set-up using these
different lattices.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures and 4 tables. Minor corrections to match published
versio
The Measure of Cosmological Parameters
New, large, ground and space telescopes are contributing to an exciting and
rapid period of growth in observational cosmology. The subject is now far from
its earlier days of being data-starved and unconstrained, and new data are
fueling a healthy interplay between observations and experiment and theory. I
briefly review here the status of measurements of a number of quantities of
interest in cosmology: the Hubble constant, the total mass-energy density, the
matter density, the cosmological constant or dark energy component, and the
total optical background light.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, to be published in "2001: A Spacetime Odyssey:
Proceedings of the Inaugural Conference of the Michigan Center for
Theoretical Physics", Michael J. Duff & James T. Liu, eds., (World
Scientific, Singapore), in pres
Winter Ecology and Spring Dispersal of Common Ravens in Wyoming
Numbers of Common Ravens (Corvus corax) have increased in western North America, and these high abundances are the source of problems throughout the species\u27 range. Little is known about the winter ecology of ravens. We studied a population of ravens in Wyoming during the winters of 2013–2015; our goals were to examine use of landfills for foraging and use of anthropogenic structures for roosting, as well as dispersal patterns of ravens from these landfills in the spring. On average, 22% of radio-marked ravens foraged at landfills on a given day and 68% roosted at anthropogenic sites (e.g. on buildings or underneath bridges) each night. Daily counts at an anthropogenic roost and at the nearest landfill were positively correlated. Decreased temperatures increased raven use of landfills and anthropogenic roost sites. In the spring, radio-marked and GPS-marked ravens (n = 56) dispersed an average of 38 km from the landfills where they were captured. Use of landfills and anthropogenic roost sites in the winter likely contributes to an increase in the number of ravens by improving survival and body condition of breeding-age birds. In the spring, ravens moved outward from these locations, and the area most susceptible to raven damage was localized within a 40-km radius of where ravens wintered
Materials for Advanced Turbine Engines
An attempt was made to improve methods for producing powder metallurgy aircraft gas turbine engine parts from the nickel base superalloy known as Rene 95. The parts produced were the high pressure turbine aft shaft for the CF6-50 engine and the stages 5 through 9 compressor disk forgings for the CFM56/F101 engines. A 50% cost reduction was achieved as compared to conventional cast and wrought processing practices. An integrated effort involving several powder producers and a major forging source were included
Dynamics of gas bubbles in an oscillating pressure field Annual report, Jul. 1965 - Aug. 1966
Gas bubble dynamics in oscillating pressure fiel
Cosmological Baryon Sound Waves Coupled with the Primeval Radiation
The fluid equations for the baryon-electron system in an expanding universe
are derived from the Boltzmann equation. The effect of the Compton interaction
is taken into account properly in order to evaluate the photon-electron
collisional term. As an application, the acoustic motions of the
baryon-electron system after recombination are investigated. The effective
adiabatic index is computed for sound waves of various wavelengths,
assuming the perturbation amplitude is small. The oscillations are found to be
dumped when changes from between 1 (for an isothermal process) to 5/3
(for an adiabatic process).Comment: 20 pages, Revtex, Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
- …