16 research outputs found
Evidence of stochastic resonance in the mating behavior of Nezara viridula (L.)
We investigate the role of the noise in the mating behavior between
individuals of Nezara viridula (L.), by analyzing the temporal and spectral
features of the non-pulsed type female calling song emitted by single
individuals. We have measured the threshold level for the signal detection, by
performing experiments with the calling signal at different intensities and
analyzing the insect response by directionality tests performed on a group of
male individuals. By using a sub-threshold signal and an acoustic Gaussian
noise source, we have investigated the insect response for different levels of
noise, finding behavioral activation for suitable noise intensities. In
particular, the percentage of insects which react to the sub-threshold signal,
shows a non-monotonic behavior, characterized by the presence of a maximum, for
increasing levels of the noise intensity. This constructive interplay between
external noise and calling signal is the signature of the non-dynamical
stochastic resonance phenomenon. Finally, we describe the behavioral activation
statistics by a soft threshold model which shows stochastic resonance. We find
that the maximum of the ensemble average of the input-output cross-correlation
occurs at a value of the noise intensity very close to that for which the
behavioral response has a maximum.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, to appear in EPJ B (2008
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Very low frequency magnetotelluric and dipole-dipole responses of three-dimensional thin-layer resistivity structure modeled using finite elements
An algorithm to simulate the very low frequency magnetotelluric and dipole-dipole responses of three-dimensional thin-layer inhomogeneity has been developed from an existing finite element program used to simulate resistivity/IP signatures of 2-D earth sections. The 3-D body is confined to and extends uniformly across a thin layer overlain by air and underlain by infinite resistivity. Electric fields are obtained through differentiation of piecewise parabolas fit to nodal voltages while magnetic fields arise from integration of the free-space Green's tensor over secondary current perturbations throughout the thin layer. Dipole-dipole apparent resistivities arise through application to nodal voltages of the logarithmic geometric factors appropriate to continuously grounded line sources of current. Checks on accuracy of the simulation utilize analytic solutions, 2-D AC plane-wave results using finite elements, and a surface integral equations technique. 18 refs., 14 figs
Trans-crustal structural control of CO2-rich extensional magmatic systems revealed at Mount Erebus Antarctica.
Erebus volcano, Antarctica, with its persistent phonolite lava lake, is a classic example of an evolved, CO <sub>2</sub> -rich rift volcano. Seismic studies provide limited images of the magmatic system. Here we show using magnetotelluric data that a steep, melt-related conduit of low electrical resistivity originating in the upper mantle undergoes pronounced lateral re-orientation in the deep crust before reaching shallower magmatic storage and the summit lava lake. The lateral turn represents a structural fault-valve controlling episodic flow of magma and CO <sub>2</sub> vapour, which replenish and heat the high level phonolite differentiation zone. This magmatic valve lies within an inferred, east-west structural trend forming part of an accommodation zone across the southern termination of the Terror Rift, providing a dilatant magma pathway. Unlike H <sub>2</sub> O-rich subduction arc volcanoes, CO <sub>2</sub> -dominated Erebus geophysically shows continuous magmatic structure to shallow crustal depths of < 1 km, as the melt does not experience decompression-related volatile supersaturation and viscous stalling