3,941 research outputs found
Escape path complexity and its context dependency in Pacific blue-eyes (Pseudomugil signifer)
The escape trajectories animals take following a predatory attack appear to
show high degrees of apparent 'randomness' - a property that has been described
as 'protean behaviour'. Here we present a method of quantifying the escape
trajectories of individual animals using a path complexity approach. When fish
(Pseudomugil signifer) were attacked either on their own or in groups, we find
that an individual's path rapidly increases in entropy (our measure of
complexity) following the attack. For individuals on their own, this entropy
remains elevated (indicating a more random path) for a sustained period (10
seconds) after the attack, whilst it falls more quickly for individuals in
groups. The entropy of the path is context dependent. When attacks towards
single fish come from greater distances, a fish's path shows less complexity
compared to attacks that come from short range. This context dependency effect
did not exist, however, when individuals were in groups. Nor did the path
complexity of individuals in groups depend on a fish's local density of
neighbours. We separate out the components of speed and direction changes to
determine which of these components contributes to the overall increase in path
complexity following an attack. We found that both speed and direction measures
contribute similarly to an individual's path's complexity in absolute terms.
Our work highlights the adaptive behavioural tactics that animals use to avoid
predators and also provides a novel method for quantifying the escape
trajectories of animals.Comment: 9 page
Limits on Radio Continuum Emission from a Sample of Candidate Contracting Starless Cores
We used the NRAO Very Large Array to search for 3.6 cm continuum emission
from embedded protostars in a sample of 8 nearby ``starless'' cores that show
spectroscopic evidence for infalling motions in molecular emission lines. We
detect a total of 13 compact sources in the eight observed fields to 5 sigma
limiting flux levels of typically 0.09 mJy. None of these sources lie within 1'
of the central positions of the cores, and they are all likely background
objects. Based on an extrapolation of the empirical correlation between the
bolometric luminosity and 3.6 cm luminosity for the youngest protostars, these
null-detections place upper limits of ~0.1 L_sun (d/140pc)^2 on the
luminosities of protostellar sources embedded within these cores. These limits,
together with the extended nature of the inward motions inferred from molecular
line mapping (Lee et al. 2001), are inconsistent with the inside-out collapse
model of singular isothermal spheres and suggest a less centrally condensed
phase of core evolution during the earliest stages of star formation.Comment: Accepted to the Astronomical Journal; 12 pages, 1 figur
TEDI: the TripleSpec Exoplanet Discovery Instrument
The TEDI (TripleSpec - Exoplanet Discovery Instrument) will be the first
instrument fielded specifically for finding low-mass stellar companions. The
instrument is a near infra-red interferometric spectrometer used as a radial
velocimeter. TEDI joins Externally Dispersed Interferometery (EDI) with an
efficient, medium-resolution, near IR (0.9 - 2.4 micron) echelle spectrometer,
TripleSpec, at the Palomar 200" telescope. We describe the instrument and its
radial velocimetry demonstration program to observe cool stars.Comment: 6 Pages, To Appear in SPIE Volume 6693, Techniques and
Instrumentation for Detection of Exoplanets II
Community Woodstove Changeout and Impact on Ambient Concentrations of Polycyclic Aromatic Hydrocarbons and Phenolics
A large woodstove changeout program was carried out in Libby, Montana, with the goal of reducing ambient levels of PM2.5. This provided researchers the opportunity to measure ambient concentrations of phenolic and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) before, during, and after the changeout of nearly 1200 stoves to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention. Starting in the heating season of 2004/2005 and ending in the heating season of 2007/2008, 19 compounds were measured every three days using a high-volume polyurethane foam (PUF) sampler followed by gas chromatography and mass spectrometry analysis. Some of the organic species with the highest measured concentrations were also signature chemical markers for wood combustion. When comparing the measurements conducted during the heating season of 2004/2005 (prechangeout) to those of the heating season of 2007/2008 (postchangeout), there was a 64% average reduction in the measured concentrations of phenolics and PAHs, while the PM2.5 mass dropped by only 20% over the same time period. The results of this four year sampling program suggest that the Libby woodstove changeout program was successful in reducing overall concentrations of the measured phenolic and PAH compounds
Investigating A Dose Response Relationship between High Fat Diet Consumption and the Contractile Performance of Isolated Mouse Soleus, EDL and Diaphragm Muscles
Induction of Colonic Aberrant Crypts in Mice by Feeding Apparent N-Nitroso Compounds Derived From Hot Dogs
Nitrite-preserved meats (e.g., hot dogs) may help cause colon cancer because they contain N-nitroso compounds. We tested whether purified hot-dog-derived total apparent N-nitroso compounds (ANC) could induce colonic aberrant crypts, which are putative precursors of colon cancer. We purified ANC precursors in hot dogs and nitrosated them to produce ANC. In preliminary tests, CF1 mice received 1 or 3 i.p. injections of 5mg azoxymethane (AOM)/kg. In Experiments 1 and 2, female A/J mice received ANC in diet. In Experiment 1, ANC dose initially dropped sharply because the ANC precursors had mostly decomposed but, later in Experiment 1 and throughout Experiment 2, ANC remained at 85 nmol/g diet. Mice were killed after 8 (AOM tests) or 17–34 (ANC tests) wk.Median numbers of aberrant crypts in the distal 2 cm of the colon for 1 and 3 AOMinjections, CF1 controls, ANC (Experiment 1), ANC (Experiment 2),and untreated A/J mice were 31, 74, 12, 20, 12, and 5–6, with P < 0.01 for both ANC tests. Experiment 2 showed somewhat increased numbers of colonic mucin-depleted foci in the ANC-treated group. We conclude that hot-dog-derived ANC induced significant numbers of aberrant crypts in the mouse colon
Detailed analysis of the cell-inactivation mechanism by accelerated protons and light ions
Published survival data for V79 cells irradiated by monoenergetic protons,
helium-3, carbon, and oxygen ions and for CHO cells irradiated by carbon ions
have been analyzed using the probabilistic two-stage model of cell
inactivation. Three different classes of DNA damages formed by traversing
particles have been distinguished, namely severe single-track damages which
might lead to cell inactivation directly, less severe damages where cell
inactivation is caused by their combinations, and damages of negligible
severity that can be repaired easily. Probabilities of single ions to form
these damages have been assessed in dependence on their linear energy transfer
(LET) values.
Damage induction probabilities increase with atomic number and LET. While
combined damages play crucial role at lower LET values, single-track damages
dominate in high-LET regions. The yields of single-track lethal damages for
protons have been compared with the Monte Carlo estimates of complex DNA
lesions, indicating that lethal events correlate well with complex DNA
double-strand breaks. The decrease in the single-track damage probability for
protons of LET above approx. 30 keV/m, suggested by limited experimental
evidence, is discussed, together with the consequent differences in the
mechanisms of biological effects between protons and heavier ions. Applications
of the results in hadrontherapy treatment planning are outlined.Comment: submitted to Physics in Medicine and Biolog
Hypercomplex Integrable Systems
In this paper we study hypercomplex manifolds in four dimensions. Rather than
using an approach based on differential forms, we develop a dual approach using
vector fields. The condition on these vector fields may then be interpreted as
Lax equations, exhibiting the integrability properties of such manifolds. A
number of different field equations for such hypercomplex manifolds are
derived, one of which is in Cauchy-Kovaleskaya form which enables a formal
general solution to be given. Various other properties of the field equations
and their solutions are studied, such as their symmetry properties and the
associated hierarchy of conservation laws.Comment: Latex file, 19 page
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