310 research outputs found
Resonance Raman Investigation of the Radical Cation of 1,3,5-Hexatriene
The resonance Raman spectrum of the 1,3,5-hexatriene radical cation generated by v-irradiation in a Freon glass is reported. The spectrum is excited at 395 nm in resonance with the second absorption band. Identical spectra are obtained from ionized (E)- and (Z)-1,3,5-hexatriene. The presence of more than one rotamer has to be assumed to account for all the observed resonance Raman bands. The bands are assigned to a mixture of the two rotamers, calculated at lowest energy, the ttt an tct rotamers, on the basis of ab initio ROHF/6-31G calculated harmonic frequencies. The spectrum indicates that the ttt and tct rotamers are formed in a ratio in the range 0.4./0.6-0.6/0.4. Two possible mechanisms are proposed to explain the presence of these two rotamers
Decay of Sexual Trait Genes in an Asexual Parasitoid Wasp.
Trait loss is a widespread phenomenon with pervasive consequences
for a species’ evolutionary potential. The genetic changes
underlying trait loss have only been clarified in a small number of cases. None of these studies can identify whether the loss of the trait
under study was a result of neutral mutation accumulation or negative selection. This distinction is relatively clear-cut in the loss of
sexual traits in asexual organisms. Male-specific sexual traits are not expressed and can only decay through neutral mutations,
whereas female-specific traits are expressed and subject to negative selection. We present the genome of an asexual parasitoid
wasp and compare it to that of a sexual lineage of the same species.
We identify a short-list of 16 genes for which the asexual lineage
carries deleterious SNP or indel variants, whereas the sexual lineag
e does not. Using tissue-specific expression data from other insects,
we show that fifteen of these are expressed in male-specific reproductive tissues. Only one deleterious variant was found that is
expressed in the female-specific spermathecae, a trait that is
heavily degraded and thought to be under negative selection in
L. clavipes
. Although the phenotypic decay of male-specific sexual traits in asexuals is generally slow compared with the decay of
female-specific sexual traits, we show that male-specific traits do indeed accumulate deleterious mutations as expected by theory.
Our results provide an excellent starting point for detailed s
tudy of the genomics of neutral and selected trait decay
Finite element pressure stabilizations for incompressible flow problems
Discretizations of incompressible flow problems with pairs of finite element spaces that do not satisfy a discrete inf-sup condition require a so-called pressure stabilization. This paper gives an overview and systematic assessment of stabilized methods, including the respective error analysis
- …