17,691 research outputs found

    A density functional perspective for one-particle systems

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    Density functional theory is discussed in the context of one-particle systems. We show that the ground state density ρ0(x)\rho_0(x) and energy E0E_0 are simply related to a family of external potential energy functions with ground state wave functions ψn(x)ρ0(x)n\psi_n(x) \propto \rho_0(x)^n and energies En=2nE0E_n=2nE_0 for certain integer values of nn.Comment: 7 pages, ReVTeX4, submitted to Am. J. Phy

    The Effect of Urbanization on Bumble Bee Communities in Greater Philadelphia

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    Bumble bees (Bombus spp.) are among the most important wild pollinators in temperate ecosystems in North America and Europe, and are believed to be vital to the functioning of the pollination networks in which they occur. Accordingly, evidence of their overall decline in Europe and more selective decline in the U.S. has raised concern about the long term persistence of many species. Human-induced changes in land use, including the loss of natural and semi-natural habitat and associated floral resources, are purported causes in several cases. Declines prompted an investigation of this potential trend in the urbanized landscape in and surrounding Philadelphia, PA. We surveyed the species richness and abundance of bumble bee communities in ten half-ha plots located in restored, managed meadows along a gradient of urban and suburban development in the Philadelphia metropolitan area from June 1 to August 15, 2006. In conjunction with collections, we measured floral density within each plot. We calculated the proportion of developed land at differing spatial scales ranging from 500 to 4000 m from survey sites. General linear models were used to test the effect of developed land, local meadow size, and floral resource density on overall bumble bee species richness and abundance. 
Development did not have any detectable effect on species richness at any tested spatial scale. Bee abundance was best explained by a model that included the proportion of developed land at the 2500 m scale. In contrast to our expectations, total bumble bee abundance was significantly higher in plots with a higher proportion of developed land surrounding the site (F1,5 = 8.13, P = 0.04). Local floral density did not significantly affect richness or abundance (F 1,5 = 0.93, P = 0.34), nor was local resource quality associated with development (r = 0.52, P = 0.12) . We hypothesize that gardens maintained in urban and suburban landscapes may provide an important and consistent food supply to bumble bees throughout the duration of their colony cycle. Forested habitats, which were the other dominate habitat type, may actually be relatively poor in bumble bee resources following closure of the canopy in late spring. This research indicates that restored meadows are excellent habitat for bumble bees and may promote pollination services in urbanized settings.
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    SBML Reaction Finder: Retrieve and extract specific reactions from the BioModels database

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    Summary: The SBML Reaction Finder (SRF) application leverages the deep semantic annotations in the BioModels database to provide efficient retrieval and extraction of individual reactions from SBML models. We hope that the SRF will be useful to quantitative modelers who seek to accelerate their modeling efforts by reusing previously published representations of specific chemical reactions.

Availability and Implementation: The SRF is open source, coded in Java, and distributed under the Mozilla Pubic License Version 1.1. Windows, Macintosh and Linux distributions are available for download at 
http://sourceforge.net/projects/sbmlrxnfinder.
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    Outerbridge grade IV cartilage lesions in the hip identified at arthroscopy

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    Turbulent skin friction and heat-transfer charts adapted from the Spalding and Chi method

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    Local and average skin friction and heat transfer on flat plates in air - chart

    Thermal stability of coupled ferromagnetic and superparamagnetic particles

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    We consider a single-domain ferromagnetic particle with uniaxial anisotropy coupled to a single-domain soft ferromagnetic particle (superparamagnetic particle). The problem of thermally agitated magnetization reversal in this case can be reduced to the random magnetization dynamics of the first particle with an effectively larger anisotropy field. The magnetic external field is also altered in a manner that depends on the sign of the coupling and can be either enhanced or suppressed.Comment: 3 pages, 2 figures, presented at MMM'0
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