260 research outputs found

    A general treatment of snow microstructure exemplified by an improved relation for thermal conductivity

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    Finding relevant microstructural parameters beyond density is a longstanding problem which hinders the formulation of accurate parameterizations of physical properties of snow. Towards a remedy, we address the effective thermal conductivity tensor of snow via anisotropic, second-order bounds. The bound provides an explicit expression for the thermal conductivity and predicts the relevance of a microstructural anisotropy parameter <i>Q</i>, which is given by an integral over the two-point correlation function and unambiguously defined for arbitrary snow structures. For validation we compiled a comprehensive data set of 167 snow samples. The set comprises individual samples of various snow types and entire time series of metamorphism experiments under isothermal and temperature gradient conditions. All samples were digitally reconstructed by micro-computed tomography to perform microstructure-based simulations of heat transport. The incorporation of anisotropy via <i>Q</i> considerably reduces the root mean square error over the usual density-based parameterization. The systematic quantification of anisotropy via the two-point correlation function suggests a generalizable route to incorporate microstructure into snowpack models. We indicate the inter-relation of the conductivity to other properties and outline a potential impact of <i>Q</i> on dielectric constant, permeability and adsorption rate of diffusing species in the pore space

    Brachypodium distachyonis a pathosystem model for the study of the wheat disease rhizoctonia root rot

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    Brachypodium distachyon (Bd) is increasingly being used as a model for cereal diseases and to study cereal root architecture. Rhizoctonia solani AG 8 is a necrotrophic root pathogen that infects wheat soon after germination resulting in reduced plant growth and yield loss. Genetic resistance to R. solani AG 8 is not available in commercial wheat cultivars, although some quantitative levels of resistance have previously been found in mutant lines and grass relatives. Resistance mechanisms in cereals remain unknown. The ability to use Bd as a model to study the wheat–R. solani AG 8 pathosystem was investigated. The results presented show that Bd is susceptible to R. solani AG 8 and that the pathogen infects both species to a similar degree, producing comparable disease symptoms. Root length reduction was the primary indicator of disease, with shoots also affected. The second objective was to develop a repeatable phenotyping method to screen Bd populations for resistance to R. solani AG 8. Results of a preliminary experiment provide evidence for variation in resistance between Bd inbred lines. This is the first report showing the potential of Bd as a model plant for discovery of quantitative genetic variation in resistance to a necrotrophic cereal root pathogen.This work was carried out for K. S.'s PhD thesis and funded by the Australian Grains Research and Development Corporation

    Le droit suisse des sociétés en 2017: modifications législatives, jurisprudence et doctrine

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    La contribution présente, sous une forme synthétique, les principales modifications législatives, entrées en vigueur et en cours, la jurisprudence ainsi que la doctrine publiée en droit suisse des sociétés en 2017. Les modifications législatives (I.) accordent une large place à la présentation de la révision projetée du droit de la société anonyme, tout en s’intéressant également à d’autres thèmes, tel que l’initiative populaire « Entreprises responsables - pour protéger l’être humain et l’environnement ». Les résumés de jurisprudence sont classés par forme de société et décrivent en premier lieu les arrêts publiés (II.). Finalement, la doctrine est présentée en fonction du thème traité (III.)

    Vapor flux and recrystallization during dry snow metamorphism under a steady temperature gradient as observed by time-lapse micro-tomography

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    Dry snow metamorphism under an external temperature gradient is the most common type of recrystallization of snow on the ground. The changes in snow microstructure modify the physical properties of snow, and therefore an understanding of this process is essential for many disciplines, from modeling the effects of snow on climate to assessing avalanche risk. We directly imaged the microstructural changes in snow during temperature gradient metamorphism (TGM) under a constant gradient of 50 K m&lt;sup&gt;−1&lt;/sup&gt;, using in situ time-lapse X-ray micro-tomography. This novel and non-destructive technique directly reveals the amount of ice that sublimates and is deposited during metamorphism, in addition to the exact locations of these phase changes. We calculated the average time that an ice volume stayed in place before it sublimated and found a characteristic residence time of 2–3 days. This means that most of the ice changes its phase from solid to vapor and back many times in a seasonal snowpack where similar temperature conditions can be found. Consistent with such a short timescale, we observed a mass turnover of up to 60% of the total ice mass per day. The concept of hand-to-hand transport for the water vapor flux describes the observed changes very well. However, we did not find evidence for a macroscopic vapor diffusion enhancement. The picture of {temperature gradient metamorphism} produced by directly observing the changing microstructure sheds light on the micro-physical processes and could help to improve models that predict the physical properties of snow

    Mechanics of the Ski-Snow Contact

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    Two outstanding questions of the ski-snow friction are considered: the deformation mode of the snow and the real contact area. The deformation of hard, well sintered snow in a short time impact has been measured with a special linear friction tester. Four types of deformations have been identified: brittle fracture of bonds, plastic deformation of ice at the contact spots, elastic and delayed elastic deformation of the snow matrix. The latter is the dominant deformation in the ski-snow contact. Based on the measured loading curves the mechanical energy dissipation of snow deformation in skiing on hard snow has been determined and found negligible compared to the thermal energy dissipation. A mechanical model consisting of ice spheres supported by rheological elements (a non-linear spring in series with a Kelvin element) is proposed to model the deformation of snow in the ski-snow contact. The model can describe the delayed elastic behaviour of snow. Coupled with the complete topographical description of the snow surface obtained from X-ray micro computer tomography measurements, the model predicts the number and area of contact spots between ski and snow. An average contact spot size of 110μm, and a relative real contact area of 0.4% has been foun

    Characterization of strong light-matter coupling in semiconductor quantum-dot microcavities via photon-statistics spectroscopy

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    It is shown that spectrally resolved photon-statistics measurements of the resonance fluorescence from realistic semiconductor quantum-dot systems allow for high contrast identification of the two-photon strong-coupling states. Using a microscopic theory, the second-rung resonance is analyzed and optimum excitation conditions are determined. The computed photon-statistics spectrum displays gigantic, experimentally robust resonances at the energetic positions of the second-rung emission.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure

    Observation of Coulomb-Assisted Dipole-Forbidden Intraexciton Transitions in Semiconductors

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    We use terahertz pulses to induce resonant transitions between the eigenstates of optically generated exciton populations in a high-quality semiconductor quantum-well sample. Monitoring the excitonic photoluminescence, we observe transient quenching of the 1s1s exciton emission, which we attribute to the terahertz-induced 1s1s-to-2p2p excitation. Simultaneously, a pronounced enhancement of the 2s2s-exciton emission is observed, despite the 1s1s-to-2s2s transition being dipole forbidden. A microscopic many-body theory explains the experimental observations as a Coulomb-scattering mixing of the 2ss and 2pp states, yielding an effective terahertz transition between the 1ss and 2ss populations.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
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