2,173 research outputs found
Can we predict the duration of an interglacial?
Differences in the duration of interglacials have long been apparent in palaeoclimate records of the Late and Middle Pleistocene. However, a systematic evaluation of such differences has been hampered by the lack of a metric that can be applied consistently through time and by difficulties in separating the local from the global component in various proxies. This, in turn, means that a theoretical framework with predictive power for interglacial duration has remained elusive. Here we propose that the interval between the terminal oscillation of the bipolar seesaw and three thousand years (kyr) before its first major reactivation provides an estimate that approximates the length of the sea-level highstand, a measure of interglacial duration. We apply this concept to interglacials of the last 800 kyr by using a recently-constructed record of interhemispheric variability. The onset of interglacials occurs within 2 kyr of the boreal summer insolation maximum/precession minimum and is consistent with the canonical view of Milankovitch forcing pacing the broad timing of interglacials. Glacial inception always takes place when obliquity is decreasing and never after the obliquity minimum. The phasing of precession and obliquity appears to influence the persistence of interglacial conditions over one or two insolation peaks, leading to shorter (~ 13 kyr) and longer (~ 28 kyr) interglacials. Glacial inception occurs approximately 10 kyr after peak interglacial conditions in temperature and CO2, representing a characteristic timescale of interglacial decline. Second-order differences in duration may be a function of stochasticity in the climate system, or small variations in background climate state and the magnitude of feedbacks and mechanisms contributing to glacial inception, and as such, difficult to predict. On the other hand, the broad duration of an interglacial may be determined by the phasing of astronomical parameters and the history of insolation, rather than the instantaneous forcing strength at inception
Intercellular ultrafast Ca(2+) wave in vascular smooth muscle cells: numerical and experimental study.
Vascular smooth muscle cells exhibit intercellular Ca(2+) waves in response to local mechanical or KCl stimulation. Recently, a new type of intercellular Ca(2+) wave was observed in vitro in a linear arrangement of smooth muscle cells. The intercellular wave was denominated ultrafast Ca(2+) wave and it was suggested to be the result of the interplay between membrane potential and Ca(2+) dynamics which depended on influx of extracellular Ca(2+), cell membrane depolarization and its intercel- lular propagation. In the present study we measured experimentally the conduction velocity of the membrane depolarization and performed simulations of the ultrafast Ca(2+) wave along coupled smooth muscle cells. Numerical results reproduced a wide spectrum of experimental observations, including Ca(2+) wave velocity, electrotonic membrane depolarization along the network, effects of inhibitors and independence of the Ca(2+) wave speed on the intracellular stores. The numerical data also provided new physiological insights suggesting ranges of crucial model parameters that may be altered experimentally and that could significantly affect wave kinetics allowing the modulation of the wave characteristics experimentally. Numerical and experimental results supported the hypothesis that the propagation of membrane depolarization acts as an intercellular messenger mediating intercellular ultrafast Ca(2+) waves in smooth muscle cells
The integral monodromy of hyperelliptic and trielliptic curves
We compute the \integ/\ell and \integ_\ell monodromy of every irreducible
component of the moduli spaces of hyperelliptic and trielliptic curves. In
particular, we provide a proof that the \integ/\ell monodromy of the moduli
space of hyperelliptic curves of genus is the symplectic group
\sp_{2g}(\integ/\ell). We prove that the \integ/\ell monodromy of the
moduli space of trielliptic curves with signature is the special
unitary group \su_{(r,s)}(\integ/\ell\tensor\integ[\zeta_3])
Iron oxidation at low temperature (260–500 C) in air and the effect of water vapor
The oxidation of iron has been studied at low temperatures (between 260 and 500 C) in dry air or air with 2 vol% H2O, in the framework of research on dry corrosion of nuclear waste containers during long-term interim storage. Pure iron is regarded as a model material for low-alloyed steel. Oxidation tests were performed in a thermobalance (up to 250 h) or in a laboratory furnace (up to 1000 h). The oxide scales formed were characterized using SEM-EDX, TEM, XRD, SIMS and EBSD techniques. The parabolic rate constants deduced from microbalance experiments were found to be in good agreement with the few existing values of the literature. The presence of water vapor in air was found to strongly influence the transitory stages of the kinetics. The entire structure of the oxide scale was composed of an internal duplex magnetite scale made of columnar grains and an external hematite scale made of equiaxed grains. 18O tracer experiments performed at 400 C allowed to propose a growth mechanism of the scale
Instanton bundles on Fano threefolds
We introduce the notion of an instanton bundle on a Fano threefold of index
2. For such bundles we give an analogue of a monadic description and discuss
the curve of jumping lines. The cases of threefolds of degree 5 and 4 are
considered in a greater detail.Comment: 31 page, to appear in CEJ
Ancient Yersinia pestis genomes from across Western Europe reveal early diversification during the First Pandemic (541–750)
The first historically documented pandemic caused by Yersinia pestis began as the Justinianic Plague in 541 within the Roman Empire and continued as the so-called First Pandemic until 750. Although paleogenomic studies have previously identified the causative agent as Y. pestis, little is known about the bacterium’s spread, diversity, and genetic history over the course of the pandemic. To elucidate the microevolution of the bacterium during this time period, we screened human remains from 21 sites in Austria, Britain, Germany, France, and Spain for Y. pestis DNA and reconstructed eight genomes. We present a methodological approach assessing single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ancient bacterial genomes, facilitating qualitative analyses of low coverage genomes from a metagenomic background. Phylogenetic analysis on the eight reconstructed genomes reveals the existence of previously undocumented Y. pestis diversity during the sixth to eighth centuries, and provides evidence for the presence of multiple distinct Y. pestis strains in Europe. We offer genetic evidence for the presence of the Justinianic Plague in the British Isles, previously only hypothesized from ambiguous documentary accounts, as well as the parallel occurrence of multiple derived strains in central and southern France, Spain, and southern Germany. Four of the reported strains form a polytomy similar to others seen across the Y. pestis phylogeny, associated with the Second and Third Pandemics. We identified a deletion of a 45-kb genomic region in the most recent First Pandemic strains affecting two virulence factors, intriguingly overlapping with a deletion found in 17th- to 18th-century genomes of the Second Pandemic. © 2019 National Academy of Sciences. All rights reserved
Hypercontractivity on the -Araki-Woods algebras
Extending a work of Carlen and Lieb, Biane has obtained the optimal
hypercontractivity of the -Ornstein-Uhlenbeck semigroup on the
-deformation of the free group algebra. In this note, we look for an
extension of this result to the type III situation, that is for the
-Araki-Woods algebras. We show that hypercontractivity from to
can occur if and only if the generator of the deformation is bounded.Comment: 17 page
Regulator constants and the parity conjecture
The p-parity conjecture for twists of elliptic curves relates multiplicities
of Artin representations in p-infinity Selmer groups to root numbers. In this
paper we prove this conjecture for a class of such twists. For example, if E/Q
is semistable at 2 and 3, K/Q is abelian and K^\infty is its maximal pro-p
extension, then the p-parity conjecture holds for twists of E by all orthogonal
Artin representations of Gal(K^\infty/Q). We also give analogous results when
K/Q is non-abelian, the base field is not Q and E is replaced by an abelian
variety. The heart of the paper is a study of relations between permutation
representations of finite groups, their "regulator constants", and
compatibility between local root numbers and local Tamagawa numbers of abelian
varieties in such relations.Comment: 50 pages; minor corrections; final version, to appear in Invent. Mat
Uniformizing the Stacks of Abelian Sheaves
Elliptic sheaves (which are related to Drinfeld modules) were introduced by
Drinfeld and further studied by Laumon--Rapoport--Stuhler and others. They can
be viewed as function field analogues of elliptic curves and hence are objects
"of dimension 1". Their higher dimensional generalisations are called abelian
sheaves. In the analogy between function fields and number fields, abelian
sheaves are counterparts of abelian varieties. In this article we study the
moduli spaces of abelian sheaves and prove that they are algebraic stacks. We
further transfer results of Cerednik--Drinfeld and Rapoport--Zink on the
uniformization of Shimura varieties to the setting of abelian sheaves. Actually
the analogy of the Cerednik--Drinfeld uniformization is nothing but the
uniformization of the moduli schemes of Drinfeld modules by the Drinfeld upper
half space. Our results generalise this uniformization. The proof closely
follows the ideas of Rapoport--Zink. In particular, analogies of -divisible
groups play an important role. As a crucial intermediate step we prove that in
a family of abelian sheaves with good reduction at infinity, the set of points
where the abelian sheaf is uniformizable in the sense of Anderson, is formally
closed.Comment: Final version, appears in "Number Fields and Function Fields - Two
Parallel Worlds", Papers from the 4th Conference held on Texel Island, April
2004, edited by G. van der Geer, B. Moonen, R. Schoo
Ramification theory for varieties over a local field
We define generalizations of classical invariants of wild ramification for
coverings on a variety of arbitrary dimension over a local field. For an l-adic
sheaf, we define its Swan class as a 0-cycle class supported on the wild
ramification locus. We prove a formula of Riemann-Roch type for the Swan
conductor of cohomology together with its relative version, assuming that the
local field is of mixed characteristic.
We also prove the integrality of the Swan class for curves over a local field
as a generalization of the Hasse-Arf theorem. We derive a proof of a conjecture
of Serre on the Artin character for a group action with an isolated fixed point
on a regular local ring, assuming the dimension is 2.Comment: 159 pages, some corrections are mad
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