8,907 research outputs found
Effect of laboratory heat stress on mortality and web mass of the common house spider, Parasteatoda tepidariorum (Koch 1841) (Araneae: Theridiidae)
We determined the effects of chronic heat stress on web construction of Parasteatoda tepidariorum (Araneae: Theridiidae) by measuring the survival and web mass of specimens after a 48-h period within a temperature chamber at 21, 30, 35, 40, or 50°C. The 21, 30 and 35°C treatments had the highest mean survival rate (100%), the 50°C treatment had the lowest (0%), and the 40°C treatment was intermediate (58%). The 21, 30, and 35°C treatments had the highest mean web mass, and the 40 and 50°C treatments had the lowest. Web mass did not correlate with spider mass for specimens across all temperature treatments. While acclimation temperature and humidity fluctuated throughout the 3 weeks of the study, neither variable affected web mass. This study demonstrates the sublethal effect of temperature on web construction, an effect that would ultimately be lethal in nature if a spider was unable to construct its web
A Kernel-Based Calculation of Information on a Metric Space
Kernel density estimation is a technique for approximating probability
distributions. Here, it is applied to the calculation of mutual information on
a metric space. This is motivated by the problem in neuroscience of calculating
the mutual information between stimuli and spiking responses; the space of
these responses is a metric space. It is shown that kernel density estimation
on a metric space resembles the k-nearest-neighbor approach. This approach is
applied to a toy dataset designed to mimic electrophysiological data
Localization on the Landscape and Eternal Inflation
We investigate the validity of the assertion that eternal inflation populates
the landscape of string theory. We verify that bubble solutions do not satisfy
the Klein Gordon equation for the landscape potential. Solutions to the
landscape potential within the formalism of quantum cosmology are Anderson
localized wavefunctions. Those are inconsistent with inflating bubble
solutions. The physical reasons behind the failure of a relation between
eternal inflation and the landscape are rooted in quantum phenomena such as
interference between wavefunction concentrated around the various vacua in the
landscape.Comment: 21 page
Swift-Hohenberg equation with broken reflection symmetry
The bistable Swift-Hohenberg equation possesses a variety of time-independent spatially localized solutions organized in the so-called snakes-and-ladders structure. This structure is a consequence of a phenomenon known as homoclinic snaking, and is in turn a consequence of spatial reversibility of the equation. We examine here the consequences of breaking spatial reversibility on the snakes-and-ladders structure. We find that the localized states now drift, and show that the snakes-and-ladders
structure breaks up into a stack of isolas. We explore the evolution of this new structure with increasing reversibility breaking and study the dynamics of the system outside of the snaking region using a combination of numerical and analytical techniques
Multidimensional Bosonization
Bosonization of degenerate fermions yields insight both into Landau Fermi
liquids, and into non-Fermi liquids. We begin our review with a pedagogical
introduction to bosonization, emphasizing its applicability in spatial
dimensions greater than one. After a brief historical overview, we present the
essentials of the method. Well known results of Landau theory are recovered,
demonstrating that this new tool of many-body theory is robust. Limits of
multidimensional bosonization are tested by considering several examples of
non-Fermi liquids, in particular the composite fermion theory of the
half-filled Landau level. Nested Fermi surfaces present a different challenge,
and these may be relevant in the cuprate superconductors. We conclude by
discussing the future of multidimensional bosonization.Comment: 91 pages, 15 eps figures, LaTeX. Minor changes to match the published
versio
Hall conductance of a pinned vortex lattice in a high magnetic field
We calculate the quasiparticle contribution to the zero temperature Hall
conductance of two-dimensional extreme type-II superconductors in a high
magnetic field, using the Landau basis. As one enters the superconducting phase
the Hall conductance is renormalized to smaller values, with respect to the
normal state result, until a quantum level-crossing transition is reached. At
high values of the order parameter, where the quasiparticles are bound to the
vortex cores, the Hall conductance is expected to tend to zero due to a theorem
of Thouless.Comment: To appear in Journ. Phys. : Cond. Matte
Two monopoles of one type and one of another
The metric on the moduli space of charge (2,1) SU(3)
Bogomolny-Prasad-Sommerfield monopoles is calculated and investigated. The
hyperKahler quotient construction is used to provide an alternative derivation
of the metric. Various properties of the metric are derived using the
hyperKahler quotient construction and the correspondence between BPS monopoles
and rational maps. Several interesting limits of the metric are also
considered.Comment: 48 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures. Typos corrected. Version in JHE
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