6,537 research outputs found
F-region drift velocities from incoherent-scatter measurements at Millstone Hill
F-region drift velocities measured at Millstone Hill from 1968 to 1974 are presented in tabular form. A brief description of the measurement procedures is also given
The N-Vortex Problem on a Symmetric Ellipsoid: A Perturbation Approach
We consider the N-vortex problem on a ellipsoid of revolution. Applying
standard techniques of classical perturbation theory we construct a sequence of
conformal transformations from the ellipsoid into the complex plane. Using
these transformations the equations of motion for the N-vortex problem on the
ellipsoid are written as a formal series on the eccentricity of the ellipsoid's
generating ellipse. First order equations are obtained explicitly. We show
numerically that the truncated first order system for the three-vortices system
on the symmetric ellipsoid is non-integrable.Comment: 14 pages, 1 figur
Equatorial ozone characteristics as measured at Natal (5.9 deg S, 35.2 deg W)
Ozone density profiles obtained through electrochemical concentration cell (ECC) sonde measurements at Natal were analyzed. Time variations, as expected, are small. Outstanding features of the data are tropospheric densities substantially higher than those measured at other stations, and also a total ozone content that is higher than the averages given by satellite measurements
Calculation of conductivities and currents in the ionosphere
Formulas and procedures to calculate ionospheric conductivities are summarized. Ionospheric currents are calculated using a semidiurnal E-region neutral wind model and electric fields from measurements at Millstone Hill. The results agree well with ground based magnetogram records for magnetic quiet days
The Kirchhoff gauge
We discuss the Kirchhoff gauge in classical electrodynamics. In this gauge
the scalar potential satisfies an elliptical equation and the vector potential
satisfies a wave equation with a nonlocal source. We find the solutions of both
equations and show that, despite of the unphysical character of the scalar
potential, the electric and magnetic fields obtained from the scalar and vector
potentials are given by their well-known retarded expressions. We note that the
Kirchhoff gauge pertains to the class of gauges known as the velocity gauge.Comment: 12 page
P2X1 and P2X5 subunits form the functional P2X receptor in mouse cortical astrocytes
ATP plays an important role in signal transduction between neuronal and glial circuits and within glial networks. Here we describe currents activated by ATP in astrocytes acutely isolated from cortical brain slices by non-enzymatic mechanical dissociation. Brain slices were prepared from transgenic mice that express enhanced green fluorescent protein under the control of the human glial fibrillary acidic protein promoter. Astrocytes were studied by whole-cell voltage clamp. Exogenous ATP evoked inward currents in 75 of 81 astrocytes. In the majority (~65%) of cells, ATP-induced responses comprising a fast and delayed component; in the remaining subpopulation of astrocytes, ATP triggered a smoother response with rapid peak and slowly decaying plateau phase. The fast component of the response was sensitive to low concentrations of ATP (with EC50 of ~40 nM). All ATP-induced currents were blocked by pyridoxal-phosphate-6-azophenyl-2',4'-disulfonate (PPADS); they were insensitive to ivermectin. Quantitative real-time PCR demonstrated strong expression of P2X1 and P2X5 receptor subunits and some expression of P2X2 subunit mRNAs. The main properties of the ATP-induced response in cortical astrocytes (high sensitivity to ATP, biphasic kinetics, and sensitivity to PPADS) were very similar to those reported for P2X1/5 heteromeric receptors studied previously in heterologous expression systems
Generalized vortex-model for the inverse cascade of two-dimensional turbulence
We generalize Kirchhoff's point vortex model of two-dimensional fluid motion
to a rotor model which exhibits an inverse cascade by the formation of rotor
clusters. A rotor is composed of two vortices with like-signed circulations
glued together by an overdamped spring. The model is motivated by a treatment
of the vorticity equation representing the vorticity field as a superposition
of vortices with elliptic Gaussian shapes of variable widths, augmented by a
suitable forcing mechanism. The rotor model opens up the way to discuss the
energy transport in the inverse cascade on the basis of dynamical systems
theory.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figure
Infanticide in Chimpanzees: Taphonomic Case Studies from Gombe
Objectives
We present a study of skeletal damage to four chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) infanticide victims from Gombe National Park, Tanzania. Skeletal analysis may provide insight into the adaptive significance of infanticide by examining whether nutritional benefits sufficiently explain infanticidal behavior. The nutritional hypothesis would be supported if bone survivorship rates and skeletal damage patterns are comparable to those of monkey prey. If not, other explanations, such as the resource competition hypothesis, should be considered. Methods
Taphonomic assessment of two chimpanzee infants included description of breakage and surface modification, data on MNE, %MNE, and bone survivorship. Two additional infants were assessed qualitatively. The data were compared to published information on monkey prey. We also undertook a review of published infanticide cases. Results
The cases were intercommunity infanticides (one male and three female infants) committed by males. Attackers partially consumed two of the victims. Damage to all four infants included puncture marks and compression fractures to the cranium, crenulated breaks to long bones, and incipient fractures on ribs. Compared to monkey prey, the chimpanzee infants had an abundance of vertebrae and hand/foot bones. Conclusions
The cases described here suggest that chimpanzees may not always completely consume infanticide victims, while reports on chimpanzee predation indicated that complete consumption of monkey prey usually occurred. Infanticidal chimpanzees undoubtedly gain nutritional benefits when they consume dead infants, but this benefit may not sufficiently explain infanticide in this species. Continued study of infanticidal and hunting behavior, including skeletal analysis, is likely to be of interest
Ferromagnetic phase transition for the spanning-forest model (q \to 0 limit of the Potts model) in three or more dimensions
We present Monte Carlo simulations of the spanning-forest model (q \to 0
limit of the ferromagnetic Potts model) in spatial dimensions d=3,4,5. We show
that, in contrast to the two-dimensional case, the model has a "ferromagnetic"
second-order phase transition at a finite positive value w_c. We present
numerical estimates of w_c and of the thermal and magnetic critical exponents.
We conjecture that the upper critical dimension is 6.Comment: LaTex2e, 4 pages; includes 6 Postscript figures; Version 2 has
expanded title as published in PR
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