664 research outputs found
Germination Biology and the Ecology of Annual Plants
We derive spatially explicit population models for the interaction between a species
of annual plant and a community of perennial species. The models are used to explore the
conditions for persistence of the annual in both a constant and a stochastic environment. In
both types of environment a seed's response to the presence of established perennial plants is
found to affect strongly the conditions for persistence. Sensitivity analysis of a parameterized
version of the model indicates the importance of germination and mortality parameters in
allowing persistence. In the parameterized model large changes in fecundity have little effect
on the condition for persistence. The implications of these results for the distribution of annual
plants and the forces structuring communities of short-lived plants in successional habitats are
discussed
The Analysis and Interpretation of Seedling Recruitment Curves
We derive spatially explicit population models for the interaction between a species of annual plant and a community of perennial species. The models are used to explore the conditions for persistence of the annual in both a constant and a stochastic environment. In both types of environment a seed's response to the presence of established perennial plants is found to affect strongly the conditions for persistence. Sensitivity analysis of a parameterized version of the model indicates the importance of germination and mortality parameters in allowing persistence. In the parameterized model large changes in fecundity have little effect on the condition for persistence. The implications of these results for the distribution of annual plants and the forces structuring communities of short-lived plants in successional habitats are discussed
The Analysis and Interpretation of Seedling Recruitment Curves
We derive spatially explicit population models for the interaction between a species of annual plant and a community of perennial species. The models are used to explore the conditions for persistence of the annual in both a constant and a stochastic environment. In both types of environment a seed's response to the presence of established perennial plants is found to affect strongly the conditions for persistence. Sensitivity analysis of a parameterized version of the model indicates the importance of germination and mortality parameters in allowing persistence. In the parameterized model large changes in fecundity have little effect on the condition for persistence. The implications of these results for the distribution of annual plants and the forces structuring communities of short-lived plants in successional habitats are discussed
Burial and seed survival in Brassica napus subsp. oleifera and Sinapis arvensis including a comparison of transgenic and non-transgenic lines of the crop
The creation of transgenic plants through genetic engineering has focused interest on how the fitness of a plant species may be altered by small changes in its genome. This study concentrates on a key component of fitness: persistence of seeds overwinter. Seeds of three lines of oilseed rape (Brassica napus subsp. oleifera DC Metzger) and of charlock (Sinapis arvensis L.) were buried in nylon mesh bags at two depths in four habitats in each of three geographically separated sites: Cornwall, Berkshire and Sutherland. Seeds were recovered after 12 and 24 months. Charlock exhibited much greater seed survival (average 60 per cent surviving the first year and 32.5 per cent surviving the second year) than oilseed rape (1.5 per cent surviving the first year and 0.2 per cent surviving the second) at all sites. Charlock showed higher survival at 15 cm burial than 2 cm burial at certain sites, but oilseed rape showed no depth effect. Different genetic lines of oilseed rape displayed different rates of seed survival; non-transgenic rape showed greater survival (2 per cent) than the two transgenic lines, one developed for tolerance to the antibiotic kanamycin (0.3 per cent) and one for tolerance to both kanamycin and the herbicide glufosinate (0.25 per cent). The absolute and relative performances of the different genetic lines of oilseed rape were context specific, illustrating the need to test hypotheses in a wide range of ecological settings
Intensive monitoring of the strongly variable BL Lac S5 0716+714
The BL Lac object S5 0716+714 was monitored during a multifrequency campaign
in 1996. Preliminary analysis of the optical, ROSAT and RXTE data are
presented. Strong variability on short time scales was observed. The data
suggest an interpretation within a multi-component model.Comment: To appear in The Active X-ray Sky: Results from BeppoSAX and
Rossi-XTE, Rome, Italy, 21-24 October, 1997. Eds.: L. Scarsi, Bradt, P.
Giommi and F. Fiore. PS-file avialable at
http://www.lsw.uni-heidelberg.de/projects/extragalactic/bl_lac.htm
Early reionization by miniquasars
Motivated by the recent detection by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe of a large optical depth to Thomson scattering, implying a very early reionization epoch, we assess a scenario where the universe was reionized by "miniquasars" powered by intermediate-mass black holes (IMBHs), the remnants of the first generation of massive stars. Pregalactic IMBHs form within minihalos above the cosmological Jeans mass collapsing at z > 20, get incorporated through mergers into larger and larger systems, sink to the center as a result of dynamical friction, and accrete cold material. The merger history of dark halos and associated IMBHs is followed by Monte Carlo realizations of the merger hierarchy in a CDM cosmology. Our model is based on the assumptions that quasar activity is driven by major mergers and nuclear IMBHs accrete at the Eddington rate a fraction of the gas in the merger remnant. The long dynamical frictional timescales leave many IMBHs "wandering" in galaxy halos after a minor merger. While seed IMBHs that are as rare as the 3.5 peaks of the primordial density field evolve largely in isolation, a significant number of BH binary systems will form if IMBHs populate the more numerous 3 peaks instead. In the case of rapid binary coalescence a fraction of IMBHs will be displaced from galaxy centers and ejected into the intergalactic medium (IGM) by the "gravitational rocket" effect, rather than accrete and shine as miniquasars. We show that, under a number of plausible assumptions for the amount of gas accreted onto IMBHs and their emission spectrum, miniquasars powered by IMBHs, and not their stellar progenitors, may be responsible for cosmological reionization at z 15. Reionization by miniquasars with a hard spectrum may be more "economical" than stellar reionization, as soft X-rays escape more easily from the dense sites of star formation and travel farther than EUV radiation. Energetic photons will permeate the universe more uniformly, make the low-density diffuse IGM warm and weakly ionized prior to the epoch of reionization breakthrough, set an entropy floor, and reduce gas clumping. Future 21 cm observations may detect a preheated, weakly ionized IGM in emission against the cosmic microwave background
Reissner-Nordstrom and charged gas spheres
The main point of this paper is a suggestion about the proper treatment of
the photon gas in a theory of stellar structure and other plasmas. This problem
arises in the study of polytropic gas spheres, where we have already introduced
some innovations. The main idea, already advanced in the contextof neutral,
homogeneous, polytropic stellar models, is to base the theory firmly on a
variational principle. Another essential novelty is to let mass distribution
extend to infinity, the boundary between bulk and atmosphere being defined by
an abrupt change in the polytropic index, triggered by the density. The logical
next step in this program is to include the effect of radiation, which is a
very significant complication since a full treatment would have to include an
account of ionization, thus fieldsrepresenting electrons, ions, photons,
gravitons and neutral atoms as well. In way of preparation, we consider models
that are charged but homogeneous, involving only gravity, electromagnetism and
a single scalar field that represents both the mass and the electric charge; in
short, anon-neutral plasma. While this work only represents a stage in the
development of a theory of stars, without direct application to physical
systems, it does shed some light on the meaning of the Reissner-Nordstrom
solution of the modified Einstein-Maxwell equations., with an application to a
simple system.Comment: 19 pages, plain te
Field theory of the photon self-energy in a medium with a magnetic field and the Faraday effect
A convenient and general decomposition of the photon self-energy in a
magnetized, but otherwise isotropic, medium is given in terms of the minimal
set of tensors consistent with the transversality condition. As we show, the
self-energy in such a medium is completely parametrized in terms of nine
independent form factors, and they reduce to three in the long wavelength
limit. We consider in detail an electron gas with a background magnetic field,
and using finite temperature field theory methods, we obtain the one-loop
formulas for the form factors, which are exact to all orders in the magnetic
field. Explicit results are derived for a variety of physical conditions. In
the appropriate limits, we recover the well-known semi-classical results for
the photon dispersion relations and the Faraday effect. In more general cases,
where the semi-classical treatment or the linear approximation (weak field
limit) are not applicable, our formulas provide a consistent and systematic way
for computing the self-energy form factors and, from them, the photon
dispersion relations.Comment: Revtex, 27 page
Modelling spatial and inter-annual variations of nitrous oxide emissions from UK cropland and grasslands using DailyDayCent
This work contributes to the Defra funded projects AC0116: âImproving the nitrous oxide inventoryâ, and AC0114: âData Synthesis, Management and Modellingâ. Funding for this work was provided by the UK Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) AC0116 and AC0114, the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs for Northern Ireland, the Scottish Government and the Welsh Government. Rothamsted Research receives strategic funding from the Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council. This study also contributes to the projects: N-Circle (BB/N013484/1), U-GRASS (NE/M016900/1) and GREENHOUSE (NE/K002589/1).Peer reviewedPublisher PD
The distribution of supermassive black holes in the nuclei of nearby galaxies
The growth of supermassive black holes by merging and accretion in
hierarchical models of galaxy formation is studied by means of Monte Carlo
simulations. A tight linear relation between masses of black holes and masses
of bulges arises if if the mass accreted by supermassive black holes scales
linearly with the mass forming stars and if the redshift evolution of mass
accretion tracks closely that of star formation. Differences in redshift
evolution between black hole accretion and star formation introduce
considerable scatter in this relation. A non-linear relation between black hole
accretion and star formation results in a non-linear relation between masses of
remnant black holes and masses of bulges. The relation of black hole mass to
bulge luminosity obseved in nearby galaxies and its scatter are reproduced
reasonably well by models in which black hole accretion and star formation are
linearly related but do not track each other in redshift. This suggests that a
common mechanism determines the efficiency for black hole accretion and the
efficiency for star formation, especially for bright bulges.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, submitted to MNRA
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