17,089 research outputs found
Facultative Altitudinal Movements by Mountain White-Crowned Sparrows (Zonotrichia Leucophrys Oriantha) in the Sierra Nevada
Mountain White-crowned Sparrows (Zonotrichia leucophrys oriantha) winter in Mexico and often arrive in the vicinity of their breeding grounds in the Sierra Nevada well before nesting is possible. Arrival at Tioga Pass, California (elevation 3,030 m), usually occurs in early May, but residual winter snow and adverse weather can delay nesting for weeks. We used radiotelemetry to determine whether prebreeding Mountain White-crowned Sparrows engaged in weather-related altitudinal movements during the waiting period between the end of spring migration and onset of breeding during 1995-2001, with a range of residual winter snowpacks. Interannual variation in arrival date and onset of egg laying was 18 and 41 days, respectively. We tracked females for two years and males for all seven years. During spring snowstorms (which occurred in four years), radiomarked individuals moved to lower elevation sites, where they often remained for several days. Departing birds left Tioga Pass by early afternoon and returned early in the morning after storms. More frequent storms during tracking increased the likelihood of facultative altitudinal movements, but heavier residual winter snowpack did not. Warm days increased the likelihood of birds returning to Tioga Pass from low elevation. This study demonstrates that facultative altitudinal movement behavior can be a common feature of spring arrival biology in montane-breeding birds. Received 1 November 2002, accepted 30 June 2004.Integrative Biolog
HAT-P-30b: A Transiting Hot Jupiter on a Highly Oblique Orbit
We report the discovery of HAT-P-30b, a transiting exoplanet orbiting the V = 10.419 dwarf star GSC 0208-00722. The planet has a period P = 2.810595 ± 0.000005 days, transit epoch Tc = 2455456.46561 ± 0.00037 (BJD), and transit duration 0.0887 ± 0.0015 days. The host star has a mass of 1.24 ± 0.04 M_⊙, radius of 1.21 ± 0.05 R_⊙, effective temperature of 6304 ± 88 K, and metallicity [Fe/H] = +0.13 ± 0.08. The planetary companion has a mass of 0.711 ± 0.028 M J and radius of 1.340 ± 0.065 R J yielding a mean density of 0.37 ± 0.05 g cm^(–3). We also present radial velocity measurements that were obtained throughout a transit that exhibit the Rossiter-McLaughlin effect. By modeling this effect, we measure an angle of λ = 73.°5 ± 9.°0 between the sky projections of the planet's orbit normal and the star's spin axis. HAT-P-30b represents another example of a close-in planet on a highly tilted orbit, and conforms to the previously noted pattern that tilted orbits are more common around stars with T_(eff*) ≳ 6250 K
Constraining Coronal Heating: Employing Bayesian Analysis Techniques to Improve the Determination of Solar Atmospheric Plasma Parameters
One way of revealing the nature of the coronal heating mechanism is by comparing simple theoretical one dimensional hydrostatic loop models with observations at the temperature and/or density structure along these features. The most well-known method for dealing with comparisons like that is the approach. In this paper we consider the restrictions imposed by this approach and present an alternative way for making model comparisons using Bayesian statistics. In order to quantify our beliefs we use Bayes factors and information criteria such as AIC and BIC. Three simulated datasets are analyzed in order to validate the procedure and assess the effects of varying error bar size. Another two datasets (Ugarte-Urra et al., 2005; Priest et al., 2000) are re-analyzed using the method described above. In one of these two datasets (Ugarte-Urra et al., 2005), due to the error estimates in the observed temperature values, it is not posible to distinguish between the different heating mechanisms. For this we suggest that both Classical and Bayesian statistics should be applied in order to make safe assumptions about the nature of the coronal heating mechanisms
Invariants of genus 2 mutants
Pairs of genus 2 mutant knots can have different Homfly polynomials, for
example some 3-string satellites of Conway mutant pairs. We give examples which
have different Kauffman 3-variable polynomials, answering a question raised by
Dunfield et al in their study of genus 2 mutants. While pairs of genus 2 mutant
knots have the same Jones polynomial, given from the Homfly polynomial by
setting v=s^2, we give examples whose Homfly polynomials differ when v=s^3. We
also give examples which differ in a Vassiliev invariant of degree 7, in
contrast to satellites of Conway mutant knots.Comment: 16 pages, 20 figure
Coercivity for One-dimensional Cell Vertex Approximations
Previous error analysis for the cell vertex scheme has been limited to situations where the cell residuals can be set to zero. However, in practical use for compressible flow computations it is necessary to extend the method by the use of distribution matrices and the careful addition of artificial viscosity terms. In this paper we make a start on the error analysis that is required for this more general method. The chosen example is a one-dimensional convection-diffusion problem with an expansion critical or turning point
A large scale prediction of bacteriocin gene blocks suggests a wide functional spectrum for bacteriocins
Bacteriocins are peptide-derived molecules produced by bacteria, whose
recently-discovered functions include virulence factors and signalling
molecules as well as their better known roles as antibiotics. To date, close to
five hundred bacteriocins have been identified and classified. Recent
discoveries have shown that bacteriocins are highly diverse and widely
distributed among bacterial species. Given the heterogeneity of bacteriocin
compounds, many tools struggle with identifying novel bacteriocins due to their
vast sequence and structural diversity. Many bacteriocins undergo
post-translational processing or modifications necessary for the biosynthesis
of the final mature form. Enzymatic modification of bacteriocins as well as
their export is achieved by proteins whose genes are often located in a
discrete gene cluster proximal to the bacteriocin precursor gene, referred to
as \textit{context genes} in this study. Although bacteriocins themselves are
structurally diverse, context genes have been shown to be largely conserved
across unrelated species. Using this knowledge, we set out to identify new
candidates for context genes which may clarify how bacteriocins are
synthesized, and identify new candidates for bacteriocins that bear no sequence
similarity to known toxins. To achieve these goals, we have developed a
software tool, Bacteriocin Operon and gene block Associator (BOA) that can
identify homologous bacteriocin associated gene clusters and predict novel
ones. We discover that several phyla have a strong preference for bactericon
genes, suggesting distinct functions for this group of molecules. Availability:
https://github.com/idoerg/BOAComment: Accepted for publication in BMC Bioinformatic
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