692 research outputs found

    Nutrient Addition Effects on Phytoplankton Communities in the Amazon River Plume

    Get PDF
    The types and abundance of phytoplankton is largely controlled by availability of sunlight and bioavailable nutrients. Phytoplankton require essential nutrients including nitrate, phosphate, and silicate to grow, so understanding the role of these macronutrients in limiting the growth phytoplankton communitiesand the way this may differ depending on community compositionis key to understanding the controls on phytoplankton biomass and community structure. We aimed to explore how the availability of these nutrients affects the health and composition of phytoplankton communities by conducting a series of nutrient amendment experiments (NAEs) with samples from the Western Tropical North Atlantic, which is heavily influenced by the nutrient-rich, low salinity waters of the Amazon River Plume. These experiments, conducted at five locations in and around the plume, provide greater resolution and further our understanding about the ways nutrients affect communities in dynamic coastal regions

    Origin of the `He/N' and `Fe II' Spectral Classes of Novae

    Full text link
    The spectra of postoutburst novae display either He+N or Fe II lines as the most prominent non-Balmer lines at maximum light. Spectral diagnostics indicate physical conditions for 'He/N' spectra that are consistent with their origin in the white dwarf (WD) ejecta, whereas 'Fe II' spectra point to their formation in a large circumbinary envelope of gas whose origin is the secondary star. A determining parameter for which of the two types of spectra predominates may be the binary mass ratio Msec/MWD. The increasing fraction of novae that are observed to be 'hybrid' objects, where both classes of spectra appear sequentially, is explained by changing parameters in the two emitting regions during the postoutburst decline. We argue that most novae may be hybrids that show both types of spectra during decline. The emission line intensity ratio O I {\lambda}8446/{\lambda}7773 is suggested as a good density diagnostic for the ejecta, and a finding list of emission lines identified in recent spectroscopic surveys of novae is presented as an aid to future line identification work.Comment: 14 pages, 2 table
    corecore