582,517 research outputs found
Eddy intrustion of hot plasma into the polar cap and formation of polar-cap arcs
Under the simple postulate that multiple large scale detachable magnetospheric convection eddies can exist in the vicinity of the convection reversal boundary and in the polar cap, by Kelvin-Helmholtz instability or otherwise, it is shown that a number of seemingly disconnected plasma and electric field observations in the polar cap can be organized into a theory of magnetosheath and plasmasheet plasma intrusion into the polar cap. Current theory of inverted V structures then predicts existence of similar, but weaker, structures at the eddy convection reversal boundaries in the polar cap. A possible consequence is that the polar cap auroras are natural offshoots from discrete oval arcs and evidently are formed by similar processes. The two arc systems can occassionally produce an optical image in the form of the theta aurora
Failure to detect "cap" structures in mitochondrial DNA-coded poly(A)-containing RNA from HeLa cells
The structure of the 5'-termini has been investigated in mitochondrial DNA- coded poly(A)-containing RNA from HeLa cells. For this purpose, mitochondrial RNA isolated from cells labeled for 3 hours with [32P]orthophosphate in the presence of 20 µg/ml camptothecin, and selected for poly(A) content by two passages through oligo(dT)-cellulose, was digested either with the nuclease P1 or with a mixture of RNases: the digestion products were then fractionated by two-dimensional electrophoresis. No "cap" structures were detected under conditions where the presence of such structures in one out of five to ten RNA molecules would have been recognized. It is, therefore, likely that "cap" structures are completely absent in HeLa cell mitochondrial poly(A)-containing RNA
Governance of Bulgarian Farming
This paper employs New Institutional and Transaction Costs Economics to ana-lyze Bulgarian agriculture. It evaluates the efficiency of dominant governing forms on the eve of EU accession, and assesses the likely impact of CAP im-plementation on farming structures. Firstly, assessment is made on the compara-tive efficiency, complementarily, and sustainability of major farm structures such as agro-firms, cooperatives, unregistered and subsistence farms. Next, prin-cipal modes of land, labor, service, inputs and financial supplies, in addition to marketing in different types of commercial farms, are identified and evaluated. Finally, a feasible pace for CAP implementation in the Bulgarian condition is projected, and the likely impact on farm structures is estimated.farm structures, efficiency, sustainability, impact of CAP, Bulgaria
Mitochondrial ribosome assembly in Neurospora. Structural analysis of mature and partially assembled ribosomal subunits by equilibrium centrifugation in CsCl gradients
In Neurospora, one protein associated with the mitochondrial small ribosomal subunit (S-5, Mr 52,000) is synthesized intramitochondrially and is assumed to be encoded by mtDNA. When mitochondrial protein synthesis is inhibited, either by chloramphenicol or by mutation, cells accumulate incomplete mitochondrial small subunits (CAP-30S and INC-30S particles) that are deficient in S-5 and several other proteins. To gain additional insight into the role of S-5 in mitochondrial ribosome assembly, the structures of Neurospora mitochondrial ribosomal subunits, CAP-30S particles, and INC-30S particles were analyzed by equilibrium centrifugation in CsCl gradients containing different concentrations of Mg+2. The results show (a) that S-5 is tightly associated with small ribosomal subunits, as judged by the fact that it is among the last proteins to be dissociated in CsCl gradients as the Mg+2 concentration is decreased, and (b) that CAP-30S and INC-30S particles, which are deficient in S-5, contain at most 12 proteins that are bound as tightly as in mature small subunits. The CAP-30S particles isolated from sucrose gradients contain a number of proteins that appear to be loosely bound, as judged by dissociation of these proteins in CsCl gradients under conditions in which they remain associated with mature small subunits. The results suggest that S-5 is required for the stable binding of a subset of small subunit ribosomal proteins
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Determining decay rates of polar cap plasma using bservations of polar cap patches
Polar cap patches are large scale structures occurring in the high-latitude ionosphere. They are regions of enhanced plasma density of at least twice the background density, and they are often observed in the polar cap region. The primary decay mechanism is via a two-step rearrangement and recombination reaction involving Oxygen and Nitrogen. Small scale structures within polar cap patches can result in scintillation of radio signals such as those used in Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS). As such, quantifying the decay rate of the plasma is of importance if the effects on such communications are to be predicted. Observations were obtained during the Northern Deep Winter experiment, a series of incoherent scatter radar world days that took place in December 2014. Data from multiple incoherent scatter radars at high latitudes will be utilised to observe the same plasma at several locations as it is transported. From these observations, the decay of the plasma will be calculated and compared to the results of laboratory experiments
Various L2-signatures and a topological L2-signature theorem
For a normal covering over a closed oriented topological manifold we give a
proof of the L2-signature theorem with twisted coefficients, using Lipschitz
structures and the Lipschitz signature operator introduced by Teleman. We also
prove that the L-theory isomorphism conjecture as well as the C^*_max-version
of the Baum-Connes conjecture imply the L2-signature theorem for a normal
covering over a Poincar space, provided that the group of deck transformations
is torsion-free. We discuss the various possible definitions of L2-signatures
(using the signature operator, using the cap product of differential forms,
using a cap product in cellular L2-cohomology,...) in this situation, and prove
that they all coincide.Comment: comma in metadata (author field) added
Space weather challenges of the polar cap ionosphere
This paper presents research on polar cap ionosphere space weather phenomena
conducted during the European Cooperation in Science and Technology (COST)
action ES0803 from 2008 to 2012. The main part of the work has been directed
toward the study of plasma instabilities and scintillations in association with
cusp flow channels and polar cap electron density structures/patches,which is
considered as critical knowledge in order to develop forecast models for
scintillations in the polar cap. We have approached this problem by
multi-instrument techniques that comprise the EISCAT Svalbard Radar, SuperDARN
radars, in-situ rocket, and GPS scintillation measurements. The Discussion
section aims to unify the bits and pieces of highly specialized information
from several papers into a generalized picture. The cusp ionosphere appears as
a hot region in GPS scintillation climatology maps. Our results are consistent
with the existing view that scintillations in the cusp and the polar cap
ionosphere are mainly due to multi-scale structures generated by instability
processes associated with the cross-polar transport of polar cap patches. We
have demonstrated that the SuperDARN convection model can be used to track
these patches backward and forward in time. Hence, once a patch has been
detected in the cusp inflow region, SuperDARN can be used to forecast its
destination in the future. However, the high-density gradient of polar cap
patches is not the only prerequisite for high-latitude scintillations.
Unprecedented high resolution rocket measurements reveal that the cusp
ionosphere is associated with filamentary precipitation giving rise to
kilometer scale gradients onto which the gradient drift instability can operate
very efficiently... (continued
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