2,512 research outputs found
Ocean Chlorophyll Studies from a U-2 Aircraft Platform
Chlorophyll gradient maps of large ocean areas were generated from U-2 ocean color scanner data obtained over test sites in the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The delineation of oceanic features using the upward radiant intensity relies on an analysis method which presupposes that radiation backscattered from the atmosphere and ocean surface can be properly modeled using a measurement made at 778 nm. An estimation of the chlorophyll concentration was performed by properly ratioing radiances measured at 472 nm and 548 nm after removing the atmospheric effects. The correlation between the remotely sensed data and in-situ surface chlorophyll measurements was validated in two sets of data. The results show that the correlation between the in-situ measured chlorophyll and the derived quantity is a negative exponential function and the correlation coefficient was calculated to be -0.965
Hadronic Density of States from String Theory
Exactly soluble string theories describing a particular hadronic sector of
certain confining gauge theories have been obtained recently as Penrose-Gueven
limits of the dual supergravity backgrounds. The effect of taking the
Penrose-Gueven limit on the gravity side translates, in the gauge theory side,
into an effective truncation to hadrons of large U(1) charge (annulons). We
present an exact calculation of the finite temperature partition function for
the hadronic states corresponding to a Penrose-Gueven limit of the
Maldacena-Nunez embedding of N=1 SYM into string theory. It is established that
the theory exhibits a Hagedorn density of states.
Motivated by this exact calculation we propose a semiclassical string
approximation to the finite temperature partition function for confining gauge
theories admitting a supergravity dual, by performing an expansion around
classical solutions characterized by temporal windings. This semiclassical
approximation reveals a hadronic energy density of states of Hagedorn type,
with the coefficient determined by the gauge theory string tension as expected
for confining theories. We argue that our proposal captures primarily
information about states of pure N=1 SYM, given that this semiclassical
approximation does not entail a projection onto states of large U(1) charge.Comment: 15 page
Sirtuin-3 Is Expressed by Enteric Neurons but It Does not Play a Major Role in Their Regulation of Oxidative Stress
Gut inflammation contributes to the development of gut motility disorders in part by disrupting the function and survival of enteric neurons through mechanisms that involve oxidative stress. How enteric neurons regulate oxidative stress is still poorly understood. Importantly, how neuron autonomous antioxidant mechanisms contribute to the susceptibility of enteric neurons to oxidative stress in disease is not known. Here, we discover that sirtuin-3 (Sirt3), a key regulator of oxidative stress and mitochondrial metabolism, is expressed by neurons in the enteric nervous system (ENS) of the mouse colon. Given the important role of Sirt3 in the regulation of neuronal oxidative stress in the central nervous system (CNS), we hypothesized that Sirt3 plays an important role in the cell autonomous regulation of oxidative stress by enteric neurons and that a loss of Sirt3 increases neuronal vulnerability during intestinal inflammation. We tested our hypothesis using a combination of traditional immunohistochemistry, oxidative stress measurements and in vivo and ex vivo measures of GI motility in healthy and inflamed wild-type (wt) and Sirt3 null (Sirt3(−/−)) mice. Our results show that Sirt3 is widely expressed by neurons throughout the myenteric plexus of the mouse colon. However, the deletion of Sirt3 had surprisingly little effect on gut function and susceptibility to inflammation. Likewise, neither the genetic ablation of Sirt3 nor the inhibition of Sirt3 with antagonists had a significant effect on neuronal oxidative stress. Therefore, we conclude that Sirt3 contributes very little to the overall regulation of neuronal oxidative stress in the ENS. The functional relevance of Sirt3 in enteric neurons is still unclear but our data show that it is an unlikely candidate to explain neuronal vulnerability to oxidative stress during inflammation
The measurement of the winds near the ocean surface with a radiometer-scatterometer on Skylab
The author has identified the following significant results. There were a total of twenty-six passes in the ZLV mode that yielded useful data. Six were in the in-track noncontiguous mode; all others were in the cross-track noncontiguous mode. The wind speed and direction, as effectively determined in a neutral atmosphere at 19.5 m above the sea surface, were found for each cell scanned by S193. It is shown how the passive microwave measurements were used both to compute the attenuation of the radar beam and to determine those cells where the backscatter measurement was suspect. Given the direction of the wind from some independent source, with the typical accuracy of measurement by available meteorological methods, a backscatter measurement at a nadir angle of 50, 43, or 32 deg can be used to compute the speed of the wind averaged over the illuminated area
Covariant path integral for chiral p-forms
The covariant path integral for chiral bosons obtained by McClain, Wu and Yu
is generalized to chiral p-forms. In order to handle the reducibility of the
gauge transformations associated with the chiral p-forms and with the new
variables (in infinite number) that must be added to eliminate the second class
constraints, the field-antifield formalism is used.Comment: revtex, 9 pages, submitted to Physical Review
Pasti-Sorokin-Tonin Actions in the Presence of Sources
Pasti, Sorokin and Tonin have recently constructed manifestly
Lorentz-invariant actions for self-dual field strengths and for Maxwell fields
with manifest electromagnetic duality. Using the method of Deser, Gomberoff,
Henneaux and Teitelboim, we generalize these actions in the presence of
sources.Comment: 6 pages, LaTe
Duality Symmetry in Momentum Frame
Siegel's action is generalized to the D=2(p+1) (p even) dimensional
space-time. The investigation of self-duality of chiral p-forms is extended to
the momentum frame, using Siegel's action of chiral bosons in two space-time
dimensions and its generalization in higher dimensions as examples. The whole
procedure of investigation is realized in the momentum space which relates to
the configuration space through the Fourier transformation of fields. These
actions correspond to non-local Lagrangians in the momentum frame. The
self-duality of them with respect to dualization of chiral fields is uncovered.
The relationship between two self-dual tensors in momentum space, whose similar
form appears in configuration space, plays an important role in the
calculation, that is, its application realizes solving algebraically an
integral equation.Comment: 11 pages, no figures, to appear in Phys. Rev.
State of Climate 2011 - Global Ocean Phytoplankton
Phytoplankton photosynthesis in the sun lit upper layer of the global ocean is the overwhelmingly dominant source of organic matter that fuels marine ecosystems. Phytoplankton contribute roughly half of the global (land and ocean) net primary production (NPP; gross photosynthesis minus plant respiration) and phytoplankton carbon fixation is the primary conduit through which atmospheric CO2 concentrations interact with the ocean s carbon cycle. Phytoplankton productivity depends on the availability of sunlight, macronutrients (e.g., nitrogen, phosphorous), and micronutrients (e.g., iron), and thus is sensitive to climate-driven changes in the delivery of these resources to the euphotic zon
Optical activity induced by curvature in a gravitational pp-wave background
We study optical activity induced by curvature. The optical activity model we
present has two phenomenological gyration parameters, within which we analyze
three model cases, namely, an exactly integrable model, the Landau-Lifshitz
model and the Fedorov model, these latter two are solved in the short
wavelength approximation. The model background is a gravitational pp-wave. The
solutions show that the optical activity induced by curvature leads to Faraday
rotation.Comment: 16 pages, late
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