88,300 research outputs found
Management of invasive Allee species
In this study, we use a discrete, two-patch population model of an Allee species to examine different methods in managing invasions. We first analytically examine the model to show the presence of the strong Allee effect, and then we numerically explore the model to test the effectiveness of different management strategies. As expected invasion is facilitated by lower Allee thresholds, greater carrying capacities and greater proportions of dispersers. These effects are interacting, however, and moderated by population growth rate. Using the gypsy moth as an example species, we demonstrate that the effectiveness of different invasion management strategies is context-dependent, combining complementary methods may be preferable, and the preferred strategy may differ geographically. Specifically, we find methods for restricting movement to be more effective in areas of contiguous habitat and high Allee thresholds, where methods involving mating disruptions and raising Allee thresholds are more effective in areas of high habitat fragmentation
Instability of three dimensional conformally dressed black hole
The three dimensional black hole solution of Einstein equations with negative
cosmological constant coupled to a conformal scalar field is proved to be
unstable against linear circularly symmetric perturbations.Comment: 5 pages, REVTe
Wave-packet treatment of neutrino oscillations and its implications on determining the neutrino mass hierarchy
We derive the neutrino flavor transition probabilities with the neutrino
treated as a wave packet. The decoherence and dispersion effects from the
wave-packet treatment show up as damping and phase-shifting of the plane-wave
neutrino oscillation patterns. If the energy uncertainty in the initial
neutrino wave packet is larger than around 0.01 of the neutrino energy, the
decoherence and dispersion effects would degrade the sensitivity of reactor
neutrino experiments to mass hierarchy measurement to lower than 3
confidence level
The signature of the magnetorotational instability in the Reynolds and Maxwell stress tensors in accretion discs
The magnetorotational instability is thought to be responsible for the
generation of magnetohydrodynamic turbulence that leads to enhanced outward
angular momentum transport in accretion discs. Here, we present the first
formal analytical proof showing that, during the exponential growth of the
instability, the mean (averaged over the disc scale-height) Reynolds stress is
always positive, the mean Maxwell stress is always negative, and hence the mean
total stress is positive and leads to a net outward flux of angular momentum.
More importantly, we show that the ratio of the Maxwell to the Reynolds
stresses during the late times of the exponential growth of the instability is
determined only by the local shear and does not depend on the initial spectrum
of perturbations or the strength of the seed magnetic. Even though we derived
these properties of the stress tensors for the exponential growth of the
instability in incompressible flows, numerical simulations of shearing boxes
show that this characteristic is qualitatively preserved under more general
conditions, even during the saturated turbulent state generated by the
instability.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures. Minor revisions. Accepted for publication in
MNRA
On site challenges for the construction of 16-storey condominium: as observed by a young civil engineering technologist
The difference between an engineer and an engineering technologist is that, an engineer would mainly focus and produce structural designs based on engineering calculations, while the job of an engineering technologist is to execute the design in the real working environment by adopting flexible and critical technical ideas on-site. The challenges can be divided into two categories, namely design challenges faced by an engineer and the construction challenges faced by an engineering technologist. Thus, the job scope of an engineering technologist is relatively wider when compared to that of an engineer, as the engineering technologist would be dealing with the consultant, contractors and suppliers on site, while handling the in situ construction challenges. This requires basic understanding of engineering principles and technology, critical thinking and problem-solving skills, modern tools competency in software applications, designs and construction calculations, as well as communication and leadership skills all rolled into one. I have recorded my experience as a junior civil engineering technologist engaged in the construction works of a 16-storey condominium at Langkawi, Kedah. Included in the descriptions are in situ technical problems encountered, potentially unsafe working conditions, foundations, scheduling and housekeeping on site, among others. I hope that the information shared in this entry would make a good introduction and induction for juniors entering the work site, where my personal undertakings could serve as a guide and reminder for them
In-vivo magnetic resonance imaging of hyperpolarized silicon particles
Silicon-based micro and nanoparticles have gained popularity in a wide range
of biomedical applications due to their biocompatibility and biodegradability
in-vivo, as well as a flexible surface chemistry, which allows drug loading,
functionalization and targeting. Here we report direct in-vivo imaging of
hyperpolarized 29Si nuclei in silicon microparticles by MRI. Natural physical
properties of silicon provide surface electronic states for dynamic nuclear
polarization (DNP), extremely long depolarization times, insensitivity to the
in-vivo environment or particle tumbling, and surfaces favorable for
functionalization. Potential applications to gastrointestinal, intravascular,
and tumor perfusion imaging at sub-picomolar concentrations are presented.
These results demonstrate a new background-free imaging modality applicable to
a range of inexpensive, readily available, and biocompatible Si particles.Comment: Supplemental Material include
Activation barrier scaling and crossover for noise-induced switching in a micromechanical parametric oscillator
We explore fluctuation-induced switching in a parametrically-driven
micromechanical torsional oscillator. The oscillator possesses one, two or
three stable attractors depending on the modulation frequency. Noise induces
transitions between the coexisting attractors. Near the bifurcation points, the
activation barriers are found to have a power law dependence on frequency
detuning with critical exponents that are in agreement with predicted universal
scaling relationships. At large detuning, we observe a crossover to a different
power law dependence with an exponent that is device specific.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
Cosmic Microwave Background constraints of decaying dark matter particle properties
If a component of cosmological dark matter is made up of massive particles -
such as sterile neutrinos - that decay with cosmological lifetime to emit
photons, the reionization history of the universe would be affected, and cosmic
microwave background anisotropies can be used to constrain such a decaying
particle model of dark matter. The optical depth depends rather sensitively on
the decaying dark matter particle mass m_{dm}, lifetime tau_{dm}, and the mass
fraction of cold dark matter f that they account for in this model. Assuming
that there are no other sources of reionization and using the WMAP 7-year data,
we find that 250 eV < m_{dm} < 1 MeV, whereas 2.23*10^3 yr < tau_{dm} <
1.23*10^18 yr. The best fit values for m_{dm} and tau_{dm}/f are 17.3 keV and
2.03*10^16 yr respectively.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figure
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