9,608 research outputs found
Darwinian Selection and Non-existence of Nash Equilibria
We study selection acting on phenotype in a collection of agents playing
local games lacking Nash equilibria. After each cycle one of the agents losing
most games is replaced by a new agent with new random strategy and game
partner. The network generated can be considered critical in the sense that the
lifetimes of the agents is power law distributed. The longest surviving agents
are those with the lowest absolute score per time step. The emergent ecology is
characterized by a broad range of behaviors. Nevertheless, the agents tend to
be similar to their opponents in terms of performance.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Darwin Meets Einstein: LISA Data Analysis Using Genetic Algorithms
This work presents the first application of the method of Genetic Algorithms
(GAs) to data analysis for the Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA). In
the low frequency regime of the LISA band there are expected to be tens of
thousands galactic binary systems that will be emitting gravitational waves
detectable by LISA. The challenge of parameter extraction of such a large
number of sources in the LISA data stream requires a search method that can
efficiently explore the large parameter spaces involved. As signals of many of
these sources will overlap, a global search method is desired. GAs represent
such a global search method for parameter extraction of multiple overlapping
sources in the LISA data stream. We find that GAs are able to correctly extract
source parameters for overlapping sources. Several optimizations of a basic GA
are presented with results derived from applications of the GA searches to
simulated LISA data.Comment: 8 pages, 12 figure
Heteranthery in Clarkia: pollen performance of dimorphic anthers contradicts expectations.
Premise of the studyWild plant species that require the services of pollen-feeding insects for reliable pollination may evolve features that attract and reward their mutualistic partners. Heterantherous species have been proposed to exhibit a "division of labor" whereby "feeding anthers" (which produce pollen that may be consumed by an insect) are distinguished from "reproductive anthers" (which produce pollen more likely to contribute to reproduction). In some heterantherous species, including Clarkia unguiculata (Onagraceae), these two anther types differ with respect to stamen length, anther size, pollen production, and pollen color.MethodsThe primary goal of this study was to test one component of the "division of labor" hypothesis by comparing the performance of the pollen produced by each type of anther in C. unguiculata. To achieve this goal, under greenhouse conditions, we hand pollinated and assessed pollen performance (using epifluorescence microscopy) within ~228 flowers.Key resultsThe pollen produced by the two anther types differed significantly with respect to both stigma and style penetration. The inner series of anthers produce pollen with higher performance than the outer series of longer, dark red anthers.ConclusionsThese findings contradict previous descriptions of the genus, reporting that the inner diminutive series of anthers in Clarkia produce "abortive and nonfunctional" pollen. We outline the future research required to demonstrate the ecological function of heteranthery in this iconic wildflower group
Langevin dynamics in crossed magnetic and electric fields: Hall and diamagnetic fluctuations
Based on the classical Langevin equation, we have re-visited the problem of
orbital motion of a charged particle in two dimensions for a normal magnetic
field crossed with or without an in-plane electric bias. We are led to two
interesting fluctuation effects: First, we obtain not only a longitudinal
"work-fluctuation" relation as expected for a barotropic type system, but also
a transverse work-fluctuation relation perpendicular to the electric bias. This
"Hall fluctuation" involves the product of the electric and the magnetic
fields. And second, for the case of harmonic confinement without bias, the
calculated probability density for the orbital magnetic moment gives non-zero
even moments, not derivable as field derivatives of the classical free energy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, revised versio
The maximum density droplet to lower density droplet transition in quantum dots
We show that, Landau level mixing in two-dimensional quantum dot wave
functions can be taken into account very effectively by multiplying the exact
lowest Landau level wave functions by a Jastrow factor which is optimized by
variance minimization. The comparison between exact diagonalization and fixed
phase diffusion Monte Carlo results suggests that the phase of the many-body
wave functions are not affected much by Landau level mixing. We apply these
wave functions to study the transition from the maximum density droplet state
(incipient integer quantum Hall state with angular momentum L=N(N-1)/2) to
lower density droplet states (L>N(N-1)/2).Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.
Four Species of Synopiidae from the Caribbean Region (Crustacea: Amphipoda)
Synopia ultramarina is redescribed from the Gulf Stream and the Florida Keys and comments are made on the tangled taxonomy in Synopia. Tiron bellairsi, originally described from Barbados, is reported from Belize, at the opposite side of the Caribbean Basin. Garosyrrhoe bigarra, a Pacific species, is also reported from Belize, but no clear subspecific differences are detected as yet between Pacific and Atlantic populations
Gammaropsis arawakia, a New Species of Marine Amphipoda (Crustacea) from Jamaica
One of the dominant amphipods in algal turf communities at Discovery Bay, Jamaica, is a new species, Gammaropsis arawakia, characterized by long peduncle of uropod 3, small coxa I, 3-articulate accessory flagellum, extremely setose gnathopod 2, one pair of dorsal teeth on urosomite I, pointed ocular lobe, and oblique upper margin of cephalic sinus for antenna 2
Two Species of Hornellia (Subgenus Metaceradocus) from the Florida Keys and Belize (Amphipoda, Melphidippoidea)
Hornellia (Metaceradocus) atlanticus, a new species from Belize, related to M. occidentalis, an eastern Pacific species, is reported from the Caribbean Sea and a morphologically remote new species, M. tequestae, is described from the Florida Keys
- …
