1,303 research outputs found
The effects of oxygen depletion due to upwelling groundwater on the post-hatch fitness of Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar)
The conditions experienced by incubating Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) eggs are strongly influenced by hyporheic exchange. In some rivers, periods of intense groundwater upwelling can reduce oxygen levels in the incubation zone to 0% saturation. The present study investigated the effect of oxygen sags on the post-hatch fitness of Atlantic salmon. A laboratory experiment allowed fine-scale control of oxygen concentrations to replicate those induced by low oxygen groundwater in rivers. Extreme oxygen sags in the earlier stages of embryo development resulted in a developmental lag with alevin hatching later and at an underdeveloped state. At the latest stages of development, oxygen sags caused premature hatching of severely underdeveloped alevin. These findings combined with a review of the literature suggest post-hatch survival of embryos exposed to groundwater induced hypoxia will be lower due to predation and poor competitiveness
Nonlocal restoration of two-mode squeezing in the presence of strong optical loss
We present the experimental realization of a theoretical effect discovered by
Olivares and Paris, in which a pair of entangled optical beams undergoing
independent losses can see nonlocal correlations restored by the use of a
nonlocal resource correlating the losses. Twin optical beams created in an
entangled Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) state by an optical parametric
oscillator above threshold were subjected to 50% loss from beamsplitters in
their paths. The resulting severe degradation of the signature quantum
correlations observed between the two beams was then suppressed when another,
independent EPR state impinged upon the other input ports of the beamsplitters,
effectively entangling the losses inflicted to the initial EPR state. The
additional EPR beam pair was classically coherent with the primary one but had
no quantum correlations with it. This result may find applications as a quantum
tap for entanglement.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, submitted for publicatio
Torsion, an alternative to dark matter?
We confront Einstein-Cartan's theory with the Hubble diagram. An affirmative
answer to the question in the title is compatible with today's supernovae data.Comment: 14 pp, 3 figures. Version 2 matches the version published in Gen.
Rel. Grav., references added. Version 3 corrects a factor 3 in Cartan's
equations to become
FK 506 has no short-term effects on endogenous or exogenous myeloid reconstitution in irradiated mice
Effects of moderate-volume, high-load lower-body resistance training on strength and function in persons with Parkinson\u27s disease: A pilot study
Real-Gas Effects and Phase Separation in Underexpanded Jets at Engine-Relevant Conditions
A numerical framework implemented in the open-source tool OpenFOAM is
presented in this work combining a hybrid, pressure-based solver with a
vapor-liquid equilibrium model based on the cubic equation of state. This
framework is used in the present work to investigate underexpanded jets at
engine-relevant conditions where real-gas effects and mixture induced phase
separation are probable to occur. A thorough validation and discussion of the
applied vapor-liquid equilibrium model is conducted by means of general
thermodynamic relations and measurement data available in the literature.
Engine-relevant simulation cases for two different fuels were defined. Analyses
of the flow field show that the used fuel has a first order effect on the
occurrence of phase separation. In the case of phase separation two different
effects could be revealed causing the single-phase instability, namely the
strong expansion and the mixing of the fuel with the chamber gas. A comparison
of single-phase and two-phase jets disclosed that the phase separation leads to
a completely different penetration depth in contrast to single-phase injection
and therefore commonly used analytical approaches fail to predict the
penetration depth.Comment: Preprint submitted to AIAA Scitech 2018, Kissimmee, Florid
Report on the first round of the Mock LISA Data Challenges
The Mock LISA Data Challenges (MLDCs) have the dual purpose of fostering the
development of LISA data analysis tools and capabilities, and demonstrating the
technical readiness already achieved by the gravitational-wave community in
distilling a rich science payoff from the LISA data output. The first round of
MLDCs has just been completed: nine data sets containing simulated
gravitational wave signals produced either by galactic binaries or massive
black hole binaries embedded in simulated LISA instrumental noise were released
in June 2006 with deadline for submission of results at the beginning of
December 2006. Ten groups have participated in this first round of challenges.
Here we describe the challenges, summarise the results, and provide a first
critical assessment of the entries.Comment: Proceedings report from GWDAW 11. Added author, added reference,
clarified some text, removed typos. Results unchanged; Removed author, minor
edits, reflects submitted versio
Outflows from the high-mass protostars NGC 7538 IRS1/2 observed with bispectrum speckle interferometry -- Signatures of flow precession
NGC 7538 IRS1 is a high-mass (approx. 30 M_sun) protostar with a CO outflow,
an associated UCHII region, and a linear methanol maser structure, which might
trace a Keplerian-rotating circumstellar disk. The directions of the various
associated axes are misaligned with each other. We investigate the
near-infrared morphology of the source to clarify the relations among the
various axes. K'-band bispectrum speckle interferometry was performed at two
6-meter-class telescopes -- the BTA 6m telescope and the 6.5m MMT.
Complementary IRAC images from the Spitzer Space Telescope Archive were used to
relate the structures detected with the outflow at larger scales. High-dynamic
range images show fan-shaped outflow structure in which we detect 18 stars and
several blobs of diffuse emission. We interpret the misalignment of various
outflow axes in the context of a disk precession model, including numerical
hydrodynamic simulations of the molecular emission. The precession period is
approx. 280 years and its half-opening angle is 40 degrees. A possible
triggering mechanism is non-coplanar tidal interaction of an (undiscovered)
close companion with the circumbinary protostellar disk. Our observations
resolve the nearby massive protostar NGC 7538 IRS2 as a close binary with
separation of 195 mas. We find indications for shock interaction between the
outflow activities in IRS1 and IRS2. Indications of outflow precession have
been discovered to date in a number of massive protostars, all with large
precession angles 20--45 degrees. This might explain the difference between the
outflow widths in low- and high-mass stars and add support to a common
collimation mechanism.Comment: 20 pages; 8 figures; Accepted by A&A on April 10, 2006; Image quality
reduced due to astro-ph file size limitations; Please download a version with
high-quality images from
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/tpreibis/ngc7538.pd
Collaboration and contestation in further and higher education partnerships in England: a Bourdieusian field analysis
Internationally, ‘College for All’ policies are creating new forms of vocational higher education (HE), and shifting relationships between HE and further education (FE) institutions. In this paper, we consider the way in which this is being implemented in England, drawing on a detailed qualitative case study of a regional HE–FE partnership to widen participation. We focus on the complex mix of collaboration and contestation that arose within it, and how these affected socially differentiated groups of students following high- and low-status routes through its provision. We outline Bourdieu’s concept of ‘field’ as a framework for our analysis and interpretation, including its theoretical ambiguities regarding the definition and scale of fields. Through hermeneutic dialogue between data and theory, we tentatively suggest that such partnerships represent bridges between HE and FE. These bridges are strong between higher-status institutions, but highly contested between lower-status institutions competing closely for distinction. We conclude that the trajectories and outcomes for socially disadvantaged students require attention and collective action to address the inequalities they face, and that our theoretical approach may have wider international relevance beyond the English case
Charged Particle Production in Proton-, Deuteron-, Oxygen- and Sulphur-Nucleus Collisions at 200 GeV per Nucleon
The transverse momentum and rapidity distributions of net protons and
negatively charged hadrons have been measured for minimum bias proton-nucleus
and deuteron-gold interactions, as well as central oxygen-gold and
sulphur-nucleus collisions at 200 GeV per nucleon. The rapidity density of net
protons at midrapidity in central nucleus-nucleus collisions increases both
with target mass for sulphur projectiles and with the projectile mass for a
gold target. The shape of the rapidity distributions of net protons forward of
midrapidity for d+Au and central S+Au collisions is similar. The average
rapidity loss is larger than 2 units of rapidity for reactions with the gold
target. The transverse momentum spectra of net protons for all reactions can be
described by a thermal distribution with `temperatures' between 145 +- 11 MeV
(p+S interactions) and 244 +- 43 MeV (central S+Au collisions). The
multiplicity of negatively charged hadrons increases with the mass of the
colliding system. The shape of the transverse momentum spectra of negatively
charged hadrons changes from minimum bias p+p and p+S interactions to p+Au and
central nucleus-nucleus collisions. The mean transverse momentum is almost
constant in the vicinity of midrapidity and shows little variation with the
target and projectile masses. The average number of produced negatively charged
hadrons per participant baryon increases slightly from p+p, p+A to central
S+S,Ag collisions.Comment: 47 pages, submitted to Z. Phys.
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