Bromine Chloride in the Coastal Arctic: Diel Patterns and Production Mechanisms

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 620-630
Author(s):  
Stephen M. McNamara ◽  
Natasha M. Garner ◽  
Siyuan Wang ◽  
Angela R. W. Raso ◽  
Sham Thanekar ◽  
...  
Biology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 750
Author(s):  
Angela S. Stoeger ◽  
Anton Baotic ◽  
Gunnar Heilmann

How do elephants achieve their enormous vocal flexibility when communicating, imitating or creating idiosyncratic sounds? The mechanisms that underpin this trait combine motoric abilities with vocal learning processes. We demonstrate the unusual production techniques used by five African savanna elephants to create idiosyncratic sounds, which they learn to produce on cue by positive reinforcement training. The elephants generate these sounds by applying nasal tissue vibration via an ingressive airflow at the trunk tip, or by contracting defined superficial muscles at the trunk base. While the production mechanisms of the individuals performing the same sound categories are similar, they do vary in fine-tuning, revealing that each individual has its own specific sound-producing strategy. This plasticity reflects the creative and cognitive abilities associated with ‘vocal’ learning processes. The fact that these sounds were reinforced and cue-stimulated suggests that social feedback and positive reinforcement can facilitate vocal creativity and vocal learning behavior in elephants. Revealing the mechanism and the capacity for vocal learning and sound creativity is fundamental to understanding the eloquence within the elephants’ communication system. This also helps to understand the evolution of human language and of open-ended vocal systems, which build upon similar cognitive processes.


Author(s):  
Gonzalo Mucientes ◽  
Katharina Leeb ◽  
Fiona-Elaine Straßer ◽  
David Villegas-Ríos ◽  
Alexandre Alonso-Fernández

Universe ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 264
Author(s):  
Daniel Boyanovsky

We study various production mechanisms of sterile neutrinos in the early universe beyond and within the standard model. We obtain the quantum kinetic equations for production and the distribution function of sterile-like neutrinos at freeze-out, from which we obtain free streaming lengths, equations of state and coarse grained phase space densities. In a simple extension beyond the standard model, in which neutrinos are Yukawa coupled to a Higgs-like scalar, we derive and solve the quantum kinetic equation for sterile production and analyze the freeze-out conditions and clustering properties of this dark matter constituent. We argue that in the mass basis, standard model processes that produce active neutrinos also yield sterile-like neutrinos, leading to various possible production channels. Hence, the final distribution function of sterile-like neutrinos is a result of the various kinematically allowed production processes in the early universe. As an explicit example, we consider production of light sterile neutrinos from pion decay after the QCD phase transition, obtaining the quantum kinetic equation and the distribution function at freeze-out. A sterile-like neutrino with a mass in the keV range produced by this process is a suitable warm dark matter candidate with a free-streaming length of the order of few kpc consistent with cores in dwarf galaxies.


Hydrobiologia ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 766 (1) ◽  
pp. 201-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jordi Compte ◽  
Marc Montenegro ◽  
Albert Ruhí ◽  
Stéphanie Gascón ◽  
Jordi Sala ◽  
...  

1978 ◽  
Vol 9 (52) ◽  
Author(s):  
V. L. HEASLEY ◽  
D. F. SHELLHAMER ◽  
J. A. ISKIKIAN ◽  
D. L. STREET ◽  
G. E. HEASLEY

2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jassim Abdulaziz Al-Ghanim ◽  
Subhi Ali Al-Nufaili

2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S304) ◽  
pp. 180-186
Author(s):  
Luigi Spinoglio

AbstractVarious observational techniques have been used to survey galaxies and AGN, from X-rays to radio frequencies, both photometric and spectroscopic. I will review these techniques aimed at the study of galaxy evolution and of the role of AGNs and star formation as the two main energy production mechanisms. I will then present as a new observational approach the far-IR spectroscopic surveys that could be done with planned astronomical facilities of the next future, such as SPICA from the space and CCAT from the ground.


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