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Search: WFRF:(Williams Trevor) > (2015-2019)

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  • 2019
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)
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2.
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3.
  • Hindell, Mark A., et al. (author)
  • Circumpolar habitat use in the southern elephant seal : implications for foraging success and population trajectories
  • 2016
  • In: Ecosphere. - : Wiley. - 2150-8925 .- 2150-8925. ; 7:5
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In the Southern Ocean, wide-ranging predators offer the opportunity to quantify how animals respond to differences in the environment because their behavior and population trends are an integrated signal of prevailing conditions within multiple marine habitats. Southern elephant seals in particular, can provide useful insights due to their circumpolar distribution, their long and distant migrations and their performance of extended bouts of deep diving. Furthermore, across their range, elephant seal populations have very different population trends. In this study, we present a data set from the International Polar Year project; Marine Mammals Exploring the Oceans Pole to Pole for southern elephant seals, in which a large number of instruments (N = 287) deployed on animals, encompassing a broad circum-Antarctic geographic extent, collected in situ ocean data and at-sea foraging metrics that explicitly link foraging behavior and habitat structure in time and space. Broadly speaking, the seals foraged in two habitats, the relatively shallow waters of the Antarctic continental shelf and the Kerguelen Plateau and deep open water regions. Animals of both sexes were more likely to exhibit area-restricted search (ARS) behavior rather than transit in shelf habitats. While Antarctic shelf waters can be regarded as prime habitat for both sexes, female seals tend to move northwards with the advance of sea ice in the late autumn or early winter. The water masses used by the seals also influenced their behavioral mode, with female ARS behavior being most likely in modified Circumpolar Deepwater or northerly Modified Shelf Water, both of which tend to be associated with the outer reaches of the Antarctic Continental Shelf. The combined effects of (1) the differing habitat quality, (2) differing responses to encroaching ice as the winter progresses among colonies, (3) differing distances between breeding and haul-out sites and high quality habitats, and (4) differing long-term -regional trends in sea ice extent can explain the differing population trends observed among elephant seal colonies.
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4.
  • Laksmono, Hartawan, et al. (author)
  • Anomalous Behavior of the Homogeneous Ice Nucleation Rate in No-Man's Land
  • 2015
  • In: The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. - : American Chemical Society (ACS). - 1948-7185. ; 6:14, s. 2826-2832
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • We present an analysis of ice nucleation kinetics from near-ambient pressure water as temperature decreases below the homogeneous limit T-H by cooling micrometer-sized droplets (microdroplets) evaporatively at 10(3)-10(4) K/s and probing the structure ultrafast using femtosecond pulses from the Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) free-electron X-ray laser. Below 232 K, we observed a slower nucleation rate increase with decreasing temperature than anticipated from previous measurements, which we suggest is due to the rapid decrease in water's diffusivity. This is consistent with earlier findings that microdroplets do not crystallize at <227 K, but vitrify at cooling rates of 10(6)-10(7) K/s. We also hypothesize that the slower increase in the nucleation rate is connected with the proposed fragile-to-strong transition anomaly in water.
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5.
  • Popp, David, et al. (author)
  • Flow-aligned, single-shot fiber diffraction using a femtosecond X-ray free-electron laser
  • 2017
  • In: CYTOSKELETON. - : WILEY. - 1949-3584 .- 1949-3592. ; 74:12, s. 472-481
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • A major goal for X-ray free-electron laser (XFEL) based science is to elucidate structures of biological molecules without the need for crystals. Filament systems may provide some of the first single macromolecular structures elucidated by XFEL radiation, since they contain one-dimensional translational symmetry and thereby occupy the diffraction intensity region between the extremes of crystals and single molecules. Here, we demonstrate flow alignment of as few as 100 filaments (Escherichia coli pili, F-actin, and amyloid fibrils), which when intersected by femtosecond X-ray pulses result in diffraction patterns similar to those obtained from classical fiber diffraction studies. We also determine that F-actin can be flow-aligned to a disorientation of approximately 5 degrees. Using this XFEL-based technique, we determine that gelsolin amyloids are comprised of stacked -strands running perpendicular to the filament axis, and that a range of order from fibrillar to crystalline is discernable for individual -synuclein amyloids.
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6.
  • Sellberg, Jonas A., et al. (author)
  • How Cubic Can Ice Be?
  • 2017
  • In: The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters. - : American Chemical Society (ACS). - 1948-7185. ; 8:14, s. 3216-3222
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Using an X-ray laser, we investigated the crystal structure of ice formed by homogeneous ice nucleation in deeply supercooled water nanodrops (r approximate to 10 nm) at similar to 225 K The nanodrops were formed by condensation of vapor in a supersonic nozzle, and the ice was probed within 100 mu s of freezing using femtosecond wide-angle X-ray scattering at the Linac Coherent Light Source free-electron X-ray laser. The X-ray diffraction spectra indicate that this ice has a metastable, predominantly cubic structure; the shape of the first ice diffraction peak suggests stacking-disordered ice with a cubicity value, chi, in the range of 0.78 +/- 0.05. The cubicity value determined here is higher than those determined in experiments with micron-sized drops but comparable to those found in molecular dynamics simulations. The high cubicity is most likely caused by the extremely low freezing temperatures and by the rapid freezing, which occurs on a similar to 1 mu s time scale in single nanodroplets.
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7.
  • Treasure, Anne M., et al. (author)
  • Marine Mammals Exploring the Oceans Pole to Pole A Review of the MEOP Consortium
  • 2017
  • In: Oceanography. - : The Oceanography Society. - 1042-8275. ; 30:2, s. 132-138
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • Polar oceans are poorly monitored despite the important role they play in regulating Earth's climate system. Marine mammals equipped with biologging devices are now being used to fill the data gaps in these logistically difficult to sample regions. Since 2002, instrumented animals have been generating exceptionally large data sets of oceanographic CTD casts (>500,000 profiles), which are now freely available to the scientific community through the MEOP data portal (http://meop.net). MEOP (Marine Mammals Exploring the Oceans Pole to Pole) is a consortium of international researchers dedicated to sharing animal-derived data and knowledge about the polar oceans. Collectively, MEOP demonstrates the power and cost-effectiveness of using marine mammals as data-collection platforms that can dramatically improve the ocean observing system for biological and physical oceanographers. Here, we review the MEOP program and database to bring it to the attention of the international community.
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  • Result 1-7 of 7
Type of publication
journal article (7)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (7)
Author/Editor
Nilsson, Anders (2)
Zhang, Yan (1)
Korhonen, Laura (1)
Lindholm, Dan (1)
Kelly, Daniel (1)
Vertessy, Beata G. (1)
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Bengtsson-Palme, Joh ... (1)
Nilsson, Henrik (1)
Ding, Ke (1)
Kelly, Ryan (1)
Li, Ying (1)
Moore, Matthew D. (1)
Wang, Mei (1)
Wang, Xin (1)
Liu, Yang (1)
Kumar, Rakesh (1)
Wang, Dong (1)
Liu, Fang (1)
Li, Ke (1)
Liu, Ke (1)
Zhang, Yang (1)
Zhang, Yao (1)
Jin, Yi (1)
Raza, Ali (1)
Rafiq, Muhammad (1)
Zhang, Kai (1)
Khatlani, T (1)
Nàgy, Péter (1)
Kahan, Thomas (1)
Kominami, Eiki (1)
van der Goot, F. Gis ... (1)
Sörelius, Karl, 1981 ... (1)
Bonaldo, Paolo (1)
Thum, Thomas (1)
Batra, Jyotsna (1)
Roobol, Monique J (1)
Adams, Christopher M (1)
Minucci, Saverio (1)
Vellenga, Edo (1)
Backman, Lars (1)
Yan, Hong (1)
Swärd, Karl (1)
Nilsson, Per (1)
Schmidt, Axel (1)
Lorkowski, Stefan (1)
Thrift, Amanda G. (1)
De Milito, Angelo (1)
Zhang, Wei (1)
Zhang, Jian (1)
Hammerschmidt, Sven (1)
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University
Stockholm University (6)
University of Gothenburg (2)
Uppsala University (2)
Lund University (2)
Karolinska Institutet (2)
Umeå University (1)
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Royal Institute of Technology (1)
Halmstad University (1)
Linköping University (1)
Chalmers University of Technology (1)
Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (1)
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Language
English (7)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Natural sciences (7)
Engineering and Technology (2)
Medical and Health Sciences (2)

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