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Institution

Louisiana State University

EducationBaton Rouge, Louisiana, United States
About: Louisiana State University is a education organization based out in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Poison control. The organization has 40206 authors who have published 76587 publications receiving 2566076 citations. The organization is also known as: LSU & Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College.
Topics: Population, Poison control, Wetland, Autism, Sediment


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2008-Ecology
TL;DR: It is argued that for marine organisms the genetic signatures of northern periglacial and southern refugia can be distinguished from one another, giving credence to recent climatic reconstructions with less extensive glaciation.
Abstract: A goal of phylogeography is to relate patterns of genetic differentiation to potential historical geographic isolating events. Quaternary glaciations, particularly the one culminating in the Last Glacial Maximum ;21 ka (thousands of years ago), greatly affected the distributions and population sizes of temperate marine species as their ranges retreated southward to escape ice sheets. Traditional genetic models of glacial refugia and routes of recolonization include these predictions: low genetic diversity in formerly glaciated areas, with a small number of alleles/haplotypes dominating disproportionately large areas, and high diversity including ''private'' alleles in glacial refugia. In the Northern Hemisphere, low diversity in the north and high diversity in the south are expected. This simple model does not account for the possibility of populations surviving in relatively small northern periglacial refugia. If these periglacial populations experienced extreme bottlenecks, they could have the low genetic diversity expected in recolonized areas with no refugia, but should have more endemic diversity (private alleles) than recently recolonized areas. This review examines evidence of putative glacial refugia for eight benthic marine taxa in the temperate North Atlantic. All data sets were reanalyzed to allow direct comparisons between geographic patterns of genetic diversity and distribution of particular clades and haplotypes including private alleles. We contend that for marine organisms the genetic signatures of northern periglacial and southern refugia can be distinguished from one another. There is evidence for several periglacial refugia in northern latitudes, giving credence to recent climatic reconstructions with less extensive glaciation.

515 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S. Fukuda1, Y. Fukuda1, M. Ishitsuka1, Yoshitaka Itow1, Takaaki Kajita1, J. Kameda1, K. Kaneyuki1, K. Kobayashi1, Yusuke Koshio1, M. Miura1, S. Moriyama1, Masayuki Nakahata1, S. Nakayama1, A. Okada1, N. Sakurai1, Masato Shiozawa1, Yoshihiro Suzuki1, H. Takeuchi1, Y. Takeuchi1, T. Toshito1, Y. Totsuka1, Shoichi Yamada1, Shantanu Desai2, M. Earl2, E. Kearns2, M. D. Messier2, Kate Scholberg2, Kate Scholberg3, J. L. Stone2, L. R. Sulak2, C. W. Walter2, M. Goldhaber4, T. Barszczak5, David William Casper5, W. Gajewski5, W. R. Kropp5, S. Mine5, D. W. Liu5, L. R. Price5, M. B. Smy5, Henry W. Sobel5, M. R. Vagins5, K. S. Ganezer6, W. E. Keig6, R. W. Ellsworth7, S. Tasaka8, A. Kibayashi, John G. Learned, S. Matsuno, D. Takemori, Y. Hayato, T. Ishii, Takashi Kobayashi, Koji Nakamura, Y. Obayashi, Y. Oyama, A. Sakai, Makoto Sakuda, M. Kohama9, Atsumu Suzuki9, T. Inagaki10, Tsuyoshi Nakaya10, K. Nishikawa10, Todd Haines11, Todd Haines5, E. Blaufuss12, E. Blaufuss13, S. Dazeley13, K. B. Lee13, K. B. Lee14, R. Svoboda13, J. A. Goodman12, G. Guillian12, G. W. Sullivan12, D. Turcan12, Alec Habig15, J. Hill16, C. K. Jung16, K. Martens16, K. Martens17, Magdalena Malek16, C. Mauger16, C. McGrew16, E. Sharkey16, B. Viren16, C. Yanagisawa16, C. Mitsuda18, K. Miyano18, C. Saji18, T. Shibata18, Y. Kajiyama19, Y. Nagashima19, K. Nitta19, M. Takita19, Minoru Yoshida19, Heekyong Kim20, Soo-Bong Kim20, J. Yoo20, H. Okazawa, T. Ishizuka21, M. Etoh22, Y. Gando22, Takehisa Hasegawa22, Kunio Inoue22, K. Ishihara22, Tomoyuki Maruyama22, J. Shirai22, A. Suzuki22, Masatoshi Koshiba1, Y. Hatakeyama23, Y. Ichikawa23, M. Koike23, Kyoshi Nishijima23, H. Fujiyasu24, Hirokazu Ishino24, M. Morii24, Y. Watanabe24, U. Golebiewska25, D. Kielczewska5, D. Kielczewska25, S. C. Boyd26, A. L. Stachyra26, R. J. Wilkes26, K. K. Young26 
TL;DR: The absence of significant zenith angle variation and spectrum distortion places strong constraints on neutrino mixing and mass difference in a flux-independent way, and two allowed regions at large mixing are found.
Abstract: We report the result of a search for neutrino oscillations using precise measurements of the recoil electron energy spectrum and zenith angle variations of the solar neutrino flux from 1258 days of neutrino-electron scattering data in Super-Kamiokande The absence of significant zenith angle variation and spectrum distortion places strong constraints on neutrino mixing and mass difference in a flux-independent way Using the Super-Kamiokande flux measurement in addition, two allowed regions at large mixing are found

515 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
K. Abe1, J. Adam2, Hiroaki Aihara3, T. Akiri4  +335 moreInstitutions (52)
TL;DR: The T2K experiment has observed electron neutrino appearance in a muon neutrinos beam produced 295 km from the Super-Kamiokande detector with a peak energy of 0.6 GeV, corresponding to a significance of 7.3σ.
Abstract: The T2K experiment has observed electron neutrino appearance in a muon neutrino beam produced 295 km from the Super-Kamiokande detector with a peak energy of 0.6 GeV. A total of 28 electron neutrino events were detected with an energy distribution consistent with an appearance signal, corresponding to a significance of 7.3 sigma when compared to 4.92 +/- 0.55 expected background events. In the Pontecorvo-Maki-Nakagawa-Sakata mixing model, the electron neutrino appearance signal depends on several parameters including three mixing angles theta(12), theta(23), theta(13), a mass difference vertical bar Delta m(32)(2)vertical bar and a CP violating phase delta(CP). In this neutrino oscillation scenario, assuming vertical bar Delta m(32)(2)vertical bar = 2.4 x 10(-3) eV(2), sin theta(2)(23) = 0.5, and vertical bar Delta m(32)(2)vertical bar > 0 (vertical bar Delta m(32)(2)vertical bar <0), a best- fit value of sin2 theta(2)(13) = 0.140(- 0.032)(+0.038) (0.170(-0.037)(+0.045)) is obtained at delta(CP) = 0. When combining the result with the current best knowledge of oscillation parameters including the world average value of theta(13) from reactor experiments, some values of delta(CP) are disfavored at the 90% C. L.

515 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The resulting integrated SWAN + ADCIRC system is highly scalable and allows for localized increases in resolution without the complexity or cost of nested meshes or global interpolation between heterogeneous meshes.

514 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a new type of geopolymer composite was synthesized from two industrial wastes, red mud (RM) and rice husk ash (RHA), at varying mixing ratios of raw materials and the resulting products characterized by mechanical compression testing, X-ray diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy to assess their mechanical properties, microstructure, and reaction reactions.
Abstract: A new type of geopolymer composite was synthesized from two industrial wastes, red mud (RM) and rice husk ash (RHA), at varying mixing ratios of raw materials and the resulting products characterized by mechanical compression testing, X-ray diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy to assess their mechanical properties, microstructure, and geopolymerization reactions. Prolonged curing significantly increases the compressive strength and Young’s modulus, but reduces the ductility. Higher RHA/RM ratios generally lead to higher strength, stiffness, and ductility, but excessive RHA may cause the opposite effect. The compressive strength ranges from 3.2 to 20.5 MPa for the synthesized geopolymers with nominal Si/Al ratios of 1.68–3.35. Microstructural and compositional analyses showed that the final products are mainly composed of amorphous geopolymer binder with both inherited and neoformed crystalline phases as fillers, rendering the composites very complex composition and highly variable mechanical properties. Uncertainties in the composition, microstructure, the extent of RHA dissolution, and side reactions may be potential barriers for the practical application of the RM–RHA based geopolymers as a construction material.

513 citations


Authors

Showing all 40485 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
H. S. Chen1792401178529
John A. Rogers1771341127390
Omar M. Yaghi165459163918
Barry M. Popkin15775190453
John E. Morley154137797021
Claude Bouchard1531076115307
Ruth J. F. Loos14264792485
Ali Khademhosseini14088776430
Shanhui Fan139129282487
Joseph E. LeDoux13947891500
Christopher T. Walsh13981974314
Kenneth A. Dodge13846879640
Steven B. Heymsfield13267977220
George A. Bray131896100975
Zhanhu Guo12888653378
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202362
2022608
20213,042
20203,095
20192,874
20182,762