Baryon number conservation is not guaranteed by any fundamental symmetry within the Standard Model, and therefore has been a subject of experimental and theoretical scrutiny for decades. So far, no ...evidence for baryon number violation has been observed. Large underground detectors have long been used for both neutrino detection and searches for baryon number violating processes. The next generation of large neutrino detectors will seek to improve upon the limits set by past and current experiments and will cover a range of lifetimes predicted by several Grand Unified Theories. In this White Paper, we summarize theoretical motivations and experimental aspects of searches for baryon number violation in neutrino experiments.
The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) collaboration has developed the MICE Analysis User Software (MAUS) to simulate and analyze experimental data. It serves as the primary codebase for the ...experiment, providing for offline batch simulation and reconstruction as well as online data quality checks. The software provides both traditional particle-physics functionalities such as track reconstruction and particle identification, and accelerator physics functions, such as calculating transfer matrices and emittances. The code design is object orientated, but has a top-level structure based on the Map-Reduce model. This allows for parallelization to support live data reconstruction during data-taking operations. MAUS allows users to develop in either Python or C++ and provides APIs for both. Various software engineering practices from industry are also used to ensure correct and maintainable code, including style, unit and integration tests, continuous integration and load testing, code reviews, and distributed version control. The software framework and the simulation and reconstruction capabilities are described.
Research efforts have been made to develop novel tactics, such as those targeting behavioral control, for management of the Asian citrus psyllid
Diaphorina citri
Kuwayama (Hemiptera: Psyllidae), ...vector of the causal agent of citrus Huanglongbing. Here, we investigated whether association of “Ponkan” mandarin (
Citrus reticulata
) with volatiles from non-host crops: avocado, passion fruit or coffee, alters host location by the Asian citrus psyllid; and whether they can be temporary hosts for the Asian citrus psyllid. In wind tunnel assays, we found that the association of mandarin seedling with avocado plant volatiles reduced in 30% the number of psyllids sitting on host plants compared to the mandarin alone. In contrast, passion fruit plant volatiles facilitated host location by psyllids, which found mandarin seedlings faster than when exposed to mandarin alone. The association with coffee volatiles did not alter the attractiveness of mandarin to the Asian citrus psyllid. Survival and half-lethal time (LT
50
) of
D. citri
fed on non-host plants were longer than those insects with water only, but shorter than those fed on mandarin. Among the non-host plants,
D. citri
performed better in coffee, followed by avocado and passion fruit plants. Our results indicate that the association of mandarin with avocado plant can be beneficial for Asian citrus psyllid management.
Abstract Herbivory by insects leads to changes in both primary and secondary plant metabolism, ultimately impacting subsequent interactions. Some phloem‐feeding insects have developed mechanisms to ...suppress herbivore‐induced plant defences and manipulate the quality of host phloem sap, thereby facilitating their establishment on the host plant. Based on evidence that the specialized phloem‐feeding insects, Dalbulus maidis and Rhopalosiphum maidis , can suppress herbivore‐induced defences in maize, we hypothesized that infestation by either of these pests in maize would facilitate the colonization and establishment of subsequent conspecific and heterospecific individuals. We conducted a series of behavioural assays with these insects in both laboratory and greenhouse settings. The corn leafhopper D. maidis preferred previously infested plants as hosts, but it did not discriminate between conspecific‐ or heterospecific‐infested plants for colonization. However, when selecting a host for oviposition, it preferred depositing eggs on conspecific‐infested plants, which were the hosts that the offspring performed better compared to both non‐infested and heterospecific‐infested plants. The corn aphid R. maidis also preferred previously infested plants over non‐infested plants as hosts. However, the aphid preferred heterospecific‐infested over conspecific‐infested plants, even though heterospecific‐infested plants were hosts of lower quality to aphids. Aphids performed better on conspecific‐infested plants, followed by heterospecific‐infested plants, when compared to non‐infested plants. Our results confirm that previous colonization by the specialized phloem‐feeding insects facilitates subsequent infestations by conspecifics and heterospecifics. However, the facilitation for heterospecifics was asymmetric, as colonization by D. maidis facilitated infestations by R. maidis more than the reverse sequence of infestation.