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ABSTRACT 1. Aposematic signals advertise prey distastefulness or metabolic unprofitability to potential predators and have evolved independently in many prey groups over the course of evolutionary history as a means of protection from predation. Most aposematic signals investigated to date exhibit highly chromatic patterning; however, relatives in these toxic groups

ABSTRACT 1. Aposematic signals advertise prey distastefulness or metabolic unprofitability to potential predators and have evolved independently in many prey groups over the course of evolutionary history as a means of protection from predation. Most aposematic signals investigated to date exhibit highly chromatic patterning; however, relatives in these toxic groups with patterns of very low chroma have been largely overlooked. 2. We propose that bright displays with low chroma arose in toxic prey species because they were more effective at deterring predation than were their chromatic counterparts, especially when viewed in relatively low light environments such as forest understories. 3. We analyzed the reflectance and radiance of color patches on the wings of 90 tropical butterfly species that belong to groups with documented toxicity that vary in their habitat preferences to test this prediction: Warning signal chroma and perceived chromaticity are expected to be higher and brightness lower in species that fly in open environments when compared to those that fly in forested environments. 4. Analyses of the reflectance and radiance of warning color patches and predator visual modeling support this prediction. Moreover, phylogenetic tests, which correct for statistical non-independence due to phylogenetic relatedness of test species, also support the hypothesis of an evolutionary correlation between perceived chromaticity of aposematic signals and the flight habits of the butterflies that exhibit these signals.
ContributorsDouglas, Jonathan Marion (Author) / Rutowski, Ronald L (Thesis advisor) / Gadau, Juergen (Committee member) / McGraw, Kevin J. (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
Description
Producing a brighter electron beams requires the smallest possible emittance from the cathode with the highest possible current. Several materials like ordered surface, single-crystalline metal surfaces, ordered surface, epitaxially grown high quantum efficiency alkali-antimonides, topologically non-trivial Dirac semimetals, and nano-structured confined emission photocathodes show promise of achieving ultra-low emittance with

Producing a brighter electron beams requires the smallest possible emittance from the cathode with the highest possible current. Several materials like ordered surface, single-crystalline metal surfaces, ordered surface, epitaxially grown high quantum efficiency alkali-antimonides, topologically non-trivial Dirac semimetals, and nano-structured confined emission photocathodes show promise of achieving ultra-low emittance with large currents. This work investigates the various limitations to obtain the smallest possible emittance from photocathodes, and demonstrates the performance of a novel electron gun that can utilize these photocathodes under optimal photoemission conditions. Chapter 2 discusses the combined effect of physical roughness and work function variation which contributes to the emittance. This is particularly seen in polycrystalline materials and is an explanation for their higher than expected emittance performance when operated at the photoemission threshold. A computation method is described for estimating the simultaneous contribution of both types of roughness on the mean transverse energy. This work motivates the need for implementing ordered surface, single-crystalline or epitaxially grown photocathodes. Chapter 3 investigates the effects of coulomb interactions on electron beams from theoretically low emittance, low total energy spread nanoscale photoemission sources specifically for electron microscopy applications. This computation work emphasizes the key role that image charge effects have on such cold, dense electron beams. Contrary to initial expectations, the primary limiter to beam brightness for theoretically ultra-low emittance photocathodes is the saturation current. Chapters 4 and 5 describe the development and commissioning of a high accelerating gradient, cryogenically cooled electron gun and photoemission diagnostics beamline within the Arizona State University Photoemission and Bright Beams research lab. This accelerator is unique in it's capability to utilize photocathodes mounted on holders typically used in commercial surface chemistry tools, has the necessary features and tools for operating in the optimal regime for many advanced photocathodes. A Pinhole Scan technique has been implemented on the beamline, and has shown a full 4-dimensional phase space measurement demonstrating the ability to measure beam brightness in this gun. This gun will allow for the demonstration of ultra-high brightness from next-generation ultra-low emittance photocathodes.
ContributorsGevorkyan, Gevork Samvelovich (Author) / Karkare, Siddharth (Thesis advisor) / Padmore, Howard (Committee member) / Alarcon, Ricardo (Committee member) / Kaindl, Robert (Committee member) / Graves, William (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023