The X-ray Telescope (XRT) of the Hinode mission provides an unprecedented combination of spatial and temporal resolution in solar coronal studies. The high sensitivity and broad dynamic range of XRT, coupled with the spacecraft’s onboard memory capacity and the planned downlink capability will permit a broad range of coronal studies over an\ud
extended period of time, for targets ranging from quiet Sun to X-flares. This paper discusses in detail the design, calibration, and measured performance of the XRT instrument up to the focal plane. The CCD camera and data handling are discussed separately in a companion paper
Tucker, John M. (U. California, Davis.) Studies in the Quercus undulata complex. I. A preliminary statement. Amer. Jour. Bot. 48(3): 202–208. Illus. 1961.—The taxonomic history of Quercus undulata, a highly variable, problematic complex of the Southwest, is discussed. Conservatively treated as a single species, it comprises a wide range of forms which at one extreme approach Q. gambelii morphologically, and, at the other, Q. grisea, Q. turbinella, and other species. The postulate was made that Q. undulata had arisen through hybridization between these very different oaks. Field observations and preliminary study of numerous population samples confirm this postulate. (Detailed morphological analyses are in progress.) Seven species have apparently been involved—Q. gambelii (the “common denominator” of the complex) has hybridized in different parts of its range with one or another of the following: Q. arizonica, Q. turbinella, Q. havardii, Q. muehlenbergii, Q. mohriana, and Q. grisea. The latter 6 species are discussed individually, and the extent to which each contributes to the complex, and the area in which this occurs, are indicated.
Summary
Several cases are cited from the literature of misinterpretation of taxonomic relationships, where distantly related species of Quercus exhibit parallelism in leaf form. This paper presents a number of other examples in which species belonging to different subgenera are remarkably similar in gross leaf morphology. In each such example, the two species occur in very similar habitats, and actually co‐exist in some areas. It is assumed that their similarities are adaptive, and in two of the more extreme examples speculations are advanced as to what the adaptive significance may be.
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