12,727 research outputs found
Australian Organic Market Report 2008
Being four years since the publication of a similar research document, the Australian Organic Market Report (AOMR) 2008 is a landmark report for the organic industry. The report will be invaluable for monitoring and planning the industry development during a period of high growth.
Delivering consistent data for benchmarking growth across the various sectors of the industry, it will be a key tool for decision making by organic producers and marketers, along with interested parties such as government and media, in assisting in understanding the nature, size and development of the organic industry in Australia.
Supply chain development has been hindered over many years by a lack of basic information about volumes, seasonality, continuity and quality, not only making it difficult for potentially new members of industry to feel confident about investing in organic, however also likely to cause overseas buyers to look for other countries with more comprehensive industry information.
The report is an important base research document required by any growing industry. It has been commissioned by Biological Farmers of Australia (BFA), and has been carried out independently by the University of New England’s Organic Research Group. The report has the financial support of major sponsor Westpac Bank, all State Governments in Australia as well as many dedicated industry businesses
Observing a Light CP-Violating Higgs Boson in Diffraction
Light CP-violating Higgs bosons with mass lower than 70 GeV might have
escaped detection in direct searches at the LEP collider. They may remain
undetected in conventional search channels at the Tevatron and LHC. In this
Letter we show that exclusive diffractive reactions may be able to probe for
the existence of these otherwise elusive Higgs particles. As a prototype
example, we calculate diffractive production cross-sections of the lightest
Higgs boson within the framework of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
with explicit CP violation. Our analysis shows that the challenging regions of
parameter space corresponding to a light CP-violating Higgs boson might be
accessible at the LHC provided suitable proton tagging detectors are installed.Comment: 9 pages, LaTeX, 2 figures, version as to appear in Phys. Rev.
Computer aided systems human engineering: A hypermedia tool
The Computer Aided Systems Human Engineering (CASHE) system, Version 1.0, is a multimedia ergonomics database on CD-ROM for the Apple Macintosh II computer, being developed for use by human system designers, educators, and researchers. It will initially be available on CD-ROM and will allow users to access ergonomics data and models stored electronically as text, graphics, and audio. The CASHE CD-ROM, Version 1.0 will contain the Boff and Lincoln (1988) Engineering Data Compendium, MIL-STD-1472D and a unique, interactive simulation capability, the Perception and Performance Prototyper. Its features also include a specialized data retrieval, scaling, and analysis capability and the state of the art in information retrieval, browsing, and navigation
HepData and JetWeb: HEP data archiving and model validation
The CEDAR collaboration is extending and combining the JetWeb and HepData
systems to provide a single service for tuning and validating models of
high-energy physics processes. The centrepiece of this activity is the fitting
by JetWeb of observables computed from Monte Carlo event generator events
against their experimentally determined distributions, as stored in HepData.
Caching the results of the JetWeb simulation and comparison stages provides a
single cumulative database of event generator tunings, fitted against a wide
range of experimental quantities. An important feature of this integration is a
family of XML data formats, called HepML.Comment: 4 pages, 0 figures. To be published in proceedings of CHEP0
Optimization approach for optical absorption in three-dimensional structures including solar cells
The rigorous coupled-wave approach (RCWA) and the differential evolution
algorithm (DEA) were coupled in a practicable approach to maximize absorption
in optical structures with three-dimensional morphology. As a model problem,
optimal values of four geometric parameters and the bandgaps of three i-layers
were found for an amorphous-silicon, multi-terminal, thin-film tandem solar
cell comprising three p-i-n junctions with a metallic hexagonally corrugated
back-reflector. When the optical short-circuit current density was chosen as
the figure of merit to be maximized, only the bandgap of the topmost i-layer
was significant and the remaining six parameters played minor roles. While this
configuration would absorb light very well, it would have poor electrical
performance. This is because the optimization problem allows for the
thicknesses and bandgaps of the semiconductor layers to change. We therefore
devised another figure of merit that takes into account bandgap changes by
estimating the open-circuit voltage. The resulting configuration was found to
be optimal with respect to all seven variable parameters. The RCWA+DEA
optimization approach is applicable to other types of photovoltaic solar cells
as well as optical absorbers, with the choice of the figure of merit being
vital to a successful outcome.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figure
A comparison of head and manual control for a position-control pursuit tracking task
Head control was compared with manual control in a pursuit tracking task involving proportional controlled-element dynamics. An integrated control/display system was used to explore tracking effectiveness in horizontal and vertical axes tracked singly and concurrently. Compared with manual tracking, head tracking resulted in a 50 percent greater rms error score, lower pilot gain, greater high-frequency phase lag and greater low-frequency remnant. These differences were statistically significant, but differences between horizontal- and vertical-axis tracking and between 1- and 2-axis tracking were generally small and not highly significant. Manual tracking results were matched with the optimal control model using pilot-related parameters typical of those found in previous manual control studies. Head tracking performance was predicted with good accuracy using the manual tracking model plus a model for head/neck response dynamics obtained from the literature
- …
