3,612 research outputs found
Adding chopped straw to concentrate feed: the effect of inclusion rate and particle length on intake behaviour of horses
Clinical guidelines for the management of cutaneous leishmaniasis in British military personnel.
The influence of boot design on exercise associated surface temperature of tendons in horses [forthcoming]
Sport horses frequently injure tendons of the lower limb. Tendon boots are commonly applied for structural support and trauma prevention during competitions. However these boots may increase heat stress in the area. Two separate studies were carried out with the aim to improve understanding of the effect of boots on heat around the tendon area. Study 1 measured heat emitted from two types of boots (traditional and perforated, cross over design) covering the superficial digital flexor tendon (SDFT) in 4 horses during a set ridden and lunged exercise test. Study 2, a Field test, measured the effect of boot style (traditional, perforated and open fronted) on skin surface temperature in 131 horses, after completing a cross country event test (either a BE 100 three day event or a CCI* - two day short format event). The Raytek Raynger ST20 (infrared thermometer) was used to measure temperatures during both studies. The MobIR®M4 Thermal Imager was also used in Study 1 to compare measurement methods. A significant correlation was found between both measurement types (p<0.001; R2=0.94). Boots designed with perforations demonstrated greater heat emissions than traditional (non-perforated) boots (+ 3.5°C, p<0.01). In Study 2 mean tendon surface temperature for perforated type boots (28.0°C) was significantly lower than for traditional boots (32.3°C) and for open fronted tendon boots (31.1°C) (P<0.001). As this was an applied field study, additional environmental factors, such as speed and fitness level of horses, may have influenced results
The influence of low versus high fibre haylage diets in combination with training or pasture rest on equine gastric ulceration syndrome (EGUS)
The aim of this field study was to examine the influence of a low fibre (LF) and a high fibre (HF) diet on the presence of gastric ulceration in thirty 3-year old Dutch Warmblood horses during training period and during pasture rest. In the first part of the study all horses were stabled individually and fed either an iso-energetic HF (75% haylage) or LF (25% haylage) diet for sixteen weeks. Horses were exercised daily throughout this period, after which the first gastroscopy was performed. The second gastroscopy for all horses was performed following a fourteen week Pasture period during which grass was supplemented with haylage. Contrary to expectations the scores for number and severity of gastric lesions during the Training period were significantly higher in the HF group compared to the LF group. Additionally, horses of the HF group showed high haylage retention in the stomach after 12 hours fasting, whilst the LF group exhibited marked bedding eating and coprophagia. The results of gastroscopy following the Pasture period with extra haylage feeding for all horses, were similar to the HF horses following the Training period. These unexpected results may be related to the retention of the pre-fermented feed (haylage) in the stomach leading to continuing fermentation with increased volatile fatty acid (VFA) production in the stomach. The consumption of bedding and coprophagy shown by the LF group may have limited the previously reported high risk of gastric ulceration on a lowfibre diet
Starobinsky-like inflation in no-scale supergravity Wess-Zumino model with Polonyi term
We propose a simple modification of the no-scale supergravity Wess-Zumino
model of Starobinsky-like inflation to include a Polonyi term in the
superpotential. The purpose of this term is to provide an explicit mechanism
for supersymmetry breaking at the end of inflation. We show how successful
inflation can be achieved for a gravitino mass satisfying the strict upper
bound TeV, with favoured values
TeV. The model suggests that SUSY may be discovered in collider physics
experiments such as the LHC or the FCC.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Skyrmion Multi-Walls
Skyrmion walls are topologically-nontrivial solutions of the Skyrme system
which are periodic in two spatial directions. We report numerical
investigations which show that solutions representing parallel multi-walls
exist. The most stable configuration is that of the square -wall, which in
the limit becomes the cubically-symmetric Skyrme crystal. There is
also a solution resembling parallel hexagonal walls, but this is less stable.Comment: 7 pages, 1 figur
CPT Violation, Strings, and Neutral-Meson Systems
This talk provides a short overview of recent results on possible CPT
violation and some associated experimental signatures.Comment: Presented at Orbis Scientiae, January 199
The effect of presenting forage in multi-layered haynets and at multiple sites on night time budgets of stabled horses
The aim of this study was to explore the efficacy of multi-layered haynets and multiple presentation of haynets to increase time spent on feed intake behaviour at night (13 hours observation). For preliminary assessment two horses performing the oral stereotypy of crib biting were included. Six horses received the same amount of forage during a 22-day, crossover study where treatment consisted of either forage presentation in a single small-holed haynet (SH) or the forage was divided between 3 haynet combinations hung up simultaneously = multiple haynets (MH). The three haynets presented simultaneously consisted of a) MH single haynet (same as SH), b) MH double layered haynet and c) MH triple layered haynet. Multiple haynets were presented, in random order, on three sides of the stable. Horses were filmed using a video surveillance camera with infrared light source. Behaviour was observed for at least 4 nights per treatment (one night during the acclimatisation period [nights 2-4] and three nights during the end period [nights 7-11]). The observation period commenced at 16:30 - 17.00h (point of haynets being presented) until 06.00h (all horses) or 9.00h (2 crib-biting horses) the next morning. Data was analysed for normal distribution and Anova between haynets, paired t-tests between treatments and Pearson Correlation were used (SPSS. 17.00; 2012). There was a significant effect of type of haynet (p<0.001) on intake time per kg forage (min/kg for SH: 39; MH all (data combined): 51; MH Single: 27; MH Double: 67; MH Triple: 78; overall sem. 8.9). The overall time budget (minutes per observation hour) showed a significant difference between treatments for eating from haynet, standing still, locomotion and drinking. Horses finished eating from SH haynets at around 01:38 am (±1.05 hours s.d.), were last observed at the double net at 03:00 am and at the triple net at 05:12 am (±1.25 hours s.d.). Based on these results, providing 6 kg of forage in 3 double-layered, 2.5 cm haynets spread around the stable could potentially lead to an increased feeding time of 2 hours per night compared to a single 2.5 cm holed haynet containing 6 kg. From the continuous observation data a clear visual difference in crib-biting pattern and therefore motivation to perform crib-biting emerged between the two stereotypic horses
Automation of one-loop QCD corrections
We present the complete automation of the computation of one-loop QCD
corrections, including UV renormalization, to an arbitrary scattering process
in the Standard Model. This is achieved by embedding the OPP integrand
reduction technique, as implemented in CutTools, into the MadGraph framework.
By interfacing the tool so constructed, which we dub MadLoop, with MadFKS, the
fully automatic computation of any infrared-safe observable at the
next-to-leading order in QCD is attained. We demonstrate the flexibility and
the reach of our method by calculating the production rates for a variety of
processes at the 7 TeV LHC.Comment: 64 pages, 12 figures. Corrected the value of m_Z in table 1. In table
2, corrected the values of cross sections in a.4 and a.5 (previously computed
with mu=mtop/2 rather than mu=mtop/4). In table 2, corrected the values of
NLO cross sections in b.3, b.6, c.3, and e.7 (the symmetry factor for a few
virtual channels was incorrect). In sect. A.4.3, the labeling of the
four-momenta was incorrec
W boson production at hadron colliders: the lepton charge asymmetry in NNLO QCD
We consider the production of W bosons in hadron collisions, and the
subsequent leptonic decay W->lnu_l. We study the asymmetry between the rapidity
distributions of the charged leptons, and we present its computation up to the
next-to-next-to-leading order (NNLO) in QCD perturbation theory. Our
calculation includes the dependence on the lepton kinematical cuts that are
necessarily applied to select W-> lnu_l events in actual experimental analyses
at hadron colliders. We illustrate the main differences between the W and
lepton charge asymmetry, and we discuss their physical origin and the effect of
the QCD radiative corrections. We show detailed numerical results on the charge
asymmetry in ppbar collisions at the Tevatron, and we discuss the comparison
with some of the available data. Some illustrative results on the lepton charge
asymmetry in pp collisions at LHC energies are presented.Comment: 37 pages, 21 figure
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