5,154 research outputs found
Farm ponds for Iowa
Every farm must have an adequate water supply which can be depended upon for livestock during periods of extended drouth. Many farmers in southern Iowa depend upon their farm ponds as a,principal source of water or to supplement their wells. A well planned and constructed farm pond may be what you need to insure an adequate supply of water on your farm at all times if your present water supply is not dependable.
A farm pond will be a ready source of water for many years if properly planned, constructed and maintained. Before investing money in a farm pond, however, consider a number of important problems. Then decide what is best for you and your farm. Your county extension director or technician of your local soil conservation district may be able to help plan the pond.
A farm pond, in addition to its usefulness in providing water for livestock, can serve other important needs on the farm. The pond can supply water for fire protection, limited irrigation, orchard and crop spraying, fish production, recreation and waterfowl. A pond properly planned and maintained can be stocked with fish and thereby be a source of food as well as provide sport for the family or neighbors
Maternal Age and Infant Mortality: A Test of the Wilcox-Russell Hypothesis
It has been argued (e.g., the Wilcox-Russell hypothesis) that (low) birth weight is a correlate of adverse birth outcomes but is not on the “causal” pathway to infant mortality. However, the US national policy for reducing infant mortality is to reduce low birth weight. If these theoretical views are correct, lowering the rate of low birth weight may have little effect on infant mortality. In this paper, the authors use the “covariate density defined mixture of logistic regressions” method to formally test the Wilcox-Russell hypothesis that a covariate which influences birth weight, in this case maternal age, can influence infant mortality directly but not indirectly through birth weight. The authors analyze data from 8 populations in New York State (1985–1988). The results indicate that among the populations examined, 1) maternal age significantly influences the birth weight distribution and 2) maternal age also affects infant mortality directly, but 3) the influence of maternal age on the birth weight distribution has little or no effect on infant mortality, because the birth-weight-specific mortality curve shifts accordingly to compensate for changes in the birth weight distribution. These results tend to support the Wilcox-Russell hypothesis for maternal age
The Rest-Frame Optical Spectrum of MS 1512-cB58
Moderate resolution, near-IR spectroscopy of MS1512-cB58 is presented,
obtained during commissioning of the the Near IR Spectrometer (NIRSPEC) on the
Keck II telescope. The strong lensing of this z=2.72 galaxy by the foreground
cluster MS1512+36 makes it the best candidate for detailed study of the
rest-frame optical properties of Lyman Break Galaxies.
A redshift of z=2.7290+/-0.0007 is inferred from the emission lines, in
contrast to the z=2.7233 calculated from UV observations of interstellar
absorption lines. Using the Balmer line ratios, we find an extinction of
E(B-V)=0.27. Using the line strengths, we infer an SFR=620+/-18 Msun/yr
(H_0=75, q_0=0.1, Lambda =0), a factor of 2 higher than that measured from
narrow-band imaging observations of the galaxy, but a factor of almost 4 lower
than the SFR inferred from the UV continuum luminosity. The width of the Balmer
lines yields a mass of M_vir=1.2x10^10 Msun. We find that the oxygen abundance
is 1/3 solar, in good agreement with other estimates of the metallicity.
However, we infer a high nitrogen abundance, which may argue for the presence
of an older stellar population.Comment: 14 pages, including 3 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ
Letter
Perturbative and non-perturbative studies with the delta function potential
We show that the delta function potential can be exploited along with
perturbation theory to yield the result of certain infinite series. The idea is
that any exactly soluble potential if coupled with a delta function potential
remains exactly soluble. We use the strength of the delta function as an
expansion parameter and express the second-order energy shift as an infinite
sum in perturbation theory. The analytical solution is used to determine the
second-order energy shift and hence the sum of an infinite series. By an
appropriate choice of the unperturbed system, we can show the importance of the
continuum in the energy shift of bound states.Comment: 19 pages, 2 table
Assessing the influence of lake and watershed attributes on snowmelt bypass at thermokarst lakes
Snow represents the largest potential source of water for thermokarst lakes, but the runoff generated by snowmelt (freshet) can flow beneath lake ice and via the outlet without mixing with and replacing pre-snowmelt lake water. Although this phenomenon, called “snowmelt bypass”, is common in ice-covered lakes, it is unknown which lake and watershed properties cause variation in snowmelt bypass among lakes. Understanding the variability of snowmelt bypass is important because the amount of freshet that is mixed into a lake affects the hydrological and biogeochemical properties of the lake. To explore lake and watershed attributes that influence snowmelt bypass, we sampled 17 open-drainage thermokarst lakes for isotope analysis before and after snowmelt. Isotope data were used to estimate the amount of lake water replaced by freshet and to observe how the water sources of lakes changed in response to the freshet. Among the lakes, a median of 25.2 % of lake water was replaced by freshet, with values ranging widely from 5.2 % to 52.8 %. For every metre that lake depth increased, the portion of lake water replaced by freshet decreased by an average of 13 %, regardless of the size of the lake's watershed. The thickness of the freshet layer was not proportional to maximum lake depth, so that a relatively larger portion of pre-snowmelt lake water remained isolated in deeper lakes. We expect that a similar relationship between increasing lake depth and greater snowmelt bypass could be present at all ice-covered open-drainage lakes that are partially mixed during the freshet. The water source of freshet that was mixed into lakes was not exclusively snowmelt but a combination of snowmelt mixed with rain-sourced water that was released as the soil thawed after snowmelt. As climate warming increases rainfall and shrubification causes earlier snowmelt timing relative to lake ice melt, snowmelt bypass may become more prevalent, with the water remaining in thermokarst lakes post-freshet becoming increasingly rainfall sourced. However, if climate change causes lake levels to fall below the outlet level (i.e., lakes become closed-drainage), more freshet may be retained by thermokarst lakes as snowmelt bypass will not be able to occur until lakes reach their outlet level.</p
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Quantifying sources of inter-model diversity in the cloud albedo effect
There is large diversity in simulated aerosol forcing among models that participated in the fifth Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5), particularly related to aerosol interactions with clouds. Here we use the reported model data and fitted aerosol-cloud relations to separate the main sources of inter-model diversity in the magnitude of the cloud albedo effect. There is large diversity in the global load and spatial distribution of sulfate aerosol, as well as in global-mean cloud-top effective radius. The use of different parameterizations of aerosol-cloud interactions makes the largest contribution to diversity
in modeled radiative forcing (up to -39%, +48% about the mean estimate). Uncertainty in pre-industrial sulfate load also makes a substantial contribution (-15%, +61% about the mean estimate), with smaller contributions from inter-model differences in the historical change in sulfate load and in mean cloud fraction
Development of a chromium-thoria alloy
Low temperature ductility and high temperature strength of pure chromium and chromium-thoria alloy prepared from vapor deposited powder
Distinguished Lecture on Economics in Government: The Private Uses of Public Interests: Incentives and Institutions
As a long-time student of the public sector, I welcomed the opportunity to come to Washington as a member of the Council of Economic Advisers and later to become the Chairman of the Council, partly because it gave me an opportunity to study at first hand this immensely important part of our economy and society and to test my ideas against the reality of government in action
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