585 research outputs found
RISK PERCEPTIONS AND MANAGEMENT RESPONSES: PRODUCER-GENERATED HYPOTHESES FOR RISK MODELING
Farm level risk analyses have used price and yield variability almost exclusively to represent risk. Results from a survey of 149 agricultural producers in 12 states indicate that producers consider a broader range of sources of variability in their operations. Significant differences exist among categories with respect to the importance of the sources of variability in crop and livestock production. Producers also used a variety of management responses to variability. There were significant difference among categories in the importance given to particular responses and their use of them. These results have implications for research, extension, and policy programs.Risk and Uncertainty,
COBE Observations of the Microwave Counterparts of Gamma Ray Bursts
We have used the data from the COBE satellite to search for delayed microwave
emission (31 - 90 GHz) from Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs). The large beam
of COBE is well matched to the large positional uncertainties in the GRB
locations, although it also means that fluxes from (point source) GRB objects
will be diluted. In view of this we are doing a statistical search of the GRBs
which occurred during the currently released COBE DMR data (years 1990 and
1991), which overlap GRBs recorded by GRO. Here we concentrate on
just the top 10 GRBs (in peak counts/second). We obtain the limits on the
emission by comparing the COBE fluxes before and after the GRB at the GRB
location. Since it is thought that the microwave emission should lag the GRB
event, we have searched the GRB position for emission in the few months
following the GRB occurrence.Comment: 5 pages, LaTE
Asymptotic entanglement in 1D quantum walks with a time-dependent coined
Discrete-time quantum walk evolve by a unitary operator which involves two
operators a conditional shift in position space and a coin operator. This
operator entangles the coin and position degrees of freedom of the walker. In
this paper, we investigate the asymptotic behavior of the coin position
entanglement (CPE) for an inhomogeneous quantum walk which determined by two
orthogonal matrices in one-dimensional lattice. Free parameters of coin
operator together provide many conditions under which a measurement perform on
the coin state yield the value of entanglement on the resulting position
quantum state. We study the problem analytically for all values that two free
parameters of coin operator can take and the conditions under which
entanglement becomes maximal are sought.Comment: 23 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in IJMPB. arXiv admin
note: text overlap with arXiv:1001.5326 by other author
Tameness of holomorphic closure dimension in a semialgebraic set
Given a semianalytic set S in a complex space and a point p in S, there is a
unique smallest complex-analytic germ at p which contains the germ of S, called
the holomorphic closure of S at p. We show that if S is semialgebraic then its
holomorphic closure is a Nash germ, for every p, and S admits a semialgebraic
filtration by the holomorphic closure dimension. As a consequence, every
semialgebraic subset of a complex vector space admits a semialgebraic
stratification into CR manifolds satisfying a strong version of the condition
of the frontier.Comment: Published versio
IDENTIFICATION OF ERRORS IN COTTON FIBER DATA SETS USING BAYESIAN NETWORKS
Cotton fiber is graded on a series of parameters based on physiological factors (strength, length, and thickness), lint color, and presence of non-lint matter such as leaves, stems or other foreign materials. Cotton lint is graded by the USDA-AMS after harvest and ginning, and the grade determines the price of the lint. Given the importance of cotton fiber quality to the value of the crop, the spatial variability of cotton fiber properties is of particular interest to researchers and producers in developing management scenarios for optimal profitability. Previous research studies have relied on hand-harvesting the cotton at intervals throughout the field to obtain a measure of the cotton fiber quality and the extent of spatial variability. However, hand-harvested cotton has different qualities than that harvested by machine and ginned in the large-scale production gins. Part of this arises from the difference in efficiency of harvest between machine and humans, and part results from the different gins used for the smaller sample sizes. While these studies have demonstrated the extent of spatial variability of fiber properties, handharvesting is not amenable to large-scale or production research efforts. Moreover, the differences in fiber properties limit the extension of the results to the production setting. We have developed a mechanism of sampling cotton from the cotton chute during mechanical harvest. The samples are then ginned on a research gin. This study was undertaken to develop a method of translating these small-scale researcher level results to full-scale production level results. The research reported here is the first step in that effort, and demonstrates the use of Bayesian networks to detect erroneous entries in cotton fiber data sets
Infrared receivers for low background astronomy: Incoherent detectors and coherent devices from one micrometer to one millimeter
The status of incoherent detectors and coherent receivers over the infrared wavelength range from one micrometer to one millimeter is described. General principles of infrared receivers are included, and photon detectors, bolometers, coherent receivers, and important supporting technologies are discussed, with emphasis on their suitability for low background astronomical applications. Broad recommendations are presented and specific opportunities are identified for development of improved devices
Extremal discs and the holomorphic extension from convex hypersurfaces
Let D be a convex domain with smooth boundary in complex space and let f be a
continuous function on the boundary of D. Suppose that f holomorphically
extends to the extremal discs tangent to a convex subdomain of D. We prove that
f holomorphically extends to D. The result partially answers a conjecture by
Globevnik and Stout of 1991
Autoantibodies to Hair Follicles in C3H/HeJ Mice With Alopecia Areata–Like Hair Loss
We have previously described spontaneous but reversible hair loss that clinically and histologically resembles human alopecia areata in a colony of C3H/HeJ mice. Alopecia areata in humans is associated with antibodies to hair follicles. This study was conducted to determine whether C3H/HeJ mice with hair loss have a similar abnormal antibody response to hair follicles. Eighteen C3H/HeJ mice with alopecia, 12 unaffected littermates, and 15 control mice were examined for circulating antibodies to C3H/HeJ anagen hair follicles by indirect immunofluorescence and against extracts of isolated C3H/HeJ and human anagen hair follicles by immunoblotting. Using both procedures, antibodies to anagen hair follicles were present in all C3H/HeJ mice with alopecia but in none of the control mice. The antibodies were also present in some unaffected C3H/HeJ littermates but were absent in mice of an unrelated strain with inflammatory skin disease and alopecia, indicating that their appearance did not result from the hair loss. These antibodies reacted to hair follicle–specific antigens of 40–60kDa present in murine and human anagen hair follicles. These antigens were also reactive with human alopecia areata antibodies. Some of the antibodies in both C3H/HeJ mice and humans with alopecia areata reacted to antigens of 44 and 46 kDa, which were identified as hair follicle–specific keratins. This study indicates that C3H/HeJ mice with hair loss have circulating antibodies to hair follicles similar to those present in humans with alopecia areata. These findings confirm that these mice are an appropriate model for human alopecia areata and support the hypothesis that alopecia areata results from an abnormal autoimmune response to hair follicles
FUSE and HST STIS Observations of Hot and Cold Gas in the AB Aurigae System
We present the first observations of a Herbig Ae star with a circumstellar
disk by the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE), as well as a
simultaneous observation of the star obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope
Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). The spectra of AB Aurigae show
emission and absorption features arising from gasses that have a wide range in
temperature, from hot OVI emission to cold molecular hydrogen and CO
absorption. Emissions from the highly ionized species OVI and CIII present in
the FUSE spectrum are redshifted, while absorption features arising from
low-ionization species like OI, NI, and SiII are blueshifted and show
characteristic stellar wind line-profiles. We find the total column density of
molecular hydrogen toward AB Aur from the FUSE apectrum, N(H_2) = (6.8 +/- 0.5)
x 10^19 cm^-2. The gas kinetic temperature of the molecular hydrogen derived
from the ratio N(J=1)/N(J=0) is 65 +/- 4 K. The column density of the CO
observed in the STIS spectrum is N(CO) = (7.1 +/- 0.5) x 10^13 cm^-2, giving a
CO/H_2 ratio of (1.04 +/- 0.11) x 10^-6. We also use the STIS spectrum to find
the column density of HI, permitting us to calculate the total column density
of hydrogen atoms, the fractional abundance of H_2, and the gas-to-dust ratio.Comment: 5 pages, including 6 figures. LaTex2e (emulateapj5.sty). Accepted for
publication in ApJ Letter
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