987 research outputs found
Exploring the sensitivity of visual soil evaluation to traffic-induced soil compaction
peer-reviewedVisual Soil Evaluation (VSE) techniques are useful for assessing the impact of land management, particularly the identification and remediation of soil compaction. Despite an increasing body of VSE research, comparatively few studies have explored the sensitivity of VSE for capturing experimentally imposed compaction to estimate sensitivity and limit of detection. The aim of this research was to examine the ability of VSE techniques to indicate soil structure at different soil profile depths and to measure the associated soil productive function (yield) response to imposed compaction. A two-year experiment was conducted on sites with loam and sandy soils. Varying levels of wheeled traffic were imposed on plots in a randomised block design, prior to sowing winter barley (Hordeum vulgare L.). Quantitative crop and soil measurements were taken throughout the season in conjunction with VSE techniques, which assessed to 25 cm (VESS), 40 cm (Double Spade) and 80 cm (SubVESS) depth. Graduated changes were observed by soil and some crop quantitative measurements as traffic treatment varied. VESS and Double Spade successfully identified a graduated treatment effect at all sites to 40 cm depth, although diagnosis translated into a yield response for the loam but not the sandy soil. Correlation between VESS Sq scores and crop yield were found. SubVESS gave mixed signals and indicated impacts lower in the profile in certain instances. These impacts were not captured by quantitative soil measurements.
This work highlights the capacity for VSE techniques to indicate soil structural damage, which may cause a crop yield response, therefore allowing appropriate soil management strategies to be deployed before yield penalties occur
Strongly correlated growth of Rydberg aggregates in a vapor cell
The observation of strongly interacting many-body phenomena in atomic gases typically requires ultracold samples. Here we show that the strong interaction potentials between Rydberg atoms enable the observation of many-body effects in an atomic vapor, even at room temperature. We excite Rydberg atoms in cesium vapor and observe in real-time an out-of-equilibrium excitation dynamics that is consistent with an aggregation mechanism. The experimental observations show qualitative and quantitative agreement with a microscopic theoretical model. Numerical simulations reveal that the strongly correlated growth of the emerging aggregates is reminiscent of soft-matter type systems
Argon annealing of the oxygen-isotope exchanged manganite La_{0.8}Ca_{0.2}MnO_{3+y}
We have resolved a controversial issue concerning the oxygen-isotope shift of
the ferromagnetic transition temperature T_{C} in the manganite
La_{0.8}Ca_{0.2}MnO_{3+y}. We show that the giant oxygen-isotope shift of T_C
observed in the normal oxygen-isotope exchanged samples is indeed intrinsic,
while a much smaller shift observed in the argon annealed samples is an
artifact. The argon annealing causes the 18O sample to partially exchange back
to the 16O isotope due to a small 16O contamination in the Ar gas. Such a
contamination is commonly caused by the oxygen outgas that is trapped in the
tubes, connectors and valves. The present results thus umambiguously
demonstrate that the observed large oxygen isotope effect is an intrinsic
property of manganites, and places an important constraint on the basic physics
of these materials.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
The Double Spade Method: a ‘mini-profile’ visual soil evaluation technique
peer-reviewedVisual Soil Evaluation (VSE) methods are established for soil quality assessment and focus
on the examination of soil structure and associated anthropogenic impacts. VSE techniques,
of which numerous types exist, are successfully used internationally both in soil research and
as sustainable soil management tools. Techniques are generally categorised into profile and
spade methods. Profile methods examine entire soil profiles in soil-pits to depths of ~ 1.5 m,
exploring interactions between inherent soil features and anthropic management at specific
sample points. Spade methods examine the upper soil profile, often by extracting sample
blocks of topsoil by spade and focus on anthropic impacts. The VESS method (Guimarães et
al., 2011) is a widely used spade method and involves assessment of soil sample blocks to 25
cm depth. However, in arable soils, important structural features may occur just below this
depth such as plough pans, which VESS may not capture. The SubVESS method (Ball et al.,
2015) follows principles of VESS but allows assessment to ~ 1 m depth. However, the later
involves soil-pit excavation by mechanical means, which may be destructive, costly, time
consuming and limit replication. When used in on-farm situations by farmers or advisors, full
soil-pit excavation may not be desirable. Here we describe a method previously outlined
(Emmet-Booth et al. 2018) called the Double Spade Method (DS) designed to examine miniprofiles
in soil pits to 40 cm depth, therefore capturing potential structural features below the
VESS assessment depth, without requiring full soil-pit excavation
DISSOCIATION OF O2 BY ELECTRON IMPACT IN PLASMA
Константа скорости диссоциации О2 была измерена в широком диапазоне E/N в тлеющем разряде постоянного тока. Поле Е определялось зондовым методом, а плотность газа N - из измерений газовой температуры по спектру излучения Р-ветви полосы O2(b1g+) O2(X3g-). Плотность атомов О(3P) измерялась методом TALIF, а отношение O(3P)/N, кроме этого, определялось методом актинометрии по атомам Ar. Время разрешенная актинометрия в модулированном разряде использовалась для определения скорости гибели атомов О(3Р). Из данных измерений была получена константа скорости диссоциации О2 как функция E/N. Анализ полученных данных позволил детально рассмотреть механизмы диссоциации и возбуждения высоких электронных состояний О2 и сформировать новый самосогласованный набор сечений для молекулы О2.DC glow discharges in pure O2 in a Pyrex tube were studied to measure dissociation rate constant over a wide range of E/N. E was found from probe measurements while gas density N - from the measurements of the gas temperature from the O2(b1g+) O2(X3g-) emission spectrum. O(3P) atom density was measured by TALIF while O(3P)/N ratio was also determined by Ar actinometry. Time-resolved actinometry on partially-modulated discharges was used to measure the loss rate of O atoms. From these measurements the O2 dissociation rate constant was determined as a function of E/N. The obtained data allowed analyzing both dissociation and excitation mechanisms of the high electronic states of O2 as well as forming a new self-consistent cross section set for O2 molecule.119-11
On the effects of the magnetic field and the isotopic substitution upon the infrared absorption of manganites
Employing a variational approach that takes into account electron-phonon and
magnetic interactions in perovskites with , the
effects of the magnetic field and the oxygen isotope substitution on the phase
diagram, the electron-phonon correlation function and the infrared absorption
at are studied. The lattice displacements show a strong correlation
with the conductivity and the magnetic properties of the system. Then the
conductivity spectra are characterized by a marked sensitivity to the external
parameters near the phase boundary.Comment: 10 figure
Model confidence sets and forecast combination: an application to age-specific mortality
Background: Model averaging combines forecasts obtained from a range of models, and it often produces more accurate forecasts than a forecast from a single model.
Objective: The crucial part of forecast accuracy improvement in using the model averaging lies in the determination of optimal weights from a finite sample. If the weights are selected sub-optimally, this can affect the accuracy of the model-averaged forecasts. Instead of choosing the optimal weights, we consider trimming a set of models before equally averaging forecasts from the selected superior models. Motivated by Hansen et al. (2011), we apply and evaluate the model confidence set procedure when combining mortality forecasts.
Data & Methods: The proposed model averaging procedure is motivated by Samuels and Sekkel (2017) based on the concept of model confidence sets as proposed by Hansen et al. (2011) that incorporates the statistical significance of the forecasting performance. As the model confidence level increases, the set of superior models generally decreases. The proposed model averaging procedure is demonstrated via national and sub-national Japanese mortality for retirement ages between 60 and 100+.
Results: Illustrated by national and sub-national Japanese mortality for ages between 60 and 100+, the proposed model-average procedure gives the smallest interval forecast errors, especially for males. Conclusion: We find that robust out-of-sample point and interval forecasts may be obtained from the trimming method. By robust, we mean robustness against model misspecification
Search for composite and exotic fermions at LEP 2
A search for unstable heavy fermions with the DELPHI detector at LEP is
reported. Sequential and non-canonical leptons, as well as excited leptons and
quarks, are considered. The data analysed correspond to an integrated
luminosity of about 48 pb^{-1} at an e^+e^- centre-of-mass energy of 183 GeV
and about 20 pb^{-1} equally shared between the centre-of-mass energies of 172
GeV and 161 GeV. The search for pair-produced new leptons establishes 95%
confidence level mass limits in the region between 70 GeV/c^2 and 90 GeV/c^2,
depending on the channel. The search for singly produced excited leptons and
quarks establishes upper limits on the ratio of the coupling of the excited
fermio
Study of Tau-pair Production in Photon-Photon Collisions at LEP and Limits on the Anomalous Electromagnetic Moments of the Tau Lepton
Tau-pair production in the process e+e- -> e+e-tau+tau- was studied using
data collected by the DELPHI experiment at LEP2 during the years 1997 - 2000.
The corresponding integrated luminosity is 650 pb^{-1}. The values of the
cross-section obtained are found to be in agreement with QED predictions.
Limits on the anomalous magnetic and electric dipole moments of the tau lepton
are deduced.Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, Accepted by Eur. Phys. J.
Evidence for an Excess of Soft Photons in Hadronic Decays of Z^0
Soft photons inside hadronic jets converted in front of the DELPHI main
tracker (TPC) in events of qqbar disintegrations of the Z^0 were studied in the
kinematic range 0.2 < E_gamma < 1 GeV and transverse momentum with respect to
the closest jet direction p_T < 80 MeV/c. A clear excess of photons in the
experimental data as compared to the Monte Carlo predictions is observed. This
excess (uncorrected for the photon detection efficiency) is (1.17 +/- 0.06 +/-
0.27) x 10^{-3} gamma/jet in the specified kinematic region, while the expected
level of the inner hadronic bremsstrahlung (which is not included in the Monte
Carlo) is (0.340 +/- 0.001 +/- 0.038) x 10^{-3} gamma/jet. The ratio of the
excess to the predicted bremsstrahlung rate is then (3.4 +/- 0.2 +/- 0.8),
which is similar in strength to the anomalous soft photon signal observed in
fixed target experiments with hadronic beams.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures, Accepted by Eur. Phys. J.
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