5,439 research outputs found
Father and son agreements
Cover title.Includes bibliographical references (page 23)
Compare your dairy business with an analysis of 56 central Missouri farms, 1952
Cover title.Includes bibliographical references
Machinery use and investment on Missouri farms, 1951
This bulletin is a report on Department of Agricultural Economics Research Project Number 88, entitled 'Cost and Practice Problems of Farm Power and Machinery Modernization'--P. [2].Digitized 2007 AES.Includes bibliographical references
NMR quantum simulation of localization effects induced by decoherence
The loss of coherence in quantum mechanical superposition states limits the
time for which quantum information remains useful. Similarly, it limits the
distance over which quantum information can be transmitted, resembling Anderson
localization, where disorder causes quantum mechanical states to become
localized. Here, we investigate in a nuclear spin-based quantum simulator, the
localization of the size of spin clusters that are generated by a Hamiltonian
driving the transmission of information, while a variable-strength perturbation
counteracts the spreading. We find that the system reaches a dynamic
equilibrium size, which decreases with the square of the perturbation strength.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figure
A neighbourhood-scale estimate for the cooling potential of green roofs
Green roofs offer the possibility to mitigate multiple environmental issues in an urban environment. A common benefit attributed to green roofs is the temperature reduction through evaporation. This study focuses on evaluating the effect that evaporative cooling has on outdoor air temperatures in an urban environment. An established urban energy balance model was modified to quantify the cooling potential of green roofs and study the scalability of this mitigation strategy. Simulations were performed for different climates and urban geometries, with varying soil moisture content, green roof fraction and urban surface layer thickness. All simulations show a linear relationship between surface layer temperature reduction ΔTs and domain averaged evaporation rates from vegetation mmW, i.e. ΔTs = eW ⋅ mmW, where eW is the evaporative cooling potential with a value of ∼ −0.35 Kdaymm−1. This relationship is independent of the method by which water is supplied. We also derive a simple algebraic relation for eW using a Taylor series expansion
A Sustained Dietary Change Increases Epigenetic Variation in Isogenic Mice
Epigenetic changes can be induced by adverse environmental exposures, such as nutritional imbalance, but little is known about the nature or extent of these changes. Here we have explored the epigenomic effects of a sustained nutritional change, excess dietary methyl donors, by assessing genomic CpG methylation patterns in isogenic mice exposed for one or six generations. We find stochastic variation in methylation levels at many loci; exposure to methyl donors increases the magnitude of this variation and the number of variable loci. Several gene ontology categories are significantly overrepresented in genes proximal to these methylation-variable loci, suggesting that certain pathways are susceptible to environmental influence on their epigenetic states. Long-term exposure to the diet (six generations) results in a larger number of loci exhibiting epigenetic variability, suggesting that some of the induced changes are heritable. This finding presents the possibility that epigenetic variation within populations can be induced by environmental change, providing a vehicle for disease predisposition and possibly a substrate for natural selection.This work was supported by the Australian Research Council (DP0771859) and the National Health and Medical Research Council (#459412, #635510)
Adding Salt to an Aqueous Solution of t-Butanol: Is Hydrophobic Association Enhanced or Reduced?
Recent neutron scattering experiments on aqueous salt solutions of
amphiphilic t-butanol by Bowron and Finney [Phys. Rev. Lett. {\bf 89}, 215508
(2002); J. Chem. Phys. {\bf 118}, 8357 (2003)] suggest the formation of
t-butanol pairs, bridged by a chloride ion via
hydrogen-bonds, and leading to a reduced number of intermolecular hydrophobic
butanol-butanol contacts. Here we present a joint experimental/theoretical
study on the same system, using a combination of molecular dynamics simulations
and nuclear magnetic relaxation measurements. Both theory and experiment
clearly support the more intuitive scenario of an enhanced number of
hydrophobic contacts in the presence of the salt, as it would be expected for
purely hydrophobic solutes [J. Phys. Chem. B {\bf 107}, 612 (2003)]. Although
our conclusions arrive at a structurally completely distinct scenario, the
molecular dynamics simulation results are within the experimental errorbars of
the Bowron and Finney work.Comment: 15 pages twocolumn revtex, 11 figure
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