458 research outputs found
The movement of spray drift near a live shelterbelt
Non-Peer ReviewedThere has been recent interest in the use of shelterbelts to mitigate spray drift and protect downwind areas. Previous research has investigated the interaction of spray drift and shelterbelts using model shelterbelts, wind tunnel experiments, and numerical modeling; however, there is limited knowledge on the movement of spray drift near a live shelterbelt in field conditions. These experiments measured the ground deposition and airborne concentration of drift near a live carragana/chokecherry mix shelterbelt. It was found that when compared to open field experiments where there was no shelterbelt, the mass of ground deposit was less in the lee of the shelterbelt for a distance of 0-10H downwind of the shelterbelt (where H is the height of the shelterbelt). Further than 10H downwind of the shelterbelt, the mass of ground deposit was similar to the open field. There was an 88% reduction in airborne drift exiting the shelterbelt as compared to the drift entering the shelterbelt, which likely caused the reduction in deposition in the shelterbeltâs lee. It was shown that there was a larger proportion of drift diverted over the top of the shelterbelt as compared to the drift exiting the shelterbelt. Although not apparent in these experiments, this suggested that there may be increased deposition further downwind from the shelterbelt as compared to the open field
Ruling out the Modified Chaplygin Gas Cosmologies
The Modified Chaplygin Gas (MCG) model belongs to the class of a unified
models of dark energy (DE) and dark matter (DM). It is characterized by an
equation of state (EoS) , where the case
corresponds to the Generalized Chaplygin Gas (GCG) model. Using a perturbative
analysis and power spectrum observational data we show that the MCG model is
not a sucessful candidate for the cosmic medium unless . In this case, it
reduces to the usual GCG model.Comment: Latex file, 7 pages, 6 figures in eps forma
Observational constraints on Rastall's cosmology
Rastall's theory is a modification of General Relativity, based on the
non-conservation of the stress-energy tensor. The latter is encoded in a
parameter such that restores the usual law. We test Rastall's theory in cosmology, on a flat
Robertson-Walker metric, investigating a two-fluid model and using the type Ia
supernovae Constitution dataset. One of the fluids is pressureless and obeys
the usual conservation law, whereas the other is described by an equation of
state , with constant. The Bayesian analysis of the
Constitution set does not strictly constrain the parameter and prefers
values of close to -1. We then address the evolution of small
perturbations and show that they are dramatically unstable if and
, i.e. General Relativity is the favored configuration. The only
alternative is , for which the dynamics becomes independent from
.Comment: Latex file, 14 pages, 6 figures in eps format. Substantial
modifications performed, main conclusions change
Density perturbations in an Universe dominated by the Chaplygin gas
We study the fate of density perturbations in an Universe dominate by the
Chaplygin gas, which exhibit negative pressure. We show that it is possible to
obtain the value for the density contrast observed in large scale structure of
the Universe by fixing a free parameter in the equation of state of this gas.
The negative character of pressure must be significant only very recently.Comment: Latex file, 5 page
Palatini approach to 1/R gravity and its implications to the late Universe
By applying the Palatini approach to the 1/R-gravity model it is possible to
explain the present accelerated expansion of the Universe. Investigation of the
late Universe limiting case shows that: (i) due to the curvature effects the
energy-momentum tensor of the matter field is not covariantly conserved; (ii)
however, it is possible to reinterpret the curvature corrections as sources of
the gravitational field, by defining a modified energy-momentum tensor; (iii)
with the adoption of this modified energy-momentum tensor the Einstein's field
equations are recovered with two main modifications: the first one is the
weakening of the gravitational effects of matter whereas the second is the
emergence of an effective varying "cosmological constant"; (iv) there is a
transition in the evolution of the cosmic scale factor from a power-law scaling
to an asymptotically exponential scaling ; (v) the energy density of the matter field scales as ; (vi) the present age of the Universe and the
decelerated-accelerated transition redshift are smaller than the corresponding
ones in the CDM model.Comment: 5 pages and 2 figures. Accepted in PR
Stellar contents and Star formation in the young cluster Stock 18
We have carried out deep (V21 mag) \ubvri photometric study of the star
cluster Stock 18. These along with archival Infrared data have been used to
derive the basic cluster parameters and also to study the star formation
processes in and around the cluster region. The distance to the cluster is
derived as 2.80.2 kpc while its age is estimated as Myr.
Present study indicates that interstellar reddening is normal in the direction
of the cluster. The mass function slope is found to be -1.370.27 for the
mass range 111.9. There is no evidence found for the effect of
mass segregation in main-sequence stars of the cluster. A young stellar
population with age between 1-2 Myr have been found in and around the cluster
region. The presence of IRAS and AKARI sources with MSX intensity map also show
the youth of the Sh2-170 region.Comment: 25 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables (Accepted for publication in New
Astronomy
Wormholes and Ringholes in a Dark-Energy Universe
The effects that the present accelerating expansion of the universe has on
the size and shape of Lorentzian wormholes and ringholes are considered. It is
shown that, quite similarly to how it occurs for inflating wormholes, relative
to the initial embedding-space coordinate system, whereas the shape of the
considered holes is always preserved with time, their size is driven by the
expansion to increase by a factor which is proportional to the scale factor of
the universe. In the case that dark energy is phantom energy, which is not
excluded by present constraints on the dark-energy equation of state, that size
increase with time becomes quite more remarkable, and a rather speculative
scenario is here presented where the big rip can be circumvented by future
advanced civilizations by utilizing sufficiently grown up wormholes and
ringholes as time machines that shortcut the big-rip singularity.Comment: 11 pages, RevTex, to appear in Phys. Rev.
Limits on decaying dark energy density models from the CMB temperature-redshift relation
The nature of the dark energy is still a mystery and several models have been
proposed to explain it. Here we consider a phenomenological model for dark
energy decay into photons and particles as proposed by Lima (J. Lima, Phys.
Rev. D 54, 2571 (1996)). He studied the thermodynamic aspects of decaying dark
energy models in particular in the case of a continuous photon creation and/or
disruption. Following his approach, we derive a temperature redshift relation
for the CMB which depends on the effective equation of state and on
the "adiabatic index" . Comparing our relation with the data on the CMB
temperature as a function of the redshift obtained from Sunyaev-Zel'dovich
observations and at higher redshift from quasar absorption line spectra, we
find , adopting for the adiabatic index ,
in good agreement with current estimates and still compatible with
, implying that the dark energy content being constant in time.Comment: 8 pages, 1 figur
Rip/singularity free cosmology models with bulk viscosity
In this paper we present two concrete models of non-perfect fluid with bulk
viscosity to interpret the observed cosmic accelerating expansion phenomena,
avoiding the introduction of exotic dark energy. The first model we inspect has
a viscosity of the form by
taking into account of the decelerating parameter q, and the other model is of
the form . We give out the
exact solutions of such models and further constrain them with the latest
Union2 data as well as the currently observed Hubble-parameter dataset (OHD),
then we discuss the fate of universe evolution in these models, which confronts
neither future singularity nor little/pseudo rip. From the resulting curves by
best fittings we find a much more flexible evolution processing due to the
presence of viscosity while being consistent with the observational data in the
region of data fitting. With the bulk viscosity considered, a more realistic
universe scenario is characterized comparable with the {\Lambda}CDM model but
without introducing the mysterious dark energy.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, submitted to EPJ-
Molecular characterization of slow leaf-rusting resistance in wheat
Slow leaf-rusting resistance in wheat (Triticum aestivum L) is gaining acceptance as a breeding objective because of its durability in comparison with race-specific resistance. CI 13227 was previously reported to provide the highest level of slow leaf-rusting resistance. The objective of this study was to characterize the slow leaf-rusting resistance conferred by CI 13227 using molecular markers. A population of recombinant inbred lines (RILs) derived from CI 13227/Suwon 92 was evaluated for final severity (FS), area under disease progress curve (AUDPC), infection rate (IR), and infection duration (ID) of leaf rust. Four hundred fifty-nine amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) markers and 28 simple sequence repeat (SSR) markers were analyzed in the population. Two quantitative trait loci (QTL), designated as QLr.osu-2B and QLr.osu-7BL, were consistently associated with AUDPC, FS, and IR of leaf rust, caused by Puccinia triticina (previously P. recondita Rob. Ex Desm. f. sp. tritici). The percentages of phenotypic variance explained by each QTL varied with experiments and traits, ranging from 13.4 to 18.8% for AUDPC, 12.5 to 20.8% for FS, and 12.9 to 16.1% for IR. The third QTL for leaf rust ID, designated as QLrid.osu-2DS, was located on chromo- some 2DS and explained 26.4 and 21.47% of the phenotypic variance in 1994 and 1995, respectively. Both the QTL and correlation analysis indicate reasonable progress in leaf-rusting resistance by selecting for final severity. SSR markers closely associated with QLr.osu-2B or QLr.osu-7BL have potential to be used in marker-assisted selection (MAS) for durable leaf rust resistant cultivars.Peer reviewedPlant and Soil SciencesEntomology and Plant Patholog
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