229 research outputs found
Stomatal Opening, Transpiration, and Need/e Moisture in Loblolly Pine Seedlings From Two Texas Seed Sources
Relationships among percentage of open stomates, transpiration, and needle moisture content in seedlings of loblolly pine of two Texas provenances were studied under changing soil moisture conditions. Needle moisture content correlated very well with transpiration under favorable moisture conditions, and with percentage of open stomates under soil moisture stress. Transpiration and percentage of open stomates were correlated under a wide range of moisture conditions. Foliage moisture content was still relatively high in both ecotypes when stomates closed and transpiration drastically declined. The Lost Pines seed source appeared to have superior ability to conserve moisture under droughty conditions by closure of stomares and reduction of transpiration. FOREST SCI. 23: 457-462
Wool studies III. The uniformity of a series of fibre thickness measurements on a small sample of medium Merino wool
The fibre diameter of wool, being either directly or indirectly associated with a variety of other characteristics, is required in the majority of problems in wool research. It is essential, therefore that the procedure of sampling and the technique of preparing wool for diameter measurement should be placed on a fundamentally sound basis. Various characteristic properties of the material however, complicate the establishment of a sound technique of sampling wool as such does not readily permit a random selection of in individual fibres and any endeavour to select a representative sample of fibres by personal judgment is bound to be biased. In wool studies sampling is absolutely necessary since the preparation of the whole available material for the measurement of fibre diameter is not only practically impossible in other than very small quantities of wool, but also undesirable because it renders the material useless for further investigation.The articles have been scanned in colour with a HP Scanjet 5590; 300dpi. Adobe Acrobat XI Pro was used to OCR the text and also for the merging and conversion to the final presentation PDF-format.Includes bibliographical referencesab201
BioConcens: Biomass and bioenergy production agriculture – consequences for soil fertility, environment, spread of animal parasites and socio-economy
The research programme called “international research cooperation and organic integrity” was commenced for a period 2006-2010. It is coordinated by DARCOF (The Danish Research Centre for Organic Farming). The whole programme, with acronym DARCOF III, consists of 15 projects (http://www.darcof.dk/research/darcofiii/index.html). One of them is BIOCONCENS - Biomass and bioenergy production in organic farming – consequences for soil fertility, environment, spread of animal parasites and socio-economy (http://www.bioconcens.elr.dk/uk/). The production of bioenergy in organic agriculture (OA) can reduce its dependency of fossil fuels and decrease green house gasses emission; consequently it will increase sustainability of organic farms. Biorefinery concept based on co-production of biogas, bioethanol and protein fodder in organic farming will be developed within the BIOCONCENS project and the background for the project and the different work packages will be presented in this paper
Dilatonic current-carrying cosmic strings
We investigate the nature of ordinary cosmic vortices in some scalar-tensor
extensions of gravity. We find solutions for which the dilaton field condenses
inside the vortex core. These solutions can be interpreted as raising the
degeneracy between the eigenvalues of the effective stress-energy tensor,
namely the energy per unit length U and the tension T, by picking a privileged
spacelike or timelike coordinate direction; in the latter case, a phase
frequency threshold occurs that is similar to what is found in ordinary neutral
current-carrying cosmic strings. We find that the dilaton contribution for the
equation of state, once averaged along the string worldsheet, vanishes, leading
to an effective Nambu-Goto behavior of such a string network in cosmology, i.e.
on very large scales. It is found also that on small scales, the energy per
unit length and tension depend on the string internal coordinates in such a way
as to permit the existence of centrifugally supported equilibrium
configuration, also known as vortons, whose stability, depending on the very
short distance (unknown) physics, can lead to catastrophic consequences on the
evolution of the Universe.Comment: 10 pages, ReVTeX, 2 figures, minor typos corrected. This version to
appear in Phys. Rev.
Wakes in Dilatonic Current-Carrying Cosmic Strings
In this work, we present the gravitational field generated by a cosmic string
carrying a timelike current in the scalar-tensor gravities. The mechanism of
formation and evolution of wakes is fully investigated in this framework. We
show explicitly that the inclusion of electromagnetic properties for the string
induces logarithmic divergences in the accretion problem.Comment: Revised version to be published in the Phys. Rev.
Evolution of the continental margin of south to central Vietnam and its relationship to opening of the South China Sea (East Vietnam Sea)
The continental margin of south to central Vietnam is notable for its high elevation plateaus many of which are covered by late Cenozoic basalt flows. It forms the westernmost margin of a wide continental rift of the South China Sea (East Vietnam Sea), and uplift has been considered a result of either rifting or younger intraplate basalt magmatism. To investigate margin development apatite thermochronometry was applied to a dense array of samples collected from across and along the margin of south to central Vietnam. Results, including thermal history models, identified a distinct regional episode of fast cooling between c. 37 and 30 Ma after which cooling rates remained low. The fast cooling coincides with a period of fast extension across the South China Sea (East Sea) region that preceded continental break-up recorded by Oligocene grabens onshore. A thermal model is used test different processes that might influence the inferred cooling including a distinct pulse of exhumation; a decrease in exhumation followed by an associated transient decrease in geothermal gradients and, underplating coincident with rifting. Thermal relaxation following Mesozoic arc magmatism is ruled out as geotherms returned to background rates within 20 Myrs of emplacement, well before the onset of fast cooling. Models support fast cooling attributed to accelerated erosion during early stages of rifting. Some additional heating from either underplating, and/or hot mantle upwellings is also possible. No evidence was found to support regional uplift associated with the intraplate magmatism, enhanced monsoon-driven erosion or seafloor spreading dynamics
The physical meaning of the de Sitter invariants
We study the Lie algebras of the covariant representations transforming the
matter fields under the de Sitter isometries. We point out that the Casimir
operators of these representations can be written in closed forms and we deduce
how their eigenvalues depend on the field's rest energy and spin. For the
scalar, vector and Dirac fields, which have well-defined field equations, we
express these eigenvalues in terms of mass and spin obtaining thus the
principal invariants of the theory of free fields on the de Sitter spacetime.
We show that in the flat limit we recover the corresponding invariants of the
Wigner irreducible representations of the Poincare group.Comment: 22 pages no figure
Abnormal number of Nambu-Goldstone bosons in the color-asymmetric 2SC phase of an NJL-type model
We consider an extended Nambu--Jona-Lasinio model including both (q \bar q)-
and (qq)-interactions with two light-quark flavors in the presence of a single
(quark density) chemical potential. In the color superconducting phase of the
quark matter the color SU(3) symmetry is spontaneously broken down to SU(2). If
the usual counting of Goldstone bosons would apply, five Nambu-Goldstone (NG)
bosons corresponding to the five broken color generators should appear in the
mass spectrum. Unlike that expectation, we find only three gapless diquark
excitations of quark matter. One of them is an SU(2)-singlet, the remaining two
form an SU(2)-(anti)doublet and have a quadratic dispersion law in the small
momentum limit. These results are in agreement with the Nielsen-Chadha theorem,
according to which NG-bosons in Lorentz-noninvariant systems, having a
quadratic dispersion law, must be counted differently. The origin of the
abnormal number of NG-bosons is shown to be related to a nonvanishing
expectation value of the color charge operator Q_8 reflecting the lack of color
neutrality of the ground state. Finally, by requiring color neutrality, two
massive diquarks are argued to become massless, resulting in a normal number of
five NG-bosons with usual linear dispersion laws.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figures, revtex
Brane World Dynamics and Conformal Bulk Fields
In the Randall-Sundrum scenario we investigate the dynamics of a spherically
symmetric 3-brane world when matter fields are present in the bulk. To analyze
the 5-dimensional Einstein equations we employ a global conformal
transformation whose factor characterizes the symmetric warp. We find a
new set of exact dynamical collapse solutions which localize gravity in the
vicinity of the brane for a stress-energy tensor of conformal weight -4 and a
warp factor that depends only on the coordinate of the fifth dimension.
Geometries which describe the dynamics of inhomogeneous dust and generalized
dark radiation on the brane are shown to belong to this set. The conditions for
singular or globally regular behavior and the static marginally bound limits
are discussed for these examples. Also explicitly demonstrated is complete
consistency with the effective point of view of a 4-dimensional observer who is
confined to the brane and makes the same assumptions about the bulk degrees of
freedom.Comment: 26 pages, latex, no figures. Minor revisions. Some references added.
Revised version to appear in Phys. Rev.
Placing Joseph Banks in the North Pacific
The South Pacific was a fulcrum of Joseph Banks's maritime world and global networks. The North Pacific was a distance and intangible fringe. This article is concerned with how Banks should be ‘placed’ in the North Pacific. It tracks how Banks's activities have been delineated in terms of languages and categories of global and local, and centre and margin, and then considers the historical and geographical specifics apposite to his connection to the North Pacific. In this setting, ideas of place (as location and assignment) and capital (as a circulatory and everyday practice of exchange and opportunism) come into view and question the distinction between science and commerce in Banks historiography. The article considers a diverse group of non-Indigenous figures – explorers, traders, cartographers, scientists, collectors – operating in the North Pacific in the 1780s and 1790s whose initiatives and missives passed across Banks's desk, and assesses their place in Banks's archive by drawing on Peter Sloterdijk's ideas about the interiorising and exteriorising logic of capital.PostprintPeer reviewe
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