551 research outputs found
Preventing Predatory Abuses in Litigation Between Business Competitors: Focusing on a Litigant\u27s Reasons for Initiating the Litigation to Ensure a Balance Between the Constitutional Right to Petition and the Sherman Act\u27s Guarantee of Fair Competition in Business
Ice Age Epochs and the Sun's Path Through the Galaxy
We present a calculation of the Sun's motion through the Milky Way Galaxy
over the last 500 million years. The integration is based upon estimates of the
Sun's current position and speed from measurements with Hipparcos and upon a
realistic model for the Galactic gravitational potential. We estimate the times
of the Sun's past spiral arm crossings for a range in assumed values of the
spiral pattern angular speed. We find that for a difference between the mean
solar and pattern speed of Omega_Sun - Omega_p = 11.9 +/- 0.7 km/s/kpc the Sun
has traversed four spiral arms at times that appear to correspond well with
long duration cold periods on Earth. This supports the idea that extended
exposure to the higher cosmic ray flux associated with spiral arms can lead to
increased cloud cover and long ice age epochs on Earth.Comment: 14 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Analyzing cropping systems (1983)
In tight financial times, businesses often try to reduce spending and improve their profits. Many farmers are currently operating their businesses under such conditions. Wise management decisions can improve profits in farming while reducing cash flow needs
Uncovering hidden geographies and socio-economic influences on fuel poverty using household fuel spend data: a meso-scale study in Scotland
Nitrogen and phosphorus loads to temperate seepage lakes associated with allochthonous dissolved organic carbon loads
Terrestrial loads of dissolved organic matter (DOM) have increased in recent years in many north temperate lakes. While much of the focus on the “browning” phenomena has been on its consequences for carbon cycling, much less is known about how it influences nutrient loading to lakes. We characterize potential loads of nitrogen and phosphorus to seepage lakes in northern Wisconsin, USA, based on a laboratory soil leaching experiment and a model that includes landscape cover and watershed area. In these seepage lakes, nutrient concentrations are positively correlated with dissolved organic carbon concentrations (nitrogen: r = 0.68, phosphorus: r = 0.54). Using long‐term records of browning, we found that dissolved organic matter‐associated nutrient loadings may have resulted in substantial increases in nitrogen and phosphorus in seepage lakes and could account for currently observed nutrient concentrations in the lake. “Silent” nutrient loadings to brown‐water lakes may lead to future water‐quality concerns. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: The color of many temperate lakes is changing; some lakes are becoming more darkly stained brown. The tea‐colored stain is due to dissolved organic matter from the surrounding landscape. Much of the research related to the causes and consequences of increased staining, or “brownification,” relate to its connection to the carbon cycle. However, by examining long‐term lake chemical records, analyzing the properties of the organic compounds, and modeling potential flows of the compounds, we find that carbon is not the only element that is influenced by browning. Nitrogen and phosphorus, two nutrients important to growth of organisms at the base of the food web, may also be increasing in lakes due to brownification."Funding for this research was supported by the Northern Research Station and the Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest (CNNF) of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) Forest Service and a National Science Foundation (NSF) grant to the University of Wisconsin-Madison to support the North Temperate Lakes Long-Term Ecological Research (NTLLTER) Site (DEB-#1440297)."https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2018GL07721
ASAS Light Curves of Intermediate Mass Eclipsing Binaries and the Parameters of HI Mon
We present a catalog of 56 candidate intermediate mass eclipsing binary
systems extracted from the 3rd data release of the All Sky Automated Survey. We
gather pertinent observational data and derive orbital properties, including
ephemerides, for these systems as a prelude to anticipated spectroscopic
observations. We find that 37 of the 56, or ~66% of the systems are not
identified in the Simbad Astronomical Database as known binaries. As a specific
example, we show spectroscopic data obtained for the system HI Mon (B0 V + B0.5
V) observed at key orbital phases based on the computed ephemeris, and we
present a combined spectroscopic and photometric solution for the system and
give stellar parameters for each component.Comment: 83 pages, 63 figure
Cover crops management for no-till grain crop production
"Cover crops are forage grasses, legumes, small grains or other crops grown to protect and improve the soil. Cover crops are becoming increasingly important in Missouri, because soil losses of 10. 9 tons of cropland per acre are occurring annually through sheet and rill erosion. About 20 cents worth of nutrients is lost in each ton of soil, which means a loss of over 25 million in fertilizer each year."--First page.Z.R. Helsel, M. DeFelice, D. Buchholz (Department of Agronomy College of Agriculture)New 11/86/8
The High Angular Resolution Multiplicity of Massive Stars
We present the results of a speckle interferometric survey of Galactic
massive stars that complements and expands upon a similar survey made over a
decade ago. The speckle observations were made with the KPNO and CTIO 4 m
telescopes and USNO speckle camera, and they are sensitive to the detection of
binaries in the angular separation regime between 0.03" and 5" with relatively
bright companions (Delta V < 3). We report on the discovery of companions to 14
OB stars. In total we resolved companions of 41 of 385 O-stars (11%), 4 of 37
Wolf-Rayet stars (11%), and 89 of 139 B-stars (64%; an enriched visual binary
sample that we selected for future orbital determinations). We made a
statistical analysis of the binary frequency among the subsample that are
listed in the Galactic O Star Catalog by compiling published data on other
visual companions detected through adaptive optics studies and/or noted in the
Washington Double Star Catalog and by collecting published information on
radial velocities and spectroscopic binaries. We find that the binary frequency
is much higher among O-stars in clusters and associations compared to the
numbers for field and runaway O-stars, consistent with predictions for the
ejection processes for runaway stars. We present a first orbit for the O-star
Delta Orionis, a linear solution of the close, apparently optical, companion of
the O-star Iota Orionis, and an improved orbit of the Be star Delta Scorpii.
Finally, we list astrometric data for another 249 resolved and 221 unresolved
targets that are lower mass stars that we observed for various other science
programs.Comment: 76 pages, 6 figures, 11 table
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