292 research outputs found
Effects of a Wide-area Application of ULV Malathion on Leafhoppers in Alfalfa
Beginning in 1968, a 16 (4×4) mi2 area of Dawson County, Nebraska, was sprayed in August for 3 consecutive years with ULV malathion. Leafhoppers in alfalfa were monitored as nontarget organisms. Scaphytopius acutus (Say) was suppressed from one growing season into the next. All other major species, Aceratogallia uhleri (Van Duzee), Balclutha neglecta (DeLong and Davidson). Empoasca fabae (Harris) and Macrosteles fascifrons (Stål) recovered within 2–4 wk following treatment
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Capacity investigation of brine-bearing sands of the Frio Formation for geologic sequestration of CO2
The capacity of fluvial brine-bearing formations to sequester CO2 is investigated using numerical simulations of CO2 injection and storage. Capacity is defined as the volume fraction of the subsurface available for CO2 storage and is conceptualized as a product of factors that account for two-phase flow and transport processes, formation geometry, formation heterogeneity, and formation porosity. The space and time domains used to define capacity must be chosen with care to obtain meaningful results, especially when comparing different authors’ work. Physical factors that impact capacity include permeability anisotropy and relative permeability to CO2, brine/CO2 density and viscosity ratios, the shape of the trapping structure, formation porosity and the presence of low permeability layering.National Energy Technology LaboratoryBureau of Economic Geolog
Molecular Differentiation of Alfalfa Weevil Strains (Coleoptera: Curculionidae)
Mitochondrial DNA was amplified and sequenced from eastern, western, and Egyptian strains of alfalfa weevil, Hypera postica (Gyllenhal). Eastern and Egyptian weevils differed at only 2 nucleotide sites in 1,031 base pairs sequenced; western weevils differed by 5% sequence divergence. Three restriction sites were identified which separated eastern and western haplotypes. No intrastrain polymorphism was detected in 150 weevils from Nebraska. Collections from Lincoln in eastern Nebraska and Scottsbluff in western Nebraska were fixed for the eastern and western haplotypes, respectively. Eastern and western haplotypes were found together in the same fields in a broad overlap region in central Nebraska
An adaptive algorithm for n-body field expansions
An expansion of a density field or particle distribution in basis functions
which solve the Poisson equation both provides an easily parallelized n-body
force algorithm and simplifies perturbation theories. The expansion converges
quickly and provides the highest computational advantage if the lowest-order
potential-density pair in the basis looks like the unperturbed galaxy or
stellar system. Unfortunately, there are only a handful of such basis in the
literature which limits this advantage. This paper presents an algorithm for
deriving these bases to match a wide variety of galaxy models. The method is
based on efficient numerical solution of the Sturm-Liouville equation and can
be used for any geometry with a separable Laplacian. Two cases are described in
detail. First for the spherical case, the lowest order basis function pair may
be chosen to be exactly that of the underlying model. The profile may be cuspy
or have a core and truncated or of infinite extent. Secondly, the method yields
a three-dimensional cylindrical basis appropriate for studying galaxian disks.
In this case, the vertical and radial bases are coupled; the lowest order
radial part of the basis function can be chosen to match the underlying profile
only in the disk plane. Practically, this basis is still a very good match to
the overall disk profile and converges in a small number of terms.Comment: 16 pages, 5 figures, submitted to A
Effects of Preservation Methods, Parasites, and Gut Contents of Black Flies (Diptera: Simuliidae) on Polymerase Chain Reaction Products
Molecular analysis of biological specimens usually requires extraction of high-molecular-weight DNA free of foreign DNA contaminants. DNA was extracted from black flies at different life stages that had been preserved by 4 methods: larvae and adults in ethanol, larvae in Carnoy’s solution, adults on card-points, and adults hand-swatted and sun-dried. Using specific primers for the mitochondrial ND4 gene, a 257-bp amplicon was obtained from specimens preserved by ethanol, card-point mounting, and sun-drying. Successful amplification often required DNA dilutions ≥ 1:20 (\u3c1–10 ng). DNA from specimens preserved in Carnoy’s solution (ethanol: acetic acid, 3:1) yielded degraded DNA, resulting in fewer successful amplifications. Parasitic nematodes and, to a lesser extent, gut contents resulted in extra products when amplified with randomly amplified polymorphic DNA (RAPD) primers. Sufficient DNA was extracted from the head of a larva for a successful polymerase chain reaction (PCR), eliminating the need to remove the contaminating gut and parasites
Interaction between Injection Points during Hydraulic Fracturing
We present a model of the hydraulic fracturing of heterogeneous poroelastic
media. The formalism is an effective continuum model that captures the coupled
dynamics of the fluid pressure and the fractured rock matrix and models both
the tensile and shear failure of the rock. As an application of the formalism,
we study the geomechanical stress interaction between two injection points
during hydraulic fracturing (hydrofracking) and how this interaction influences
the fracturing process. For injection points that are separated by less than a
critical correlation length, we find that the fracturing process around each
point is strongly correlated with the position of the neighboring point. The
magnitude of the correlation length depends on the degree of heterogeneity of
the rock and is on the order of 30-45 m for rocks with low permeabilities. In
the strongly correlated regime, we predict a novel effective fracture-force
that attracts the fractures toward the neighboring injection point.Comment: Submitte
Saturation front evolution for liquid infiltration into a gas filled porous medium with counter-current flow
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Comparing FRACHEM and TOUGHREACT for reactive transport modelingof brine-rock interactions in enhanced geothermal systems (EGS)
Coupled modelling of fluid flow and reactive transport ingeothermal systems is challenging because of reservoir conditions such ashigh temperatures, elevated pressures and sometimes high salinities ofthe formation fluids. Thermal hydrological-chemical (THC) codes, such asFRACHEM and TOUGHREACT, have been developed to evaluate the long-termhydrothermal and chemical evolution of exploited reservoirs. In thisstudy, the two codes were applied to model the same geothermal reservoir,to forecast reservoir evolution using respective thermodynamic andkinetic input data. A recent (unreleased) TOUGHREACT version allows theuse of either an extended Debye-Hu?ckel or Pitzer activity model forcalculating activity coefficients, while FRACHEM was designed to use thePitzer formalism. Comparison of models results indicate that differencesin thermodynamic equilibrium constants, activity coefficients andkinetics models can result in significant differences in predictedmineral precipitation behaviour and reservoir-porosity evolution.Differences in the calculation schemes typically produce less differencein model outputs than differences in input thermodynamic and kineticdata, with model results being particularly sensitive to differences inion-interaction parameters for highsalinity systems
The precautions of clinical waste: disposable medical sharps in the United Kingdom
This article deals with recent changes in UK guidance on clinical waste, in particular a shift to disposable, single-use instruments and sharps. I use interviews conducted with nurses from a GP practice and two clinical waste managers at alternative treatment and incineration sites as a springboard for reflection on the relationship between the legislation on clinical waste management and its implementation. Scrutinizing the UK guidance, European legislation and World Health Organization principles, I draw out interviewees’ concerns that the changed practices lead to an expansion of the hazardous waste category, with an increased volume going to incineration. This raises questions regarding the regulations’ environmental and health effects, and regarding the precautionary approach embedded in the regulations. Tracing the diverse reverberations of the term ‘waste’ in different points along the journeys made by sharps in particular, and locating these questions in relation to existing literature on waste, I emphasize that public health rationales for the new practices are not made clear in the guidance. I suggest that this relative silence on the subject conceals both the uncertainties regarding the necessity for these means of managing the risks of infectious waste, and the tensions between policies of precautionary public health and environmental sustainability
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Capacity investigation of brine-bearing sands of the Fwwm formation for geologic sequestration of CO{sub 2}
The capacity of fluvial brine-bearing formations to sequester CO{sub 2} is investigated using numerical simulations of CO{sub 2} injection and storage. Capacity is defined as the volume fraction of the subsurface available for CO{sub 2} storage and is conceptualized as a product of factors that account for two-phase flow and transport processes, formation geometry, formation heterogeneity, and formation porosity. The space and time domains used to define capacity must be chosen with care to obtain meaningful results, especially when comparing different authors' work. Physical factors that impact capacity include permeability anisotropy and relative permeability to CO{sub 2}, brine/CO{sub 2} density and viscosity ratios, the shape of the trapping structure, formation porosity and the presence of low-permeability layering
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