10 research outputs found

    Cultivares, espaçamento entrelinhas e programas de aplicação de fungicidas no controle de Phakopsora pachyrhizi Sidow em soja Cultivars, row spacing and fungicide application programs on Phakopsora pachyrhizi Sydow control in soybean

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    Com este trabalho, buscou-se avaliar a resposta de cultivares de soja, em duas safras, submetidas a diferentes espaçamentos entrelinhas e programas de controle sob pressão natural de Phakopsora pachyrhizi Sidow. Nas safras 07/08 e 08/09, os espaçamentos entrelinhas de 40, 50 e 60cm representavam as parcelas principais, as cultivares 'A 8000 RG' e 'A 6001 RG', as subparcelas e os programas de controle, as subsubparcelas. A redução do espaçamento entrelinhas permitiu melhores condições para o estabelecimento e progresso da ferrugem asiática para as duas cultivares e menor eficácia de controle. A melhor resposta de controle foi verificada com a utilização do programa após uma aplicação no estádio de desenvolvimento R1 e uma segunda aplicação 25 dias após a primeira. O espaçamento de 60cm entrelinhas proporcionou menores valores de doença acumulada e maior produtividade.<br>This study aimed to assess in two seasons, the response of soybean cultivars subjected to different row spacings and control programs under Phakopsora pachyrhizi Sidow natural pressure. The research was carried out at the seasons 07/08 and 08/09. The main plots were composed of the row spacings of 40, 50 and 60cm and the split plots corresponded to the cultivars A 8000 RG and A 6001 RG. The control programs were the split split plots.The reduction of row spacing allowed more conditions for the rust establishment and progress for both cultivars and less effective control. The best control response was verified using the program with an application in R1 and a second application, 25 days after the first one. The row spacing of 60cm gave lower AUDPC values and higher productivity

    Testing Hadronic-Model Predictions of Depth of Maximum of Air-Shower Profiles and Ground-Particle Signals using Hybrid Data of the Pierre Auger Observatory

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    International audienceWe test the predictions of hadronic interaction models regarding the depth of maximum of air-shower profiles, XmaxX_{max}, and ground-particle signals in water-Cherenkov detectors at 1000 m from the shower core, S(1000)S(1000), using the data from the fluorescence and surface detectors of the Pierre Auger Observatory. The test consists in fitting the measured two-dimensional (S(1000)S(1000), XmaxX_{max}) distributions using templates for simulated air showers produced with hadronic interaction models EPOS-LHC, QGSJet II-04, Sibyll 2.3d and leaving the scales of predicted XmaxX_{max} and the signals from hadronic component at ground as free fit parameters. The method relies on the assumption that the mass composition remains the same at all zenith angles, while the longitudinal shower development and attenuation of ground signal depend on the mass composition in a correlated way. The analysis was applied to 2239 events detected by both the fluorescence and surface detectors of the Pierre Auger Observatory with energies between 1018.510^{18.5} to 1019.010^{19.0} eV and zenith angles below 6060^\circ. We found, that within the assumptions of the method, the best description of the data is achieved if the predictions of the hadronic interaction models are shifted to deeper XmaxX_{max} values and larger hadronic signals at all zenith angles. Given the magnitude of the shifts and the data sample size, the statistical significance of the improvement of data description using the modifications considered in the paper is larger than 5σ5\sigma even for any linear combination of experimental systematic uncertainties

    Demonstrating Agreement between Radio and Fluorescence Measurements of the Depth of Maximum of Extensive Air Showers at the Pierre Auger Observatory

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    International audienceWe show, for the first time, radio measurements of the depth of shower maximum (XmaxX_\text{max}) of air showers induced by cosmic rays that are compared to measurements of the established fluorescence method at the same location. Using measurements at the Pierre Auger Observatory we show full compatibility between our radio and the previously published fluorescence data set, and between a subset of air showers observed simultaneously with both radio and fluorescence techniques, a measurement setup unique to the Pierre Auger Observatory. Furthermore, we show radio XmaxX_\text{max} resolution as a function of energy and demonstrate the ability to make competitive high-resolution XmaxX_\text{max} measurements with even a sparse radio array. With this, we show that the radio technique is capable of cosmic-ray mass composition studies, both at Auger and at other experiments

    Radio Measurements of the Depth of Air-Shower Maximum at the Pierre Auger Observatory

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    International audienceThe Auger Engineering Radio Array (AERA), part of the Pierre Auger Observatory, is currently the largest array of radio antenna stations deployed for the detection of cosmic rays, spanning an area of 1717 km2^2 with 153 radio stations. It detects the radio emission of extensive air showers produced by cosmic rays in the 308030-80 MHz band. Here, we report the AERA measurements of the depth of the shower maximum (XmaxX_\text{max}), a probe for mass composition, at cosmic-ray energies between 1017.510^{17.5} to 1018.810^{18.8} eV, which show agreement with earlier measurements with the fluorescence technique at the Pierre Auger Observatory. We show advancements in the method for radio XmaxX_\text{max} reconstruction by comparison to dedicated sets of CORSIKA/CoREAS air-shower simulations, including steps of reconstruction-bias identification and correction, which is of particular importance for irregular or sparse radio arrays. Using the largest set of radio air-shower measurements to date, we show the radio XmaxX_\text{max} resolution as a function of energy, reaching a resolution better than 1515 g cm2^{-2} at the highest energies, demonstrating that radio XmaxX_\text{max} measurements are competitive with the established high-precision fluorescence technique. In addition, we developed a procedure for performing an extensive data-driven study of systematic uncertainties, including the effects of acceptance bias, reconstruction bias, and the investigation of possible residual biases. These results have been cross-checked with air showers measured independently with both the radio and fluorescence techniques, a setup unique to the Pierre Auger Observatory

    Impact of the Magnetic Horizon on the Interpretation of the Pierre Auger Observatory Spectrum and Composition Data

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    International audienceThe flux of ultra-high energy cosmic rays reaching Earth above the ankle energy (5 EeV) can be described as a mixture of nuclei injected by extragalactic sources with very hard spectra and a low rigidity cutoff. Extragalactic magnetic fields existing between the Earth and the closest sources can affect the observed CR spectrum by reducing the flux of low-rigidity particles reaching Earth. We perform a combined fit of the spectrum and distributions of depth of shower maximum measured with the Pierre Auger Observatory including the effect of this magnetic horizon in the propagation of UHECRs in the intergalactic space. We find that, within a specific range of the various experimental and phenomenological systematics, the magnetic horizon effect can be relevant for turbulent magnetic field strengths in the local neighbourhood of order Brms(50100)nG(20Mpc/ds)(100kpc/Lcoh)1/2B_{\rm rms}\simeq (50-100)\,{\rm nG}\,(20\rm{Mpc}/{d_{\rm s})( 100\,\rm{kpc}/L_{\rm coh}})^{1/2}, with dsd_{\rm s} the typical intersource separation and LcohL_{\rm coh} the magnetic field coherence length. When this is the case, the inferred slope of the source spectrum becomes softer and can be closer to the expectations of diffusive shock acceleration, i.e., E2\propto E^{-2}. An additional cosmic-ray population with higher source density and softer spectra, presumably also extragalactic and dominating the cosmic-ray flux at EeV energies, is also required to reproduce the overall spectrum and composition results for all energies down to 0.6~EeV

    Radio Measurements of the Depth of Air-Shower Maximum at the Pierre Auger Observatory

    No full text
    International audienceThe Auger Engineering Radio Array (AERA), part of the Pierre Auger Observatory, is currently the largest array of radio antenna stations deployed for the detection of cosmic rays, spanning an area of 1717 km2^2 with 153 radio stations. It detects the radio emission of extensive air showers produced by cosmic rays in the 308030-80 MHz band. Here, we report the AERA measurements of the depth of the shower maximum (XmaxX_\text{max}), a probe for mass composition, at cosmic-ray energies between 1017.510^{17.5} to 1018.810^{18.8} eV, which show agreement with earlier measurements with the fluorescence technique at the Pierre Auger Observatory. We show advancements in the method for radio XmaxX_\text{max} reconstruction by comparison to dedicated sets of CORSIKA/CoREAS air-shower simulations, including steps of reconstruction-bias identification and correction, which is of particular importance for irregular or sparse radio arrays. Using the largest set of radio air-shower measurements to date, we show the radio XmaxX_\text{max} resolution as a function of energy, reaching a resolution better than 1515 g cm2^{-2} at the highest energies, demonstrating that radio XmaxX_\text{max} measurements are competitive with the established high-precision fluorescence technique. In addition, we developed a procedure for performing an extensive data-driven study of systematic uncertainties, including the effects of acceptance bias, reconstruction bias, and the investigation of possible residual biases. These results have been cross-checked with air showers measured independently with both the radio and fluorescence techniques, a setup unique to the Pierre Auger Observatory

    Demonstrating Agreement between Radio and Fluorescence Measurements of the Depth of Maximum of Extensive Air Showers at the Pierre Auger Observatory

    No full text
    International audienceWe show, for the first time, radio measurements of the depth of shower maximum (XmaxX_\text{max}) of air showers induced by cosmic rays that are compared to measurements of the established fluorescence method at the same location. Using measurements at the Pierre Auger Observatory we show full compatibility between our radio and the previously published fluorescence data set, and between a subset of air showers observed simultaneously with both radio and fluorescence techniques, a measurement setup unique to the Pierre Auger Observatory. Furthermore, we show radio XmaxX_\text{max} resolution as a function of energy and demonstrate the ability to make competitive high-resolution XmaxX_\text{max} measurements with even a sparse radio array. With this, we show that the radio technique is capable of cosmic-ray mass composition studies, both at Auger and at other experiments
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