437 research outputs found
Early performance of cocoa (Theobroma cacao L.)genotypes in arecanut under Assam condition of North Eastregion of India
Cocoa is an important plantation crop grown in southern parts of India. Though many cocoa varieties have been released for cultivation in different parts of India, there is no variety recommended for cultivation exclusively for India’s North East region, especially Assam, where arecanut is grown as an important cash crop. Therefore the present investigation was undertaken to study the performance of twelve cocoa genotypes for its growth, pod yield and yield attributing traits for subsequent research programmes. The data for growth, pod yield and yield attributing traits were recorded three years after planting for five years (2015 to 2019), and the mean data were used for analysis. Genotype VTLC 11 significantly produced greater plant height (2.70 m), stem circumference (27.73 cm), height at jorquetting (36.16 cm) and canopy area (17.00 m2). Mean average pod yield among the genotypes varied from 20.65 to 48.40 tree-1 year-1. Genotype VTLC 19 produced significantly higher pod yield (48.40), number of fresh beans pod-1 (34.06), fresh bean weight pod-1 (229.65 g), dry bean weight pod-1 (119.32 g), single dry bean weight (1.20 g) and dry bean yield (1.76 kg). Considering the most economic traits of cocoa, VTLC 19 appears to be the most suitable genotype for commercial cultivation in the region
Effect of the momentum dependence of nuclear symmetry potential on the transverse and elliptic flows
In the framework of the isospin-dependent Boltzmann-Uehling-Uhlenbeck
transport model, effect of the momentum dependence of nuclear symmetry
potential on nuclear transverse and elliptic flows in the neutron-rich reaction
Sn+Sn at a beam energy of 400 MeV/nucleon is studied. We find
that the momentum dependence of nuclear symmetry potential affects the rapidity
distribution of the free neutron to proton ratio, the neutron and the proton
transverse flows as a function of rapidity. The momentum dependence of nuclear
symmetry potential affects the neutron-proton differential transverse flow more
evidently than the difference of neutron and proton transverse flows as well as
the difference of proton and neutron elliptic flows. It is thus better to probe
the symmetry energy by using the difference of neutron and proton flows since
the momentum dependence of nuclear symmetry potential is still an open
question. And it is better to probe the momentum dependence of nuclear symmetry
potential by using the neutron-proton differential transverse flow and the
rapidity distribution of the free neutron to proton ratio.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures, to be published by EPJ
Canted ground state in artificial molecules at high magnetic fields
We analyze the transitions that a magnetic field provokes in the ground state
of an artificial homonuclear diatomic molecule. For that purpose, we have
performed numerical diagonalizations for a double quantum dot around the regime
of filling factor 2. We present phase diagrams in terms of tunneling and Zeeman
couplings, and confinement strength. We identify a series of transitions from
ferromagnetic to symmetric states through a set of canted states with
antiferromagnetic couping between the two quantum dots
Possible Z-width probe of a "brane-world" scenario for neutrino masses
The possibility that the accurately known value of the Z width might furnish
information about the coupling of two neutrinos to the Majoron (Nambu-Goldstone
boson of spontaneous lepton number violation) is proposed and investigated in
detail. Both the "ordinary" case and the case in which one adopts a "brane"
world picture with the Majoron free to travel in extra dimensions are studied.
Bounds on the dimensionless coupling constants are obtained, allowing for any
number of extra dimensions and any intrinsic mass scale. These bounds may be
applied to a variety of different Majoron models. If a technically natural
see-saw model is adopted, the predicted coupling constants are far below these
upper bounds. In addition, for this natural model, the effect of extra
dimensions is to decrease the predicted partial Z width, the increase due to
many Kaluza-Klein excitations being compensated by the decrease of their common
coupling constant.Comment: RevTeX, 12 pages, 3 figure
Characterization of tumor heterogeneity using dynamic contrast enhanced CT and FDG-PET in non-small cell lung cancer
AbstractPurposeDynamic contrast-enhanced CT (DCE-CT) quantifies vasculature properties of tumors, whereas static FDG-PET/CT defines metabolic activity. Both imaging modalities are capable of showing intra-tumor heterogeneity. We investigated differences in vasculature properties within primary non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) tumors measured by DCE-CT and metabolic activity from FDG-PET/CT.MethodsThirty three NSCLC patients were analyzed prior to treatment. FDG-PET/CT and DCE-CT were co-registered. The tumor was delineated and metabolic activity was segmented on the FDG-PET/CT in two regions: low (<50% maximum SUV) and high (â©ľ50% maximum SUV) metabolic uptake. Blood flow, blood volume and permeability were calculated using a maximum slope, deconvolution algorithm and a Patlak model. Correlations were assessed between perfusion parameters for the regions of interest.ResultsDCE-CT provided additional information on vasculature and tumor heterogeneity that was not correlated to metabolic tumor activity. There was no significant difference between low and high metabolic active regions for any of the DCE-CT parameters. Furthermore, only moderate correlations between maximum SUV and DCE-CT parameters were observed.ConclusionsNo direct correlation was observed between FDG-uptake and parameters extracted from DCE-CT. DCE-CT may provide complementary information to the characterization of primary NSCLC tumors over FDG-PET/CT imaging
Neutrino Masses and Lepton Flavour Violation in Thick Brane Scenarios
We address the issue of lepton flavour violation and neutrino masses in the
``fat-brane'' paradigm, where flavour changing processes are suppressed by
localising different fermion field wave-functions at different positions (in
the extra dimensions) in a thick brane. We study the consequences of
suppressing lepton number violating charged lepton decays within this scenario
for lepton masses and mixing angles. In particular, we find that charged lepton
mass matrices are constrained to be quasi-diagonal. We further consider whether
the same paradigm can be used to naturally explain small Dirac neutrino masses
by considering the existence of three right-handed neutrinos in the brane, and
discuss the requirements to obtain phenomenologically viable neutrino masses
and mixing angles. Finally, we examine models where neutrinos obtain a small
Majorana mass by breaking lepton number in a far away brane and show that, if
the fat-brane paradigm is the solution to the absence of lepton number
violating charged lepton decays, such models predict, in the absence of flavour
symmetries, that charged lepton flavour violation will be observed in the next
round of rare muon/tau decay experiments.Comment: 33 pages, 9 eps figure
A supernova constraint on bulk majorons
In models with large extra dimensions all gauge singlet fields can in
principle propagate in the extra dimensional space. We have investigated
possible constraints on majoron models of neutrino masses in which the majorons
propagate in extra dimensions. It is found that astrophysical constraints from
supernovae are many orders of magnitude stronger than previous accelerator
bounds. Our findings suggest that unnatural types of the "see-saw" mechanism
for neutrino masses are unlikely to occur in nature, even in the presence of
extra dimensions.Comment: Minor changes, matches the version to appear in PR
Nonlinear ion-acoustic (IA) waves driven in a cylindrically symmetric flow
By employing a self-similar, two-fluid MHD model in a cylindrical geometry,
we study the features of nonlinear ion-acoustic (IA) waves which propagate in
the direction of external magnetic field lines in space plasmas. Numerical
calculations not only expose the well-known three shapes of nonlinear
structures (sinusoidal, sawtooth, and spiky or bipolar) which are observed by
numerous satellites and simulated by models in a Cartesian geometry, but also
illustrate new results, such as, two reversely propagating nonlinear waves,
density dips and humps, diverging and converging electric shocks, etc. A case
study on Cluster satellite data is also introduced.Comment: accepted by AS
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Synthesis of accelerograms compatible with the Chinese GB 50011-2001 design spectrum via harmonic wavelets: artificial and historic records
A versatile approach is employed to generate artificial accelerograms which satisfy the compatibility criteria prescribed by the Chinese aseismic code provisions GB 50011-2001. In particular, a frequency dependent peak factor derived by means of appropriate Monte Carlo analyses is introduced to relate the GB 50011-2001 design spectrum to a parametrically defined evolutionary power spectrum (EPS). Special attention is given to the definition of the frequency content of the EPS in order to accommodate the mathematical form of the aforementioned design spectrum. Further, a one-to-one relationship is established between the parameter controlling the time-varying intensity of the EPS and the effective strong ground motion duration. Subsequently, an efficient auto-regressive moving-average (ARMA) filtering technique is utilized to generate ensembles of non-stationary artificial accelerograms whose average response spectrum is in a close agreement with the considered design spectrum. Furthermore, a harmonic wavelet based iterative scheme is adopted to modify these artificial signals so that a close matching of the signals’ response spectra with the GB 50011-2001 design spectrum is achieved on an individual basis. This is also done for field recorded accelerograms pertaining to the May, 2008 Wenchuan seismic event. In the process, zero-phase high-pass filtering is performed to accomplish proper baseline correction of the acquired spectrum compatible artificial and field accelerograms. Numerical results are given in a tabulated format to expedite their use in practice
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