18,785 research outputs found

    On vv--domains and star operations

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    Let \ast be a star operation on an integral domain DD. Let \f(D) be the set of all nonzero finitely generated fractional ideals of DD. Call DD a \ast--Pr\"ufer (respectively, (,v)(\ast, v)--Pr\"ufer) domain if (FF1)=D(FF^{-1})^{\ast}=D (respectively, (FvF1)=D(F^vF^{-1})^{\ast}=D) for all F\in \f(D). We establish that \ast--Pr\"ufer domains (and (,v)(\ast, v)--Pr\"ufer domains) for various star operations \ast span a major portion of the known generalizations of Pr\"{u}fer domains inside the class of vv--domains. We also use Theorem 6.6 of the Larsen and McCarthy book [Multiplicative Theory of Ideals, Academic Press, New York--London, 1971], which gives several equivalent conditions for an integral domain to be a Pr\"ufer domain, as a model, and we show which statements of that theorem on Pr\"ufer domains can be generalized in a natural way and proved for \ast--Pr\"ufer domains, and which cannot be. We also show that in a \ast --Pr\"ufer domain, each pair of \ast -invertible \ast -ideals admits a GCD in the set of \ast -invertible \ast -ideals, obtaining a remarkable generalization of a property holding for the "classical" class of Pr\"ufer vv--multiplication domains. We also link DD being \ast --Pr\"ufer (or (,v)(\ast, v)--Pr\"ufer) with the group Inv(D)^{\ast}(D) of \ast -invertible \ast -ideals (under \ast-multiplication) being lattice-ordered

    Impact of the Ethanol Boom on Livestock and Dairy Industries: What Are They Going to Eat?

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    Increased demand for corn for ethanol production has helped push grain prices to record levels. This has increased livestock production costs, and producers have responded with changes to production systems. This paper explores the degree to which costs can be mitigated with alternative feeds, the effect this might have on physical performance, and the impact of alternative feeds on the competitive position of different species.cattle feeding, corn, cost of production, ethanol, Agribusiness, Farm Management, Livestock Production/Industries, Production Economics, Research and Development/Tech Change/Emerging Technologies, Q12, Q13,

    Allatostatin-A neurons inhibit feeding behavior in adult Drosophila

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    How the brain translates changes in internal metabolic state or perceived food quality into alterations in feeding behavior remains poorly understood. Studies in Drosophila larvae have yielded information about neuropeptides and circuits that promote feeding, but a peptidergic neuron subset whose activation inhibits feeding in adult flies, without promoting metabolic changes that mimic the state of satiety, has not been identified. Using genetically based manipulations of neuronal activity, we show that activation of neurons (or neuroendocrine cells) expressing the neuropeptide allatostatin A (AstA) inhibits or limits several starvation-induced changes in feeding behavior in adult Drosophila, including increased food intake and enhanced behavioral responsiveness to sugar. Importantly, these effects on feeding behavior are observed in the absence of any measurable effects on metabolism or energy reserves, suggesting that AstA neuron activation is likely a consequence, not a cause, of metabolic changes that induce the state of satiety. These data suggest that activation of AstA-expressing neurons promotes food aversion and/or exerts an inhibitory influence on the motivation to feed and implicate these neurons and their associated circuitry in the mechanisms that translate the state of satiety into alterations in feeding behavior

    EXPLANATION OF THE BASIC FORMULA PRICE PROVISIONS OF THE PROPOSED RULE

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    An important segment of milk marketing order reform involves replacing the current BFP. This working paper explains the background of the BFP issue, the options considered and the provisions of the proposed rule as related to the BFP issue.Marketing,

    THE ADOPTION AND DIFFUSION OF LEVEL FIELDS AND BASINS

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    Strategic investments in agriculture often are lumpy and irreversible, with significant impacts on operating and fixed costs. Leveling cotton fields to zero slope in central Arizona is a strategic decision made by relatively younger farmers who are farming fine-textured soils in irrigation districts with higher expected water costs. The diffusion of the technology across the region between 1968-89 appears to be both a function of institutional changes (e.g., the Groundwater Management Act of 1980, the Central Arizona Project) and the long-run expected price changes induced by these new policies.Crop Production/Industries,
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