3,135 research outputs found
'n Ondersoek na sielkundige verwerpingsrisikofaktore by die nieroorplantingspasient
Undergoing kidney transplantation has an impact on the physical and psychological well-being of the patient. This study focuses on the psychological aspect, and in particular on the personality structure of the transplant patient. The 16-Personality Factor Questionnaire was applied to 12 successful and 12 unsuccessful renal transplant patients at H. F. Verwoerd Hospital. A significant personality difference was noted between these two groups. The patients who rejected the kidney had a low score on factors Q1, Q2, Band Toughmindedness. This implies a lower crystallised intelligence, greater conservativeness, respect of established ideas as well as a tendency to go along with the group. This information is pertinent to the selection of patients who are psychologically suited to transplantation. Psychologists can play an important role in the selection, preparation and rehabilitation of these patients.S Afr Med J 1990: 78: 26-2
Drivers of land use change and household determinants of sustainability in smallholder farming systems of Eastern Uganda
Smallholder farming systems in sub-Saharan Africa have undergone changes in land use, productivity and sustainability. Understanding of the drivers that have led to changes in land use in these systems and factors that influence the systems’ sustainability is useful to guide appropriate targeting of intervention strategies for improvement. We studied low input Teso farming systems in eastern Uganda from 1960 to 2001 in a place-based analysis combined with a comparative analysis of similar low input systems in southern Mali. This study showed that policy-institutional factors next to population growth have driven land use changes in the Teso systems, and that nutrient balances of farm households are useful indicators to identify their sustainability. During the period of analysis, the fraction of land under cultivation increased from 46 to 78%, and communal grazing lands nearly completely disappeared. Cropping diversified over time; cassava overtook cotton and millet in importance, and rice emerged as an alternative cash crop. Impacts of political instability, such as the collapse of cotton marketing and land management institutions, of communal labour arrangements and aggravation of cattle rustling were linked to the changes. Crop productivity in the farming systems is poor and nutrient balances differed between farm types. Balances of N, P and K were all positive for larger farms (LF) that had more cattle and derived a larger proportion of their income from off-farm activities, whereas on the medium farms (MF), small farms with cattle (SF1) and without cattle (SF2) balances were mostly negative. Sustainability of the farming system is driven by livestock, crop production, labour and access to off-farm income. Building private public partnerships around market-oriented crops can be an entry point for encouraging investment in use of external nutrient inputs to boost productivity in such African farming systems. However, intervention strategies should recognise the diversity and heterogeneity between farms to ensure efficient use of these external inputs
Impacts of heterogeneity in soil fertility on legume-finger millet productivity, farmers ' targeting and economic benefits
Targeting of integrated management practices for smallholder agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa is necessary due to the great heterogeneity in soil fertility. Experiments were conducted to evaluate the impacts of landscape position and field type on the biomass yield, N accumulation and N2-fixation by six legumes (cowpea, green gram, groundnut, mucuna, pigeonpea and soyabean) established with and without P during the short rain season of 2005. Residual effects of the legumes on the productivity of finger millet were assessed for two subsequent seasons in 2006 in two villages in Pallisa district, eastern Uganda. Legume biomass and N accumulation differed significantly (P <0.001) between villages, landscape position, field type and P application rate. Mucuna accumulated the most biomass (4.8–10.9 Mg ha-1) and groundnut the least (1.0–3.4 Mg ha-1) on both good and poor fields in the upper and middle landscape positions. N accumulation and amounts of N2-fixed by the legumes followed a similar trend as biomass, and was increased significantly by application of P. Grain yields of finger millet were significantly (P <0.001) higher in the first season after incorporation of legume biomass than in the second season after incorporation. Finger millet also produced significantly more grain in good fields (0.62–2.15 Mg ha-1) compared with poor fields (0.29–1.49 Mg ha-1) across the two villages. Participatory evaluation of options showed that farmers preferred growing groundnut and were not interested in growing pigeonpea and mucuna. They preferentially targeted grain legumes to good fields except for mucuna and pigeonpea which they said they would grow only in poor fields. Benefit-cost ratios indicated that legume-millet rotations without P application were only profitable on good fields in both villages. We suggest that green gram, cowpea and soyabean without P can be targeted to good fields on both upper and middle landscape positions in both villages. All legumes grown with P fertiliser on poor fields provided larger benefits than continuous cropping of millet
The incidence of mid-infrared excesses in G and K giants
Using photometric data from the 2MASS and GLIMPSE catalogues, I investigate
the incidence of mid-infrared excesses (~10 microns) of G and K stars of
luminosity class III. In order to obtain a large sample size, stars are
selected using a near-IR colour-magnitude diagram. Sources which are candidates
for showing mid-IR excess are carefully examined and modelled to determined
whether they are likely to be G/K giants. It is found that mid-IR excesses are
present at a level of (1.8 +/- 0.4) x 10^-3. While the origin of these excesses
remains uncertain, it is plausible that they arise from debris discs around
these stars. I note that the measured incidence is consistent with a scenario
in which dust lifetimes in debris discs are determined by Poynting-Robertson
drag rather than by collisions.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 13 pages, 5 figures, 2 tables (1
landscape table
HESS J1507-622: an unique unidentified source off the Galactic Plane
Galactic very high energy (VHE, > 100 GeV) gamma ray sources in the inner
Galaxy H.E.S.S. survey tend to cluster within 1 degree in latitude around the
Galactic plane. HESS J1507-622 instead is unique, since it is located at
latitude of ~3.5 degrees. HESS J1507-622 is slightly extended over the PSF of
the instrument and hence its Galactic origin is clear. The search for
counterparts in other wavelength regimes (radio, infrared and X-rays) failed to
show any plausible counterparts; and given its position off the Galactic plane
and hence the absorption almost one order of magnitude lower, it is very
surprising to not see any counterparts especially at X-rays wavelengths (by
ROSAT, XMM Newton and Chandra). Its latitude implies that it is either rather
close, within about 1 kpc, or is located well off the Galactic plane. And also
the models reflect the uniqueness of this object: a leptonic PWN scenario would
place this source due to its quite small extension to multi-kpc distance
whereas a hadronic scenario would preferentially locate this object at
distances of < 1 kpc where the density of target material is higher
s-Process Nucleosynthesis in Advanced Burning Phases of Massive Stars
We present a detailed study of s-process nucleosynthesis in massive stars of
solar-like initial composition and masses 15, 20,25, and 30 Msun. We update our
previous results of s-process nucleosynthesis during the core He-burning of
these stars and then focus on an analysis of the s-process under the physical
conditions encountered during the shell-carbon burning. We show that the recent
compilation of the Ne22(alpha,n)Mg25 rate leads to a remarkable reduction of
the efficiency of the s-process during core He-burning. In particular, this
rate leads to the lowest overproduction factor of Kr80 found to date during
core He-burning in massive stars. The s-process yields resulting from shell
carbon burning turn out to be very sensitive to the structural evolution of the
carbon shell. This structure is influenced by the mass fraction of C12 attained
at the end of core helium burning, which in turn is mainly determined by the
C12(alpha,gamma)O16 reaction. The still present uncertainty in the rate for
this reaction implies that the s-process in massive stars is also subject to
this uncertainty. We identify some isotopes like Zn70 and Rb87 as the
signatures of the s-process during shell carbon burning in massive stars. In
determining the relative contribution of our s-only stellar yields to the solar
abundances, we find it is important to take into account the neutron exposure
of shell carbon burning. When we analyze our yields with a Salpeter Initial
Mass Function, we find that massive stars contribute at least 40% to s-only
nuclei with mass A 90, massive stars
contribute on average ~7%, except for Gd152, Os187, and Hg198 which are ~14%,
\~13%, and ~11%, respectively.Comment: 52 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
New unidentified H.E.S.S. Galactic sources
H.E.S.S. is one of the most sensitive instruments in the very high energy
(VHE; > 100 GeV) gamma-ray domain and has revealed many new sources along the
Galactic Plane. After the successful first VHE Galactic Plane Survey of 2004,
H.E.S.S. has continued and extended that survey in 2005-2008, discovering a
number of new sources, many of which are unidentified. Some of the unidentified
H.E.S.S. sources have several positional counterparts and hence several
different possible scenarios for the origin of the VHE gamma-ray emission;
their identification remains unclear. Others have so far no counterparts at any
other wavelength. Particularly, the lack of an X-ray counterpart puts serious
constraints on emission models. Several newly discovered and still unidentified
VHE sources are reported here.Comment: ICRC 2009 proceeding
Lead poisoning in shooting-range workers in Gauteng Province, South Africa: Two case studies
Background. Lead exposure constitutes a major public health concern globally. Relative to developed nations, lead exposure is understudied and poorly addressed in Africa, and there is a dearth of information available to inform lead poisoning prevention strategies, even in highrisk groups such as workers in shooting ranges who are potentially exposed to lead daily.Methods. Two workers at a private shooting range in Gauteng, South Africa (SA), had blood lead levels and exposure histories taken.Results. Workers had highly elevated blood lead levels and clinical symptoms associated with elevated blood lead levels.Conclusion. Workers in private SA shooting ranges are vulnerable to lead exposure and poisoning, and scaled-up action is required to protect them and their families, as well as shooting-range users, from lead and the related health risks
Pulsational instability of yellow hypergiants
Instability of population I (X=0.7, Y=0.02) massive stars against radial
oscillations during the post-main sequence gravitational contraction of the
helium core is investigated. Initial stellar masses are in the range from
65M_\odot to 90M_\odot. In hydrodynamic computations of self-exciting stellar
oscillations we assumed that energy transfer in the envelope of the pulsating
star is due to radiative heat conduction and convection. The convective heat
transfer was treated in the framework of the theory of time-dependent turbulent
convection. During evolutionary expansion of outer layers after hydrogen
exhaustion in the stellar core the star is shown to be unstable against radial
oscillations while its effective temperature is Teff > 6700K for
Mzams=65M_\odot and Teff > 7200K for mzams=90M_\odot. Pulsational instability
is due to the \kappa-mechanism in helium ionization zones and at lower
effective temperature oscillations decay because of significantly increasing
convection. The upper limit of the period of radial pulsations on this stage of
evolution does not exceed 200 day. Radial oscillations of the hypergiant resume
during evolutionary contraction of outer layers when the effective temperature
is Teff > 7300K for Mzams=65M_\odot and Teff > 7600K for Mzams=90M_\odot.
Initially radial oscillations are due to instability of the first overtone and
transition to fundamental mode pulsations takes place at higher effective
temperatures (Teff > 7700K for Mzams=65M_\odot and Teff > 8200K for
Mzams=90M_\odot). The upper limit of the period of radial oscillations of
evolving blueward yellow hypergiants does not exceed 130 day. Thus, yellow
hypergiants are stable against radial stellar pulsations during the major part
of their evolutionary stage.Comment: 20 pages, 7 gigures. Accepted for publication in Astronomy Letter
On a Site of X-ray Emission in AE Aquarii
An analysis of recently reported results of XMM-Newton observations of AE Aqr
within a hypothesis that the detected X-ray source is located inside the Roche
lobe of the white dwarf is presented. I show this hypothesis to be inconsistent
with the currently adopted model of mass-transfer in the system. Possible
solutions of this problem are briefly discussed.Comment: 4 pages, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
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