132,819 research outputs found
Economic and environmental analysis of the introduction of legumes in livestock farming systems
Legumes in low input systems are becoming increasingly important. The socioeconomic implication of the adoption of novel legumes species has been assessed in sheep and dairy cattle grazing systems in Europe using a biological model which has been linked to linear programming models. In the economic sub-model, the mathematical programming models produce an economic evaluation of the legumes in a farming system context, emphasising the land allocation and the availability of nutrients during the different seasons of the production cycle. Then the paper evaluates the impact of adopting the legumes on the regional income and production. In the UK and Germany, the introduction of legumes results in sizeable gains for the farmers whereas in Italy and France the gains are smaller
Searching for Dark Matter Signals in the Left-Right Symmetric Gauge Model with CP Symmetry
We investigate singlet scalar dark matter (DM) candidate in a left-right
symmetric gauge model with two Higgs bidoublets (2HBDM) in which the
stabilization of the DM particle is induced by the discrete symmetries P and
CP. According to the observed DM abundance, we predict the DM direct and
indirect detection cross sections for the DM mass range from 10 GeV to 500 GeV.
We show that the DM indirect detection cross section is not sensitive to the
light Higgs mixing and Yukawa couplings except the resonance regions. The
predicted spin-independent DM-nucleon elastic scattering cross section is found
to be significantly dependent on the above two factors. Our results show that
the future DM direct search experiments can cover the most parts of the allowed
parameter space. The PAMELA antiproton data can only exclude two very narrow
regions in the 2HBDM. It is very difficult to detect the DM direct or indirect
signals in the resonance regions due to the Breit-Wigner resonance effect.Comment: 24 pages, 8 figures. minor changes and a reference added, published
in Phys. Rev.
-valley electron factor in bulk GaAs and AlAs
We study the Land\'e -factor of conduction electrons in the -valley of
bulk GaAs and AlAs by using a three-band model
together with the tight-binding model. We find that the -valley -factor
is highly anisotropic, and can be characterized by two components,
and . is close to the free electron Land\'e factor but
is strongly affected by the remote bands. The contribution from remote
bands on depends on how the remote bands are treated. However, when
the magnetic field is in the Voigt configuration, which is widely used in the
experiments, different models give almost identical -factor.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, To be published in J. App. Phys. 104, 200
Lifetime Difference and Endpoint effect in the Inclusive Bottom Hadron Decays
The lifetime differences of bottom hadrons are known to be properly explained
within the framework of heavy quark effective field theory(HQEFT) of QCD via
the inverse expansion of the dressed heavy quark mass. In general, the spectrum
around the endpoint region is not well behaved due to the invalidity of
expansion near the endpoint. The curve fitting method is adopted to treat the
endpoint behavior. It turns out that the endpoint effects are truly small and
the explanation on the lifetime differences in the HQEFT of QCD is then well
justified. The inclusion of the endpoint effects makes the prediction on the
lifetime differences and the extraction on the CKM matrix element
more reliable.Comment: 11 pages, Revtex, 10 figures, 6 tables, published versio
Control and Filtering for Discrete Linear Repetitive Processes with H infty and ell 2--ell infty Performance
Repetitive processes are characterized by a series of sweeps, termed passes, through a set of dynamics defined over a finite duration known as the pass length. On each pass an output, termed the pass profile, is produced which acts as a forcing function on, and hence contributes to, the dynamics of the next pass profile. This can lead to oscillations which increase in amplitude in the pass to pass direction and cannot be controlled by standard control laws. Here we give new results on the design of physically based control laws for the sub-class of so-called discrete linear repetitive processes which arise in applications areas such as iterative learning control. The main contribution is to show how control law design can be undertaken within the framework of a general robust filtering problem with guaranteed levels of performance. In particular, we develop algorithms for the design of an H? and dynamic output feedback controller and filter which guarantees that the resulting controlled (filtering error) process, respectively, is stable along the pass and has prescribed disturbance attenuation performance as measured by and – norms
Foreign Workers and the Organic Farms’ Demand for Seasonal Unskilled Labor
This study analyzes farm labor management strategies of organic farms by employing Heckan selection model. Econometric results present interesting relationships between foreign worker-related variables and the hiring of non-family seasonal part-time workers. First, the extent of hiring is inversely related to the population of illegal residents. Second, the outcome variable (extent of hiring) is directly related to the number of H2A permits (foreign guest farm worker visas for temporary, contractual work) issued. The results also indicate that higher wages, corporate farms, and more educated, younger and full-time farm operators are associated with greater tendencies to hire non-family seasonal part-time workers. Family labor is used to supplement the lack of available non-family seasonal part-time workers.organic farm, unskilled labor, immigration, Heckman selection model, foreign worker, Farm Management,
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