497 research outputs found
Effets de six composts sur les réponses physiologiques, biochimiques et agronomiques du niébé Vigna unguiculata L. Walp var. KVX. 61.1. au déficit hydrique
Un déficit hydrique sévère a été imposé par suspension de l’arrosage à deux stades de développement à  une variété de niébé Vigna unguiculata L. Walp var. KVX. 61.1 cultivée en pot à l’air libre. Le sol de culture est un Lixisol Ferrique amendé par six types de composts fabriqués à partir de mélanges de déchets urbains solides composés de déchets verts (DV), de déchets d’abattoir (DA), de déchets de cuisine (DC) selon les compositions suivantes: C1=40%DV+60%DA; C2=40%DV+40%DA+20%DC; C3=40%DV+30%DA+30%DC; C4=40%DV+20%DA+40%DC; C5=40%DV+60%DC; C6=100%DV. Les effets de ces six composts sur le potentiel hydrique, la fuite d’électrolyte, la teneur en amidon des feuilles et sur quelques paramètres agronomiques ont été évalués sur les plantes stressées en comparaison avec les plantes témoins. Les résultats indiquent des valeurs du potentiel hydrique foliaire très faibles et une réduction de la teneur en amidon des feuilles pour les plantes des composts C2, C3, C4, et C5. Ces dernières présentent des intégrités membranaires plus affectées comparativement aux plantes du sol témoin et celles des composts C1 et C6. Les composts C2, C3, C4 et C5 favorisent le développement des racines et augmentent le rendement en graines du niébé en condition de déficit hydrique. Ce qui justifie l’intérêt du compostage des déchets de cuisine.Mots clés : niébé, déficit hydrique, compost, déchets urbains solide
Dynamique des compartiments du carbone et de l'azote dans le sol cultivé en niébé et sorgho dans le système zaï en zone Nord soudanienne du Burkina Faso
La gestion appropriée des sols cultivés peut permettre un stockage de carbone, en plus de l’avantage supplémentaire du maintien du niveau de fertilité qui en résulte. L’objectif de cette étude est d’appréhender l’influence réelle de pratiques culturales sous niébé ou sorgho dans le système zaï, sur l’évolution et l’organisation des teneurs de carbone (C) et d’azote (N) du sol à l’échelle de la parcelle. Un dispositif factoriel en blocs de Fisher a été utilisé. Les traitements comprenant des apports de fumier seul ou associé au burkina phosphate avec exportation des résidus de cultures ont été testés. Le fractionnement granulométrique de la matière organique du sol a été utilisé, séparant trois fractions. Les résultats révèlent que la répartition de C et N dans les fractions granulométriques n’a pas été affectée par les espèces cultivées. Quelle que soit la culture, le carbone et l’azote se trouvent essentiellement sous forme de matière organique stable dans la fraction 0-20 μm, soit respectivement 64% et 73% pour C et N. L’apport du fumier seul ou combiné au phosphate, entraîne une augmentation de la matière organique labile ; 38% de C et 31% de N sont stockés dans la fraction 50-2000 μm. La dynamique de la matière organique du sol à  l’échelle de la parcelle est plus influencée par les amendements que par les espèces cultivées.Mot clés : Matière organique, sols dégradés, légumineuse, céréale, fumier, burkina phosphate
Phase space geometry and slow dynamics
We describe a non-Arrhenius mechanism for slowing down of dynamics that is
inherent to the high dimensionality of the phase space. We show that such a
mechanism is at work both in a family of mean-field spin-glass models without
any domain structure and in the case of ferromagnetic domain growth. The
marginality of spin-glass dynamics, as well as the existence of a `quasi
equilibrium regime' can be understood within this scenario. We discuss the
question of ergodicity in an out-of equilibrium situation.Comment: 23 pages, ReVTeX3.0, 6 uuencoded postscript figures appende
Environmental contaminants as etiologic factors for diabetes.
For both type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus, the rates have been increasing in the United States and elsewhere; rates vary widely by country, and genetic factors account for less than half of new cases. These observations suggest environmental factors cause both type 1 and type 2 diabetes. Occupational exposures have been associated with increased risk of diabetes. In addition, recent data suggest that toxic substances in the environment, other than infectious agents or exposures that stimulate an immune response, are associated with the occurrence of these diseases. We reviewed the epidemiologic data that addressed whether environmental contaminants might cause type 1 or type 2 diabetes. For type 1 diabetes, higher intake of nitrates, nitrites, and N-nitroso compounds, as well as higher serum levels of polychlorinated biphenyls have been associated with increased risk. Overall, however, the data were limited or inconsistent. With respect to type 2 diabetes, data on arsenic and 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin relative to risk were suggestive of a direct association but were inconclusive. The occupational data suggested that more data on exposure to N-nitroso compounds, arsenic, dioxins, talc, and straight oil machining fluids in relation to diabetes would be useful. Although environmental factors other than contaminants may account for the majority of type 1 and type 2 diabetes, the etiologic role of several contaminants and occupational exposures deserves further study
Magic N=2 supergravities from hyper-free superstrings
We show by explicit construction the existence of various four dimensional
models of type II superstrings with N=2 supersymmetry, purely vector multiplet
spectrum and no hypermultiplets. Among these, two are of special interest, at
the field theory level they correspond to the two exceptional N=2
supergravities of the magic square that have the same massless scalar field
content as pure N=6 supergravity and N=3 supergravity coupled to three extra
vector multiplets. The N=2 model of the magic square that is associated to N=6
supergravity is very peculiar since not only the scalar degrees of freedom but
all the bosonic massless degrees of freedom are the same in both theories.
All presented hyper-free N=2 models are based on asymmetric orbifold
constructions with N=(4,1) world-sheet superconformal symmetry and utilize the
2d fermionic construction techniques. The two exceptional N=2 models of the
magic square are constructed via a "twisting mechanism" that eliminates the
extra gravitini of the N=6 and N=3 extended supergravities and creates at the
same time the extra spin-1/2 fermions and spin-1 gauge bosons which are
necessary to balance the numbers of bosons and fermions. Theories of the magic
square with the same amount of supersymmetry in three and five space-time
dimensions are constructed as well, via stringy reduction and oxidation from
the corresponding four-dimensional models.Comment: 27 page
Type IIB orientifolds on Gepner points
We study various aspects of orientifold projections of Type IIB closed string
theory on Gepner points in different dimensions. The open string sector is
introduced, in the usual constructive way, in order to cancel RR charges
carried by orientifold planes. Moddings by cyclic permutations of the internal
N=2 superconformal blocks as well as by discrete phase symmetries are
implemented. Reduction in the number of generations, breaking or enhancements
of gauge symmetries and topology changes are shown to be induced by such
moddings. Antibranes sector is also considered; in particular we show how non
supersymmetric models with antibranes and free of closed and open tachyons do
appear in this context. A systematic study of consistent models in D=8
dimensions and some illustrative examples in D=6 and D=4 dimensions are
presented.Comment: 67 pages, no figures References added, typos correcte
DBI Inflation in the Tip Region of a Warped Throat
Previous work on DBI inflation, which achieves inflation through the motion
of a brane as it moves through a warped throat compactification, has
focused on the region far from the tip of the throat. Since reheating and other
observable effects typically occur near the tip, a more detailed study of this
region is required. To investigate these effects we consider a generalized warp
throat where the warp factor becomes nearly constant near the tip. We find that
it is possible to obtain 60 or more e-folds in the constant region, however
large non-gaussianities are typically produced due to the small sound speed of
fluctuations. For a particular well-studied throat, the Klebanov-Strassler
solution, we find that inflation near the tip may be generic and it is
difficult to satisfy current bounds on non-gaussianity, but other throat
solutions may evade these difficulties.Comment: 26 pages, 1 figure. v1. references added, typos corrected v2.
clarifications mad
LL(1) Parsing with Derivatives and Zippers
In this paper, we present an efficient, functional, and formally verified
parsing algorithm for LL(1) context-free expressions based on the concept of
derivatives of formal languages. Parsing with derivatives is an elegant parsing
technique, which, in the general case, suffers from cubic worst-case time
complexity and slow performance in practice. We specialise the parsing with
derivatives algorithm to LL(1) context-free expressions, where alternatives can
be chosen given a single token of lookahead. We formalise the notion of LL(1)
expressions and show how to efficiently check the LL(1) property. Next, we
present a novel linear-time parsing with derivatives algorithm for LL(1)
expressions operating on a zipper-inspired data structure. We prove the
algorithm correct in Coq and present an implementation as a parser combinators
framework in Scala, with enumeration and pretty printing capabilities.Comment: Appeared at PLDI'20 under the title "Zippy LL(1) Parsing with
Derivatives
Increasing sorghum yields for smallholder farmers in Mali: the evolution towards a context-driven, on-farm, gender-responsive sorghum breeding program
This case study explores a decades long evolution towards a gender-responsive sorghum breeding program in Mali. With known disparities in men and women’s access to the resources that improve agricultural productivity and evidence that gender roles and responsibilities shape knowledge and preferences about varieties, there is need for methods that support gender-responsive processes in plant breeding programs. Gender-sensitive and gender-responsive approaches
in plant breeding may increase varietal options available to diverse end-users, increase adoption, and limit negative impacts on vulnerable populations. We assess a participatory plant breeding program in Mali to identify determinants
of gender-responsive breeding programs. The analysis uses a case study methodology that draws upon project reports, theses, articles, and experiential knowledge to understand how the sorghum breeding program transitioned over time. This case study details (a) more than a decade of sorghum breeding activities and research that led to (b) the inclusion of women in participatory plant breeding, culinary tests, and large-scale participatory selection in onfarm
trials, reaching hundreds of women each year and (c) iterative co-learning processes to develop preferred sorghum varieties and increase sorghum yields on men and women’s fields. Analyses indicated that collaborations among many
institutions on-farm with community actors, research across various disciplines such as agronomy and social sciences, context-specific breeding, and longterm funding were essential to increasing gender sensitivity and responsive in
the breeding efforts
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