2,693 research outputs found
A Case Study of Fall versus Spring Calving for the Rocky Mountain West
Feeder cattle prices are generally lower in the fall, when the volume of calves for sale is highest. Most ranches in the Rocky Mountains calve in March or April, which results in the sale of weaned calves in October, when feeder cattle prices tend to be lowest. This study was initiated with the idea that a rancher might improve profitability by switching to fall calving, which would enable them to sell calves in April at a higher price. In this study, fall calving generated both higher and less variable profit, but mainly because of cost savings.Livestock Production/Industries,
Evidence for from photoproduction and consequence for chiral-symmetry restoration at high mass
We report a partial-wave analysis of new data on the double-polarization
variable for the reactions and
and of further data published earlier. The analysis within the Bonn-Gatchina
(BnGa) formalism reveals evidence for a poorly known baryon resonance, the
one-star . This is the lowest-mass resonance with
spin-parity . Its mass is significantly higher than the mass of its
parity partner which is the lowest-mass
resonance with spin-parity . It has been suggested that chiral
symmetry might be restored in the high-mass region of hadron excitations, and
that these two resonances should be degenerate in mass. Our findings are in
conflict with this prediction.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures; Physics Letters B in pres
Water Balance Monitoring for Two Bioretention Gardens in Omaha, Nebraska, 2011–14
Document abstract
Bioretention gardens are used to help mitigate stormwater runoff in urban settings in an attempt to restore the hydrologic response of the developed land to a natural predevelopment response in which more water is infiltrated rather than routed directly to urban drainage networks. To better understand the performance of bioretention gardens in facilitating infiltration of stormwater in eastern Nebraska, the United States Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with the Douglas County Environmental Services and the Nebraska Environmental Trust, assessed the water balance of two bioretention gardens located in Omaha, Nebraska by monitoring the amount of stormwater entering and leaving the gardens. One garden is on the Douglas County Health Center campus, and the other garden is on the property of the Eastern Nebraska Office on Aging.
For the Douglas County Health Center, bioretention garden performance was evaluated on the basis of volume reduction by comparing total inflow volume to total outflow volume. The bioretention garden reduced inflow volumes from a minimum of 33 percent to 100 percent (a complete reduction in inflow volume) depending on the size of the event. Although variable, the percent reduction of the inflow volume tended to decrease with increasing total event rainfall. To assess how well the garden reduces stormwater peak inflow rates, peak inflows were plotted against peak outflows measured at the bioretention garden. Only 39 of the 255 events had any overflow, indicating 100 percent peak reduction in the other events. Of those 39 events having overflow, the mean peak reduction was 63 percent.
No overflow events were recorded at the bioretention garden at the Eastern Nebraska Office on Aging; therefore, data were not available for an event-based overflow analysis.Monitoring period summary of the water balance at both bio-retention gardens indicates that most of the stormwater in the bioretention gardens is stored in the subsurface.
Evapotranspiration was attributed to a small percentage of the outputs on an annual basis (3 percent at Douglas County Health Center site and 5 percent at Eastern Nebraska Office on Aging site), which indicates that vegetative water uptake is not a primary factor in the water budget.
Data abstract
This data release (from February 3, 2020) includes stormwater inflow, outflow, and subsurface storage data for two bioretention gardens located in Omaha, Nebraska. Additionally, two additional datasets are included which contain meteorology and evapotranspiration data for each site. These sites were located at the Douglas County Health Center (DCHC), and the Eastern Nebraska Office on Aging (ENOA)
Taking Oaths and Giving Thanks: Ritual and Religion In Revolutionary America
This dissertation examines the early modern ritual traditions of oaths, thanksgivings, and fast days in Revolutionary America and argues that American politicians and citizens negotiated the meanings of these rituals for American citizenship throughout the Revolutionary era. Oaths of office and allegiance, thanksgivings and fast days were tools for creating a united nation, but they also posed significant challenges because of the religious and political associations inherent in such rituals. These rituals came out of early modern Europe\u27s religious and political culture which was useful for establishing America as a legitimate European nation. As colonials on the edge of the European world, grounding the nation in European tradition was an important step in presenting themselves as a nation on equal footing with Britain, France, and Spain. These same rituals, however, presented problems for unifying a society with as much religious and political variety as appeared in the American colonies.
Thus, for the thirty years between the first Continental Congress in 1774 and the third peaceful exchange of presidential power in 1801, Americans negotiated what constraints the state and federal governments could place on American citizens\u27 religious and political beliefs while simultaneously searching for rituals which would draw the v
nation together in religious worship and public duty. This negotiation was often not the product of debates over political philosophy, but was enacted by groups and individuals petitioning for more religious freedom or who were viewed as loyal citizens with religious scruples. Early modern nation states typically established a particular version of Christianity while allowing varying levels of dissent from this norm and while some Americans advocated for this type of established religion in America the reality was that such uniformity of behavior was unlikely to be tolerated in the new nation. Instead, politicians and citizens alike searched for a compromise between an established denomination and total religious freedom which many feared would lead to widespread immorality and poor civic virtue
Phonons in the beta-tin, Imma, and sh phases of Silicon from ab initio calculations
We present a new interpretation of measured Raman frequencies of a
high-pressure structure of Silicon which was assigned previously to the
beta-tin phase. Our results show that the beta-tin->Imma->sh phase transitions
have been already indicated in this experiment which was performed before the
discovery of the Imma phase. We have calculated phonon-dispersion curves for
the beta-tin, Imma, and sh phases of silicon using the plane-wave
pseudopotential approach to the density-functional theory and the
density-functional perturbation theory within the local density approximation.
With the new assignment, the calculated phonon frequencies display an excellent
agreement with the experimental data, and can be also used to determine
precisely the transition pressure for the Imma->beta-tin phase transition. The
sh->Imma transition is accompanied by soft modes.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figure
Nucleon Spectroscopy with CLAS
Meson photoproduction is an important tool in the study of nucleon resonances. The spectrum of broad and overlapping nucleon excitations can be greatly clarified by use of polarization observables. The N* program at Jefferson Lab with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) includes experimental studies with linearly- and circularly-polarized tagged-photon beams, longitudinally- and transversely-polarized nucleon targets, and recoil polarizations. Selected results from these experimental studies will be presented
Polarization Observables in
We explore some of the rich structure of the polarization observables
recently developed for processes like and in the framework of a specific model for the latter process.
Emphasis is placed on observables that may be accesible at existing facilities
in the near future. The sensitivity of the observables to the details of the
model indicate that they will be a very useful tool in differentiating between
different models for reactions like these. In the framework of a model for
, we examine the sensitivity of the observables to
coupling constants of the , to the properties of the , and
to the existence of the .Comment: 21 pages, latex, 17 figures, 1 style file include
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