1,117 research outputs found

    Transconductor and integrator circuits for integrated bipolar video frequency filters

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    A description is presented of novel transconductor and integrator circuits which can be used in integrated video frequency filters in bipolar technology. The transconductor consists of a parallel connection of a passive nominal transconductance and an active variable transconductance, resulting in good high-frequency performance up to 70 MHz and less than 1% linearity error for input signals up to 2V pp. The integrator incorporates an operation transconductance amplifier circuit which provides a tunable integrator phase. Simulation results for all circuits and for a fifth-order elliptic low-pass filter with a nominal cutoff frequency of 5 MHz are presente

    Radioisotope Heaters for the Thermal Control

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    The recent development and fabrication of a series of small radioisotope heaters has opened the door to an entirely new and unique tool for thermal control. The devices are completely passive and generate heat with a reliability of 1. The design, and construction of these heaters is discussed along with qualification tests to which the heaters have been subjected. These tests include crush forces of 20,000 pounds, thermal shock from 1700°F to -320°F, and impact into granite at a velocity of 355 ft/sec. Radiation \u27shielding data are presented which will permit preliminary design estimates. General licensing requirements are also included. Some applications are discussed with comparisons made between radioisotope and electrical heating systems. In these comparisons a radioisotope heater shows both a weight and cost advantage over solar cells or batteries. Typical radioisotope heater characteristics over a power range of 1 to 50 watts are presented

    Is it possible to increase the sustainability of arable and ruminant agriculture by reducing inputs?

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    Until recently, agricultural production was optimised almost exclusively for profit but now farming is under pressure to meet environmental targets. A method is presented and applied for optimising the sustainability of agricultural production systems in terms of both economics and the environment. Components of the agricultural production chain are analysed using environmental life-cycle assessment (LCA) and a financial value attributed to the resources consumed and burden imposed on the environment by agriculture, as well as to the products. The sum of the outputs is weighed against the inputs and the system considered sustainable if the value of the outputs exceeds those of the inputs. If this ratio is plotted against the sum of inputs for all levels of input, a diminishing returns curve should result and the optimum level of sustainability is located at the maximum of the curve. Data were taken from standard economic almanacs and from published LCA reports on the extent of consumption and environmental burdens resulting from farming in the UK. Land-use is valued using the concept of ecosystem services. Our analysis suggests that agricultural systems are sustainable at rates of production close to current levels practiced in the UK. Extensification of farming, which is thought to favour non-food ecosystem services, requires more land to produce the same amount of food. The loss of ecosystem services hitherto provided by natural land brought into production is greater than that which can be provided by land now under extensive farming. This loss of ecosystem service is large in comparison to the benefit of a reduction in emission of nutrients and pesticides. However, food production is essential, so the coupling of subsidies that represent a relatively large component of the economic output in EU farming, with measures to reduce pollution are well-aimed. Measures to ensure that as little extra land is brought into production as possible or that marginal land is allowed to revert to nature would seem to be equally well-aimed, even if this required more intensive use of productive areas. We conclude that current arable farming in the EU is sustainable with either realistic prices for products or some degree of subsidy and that productivity per unit area of land and greenhouse gas emission (subsuming primary energy consumption) are the most important pressures on the sustainability of farming

    Results on Photon Production in Au+Au Collisions at RHIC

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    The status of the search for direct photons in Au+Au collisions at sqrt{s_NN} = 130 GeV and sqrt{s_NN} = 200 GeV with the PHENIX experiment is presented. Within errors, no excess of direct photons was found in a first analysis pass done on a limited data set. Significantly reduced systematic and statistical uncertainties are expected in future analyses.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures. Talk presented at the Quark Matter 2002 conference, Nantes, France, July 18-24, 2002. To appear in the proceedings (Nucl. Phys. A

    3d physics and the electroweak phase transition: a framework for lattice Monte Carlo analysis

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    We discuss a framework relying on both perturbative and non-perturbative lattice computations which will be able to reliably determine the parameters of the EW phase transition. A motivation for the use of 3d effective theory in the lattice simulations, rather than the complete 4d one, is provided. We introduce and compute on the 2-loop level a number of gauge-invariant order parameters -- condensates, which can be measured with high accuracy in MC simulations. The relation between MSbar and lattice condensates is found, together with the relation between lattice couplings and continuum parameters (the constant physics curves). These relations are exact in the continuum limit.Comment: 50 pages, uuencoded compressed postscript fil

    Industry solutions on Smart Farming Technology

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    Smart AKIS project aims at examining the suitability and use of Smart Farming Technologies (SFT) in the EU Agriculture involving farmers, the agricultural machinery industry, academia, research centers, agricultural engineering and public bodies. The purpose of this document is to present the report on methodology, standards and current findings within the Smart-AKIS project. The report provides a selection guide, detailing the issues that have to be taken into account in order to ensure the collection of data in a homogeneous way, and avoid misconceptions. This document is an update on the progress made in the data assessment that is currently ongoing on captuing industrial products related to SFTs that have not yet reached mainstreaming agriculture. This report is organized in three chapters. The first chapter will introduce current work on the Smart-Akis project as well as the objective of this document in the overall smart-akis framework. The second chapter will present the methodological approach that has taken to reach the industrial partners, the specific questions and the analysis procedure, wjhile the last chapter will present the interim results. The last chapter summarizes conclusion

    In vivo evolution of lactic acid hyper-tolerant Clostridium thermocellum

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    Lactic acid (LA) has several applications in the food, cosmetics and pharmaceutical industries, as well as in the production of biodegradable plastic polymers, namely polylactides. Industrial production of LA is essentially based on microbial fermentation. Recent reports have shown the potential of the cellulolytic bacterium Clostridium thermocellum for direct LA production from inexpensive lignocellulosic biomass. However, C. thermocellum is highly sensitive to acids and does not grow at pH \u3c 6.0. Improvement of LA tolerance of this microorganism is pivotal for its application in cost-efficient production of LA. In the present study, the LA tolerance of C. thermocellum strains LL345 (wild-type fermentation profile) and LL1111 (high LA yield) was increased by adaptive laboratory evolution. At large inoculum size (10 %), the maximum tolerated LA concentration of strain LL1111 was more than doubled, from 15 g/L to 35 g/L, while subcultures evolved from LL345 showed 50–85 % faster growth in medium containing 45 g/L LA. Gene mutations (pyruvate phosphate dikinase, histidine protein kinase/phosphorylase) possibly affecting carbohydrate and/or phosphate metabolism have been detected in most LA-adapted populations. Although improvement of LA tolerance may sometimes also enable higher LA production in microorganisms, C. thermocellum LA-adapted cultures showed a yield of LA, and generally of other organic acids, similar to or lower than parental strains. Based on its improved LA tolerance and LA titer similar to its parent strain (LL1111), mixed adapted culture LL1630 showed the highest performing phenotype and could serve as a framework for improving LA production by further metabolic engineering

    Angptl4 serves as an endogenous inhibitor of intestinal lipid digestion

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    Dietary triglycerides are hydrolyzed in the small intestine principally by pancreatic lipase. Following uptake by enterocytes and secretion as chylomicrons, dietary lipids are cleared from the bloodstream via lipoprotein lipase. Whereas lipoprotein lipase is inhibited by several proteins including Angiopoietin-like 4 (Angptl4), no endogenous regulator of pancreatic lipase has yet been identified. Here we present evidence that Angptl4 is an endogenous inhibitor of dietary lipid digestion. Angptl4−/− mice were heavier compared to their wild-type counterparts without any difference in food intake, energy expenditure or locomotor activity. However, Angptl4−/− mice showed decreased lipid content in the stools and increased accumulation of dietary triglycerides in the small intestine, which coincided with elevated luminal lipase activity in Angptl4−/− mice. Furthermore, recombinant Angptl4 reduced the activity of pancreatic lipase as well as the lipase activity in human ileostomy output. In conclusion, our data suggest that Angptl4 is an endogenous inhibitor of intestinal lipase activity

    CropSyst: a collection of object-oriented simulation models of agricultural systems

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    Object-orientated programming (OOP) was used to construct the CropSyst cropping system model. Components, or 'objects', used in the model included time, weather, crop, soil, crop residues, tillage, erosion, aphid population, aphid immigration, pesticide application, sowing, crop rotation and output. Different versions of the model were used to simulate crop production and soil erosion for cropping systems in E. Washington State, and to simulate yield loss and pesticide dynamics associated with Diuraphis noxia infestation. Different versions of the 'crop' object simulated different crops in a rotation. It was concluded that OOP was useful for constructing and maintaining agricultural systems model
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