23,876 research outputs found
Diapause in the Boll Weevil, Anthonontus grandis Boheman, As Related to Fruiting Activity in the Cotton Plant
Studies in Arkansas show that boll weevil diapause is related to changes in fruiting activity of the cotton plant. Generally, when larval development took place while fruiting levels were increasing or being held at a high level, diapause in resulting adults was low (0-20%). Diapause was approximately 20-50% when larval development coincided with decreasing fruiting levels, and was 50-100% as true cut-out approached. Regrowth cotton generally lowered diapause incidence and as fruiting levels decreased, diapause increased. Therefore, the boll weevil not only responds to short photoperiods that are characteristic during the fall in the temperate zone, but also may respond throughout the season to changes in fruiting activity of the cotton plant
Inequality Matters
This is one of a series of five papers outlining the particular domains and dimensions of inequality where new research may yield a better understanding of responses to this growing issue.The aim of this paper is to describe, in very broad brushstrokes, the state of academic scholarship regarding social inequality, with an eye toward identifying important gaps. The focus is on four key interacting social domains: 1) socioeconomic (financial and human capital)2) health (including physical and psychological) 3) political (access to power and political representation)4) sociocultural (identity, cultural freedoms, and human rights
A rheological study of glass fibers in a Newtonian oil Semiannual status report, 1 Dec. 1966 - 31 May 1967
Rheological study of glass fibers in Newtonian oi
Inclusion Polymerization and Doping in Zeolite Channels. Polyaniline
Aniline has been polymerized in the three-dimensional channel system of zeolite Y. The monomer was diffused into zeolites with different levels of acidity from hexane solution. Subsequent admission of peroxydisulfate or iodate from aqueous solution yielded the intrazeolite polymers, as demonstrated by FT-IR, electronic absorption data and recovery of the included polymer. With S2O82-, the intrazeolite products are a function of the proton content of the zeolite. Polymer is only formed when a sufficient supply of protons is present in the zeolite host. When neutral iodate solution is used, no polymer is formed in NaY and acid zeolites, but at low pH aniline polymerizes in all zeolites. The open pore system of the zeolite host can be accessed by base such that the intrazeolite protonated polymer is transformed into the corresponding neutral polymer.
The polymer chains encapsulated in zeolite hosts represent a new class of low- dimensional electronic materials
Space shuttle three main engine return to launch site abort
A Return-to-Launch-Site (RTLS) abort with three Space Shuttle Main Engines (SSME) operational was examined. The results are trajectories and main engine cutoff conditions that are approximately the same as for a two SSME case. Requiring the three SSME solution to match the two SSME abort eliminates additional crew training and is accomplished with negligible software impact
Southwest Research Institute assistance to NASA in biomedical areas of the technology utilization program
The activities are reported of the NASA Biomedical Applications Team at Southwest Research Institute between 25 August, 1972 and 15 November, 1973. The program background and methodology are discussed along with the technology applications, and biomedical community impacts
Thermodynamic phase-field model for microstructure with multiple components and phases: the possibility of metastable phases
A diffuse-interface model for microstructure with an arbitrary number of
components and phases was developed from basic thermodynamic and kinetic
principles and formalized within a variational framework. The model includes a
composition gradient energy to capture solute trapping, and is therefore suited
for studying phenomena where the width of the interface plays an important
role. Derivation of the inhomogeneous free energy functional from a Taylor
expansion of homogeneous free energy reveals how the interfacial properties of
each component and phase may be specified under a mass constraint. A diffusion
potential for components was defined away from the dilute solution limit, and a
multi-obstacle barrier function was used to constrain phase fractions. The
model was used to simulate solidification via nucleation, premelting at phase
boundaries and triple junctions, the intrinsic instability of small particles,
and solutal melting resulting from differing diffusivities in solid and liquid.
The shape of metastable free energy surfaces is found to play an important role
in microstructure evolution and may explain why some systems premelt at phase
boundaries and phase triple junctions while others do not.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figure
Charged black holes in Vaidya backgrounds: Hawking's Radiation
In this paper we propose a class of embedded solutions of Einstein's field
equations describing non-rotating Reissner-Nordstrom-Vaidya and rotating
Kerr-Newman-Vaidya black holes.Comment: 30 pages, latex file, no figure
Northern JHK Standard Stars for Array Detectors
We report J, H and K photometry of 86 stars in 40 fields in the northern
hemisphere. The fields are smaller than or comparable to a 4x4 arcmin
field-of-view, and are roughly uniformly distributed over the sky, making them
suitable for a homogeneous broadband calibration network for near-infrared
panoramic detectors. K magnitudes range from 8.5 to 14, and J-K colors from
-0.1 to 1.2. The photometry is derived from a total of 3899 reduced images;
each star has been measured, on average, 26.0 times per filter on 5.5 nights.
Typical errors on the photometry are about 0.012.Comment: 10 pages including 3 figures, one separate figure on four pages. The
finding chart of the AS-30 field and a few coordinates have been corrected.
GIF finding charts can also be found at
http://www.arcetri.astro.it/~hunt/std.htm
Bulk viscosity of superfluid neutron stars
The hydrodynamics, describing dynamical effects in superfluid neutron stars,
essentially differs from the standard one-fluid hydrodynamics. In particular,
we have four bulk viscosity coefficients in the theory instead of one. In this
paper we calculate these coefficients, for the first time, assuming they are
due to non-equilibrium beta-processes (such as modified or direct Urca
process). The results of our analysis are used to estimate characteristic
damping times of sound waves in superfluid neutron stars. It is demonstrated
that all four bulk viscosity coefficients lead to comparable dissipation of
sound waves and should be considered on the same footing.Comment: 11 pages, 1 figure, this version with some minor stylistic changes is
published in Phys. Rev.
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