5,973 research outputs found

    From plant surface to plant metabolism: the uncertain fate of foliar-applied nutrients

    Get PDF
    The application of agrochemical sprays to the aerial parts of crop plants is an important agricultural practice world-wide. While variable effectiveness is often seen in response to foliar treatments, there is abundant evidence showing the beneficial effect of foliar fertilizers in terms of improving the metabolism, quality, and yields of crops. This mini-review is focused on the major bottlenecks associated with the uptake and translocation of foliar-applied nutrient solutions. A better understanding of the complex scenario surrounding the ultimate delivery of foliar-applied nutrients to sink cells and organs is essential for improving the effectiveness and performance of foliar fertilizers

    On the generalized Nash problem for smooth germs and adjacencies of curve singularities

    Get PDF
    In this paper we explore the generalized Nash problem for arcs on a germ of smooth surface: given two prime divisors above its special point, to determine whether the arc space of one of them is included in the arc space of the other one. We prove that this problem is combinatorial and we explore its relation with several notions of adjacency of plane curve singularities.Comment: Final versio

    Tribological behaviour of the low and high viscosity peek at various testing scales

    Get PDF
    Polyetheretherketone (PEEK) has become most attractive as a sliding bearing material in industrial applications, due to its excellent thermal stability, good friction and wear resistance. These properties promote the material to be used in so called high performance tribological applications. However, fundamental mechanisms governing friction and wear are not yet fully understood and neither is the influence of composition parameters. An important parameter is PEEK’s viscosity during injection moulding which is heated up to semi-solid state, between its glass transition and melting temperature. It is not known to what extent the injection viscosity, related to the applied temperature profile, affects subsequent tribological features. This paper studies the friction and wear performance of low and high viscosity PEEK under dry reciprocating sliding contact. The tests were performed with small and large scale specimens under pin-on-plate and flat-on-flat configuration, respectively; to determine the transitions in tribological behaviour at different scales and to identify the applications limits. Tests were carried out at controlled atmosphere with 25 °C and a relative humidity of 50%. Parameters such as contact pressures and sliding speed were limited at 10 MPa and 20 mm/s, respectively; post mortem analyses were carried out by means of 2-D surface topography and optical microscopy. The results show that PEEK injected at high viscosity exhibits a tribological performance with a relatively high coefficient of friction and high wear rate compare to PEEK injected at low viscosity

    The Transverse Proximity Effect: A Probe to the Environment, Anisotropy, and Megayear Variability of QSOs

    Full text link
    The transverse proximity effect is the expected decrease in the strength of the Lya forest absorption in a QSO spectrum when another QSO lying close to the line of sight enhances the photoionization rate above that due to the average cosmic ionizing background. We select three QSOs from the Early Data Release of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey that have nearby foreground QSOs, with proper line of sight tangential separations of 0.50, 0.82, and 1.10 h^{-1} Mpc. We estimate that the ionizing flux from the foreground QSO should increase the photoionization rate by a factor (94, 13, 13) in these three cases, which would be clearly detectable in the first QSO and marginally so in the other two. We do not detect the transverse proximity effect. Three possible explanations are provided: an increase of the gas density in the vicinity of QSOs, time variability, and anisotropy of the QSO emission. We find that the increase of gas density near QSOs can be important if they are located in the most massive halos present at high redshift, but is not enough to fully explain the absence of the transverse proximity effect. Anisotropy requires an unrealistically small opening angle of the QSO emission. Variability demands that the luminosity of the QSO with the largest predicted effect was much lower 10^6 years ago, whereas the transverse proximity effect observed in the HeII Lya absorption in QSO 0302-003 by Jakobsen et al. (2003) implies a lifetime longer than 10^7 years. A combination of all three effects may better explain the lack of Lya absorption reduction. A larger sample of QSO pairs may be used to diagnose the environment, anisotropy and lifetime distribution of QSOs.Comment: 27 pages, 13 figures, accepted by Ap
    corecore