10,236 research outputs found
Estimating Potential Ground and Surface Water Pollution from Land Application of Poultry Litter - II
In Arkansas, approximately 1 Tg of poultry (Gallus gallus domesticus) manure and litter is produced annually. These waste products are commonly applied to pastures as a soil amendment or fertilizer, but excessive application rates and poor management practices could result in nutrient contamination of ground and surface water. The purpose of this study was to: (1) assess the nutrient concentrations in poultry manure and (2) evaluate the nitrogen loss from land-applied poultry litter and manure due to ammonia volatilization and denitrification. Analyses for total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN), inorganic nitrogen (Ni), phosphorus (P), and potassium (K) were compared in 12 wet and dry hen manure samples. Drying the manure reduced the TKN from 57 to 40 g N/kg on a dry weight basis in wet and dry manure, respectively. The Ni in the manure was in the ammoniacal form with values of 19 and 2 g N/kg for wet and dry manure, respectively. The P and K levels were not influenced by drying the manure and had values of 24 and 21 g/kg, respectively. The results indicate that the nitrogen content of hen manure can be significantly reduced by drying the sample prior to analysis. In a 10-day laboratory study and an 11-day field study to evaluate ammonia volatilization from surface-applied hen manure, results indicated that 37% of the total nitrogen content of the manure was lost. The results indicated that a substantial amount of nitrogen in surface-applied poultry waste can be lost due to ammonia volatilization. Laboratory studies to evaluate denitrification in a Captina silt loam amended with 9 Mg/ha of poultry litter were conducted. When the soil was aerobically incubated for 168 h and then flooded for 66 h, the nitrate-nitrogen level decreased a net of 17 mg N/kg. The results indicated that, if the ammoniacal nitrogen in the litter is oxidized to nitrate under aerobic conditions and then the soil is flooded and available carbon is present, denitrification can occur rapidly. Results from these studies indicate that soil and environmental conditions playa critical role in determining the potential for nitrate pollution of ground and surface water when poultry manure and litter are surface-applied to pastures
Reactive Force Field for Proton Diffusion in BaZrO3 using an empirical valence bond approach
A new reactive force field to describe proton diffusion within the
solid-oxide fuel cell material BaZrO3 has been derived. Using a quantum
mechanical potential energy surface, the parameters of an interatomic potential
model to describe hydroxyl groups within both pure and yttrium-doped BaZrO3
have been determined. Reactivity is then incorporated through the use of the
empirical valence bond model. Molecular dynamics simulations (EVB-MD) have been
performed to explore the diffusion of hydrogen using a stochastic thermostat
and barostat whose equations are extended to the isostress-isothermal ensemble.
In the low concentration limit, the presence of yttrium is found not to
significantly influence the diffusivity of hydrogen, despite the proton having
a longer residence time at oxygen adjacent to the dopant. This lack of
influence is due to the fact that trapping occurs infrequently, even when the
proton diffuses through octahedra adjacent to the dopant. The activation energy
for diffusion is found to be 0.42 eV, in good agreement with experimental
values, though the prefactor is slightly underestimated.Comment: Corrected titl
Deciding the Winner of an Arbitrary Finite Poset Game is PSPACE-Complete
A poset game is a two-player game played over a partially ordered set (poset)
in which the players alternate choosing an element of the poset, removing it
and all elements greater than it. The first player unable to select an element
of the poset loses. Polynomial time algorithms exist for certain restricted
classes of poset games, such as the game of Nim. However, until recently the
complexity of arbitrary finite poset games was only known to exist somewhere
between NC^1 and PSPACE. We resolve this discrepancy by showing that deciding
the winner of an arbitrary finite poset game is PSPACE-complete. To this end,
we give an explicit reduction from Node Kayles, a PSPACE-complete game in which
players vie to chose an independent set in a graph
The nonlinear Bernstein-Schr\"odinger equation in Economics
In this paper we relate the Equilibrium Assignment Problem (EAP), which is
underlying in several economics models, to a system of nonlinear equations that
we call the "nonlinear Bernstein-Schr\"odinger system", which is well-known in
the linear case, but whose nonlinear extension does not seem to have been
studied. We apply this connection to derive an existence result for the EAP,
and an efficient computational method.Comment: 8 pages, submitted to Lecture Notes in Computer Scienc
Aminoglycoside-Induced Phosphatidylserine Externalization in Sensory Hair Cells Is Regionally Restricted, Rapid, and Reversible
The aminophospholipid phosphatidylserine (PS) is normally restricted to the inner leaflet of the plasma membrane. During certain cellular processes, including apoptosis, PS translocates to the outer leaflet and can be labeled with externally applied annexin V, a calcium-dependent PS-binding protein. In mouse cochlear cultures, annexin V labeling reveals that the aminoglycoside antibiotic neomycin induces rapid PS externalization, specifically on the apical surface of hair cells. PS externalization is observed within ~75 s of neomycin perfusion, first on the hair bundle and then on membrane blebs forming around the apical surface. Whole-cell capacitance also increases significantly within minutes of neomycin application, indicating that blebbing is accompanied by membrane addition to the hair cell surface. PS externalization and membrane blebbing can, nonetheless, occur independently. Pretreating hair cells with calcium chelators, a procedure that blocks mechanotransduction, or overexpressing a phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate (PIP2)-binding pleckstrin homology domain, can reduce neomycin-induced PS externalization, suggesting that neomycin enters hair cells via transduction channels, clusters PIP2, and thereby activates lipid scrambling. The effects of short-term neomycin treatment are reversible. After neomycin washout, PS is no longer detected on the apical surface, apical membrane blebs disappear, and surface-bound annexin V is internalized, distributing throughout the supranuclear cytoplasm of the hair cell. Hair cells can therefore repair, and recover from, neomycin-induced surface damage. Hair cells lacking myosin VI, a minus-end directed actin-based motor implicated in endocytosis, can also recover from brief neomycin treatment. Internalized annexin V, however, remains below the apical surface, thereby pinpointing a critical role for myosin VI in the transport of endocytosed material away from the periphery of the hair cell
A shear spectral sum rule in a non-conformal gravity dual
A sum rule which relates a stress-energy tensor correlator to thermodynamic
functions is examined within the context of a simple non-conformal gravity
dual. Such a sum rule was previously derived using AdS/CFT for conformal
Supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory, but we show that it does
not generalize to the non-conformal theory under consideration. We provide a
generalized sum rule and numerically verify its validity. A useful byproduct of
the calculation is the computation of the spectral density in a strongly
coupled non-conformal theory. Qualitative features of the spectral densities
and implications for lattice measurements of transport coefficients are
discussed.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures. v5: Typos in Eq. (60) fixed. v4: References
added, matches published version. v3: Minor typographical corrections. v2:
References and some discussion in Appendix A have been added; conclusions
unchange
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