10,704 research outputs found

    Agricultural research and poverty reduction:

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    International agricultural research has contributed enormously to increasing world food supplies to their current state of plenty. Yet poverty remains a major problem and the challenge for agricultural research now lies in developing strategies that more explicitly address the needs of the poor. This paper, based on the study commissioned by the Technical Advisory Committee (TAC) of the CGIAR system, addresses this issue. Based on an analysis of the links between agricultural research and poverty alleviation in different types of countries and rural regions, Peter Hazell and Lawrence Haddad identify six key priorities for a pro-poor agricultural research agenda and discuss strategies for achieving each of these goals with the least trade-off in national agricultural growth. (Excerpted from Forward by Per Pinstrup-Andersen and Emil Javier)agricultural research, poverty, food supply,

    Analysis of antioxidant enzyme activity during reproductive stages of barley under drought stress

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    Drought is especially considered as key stress factor with high potential impact on crop yield. Plants mainly adapt to water deficits by alteration in physiological and biochemical processes. A simulation experiment on the responses of barley (Hordeum Vulgare L.) from heading stage to ripening stage for different soil water levels (full water supply, light water stress, and severe water stress) was conducted to determine the effects on leaf water status, levels of chlorophyll and protein, lipid peroxidation and antioxidant enzymes activity. The results indicated that drought stress relied on drought intensity and developmental stage, with more severe drought stress creating more serious effects on barley. Relative water content (RWC) significantly decreased (P < 0.05) under drought stress in all stages. The content of soluble protein and chlorophyll decreased and membrane lipid peroxidation (measured as malondialdehyde content) increased significantly according to the severity of water stress and reproductive stage. Under water stress, the activities of antioxidant enzymes ascorbate peroxidase (APX), catalase (CAT), guaiacol peroxidase (POX) and superoxide dismutase (SOD) in leaves increased sharply in flowering and milking stages, but then declined towards the lately ripening stage. Furthermore, compared with well watered conditions, changes in the activities of POX and SOD were different between light water stress and severe water stress at flowering and milking stages. However, the increases in the levels of malondialdehyde (MDA) during flowering and milking stages showed that the increased activities of antioxidant enzymes may not be enough to prevent the peroxidation of lipid membranes and to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS) under drought stress

    Field behavior of an Ising model with aperiodic interactions

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    We derive exact renormalization-group recursion relations for an Ising model, in the presence of external fields, with ferromagnetic nearest-neighbor interactions on Migdal-Kadanoff hierarchical lattices. We consider layered distributions of aperiodic exchange interactions, according to a class of two-letter substitutional sequences. For irrelevant geometric fluctuations, the recursion relations in parameter space display a nontrivial uniform fixed point of hyperbolic character that governs the universal critical behavior. For relevant fluctuations, in agreement with previous work, this fixed point becomes fully unstable, and there appears a two-cycle attractor associated with a new critical universality class.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figure (included). Accepted for publication in Int. J. Mod. Phys.

    Critical properties of an aperiodic model for interacting polymers

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    We investigate the effects of aperiodic interactions on the critical behavior of an interacting two-polymer model on hierarchical lattices (equivalent to the Migadal-Kadanoff approximation for the model on Bravais lattices), via renormalization-group and tranfer-matrix calculations. The exact renormalization-group recursion relations always present a symmetric fixed point, associated with the critical behavior of the underlying uniform model. If the aperiodic interactions, defined by s ubstitution rules, lead to relevant geometric fluctuations, this fixed point becomes fully unstable, giving rise to novel attractors of different nature. We present an explicit example in which this new attractor is a two-cycle, with critical indices different from the uniform model. In case of the four-letter Rudin-Shapiro substitution rule, we find a surprising closed curve whose points are attractors of period two, associated with a marginal operator. Nevertheless, a scaling analysis indicates that this attractor may lead to a new critical universality class. In order to provide an independent confirmation of the scaling results, we turn to a direct thermodynamic calculation of the specific-heat exponent. The thermodynamic free energy is obtained from a transfer matrix formalism, which had been previously introduced for spin systems, and is now extended to the two-polymer model with aperiodic interactions.Comment: 19 pages, 6 eps figures, to appear in J. Phys A: Math. Ge

    Impacts of agricultural research on poverty: findings of an integrated economic and social analysis

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    Agricultural research, Sustainable livelihoods, Agricultural growth, Gender, Agricultural technology,

    First measurements of the flux integral with the NIST-4 watt balance

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    In early 2014, construction of a new watt balance, named NIST-4, has started at the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST). In a watt balance, the gravitational force of an unknown mass is compensated by an electromagnetic force produced by a coil in a magnet system. The electromagnetic force depends on the current in the coil and the magnetic flux integral. Most watt balances feature an additional calibration mode, referred to as velocity mode, which allows one to measure the magnetic flux integral to high precision. In this article we describe first measurements of the flux integral in the new watt balance. We introduce measurement and data analysis techniques to assess the quality of the measurements and the adverse effects of vibrations on the instrument.Comment: 7 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in IEEE Trans. Instrum. Meas. This Journal can be found online at http://ieeexplore.ieee.org/xpl/RecentIssue.jsp?punumber=1

    Continuous Uniform Finite Time Stabilization of Planar Controllable Systems

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    Continuous homogeneous controllers are utilized in a full state feedback setting for the uniform finite time stabilization of a perturbed double integrator in the presence of uniformly decaying piecewise continuous disturbances. Semiglobal strong C1\mathcal{C}^1 Lyapunov functions are identified to establish uniform asymptotic stability of the closed-loop planar system. Uniform finite time stability is then proved by extending the homogeneity principle of discontinuous systems to the continuous case with uniformly decaying piecewise continuous nonhomogeneous disturbances. A finite upper bound on the settling time is also computed. The results extend the existing literature on homogeneity and finite time stability by both presenting uniform finite time stabilization and dealing with a broader class of nonhomogeneous disturbances for planar controllable systems while also proposing a new class of homogeneous continuous controllers

    Isospin relaxation time in heavy-ion collisions at intermediate energies

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    Using an isospin-dependent transport model, we have studied the isospin and momentum relaxation times in the heavy residues formed in heavy-ion collisions at intermediate energies. It is found that only at incident energies below the Fermi energy, chemical or thermal equilibrium can be reached before dynamical instability is developed in the heavy residues. Also, the isospin relaxation time is shorter (longer) than that for momentum at beam energies lower (higher) than the Fermi energy.Comment: 8 pages Latex + 2 ps Figs.; Phys. Rev. C in pres
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