6,626 research outputs found
An improved 1080 paste for control of possums (Trichosurus vulpecula)
A new 1080 paste (PTP) was developed by Pest-Tech Ltd. and then evaluated in a series of comparative trials with Pestoff possum paste (POP). The research indicated that PTP was significantly more palatable to captive possums than POP following 57 h of exposure to ‘hot’ conditions (hot conditions were 30°C for 6 h followed by 18 h at 13°C on a 24 h cycle). Acceptance by bees was low with significantly less PTP than POP removed by forager bees over a 30 h period. In the field, the control efficacy of both pastes was high (89%-94% kill), with no significant differences between treatments. Based on these results, it is recommend that PTP is registered for possum control in New Zealand
Phased Array Noise Source Localization Measurements of an F404 Nozzle Plume at Both Full and Model Scale
A 48-microphone planar phased array system was used to acquire jet noise source localization data on both a full-scale F404-GE-F400 engine and on a 1/4th scale model of a F400 series nozzle. The full-scale engine test data show the location of the dominant noise sources in the jet plume as a function of frequency for the engine in both baseline (no chevron) and chevron configurations. Data are presented for the engine operating both with and without afterburners. Based on lessons learned during this test, a set of recommendations are provided regarding how the phased array measurement system could be modified in order to obtain more useful acoustic source localization data on high-performance military engines in the future. The data obtained on the 1/4th scale F400 series nozzle provide useful insights regarding the full-scale engine jet noise source mechanisms, and document some of the differences associated with testing at model-scale versus fullscale
Economic Impact of a Large-Scale, Collaborative Forest Health Project: A Model for Making a Difference
The U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, Mississippi State University (MSU) Extension, and the Mississippi Forestry Commission partnered on the Southern Pine Beetle Prevention Project, a collaboration on forest health. MSU Extension provided educational outreach to a wide audience of forest landowners and screened applications for the project\u27s tree-thinning cost-share program. From 2006 to 2016, the collaboration spent 60.2 million, a value representing a benefit–cost ratio of 13:1. Collaboration is an effective means for agencies to leverage resources, and impact analysis is a useful tool for evaluating Extension program effectiveness
Dynamics of correlations due to a phase noisy laser
We analyze the dynamics of various kinds of correlations present between two
initially entangled independent qubits, each one subject to a local phase noisy
laser. We give explicit expressions of the relevant quantifiers of correlations
for the general case of single-qubit unital evolution, which includes the case
of a phase noisy laser. Although the light field is treated as classical, we
find that this model can describe revivals of quantum correlations. Two
different dynamical regimes of decay of correlations occur, a Markovian one
(exponential decay) and a non-Markovian one (oscillatory decay with revivals)
depending on the values of system parameters. In particular, in the
non-Markovian regime, quantum correlations quantified by quantum discord show
an oscillatory decay faster than that of classical correlations. Moreover,
there are time regions where nonzero discord is present while entanglement is
zero.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Scripta,
special issue for CEWQO 2011 proceeding
Discovery of a Bright Field Methane (T-type) Brown Dwarf by 2MASS
We report the discovery of a bright (J = 13.830.03) methane brown dwarf,
or T dwarf, by the Two Micron All Sky Survey. This object, 2MASSI
J0559191-140448, is the first brown dwarf identified by the newly commissioned
CorMASS instrument mounted on the Palomar 60-inch Telescope. Near-infrared
spectra from 0.9 - 2.35 \micron show characteristic CH bands at 1.1, 1.3,
1.6, and 2.2 \micron, which are significantly shallower than those seen in
other T dwarfs discovered to date. Coupled with the detection of an FeH band at
0.9896 \micron and two sets of K I doublets at J-band, we propose that 2MASS
J0559-14 is a warm T dwarf, close to the transition between L and T spectral
classes. The brightness of this object makes it a good candidate for detailed
investigation over a broad wavelength regime and at higher resolution.Comment: 21 pages, 3 figures, 2 tables, accepted to AJ for publication August
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A Regional CO2 Observing System Simulation Experiment Using ASCENDS Observations and WRF-STILT Footprints
Knowledge of the spatiotemporal variations in emissions and uptake of CO2 is hampered by sparse measurements. The recent advent of satellite measurements of CO2 concentrations is increasing the density of measurements, and the future mission ASCENDS (Active Sensing of CO2 Emissions over Nights, Days and Seasons) will provide even greater coverage and precision. Lagrangian atmospheric transport models run backward in time can quantify surface influences ("footprints") of diverse measurement platforms and are particularly well suited for inverse estimation of regional surface CO2 fluxes at high resolution based on satellite observations. We utilize the STILT Lagrangian particle dispersion model, driven by WRF meteorological fields at 40-km resolution, in a Bayesian synthesis inversion approach to quantify the ability of ASCENDS column CO2 observations to constrain fluxes at high resolution. This study focuses on land-based biospheric fluxes, whose uncertainties are especially large, in a domain encompassing North America. We present results based on realistic input fields for 2007. Pseudo-observation random errors are estimated from backscatter and optical depth measured by the CALIPSO satellite. We estimate a priori flux uncertainties based on output from the CASA-GFED (v.3) biosphere model and make simple assumptions about spatial and temporal error correlations. WRF-STILT footprints are convolved with candidate vertical weighting functions for ASCENDS. We find that at a horizontal flux resolution of 1 degree x 1 degree, ASCENDS observations are potentially able to reduce average weekly flux uncertainties by 0-8% in July, and 0-0.5% in January (assuming an error of 0.5 ppm at the Railroad Valley reference site). Aggregated to coarser resolutions, e.g. 5 degrees x 5 degrees, the uncertainty reductions are larger and more similar to those estimated in previous satellite data observing system simulation experiments
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Knowledge practices in design: The role of visual representations as 'epistemic objects'
We use a detailed study of the knowledge work around visual representations to draw attention to the multidimensional nature of `objects'. Objects are variously described in the literatures as relatively stable or in flux; as abstract or concrete; and as used within or across practices. We clarify these dimensions, drawing on and extending the literature on boundary objects, and connecting it with work on epistemic and technical objects. In particular, we highlight the epistemic role of objects, using our observations of knowledge work on an architectural design project to show how, in this setting, visual representations are characterized by a `lack' or incompleteness that precipitates unfolding. The conceptual design of a building involves a wide range of technical, social and aesthetic forms of knowledge that need to be developed and aligned. We explore how visual representations are used, and how these are meaningful to different stakeholders, eliciting their distinct contributions. As the project evolves and the drawings change, new issues and needs for knowledge work arise. These objects have an `unfolding ontology' and are constantly in flux, rather than fully formed. We discuss the implications for wider understandings of objects in organizations and for how knowledge work is achieved in practice
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