5,729 research outputs found
Dark-Energy Dynamics Required to Solve the Cosmic Coincidence
Dynamic dark energy (DDE) models are often designed to solve the cosmic
coincidence (why, just now, is the dark energy density , the same
order of magnitude as the matter density ?) by guaranteeing for significant fractions of the age of the universe. This
typically entails ad-hoc tracking or oscillatory behaviour in the model.
However, such behaviour is neither sufficient nor necessary to solve the
coincidence problem. What must be shown is that a significant fraction of
observers see . Precisely when, and for how long, must a
DDE model have in order to solve the coincidence? We
explore the coincidence problem in dynamic dark energy models using the
temporal distribution of terrestrial-planet-bound observers. We find that any
dark energy model fitting current observational constraints on and
the equation of state parameters and , does have for a large fraction of observers in the universe. This demotivates DDE
models specifically designed to solve the coincidence using long or repeated
periods of .Comment: 16 pages, 8 figures, Submitted to Phys. Rev.
On-farm control measures for the reduction of Salmonellosis in pigs
A longitudinal study of the prevalence of Salmonella spp. was carried out on 12 Irish pig farms, which included farrow-to-finish herds and specialised finishing units. The main objective of the project was to evaluate the efficacy of control measures implemented at farm level on highly infected farms. Control measures included the use of in-feed additives and /or improved hygiene and biosecurity measures
Effects of oilseed meal and grain-urea supplements fed infrequently on digestion in sheep: 1. Low quality grass hay diets
An experiment examined intake, growth response and rumen digestion of young sheep fed ad libitum low quality grass hay alone or supplemented with approximately isonitrogenous amounts of barley grain and urea (Bar/N), safflower meal (SAF) or linseed meal (LIN) provided at 3 days intervals. Supplements comprised 13–20% of total DM intake. Sheep fed grass hay alone consumed 60.2gDM/kgLW0.75/day of hay and an estimated 6.09MJ metabolizable energy (ME)/day, and were in liveweight (LW) maintenance. Hay intake was decreased (P<0.05) by the Bar/N supplement with a substitution rate of 0.9, but was not changed by the oilseed meal supplements. Each of the supplements increased (P<0.05) estimated ME intake to a similar extent, but LW gain and wool growth were lower (P<0.05) in sheep supplemented with Bar/N than those supplemented with LIN. Rumen degradabilities of the SAF and LIN CP were estimated to be 0.72 and 0.62, respectively. Rumen ammonia concentrations in sheep fed hay alone (average 97mgNH3/l) were expected to be adequate for microbial activity. Fractional outflow rate (FOR) of liquid from the rumen measured with Co-EDTA (mean 0.109h−1) was greater than that of Cr-mordanted supplements (mean 0.056h−1), which was in turn greater than the FOR of Cr-mordanted hay (mean 0.031h−1). Diet did not affect these FOR. Supplemented sheep accommodated increased DM intake on Day 1 of the 3 day supplementation cycle by increasing rumen digesta load rather than by increasing rate of passage of digesta. Results show that the LW gain of young sheep fed low quality hay was increased more by either oilseed meal than by equivalent amounts of barley grain/urea supplement, apparently due to more efficient utilization of ME for LW gain
Stochastic series expansion method for quantum Ising models with arbitrary interactions
A quantum Monte Carlo algorithm for the transverse Ising model with arbitrary
short- or long-range interactions is presented. The algorithm is based on
sampling the diagonal matrix elements of the power series expansion of the
density matrix (stochastic series expansion), and avoids the interaction
summations necessary in conventional methods. In the case of long-range
interactions, the scaling of the computation time with the system size N is
therefore reduced from N^2 to Nln(N). The method is tested on a one-dimensional
ferromagnet in a transverse field, with interactions decaying as 1/r^2.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Tuning Fermi-surface properties through quantum confinement in metallic meta-lattices: New metals from old atoms
We describe a new class of nanoscale structured metals wherein the effects of
quantum confinement are combined with dispersive metallic electronic states to
induce modifications to the fundamental low-energy microscopic properties of a
three-dimensional metal: the density of states, the distribution of Fermi
velocities, and the collective electronic response.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, to appear in Phys. Rev. Let
IgA Autoimmune Disorders: Development of a Passive Transfer Mouse Model
IgA is present in the skin in several dermatoses, including dermatitis herpetiformis, linear IgA bullous dermatosis, and Henoch-Schoenlein purpura. The neutrophilic infiltration in the area of the IgA deposition suggests that IgA is responsible for the associated inflammatory events. The mechanism for this process is unproven, but is likely to involve IgA-mediated neutrophil chemotaxis with inhibition of chemotaxis by dapsone. Elucidation of the mechanism of IgA-mediated inflammation will require an animal model. We have established a model for linear IgA bullous dermatosis as a prototype disease to be studied. IgA mouse monoclonal antibodies against a linear IgA bullous dermatosis antigen have been passively transferred to SCID mice with human skin grafts. This has produced neutrophil infiltration and basement membrane vesiculation in 4 of 12 mice tested. We conclude that an animal model for the pathogenesis of IgA dermatoses with IgA deposition and inflammation can be produced by passive transfer of mouse IgA antibodies against a linear IgA antigen
An investigation into the efficacy of washing trucks following the transportation of pigs - a Salmonella perspective
A National Salmonella Control Program is in place in the Republic of Ireland, which requires the categorisation of all pigs according to their Salmonella status. Herds in Categories 1, 2, and 3 have a serological prevalence of infection with Salmonella serotypes of \u3c10%, \u3e10-\u3c50% and \u3e50-\u3c100%, respectively. Transport of animals constitutes a stress which may induce shedding of salmonellae by carrier pigs. Although washing of trucks before leaving the abattoir is mandatory in the Republic of Ireland, little is known about the efficacy of the cleaning methods in use on trucks following the transportation of live pigs
- …