90,296 research outputs found
Light Reflectance Characteristics and Remote Sensing of Waterlettuce
Waterlettuce (
Pistia stratiotes
L.) is a free-floating exotic
aquatic weed that often invades and clogs waterways in the
southeastern United States. A study was conducted to evaluate
the potential of using remote sensing technology to distinguish
infestations of waterlettuce in Texas waterways. Field
reflectance measurements showed that waterlettuce had
higher visible green reflectance than associated plant species.
Waterlettuce could be detected in both aerial color- infrared
(CIR) photography and videography where it had
light pink to pinkish-white image tonal responses. Computer
analysis of CIR photographic and videographic images had
overall accuracy assessments of 86% and 84%, respectively. (PDF contains 6 pages.
Feeding Records of Aphids (Hemiptera: Aphididae) From Wisconsin
Basic to our understanding of any animal and its habitat requirements is knowing what it eats. Reported here are observations of feeding by 27 species of aphids encountered in Wisconsin over 1992-2002
Effects of electrical charging on the mechanical Q of a fused silica disk
We report on the effects of an electrical charge on mechanical loss of a
fused silica disk. A degradation of Q was seen that correlated with charge on
the surface of the sample. We examine a number of models for charge damping,
including eddy current damping and loss due to polarization. We conclude that
rubbing friction between the sample and a piece of dust attracted by the
charged sample is the most likely explanation for the observed loss.Comment: submitted to Review of Scientific Instrument
A-term inflation and the MSSM
The parameter space for A-term inflation is explored with . With p=6 and \lambda_p~1, the observed spectrum and
spectral tilt can be obtained with soft mass of order 10^2 GeV but not with a
much higher mass. The case p=3 requires \lambda_p~10^{-9} to 10^{-12}. The
ratio m/A requires fine-tuning, which may be justified on environmental
grounds. An extension of the MSSM to include non-renormalizable terms and/or
Dirac neutrino masses might support either A-term inflation or modular
inflation.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures; Comments added, typos correcte
Frequency stabilization of an external-cavity diode laser
Using a hybrid optical/electronic technique, an external-cavity diode laser was frequency stabilized with respect to the sub-Doppler spectrum of cesium vapor. Laser linewidths of 65 kHz and frequency stabilities of ±10 kHz were obtained
Effects of harvesting methods on sustainability of a bay scallop fishery: dredging uproots seagrass and displaces recruits
Fishing is widely recognized to have profound effects on estuarine and marine ecosystems (Hammer and Jansson, 1993; Dayton et al., 1995). Intense commercial and recreational
harvest of valuable species can result in population collapses of target and nontarget species (Botsford et al.,
1997; Pauly et al., 1998; Collie et al. 2000; Jackson et al., 2001). Fishing gear, such as trawls and dredges, that
are dragged over the seafloor inflict damage to the benthic habitat (Dayton et al., 1995; Engel and Kvitek, 1995;
Jennings and Kaiser, 1998; Watling and Norse, 1998). As the growing human population, over-capitalization, and increasing government subsidies of fishing place increasing pressures on marine resources (Myers, 1997), a clear understanding of the mechanisms by which fishing affects coastal systems is required to craft sustainable fisheries management
Collision-induced conformational changes in glycine
We present quantum dynamical calculations on the conformational changes of glycine in collisions with the He, Ne, and Ar rare-gas atoms. For two conformer interconversion processes (III-->I and IV-->I), we find that the probability of interconversion is dependent on several factors, including the energy of the collision, the angle at which the colliding atom approaches the glycine molecule, and the strength of the glycine-atom interaction. Furthermore, we show that attractive interactions between the colliding atom and the glycine molecule catalyze conformer interconversion at low collision energies. In previous infrared spectroscopy studies of glycine trapped in rare-gas matrices and helium clusters, conformer III has been consistently observed, but conformer IV has yet to be conclusively detected. Because of the calculated thermodynamic stability of conformer IV, its elusiveness has been attributed to the IV-->I conformer interconversion process. However, our calculations present little indication that IV-->I interconversion occurs more readily than III-->I interconversion. Although we cannot determine whether conformer IV interconverts during experimental Ne- and Ar-matrix depositions, our evidence suggests that the conformer should be present in helium droplets. Anharmonic vibrational frequency calculations illustrate that previous efforts to detect conformer IV may have been hindered by the overlap of its IR-absorption bands with those of other conformers. We propose that the redshifted symmetric –CH2 stretch of conformer IV provides a means for its conclusive experimental detection
Post-Issue Patent "Quality Control": A Comparative Study of US Patent Re-examinations and European Patent Oppositions
We report the results of the first comparative study of the determinants and effects of patent oppositions in Europe and of re-examinations on corresponding patents issued in the United States. The analysis is based on a dataset consisting of matched EPO and US patents. Our analysis focuses on two broad technology categories - biotechnology and pharmaceuticals, and semiconductors and computer software. Within these fields, we collect data on all EPO patents for which oppositions were filed at the EPO. We also construct a random sample of EPO patents with no opposition in these technologies. We match these EPO patents with the 'equivalent' US patents covering the same invention in the United States. Using the matched sample of USPTO and EPO patents, we compare the determinants of opposition and of re-examination. Our results indicate that valuable patents are more likely to be challenged in both jurisdictions. But the rate of opposition at the EPO is more than thirty times higher than the rate of re-examination at the USPTO. Moreover, opposition leads to a revocation of the patent in about 41 percent of the cases, and to a restriction of the patent right in another 30 percent of the cases. Re-examination results in a cancellation of the patent right in only 12.2 percent of all cases. We also find that re-examination is frequently initiated by the patentholders themselves.
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