4,256 research outputs found
Fertility building strategies during the conversion period â assessment of performance in a stockless field vegetable rotation
This report was presented at the UK Organic Research 2002 Conference of the Colloquium of Organic Researchers (COR). Nutrient off-takes, residue returns and nutrient inputs were measured during and after conversion from a conventional arable system to organic vegetables with cereals. This data was used to construct nutrient budgets to assess the effectiveness of contrasting fertility building strategies and various cropping regimes. The effect of placing the cereal crops in different places in the crop sequence was also considered
Practical approaches to delivering pandemic impacted laboratory teaching
#DryLabsRealScience is a community of practice established to support life science educators with the provision of laboratory-based classes in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic and restricted access to facilities. Four key
approaches have emerged from the innovative work shared with the network: videos, simulations, virtual/augmented reality, and datasets, with each having strengths and weaknesses. Each strategy was used pre-COVID and has a sound theoretical underpinning; here, we explore how the pandemic has forced
their adaptation and highlight novel utilisation to support student learning in the laboratory environment during the challenges faced by remote and blended teaching
A cohort study of post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome and PCV2 in 178 pigs from birth to 14 weeks on a single farm in England
Our hypothesis was that pigs that develop post-weaning multisystemic wasting syndrome (PMWS) are detectable from an early age with signs of weight loss and other clinical and serological abnormalities. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate the temporally varying and fixed events linked with the clinical incidence of PMWS by comparing affected and unaffected pigs in a cohort of 178 male piglets. Piglets were enrolled at birth and examined each week. Samples of blood were collected at regular intervals. The exposures measured were porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2) antibody titres in all 178 and PCV2 antigen in a subset of 75 piglets. We also observed piglet health and measured their weight, and a post-mortem examination was performed by an external laboratory on all pigs between 6 and 14 weeks of age that died. From the cohort, 14 (8%) pigs died from PMWS and 4% from other causes. A further 37 pigs between 6 and 14 weeks of age died from PMWS (30) and ileitis and other causes (7). PMWS was only apparent in pigs from 1 to 2 weeks before death when they wasted rapidly. There were no other characteristic clinical signs and no obvious gross clinical lesions post-mortem. There was no strong link with PCV2 antibody throughout life but PCV2 antigen level was higher from 4 to 6 weeks of age in pigs that died from PMWS compared with pigs that died from other causes
The KX method for producing K-band flux-limited samples of quasars
The longstanding question of the extent to which the quasar population is
affected by dust extinction, within host galaxies or galaxies along the line of
sight, remains open. More generally, the spectral energy distributions of
quasars vary significantly and flux-limited samples defined at different
wavelengths include different quasars. Surveys employing flux measurements at
widely separated wavelengths are necessary to characterise fully the spectral
properties of the quasar population. The availability of panoramic
near-infrared detectors on large telescopes provides the opportunity to
undertake surveys capable of establishing the importance of extinction by dust
on the observed population of quasars. We introduce an efficient method for
selecting K-band, flux-limited samples of quasars, termed ``KX'' by analogy
with the UVX method. This method exploits the difference between the power-law
nature of quasar spectra and the convex spectra of stars: quasars are
relatively brighter than stars at both short wavelengths (the UVX method) and
long wavelengths (the KX method). We consider the feasibility of undertaking a
large-area KX survey for damped Ly-alpha galaxies and gravitational lenses
using the planned UKIRT wide-field near-infrared camera.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in MNRA
The variable X-ray spectrum of Markarian 766 - I. Principal components analysis
Aims: We analyse a long XMM-Newton spectrum of the narrow-line Seyfert 1
galaxy Mrk 766, using the marked spectral variability on timescales >20ks to
separate components in the X-ray spectrum. Methods: Principal components
analysis is used to identify distinct emission components in the X-ray
spectrum, possible alternative physical models for those components are then
compared statistically. Results: The source spectral variability is
well-explained by additive variations, with smaller extra contributions most
likely arising from variable absorption. The principal varying component,
eigenvector one, is found to have a steep (photon index 2.4) power-law shape,
affected by a low column of ionised absorption that leads to the appearance of
a soft excess. Eigenvector one varies by a factor 10 in amplitude on
time-scales of days and appears to have broad ionised Fe K-alpha emission
associated with it: the width of the ionised line is consistent with an origin
at about 100 gravitational radii. There is also a strong component of
near-constant emission that dominates in the low state, whose spectrum is
extremely hard above 1 keV, with a soft excess at lower energies, and with a
strong edge at Fe K but remarkably little Fe K-alpha emission. Although this
component may be explained as relativistically-blurred reflection from the
inner accretion disc, we suggest that its spectrum and lack of variability may
alternatively be explained as either (i) ionised reflection from an extended
region, possibly a disc wind, or (ii) a signature of absorption by a disc wind
with a variable covering fraction. Absorption features in the low state may
indicate the presence of an outflow.Comment: 14 pages, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysic
XHIP-II: Clusters and associations
Context. In the absence of complete kinematic data it has not previously been
possible to furnish accurate lists of member stars for all moving groups. There
has been an unresolved dispute concerning the apparent inconsistency of the
Hipparcos parallax distance to the Pleiades.
Aims. To find improved candidate lists for clusters and associations
represented among Hipparcos stars, to establish distances, and to cast light on
the Pleiades distance anomaly.
Methods. We use a six dimensional fitting procedure to identify candidates,
and plot CMDs for 20 of the nearest groups. We calculate the mean parallax
distance for all groups.
Results. We identify lists of candidates and calculated parallax distances
for 42 clusters and 45 associations represented within the Hipparcos catalogue.
We find agreement between parallax distance and photometric distances for the
most important clusters. For single stars in the Pleiades we find mean parallax
distance 125.6 \pm 4.2 pc and photometric distance 132 \pm 3 pc calibrated to
nearby groups of similar in age and composition. This gives no reason to doubt
either the Hipparcos database or stellar evolutionary theory.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy Letters, 10 pages, 2 fig
What lies beneath? The role of informal and hidden networks in the management of crises
Crisis management research traditionally focuses on the role of formal communication networks in the escalation and management of organisational crises. Here, we consider instead informal and unobservable networks. The paper explores how hidden informal exchanges can impact upon organisational decision-making and performance, particularly around inter-agency working, as knowledge distributed across organisations and shared between organisations is often shared through informal means and not captured effectively through the formal decision-making processes. Early warnings and weak signals about potential risks and crises are therefore often missed. We consider the implications of these dynamics in terms of crisis avoidance and crisis management
Detecting the Companions and Ellipsoidal Variations of RS CVn Primaries: II. omicron Draconis, a Candidate for Recent Low-Mass Companion Ingestion
To measure the stellar and orbital properties of the metal-poor RS CVn binary
o Draconis (o Dra), we directly detect the companion using interferometric
observations obtained with the Michigan InfraRed Combiner at Georgia State
University's Center for High Angular Resolution Astronomy (CHARA) Array. The
H-band flux ratio between the primary and secondary stars is the highest
confirmed flux ratio (370 +/- 40) observed with long-baseline optical
interferometry. These detections are combined with radial velocity data of both
the primary and secondary stars, including new data obtained with the
Tillinghast Reflector Echelle Spectrograph on the Tillinghast Reflector at the
Fred Lawrence Whipple Observatory and the 2-m Tennessee State University
Automated Spectroscopic Telescope at Fairborn Observatory. We determine an
orbit from which we find model-independent masses and ages of the components
(M_A = 1.35 +\- 0.05 M_Sun, M_B = 0.99 +\- 0.02 M_Sun, system age = 3.0 -\+ 0.5
Gyr). An average of a 23-year light curve of o Dra from the Tennessee State
University Automated Photometric Telescope folded over the orbital period newly
reveals eclipses and the quasi-sinusoidal signature of ellipsoidal variations.
The modeled light curve for our system's stellar and orbital parameters confirm
these ellipsoidal variations due to the primary star partially filling its
Roche lobe potential, suggesting most of the photometric variations are not due
to stellar activity (starspots). Measuring gravity darkening from the average
light curve gives a best-fit of beta = 0.07 +\- 0.03, a value consistent with
conventional theory for convective envelope stars. The primary star also
exhibits an anomalously short rotation period, which, when taken with other
system parameters, suggests the star likely engulfed a low-mass companion that
had recently spun-up the star.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, Accepted to Ap
A long look at the BALQSO LBQS 2212-1759 with XMM-Newton
Very long (172 ks effective exposure time) observations of the BALQSO LBQS
2212-1759 with XMM-Newton yield a stringent upper-limit on its 0.2-10 keV
(rest- frame 0.64-32.2 keV) flux, F < 6 E-17 erg/cm2/s, while simultaneous UV
and optical observations reveal a rather blue spectrum extending to 650 A in
the source rest frame. These results are used to set a tight upper-limit on its
optical to X-ray spectral index alpha_{ox} < -2.56. Given the HI-BAL nature of
LBQS 212-1759, its X-ray weakness is most likely due to intrinsic absorption.
If this is the case, and assuming that the intrinsic alpha_{ox} of LBQS
2212-1759 is -1.63 - a value appropriate for a radio-quiet quasar of this
luminosity - one can set a lower limit on the X-ray absorbing column N_{H} >
3.4 E25 cm-2. Such a large column has a Thomson optical depth to electron
scattering tau > 23, sufficient to extinguish the optical and UV emission. The
problem only gets worse if the gas is neutral since the opacity in the Lyman
continuum becomes extremely large, > 2 E8, conflicting with the source
detection below 912 A. This apparent contradiction probably means that our
lines-of-sight to the X-ray and to the UV emitting regions are different, such
that the gas covers completely the compact X-ray source but only partially the
more extended source of ultraviolet photons. An extended (~ 1') X-ray source is
detected 2' to the south-east of the QSO. Given its thermal spectrum and
temperature (1.5 < T < 3.0 keV}, it is probably a foreground (0.29 < z < 0.46)
cluster of galaxies.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, A&A latex, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
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