2,065 research outputs found
Weak CSS Sources from FIRST Survey
We report early results of an observational campaign targeted on a sample of
compact steep spectrum sources selected from the FIRST survey which are
significantly weaker than those investigated before. The selection criteria and
procedure are given in detail. We present here an assortment of MERLIN and VLBI
observations and make some general comments based on the morphologies of the
sources presented.Comment: A contribution to The Third Workshop on GHz-Peaked Spectrum and
Compact Steep Spectrum Radio Sources, Kerastari, Greece, May 28-31, 2002.
Refereed and accepted by Publications of the Astronomical Society of
Australia. Final version copyedited by PASA Edito
AB-QTL analysis in winter wheat: II. Genetic analysis of seedling and field resistance against leaf rust in a wheat advanced backcross population
Recommended from our members
Calibration of lubrication force measurements by lattice Boltzmann simulations
This paper was presented at the 2nd Micro and Nano Flows Conference (MNF2009), which was held at Brunel University, West London, UK. The conference was organised by Brunel University and supported by the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, IPEM, the Italian Union of Thermofluid dynamics, the Process Intensification Network, HEXAG - the Heat Exchange Action Group and the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications.Many experiments explore the hydrodynamic boundary of a surface by approaching a colloidal sphere and measuring the occurring lubrication force. However, in this case many different parameters like wettability and surface roughness influence the result. In the experiment these cannot be separated easily. For a deeper understanding of such surface effects a tool is required that predicts the influence of different surface properties. Here computer simulations can help. In this paper we present lattice Boltzmann simulations of a sphere submerged in a Newtonian liquid and show that our method is able to reproduce the theoretical predictions. In order to provide high precision simulation results the influence of finite size effects has to be controlled. We study the influence of the required system size and resolution of the sphere and demonstrate that already moderate computing ressources allow to keep the error below 1%.This study is funded by DFG priority program SPP 1164
In-vitro proliferation of Musa balbisiana improves with increased vitamin concentration and dark culturing
Musa balbisiana is a wild banana genotype with important traits such as drought tolerance and disease resistance. Uniform and clean plants are often required to study these traits in different laboratories but plants can only be generated through a tissue culture process yet for a long time a protocol for regeneration of the same has not been available. Here, we demonstrate that modification of the anti-oxidant content of the in- vitro plant proliferation medium through adjusting the concentration of ascorbic acid and thiamine HCl in the basal MS medium together with subjecting the explants to dark culturing conditions improved proliferation of M. balbsiana by over 10 fold. These treatments resulted in 40 shoots per initial explant material at the best performance
Anti-idiotypic antibody Ab2/3H6 mimicking gp41: a potential HIV-1 vaccine?
Meeting abstract from 22nd European Society for Animal Cell Technology(ESACT) Meeting on Cell Based Technologies Vienna, Austria. 15-18 May 2011(VLID)90658
Sensory acceptance of organic and conventional food by children in the age of 2 to 7 years
This study is initialized to find out which sensory factors might influence the acceptance of organic food by young children. 138 children aged from 2 to 7 years were recruited at the German Research Institute of Child Nutrition in Dortmund. All these children are participating in the DONALD-Study. Detailed nutrition records are available about breastfeeding and feeding of these children from birth to the age of one and further on. In a 2-year testing-period children tasted organic and conventional food in two-sided Paired Comparison Tests. In both years parents were asked a number of questions, mainly about the nutrition behaviour of their children. Sensory tests were analyzed and connected in different ways: with data of sensory profiles, nutrition records and different questionnaires
Journalists in the UK
Based on one of the most comprehensive surveys of UK journalists ever carried out, this report describes journalistsâ personal characteristics, employment conditions, and working routines. It also analyses journalistsâ opinions on: ethics, influences on their work, the trustworthiness of institutions such as parliament and the police, their role in society, and changes in journalism over time. The report includes findings on UK journalismâs: lack of ethnic diversity and of women in senior positions; modest pay, especially for young journalists; and changing employment patterns and working routines in the digital age. It also reveals how journalists, while believing their profession is changing significantly, remain committed to traditional journalistic values; that although they adhere closely to professional codes and standards, UK journalists push ethical boundaries more than some of their international colleagues; and that rather than living up to the stereotype of the cynical hack, journalists in the UK are relatively trusting
RSFQ devices with selective dissipation for quantum information processing
We study the possibility to use frequency dependent damping in RSFQ circuits
as means to reduce dissipation and consequent decoherence in RSFQ/qubit
circuits. We show that stable RSFQ operation can be achieved by shunting the
Josephson junctions with an circuit instead of a plain resistor. We derive
criteria for the stability of such an arrangement, and discuss the effect on
decoherence and the optimisation issues. We also design a simple flux generator
aimed at manipulating flux qubits
- âŚ