5,482 research outputs found
Pod twist: A previously unrecorded bacterial disease of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.)
A disease which causes blighting and twisting of the pods of French bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) is described for the first time. Repeated isolations from infected tissues and pure culture inoculation show that the causal organism is a member of the Schizomycetes. In the field, transmission is effected by the bean thrips (Taeniothrips nigricornis Schmutz) and by no other apparent means. Glasshouse experiments in which these thrips were shown
to be capable of carrying infection to healthy plants are described. A pure culture study of the causal organism shows it to be a new species of the genus Pseudomonas. The organism is described in detail
Application of the Monopole Source to Quantify Explosive Flux During Vulcanian Explosions at Sakurajima Volcano (Japan)
A primary goal in volcano seismology is to characterize source motions internal to a volcano in terms of their representative forces. In a similar manner, much volcano infrasound research strives to recover eruptive force time histories corresponding to material accelerations occurring at Earth’s free surface. These motions may correspond to explosive emission of gas and pyroclasts (e.g., Banister, 1984), rapid ground distensions of a volcanic dome (e.g., Johnson and Lees, 2010), and/or gravity driven rock fall or pyroclastic flows (e.g., Yamasato, 1997). When free surface motion is unsteady it imposes stresses upon the surrounding atmosphere, which are propagated as acoustic airwaves. Typically, the sounds produced by volcanic phenomena are recorded with low-frequency infrasound sensitive microphones. The intervening atmosphere is relatively homogeneous and nonattenuating for infrasound propagation of a few kilometers, therefore the recorded excess pressures closely represent volcano source time functions. Such force time histories are equivalent to volumetric accelerations of the atmosphere at or near to the source
Sustaining family forests in rural landscapes: Rationale, challenges, and an illustration from Oregon, USA
Family forests are critical components of rural landscapes, societies and economies. In Oregon, where nonindustrial private forests comprise only 16% of the forestland base, the ecological, social and economic impact of this ownership category is disproportionately large. This is due to the landscape position these lands occupy, the diversification they contribute to forest cover and local economies, and the political and cultural connections they provide to urban populations. The significance of this ownership category is even greater in the United States as a whole, where nonindustrial private forests comprise nearly two-thirds of the commercial forestland base, dominating rural landscapes in many regions of the country. Despite the important role family forests play, their ability to contribute to the wellbeing of rural areas is challenged by several dynamic factors, including industrial consolidation in global wood markets, loss of family forestland to corporate ownership, and parcelization and fragmentation of family forestland at the urban fringe. Moreover, family forestry does not enjoy a strong social contract with the American public, which is largely ignorant of the existence of this ownership class. A foundation of broad social approval and appreciation for family forestry is a prerequisite to development of policies which can sustain family forestland ownerships and the contributions they make. This paper draws from recent research in Oregon to argue that, whereas most research on nonindustrial private forests has focused on economics and management at the individual producer level, these challenges demand greater attention to the role of family forests in the wider context of landscape, culture and rural economy
Hadron mass corrections in semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering
We derive mass corrections for semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering of
leptons from nucleons using a collinear factorization framework which
incorporates the initial state mass of the target nucleon and the final state
mass of the produced hadron. The formalism is constructed specifically to
ensure that physical kinematic thresholds for the semi-inclusive process are
explicitly respected. A systematic study of the kinematic dependencies of the
mass corrections to semi-inclusive cross sections reveals that these are even
larger than for inclusive structure functions, especially at very small and
very large hadron momentum fractions. The hadron mass corrections compete with
the experimental uncertainties at kinematics typical of current facilities, and
will be important to efforts at extracting parton distributions or
fragmentation functions from semi-inclusive processes at intermediate energies.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures; expanded discussion of kinematics and new
scaling variable; appendix comparing collinear frames included; version to
appear in JHE
Modelling and water yield assessment of Lake Sibhayi
This study has been undertaken to establish the probable causes of the almost 4 m drop in the level of Lake Sibhayi between 2001 and 2014, to assess the impact of abstractions for domestic water consumption and by commercial plantations on lake levels, and to determine what sustainable yield can be abstracted from Lake Sibhayi. From the analysis and simulations undertaken, it is concluded that the major cause of the drop in the level of Lake Sibhayi was the below-average rainfall over the period 2001 to 2011. However, while the simulation results show that the effect on lake levels of abstractions for domestic usage over this period has been negligible, they do indicate that nearly 1.4 m of the drop in lake level can be attributed to the impact of the afforestation which began in the catchment in the 1990s. A yield analysis of simulated results with historical developments in the catchment for the 65-year period of observed climate record was undertaken using both a fixed minimum allowable lake level or a maximum drop from a reference lake level as criteria for system failure. Results from simulating lake levels using the historical climate record with the area afforested and abstractions levels fixed at 2014 values indicate that no sustainable additional yield is possible because of the sustained decline in both the simulated lake levels and conceptual groundwater store, which would be environmentally, socially and ecologically unacceptable. Preliminary simulated results indicate that the removal of approximately 5 km2 of forestry is required to release 1 MCM/yr for domestic abstractions. However, these preliminary results require improved verification of input data and a review of the modelling for increased confidence in the results.Keywords: hydrology of Lake Sibhayi, lake level, abstractions, afforestation and yiel
Shell-structure effects on high-pressure Rankine-Hugoniot shock adiabats
Rankine-Hugoniot shock adiabats are calculated in the pressure range 1
Mbar-10 Gbar with two atomic-structure models: the atom in a spherical cell and
the atom in a jellium of charges. These quantum self-consistent-field models
include shell effects, which have a strong impact on pressure and shock
velocity along the shock adiabat. Comparisons with experimental data are
presented and quantum effects are interpreted in terms of electronic specific
heat. A simple analytical estimate for the maximum compression is proposed,
depending on initial density, atomic weight and atomic number
Modulational Instability in Equations of KdV Type
It is a matter of experience that nonlinear waves in dispersive media,
propagating primarily in one direction, may appear periodic in small space and
time scales, but their characteristics --- amplitude, phase, wave number, etc.
--- slowly vary in large space and time scales. In the 1970's, Whitham
developed an asymptotic (WKB) method to study the effects of small
"modulations" on nonlinear periodic wave trains. Since then, there has been a
great deal of work aiming at rigorously justifying the predictions from
Whitham's formal theory. We discuss recent advances in the mathematical
understanding of the dynamics, in particular, the instability of slowly
modulated wave trains for nonlinear dispersive equations of KdV type.Comment: 40 pages. To appear in upcoming title in Lecture Notes in Physic
Reorientation of magnetic anisotropy in epitaxial cobalt ferrite thin films
Spin reorientation has been observed in CoFe2O4 thin single crystalline films epitaxially grown on (100) MgO substrate upon varying the film thickness. The critical thickness for such a spin-reorientation transition was estimated to be 300 nm. The reorientation is driven by a structural transition in the film from a tetragonal to cubic symmetry. At low thickness, the in-plane tensile stress induces a tetragonal distortion of the lattice that generates a perpendicular anisotropy, large enough to overcome the shape anisotropy and to stabilize the magnetization easy axis out of plane. However, in thicker films, the lattice relaxation toward the cubic structure of the bulk allows the shape anisotropy to force the magnetization to be in plane aligned
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