1,236 research outputs found
Mulching and Transplanting Increase Early Yield of Muskmelons
Two techiniques were used by ISU horticulutrists to increase early production of muskmelons. Backyard gardeners may want to use these practices along with commercial growers seeking early profits
Rapid alteration in circulating free thyroxine modulates pituitary type II 5\u27 deiodinase and basal thyrotropin secretion in the rat
TSH secretion is decreased by both T4 and T3. This negative feedback control of TSH secretion has been correlated with an increase in pituitary nuclear T3 content, and it is not clear whether T4 exerts its effect directly on the thyrotroph or after its deiodination to T3. However, levels of the pituitary enzyme catalyzing T4 to T3 conversion, 5\u27D-II, are decreased in the presence of an increased amount of T4. Thus, it is unclear why the thyrotroph would have a mechanism for modulating the production of T3, if T3 is, in fact, the sole bioactive signal providing negative feedback inhibition. To examine this apparent paradox, we administered EMD 21388, a compound which inhibits the binding of T4 to transthyretin resulting in a rapid increase in circulating free T4 levels, to rats pretreated with radiolabeled T4 and T3. We observed increases in pituitary and liver T4 content of greater than 150%, without increases in the respective tissue T3 contents. The EMD 21388-treated rats also exhibited a 25% decrease in pituitary 5\u27D-II activity (103.8 +/- 15.8 fmol 125I released.mg protein-1.h-1, vs. control, 137.4 +/- 15.9, mean +/- SE), as did rats treated with sodium salicylate, another compound that inhibits T4-TTR binding (100.8 +/- 7.1). TSH levels significantly decreased 2 h after the administration of EMD 21388. These data demonstrate that despite a T4-mediated decrease in pituitary 5\u27D-II activity, an increase in T4 independently decreases TSH secretion
Comparisons of trace constituents from ground stations and the DC-8 aircraft during PEM-West B
Chemical data from ground stations in Asia and the North Pacific are compared with data from the DC-8 aircraft collected during the Pacific Exploratory Measurements in the Western Pacific Ocean (PEM-West B) mission. Ground station sampling took place on Hong Kong, Taiwan, Okinawa, and Cheju; and at three Pacific islands, Shemya, Midway, and Oahu. Aircraft samples were collected during 19 flights, most over the western North Pacific. Aluminum was used as an indicator of mineral aerosol, and even though the aircraft did sample Asian dust, strong dust storms were not encountered. The frequency distribution for non-sea-salt sulfate (nss SO4=) in the aircraft samples was bimodal: the higher concentration mode (∼1 μg m−3) evidently originated from pollution or, less likely, from volcanic sources, while the lower mode, with a peak at 0.040 μg m−3, probably was a product of biogenic emissions. In addition, the concentrations of aerosol sulfate varied strongly in the vertical: arithmetic mean SO4=concentrations above 5000 m ( = 0.21±0.69 μg m−3) were substantially lower than those below ( = 1.07±0.87 μg m−3), suggesting the predominance of the surface sources. Several samples collected in the stratosphere exhibited elevated SO4=, however, probably as a result of emissions from Mount Pinatubo. During some boundary layer legs on the DC-8, the concentrations of CO and O3 were comparable to those of clean marine air, but during other legs, several chemically distinct air masses were sampled, including polluted air in which O3was photochemically produced. In general, the continental outflow sampled from the aircraft was substantially diluted with respect to what was observed at the ground stations. Higher concentrations of aerosol species, O3, and CO at the Hong Kong ground station relative to the aircraft suggest that much of the continental outflow from southeastern Asia occurs in the lower troposphere, and extensive long-range transport out of this part of Asia is not expected. In comparison, materials emitted farther to the north apparently are more susceptible to long-range transport
Bidirectional Wave-Propelled Capillary Spinners
When a solid body floats at the interface of a vibrating liquid bath, the
relative motion between the object and interface generates outwardly
propagating surface waves. It has recently been demonstrated that millimetric
objects with fore-aft mass asymmetry generate an associated asymmetric
wavefield and consequently self-propel in unidirectional motion. Harnessing
this wave-powered mechanism of propulsion, we here demonstrate that chiral
objects placed on a vibrating fluid interface are set into steady, yet
reversible, rotation, with the angular speed and direction of rotation
controlled by the interplay between object geometry and driving parameters.
Scaling laws and a simplified model of the wavefield reveal the underlying
physical mechanism of rotation, while collapsing experimental measurements of
the angular velocity across parameters. Leveraging the control over the chiral
object's direction of rotation, we then demonstrate that a floating body with
an asymmetric mass distribution and chirality can be remotely steered along
two-dimensional trajectories via modulation of the driving frequency alone.
This accessible and tunable macroscopic system serves as a potential platform
for future explorations of chiral active and driven matter, and demonstrates a
mechanism by which wave-mediated fluid forces can be manipulated for directed
propulsion
Relation between the pole and the minimally subtracted mass in dimensional regularization and dimensional reduction to three-loop order
We compute the relation between the pole quark mass and the minimally
subtracted quark mass in the framework of QCD applying dimensional reduction as
a regularization scheme. Special emphasis is put on the evanescent couplings
and the renormalization of the epsilon-scalar mass. As a by-product we obtain
the three-loop on-shell renormalization constants Zm(OS) and Z2(OS) in
dimensional regularization and thus provide the first independent check of the
analytical results computed several years ago.Comment: 22 page
Proceedings, International Taxus Symposium, October 1, 1975
History and development of Taxus in the U.S. / Ray A. Keen -- The best of the Taxus cultivars / L. C. Chadwick -- Poisonous properties of Taxus / Jack L. Beal -- Production of Taxus / Arie J. Radder -- Effective use of Taxus in the landscape / Clarence E. Lewis -- Taxus species and hybrids / Harold G. Hillier -- Japanese yew (Taxus cuspidata) / Makoto Kawase -- Fertilizing Taxus for optimum growth / Elton M. Smith -- Taxus insects: problems and research in Ohio / David G. Nielsen -- Taxus locations in the Secrest Arboretu
Redistribution of Aluminum Ions During Processing of Sialon Ceramics
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/65916/1/j.1151-2916.1986.tb04820.x.pd
Frailty increases the long-term risk for fall and fracture-related hospitalizations and all-cause mortality in community-dwelling older women
Frailty is associated with declines in physiological capacity across sensory, neurological, and musculoskeletal systems. An underlying assumption is that the frailer an individual, the more likely they are to experience falls and fractures. We examined whether grades of frailty can assess the long-term risk of hospitalized falls, fractures, and all-cause mortality in 1261 community-dwelling older women (mean age [SD] of 75.1 [2.7] yr) over 14.5 yr. Frailty was operationalized using a frailty index (FI) of cumulative deficits from 33 variables across multiple health domains (physical, mental, comorbidities) at baseline. The total score across these variables was summed and divided by 33 to obtain the FI. Participants were graded as fit (FI ≤ 0.12), mildly frail (FI \u3e 0.12-0.24), moderately frail (FI \u3e 0.24-0.36), or severely frail (FI \u3e 0.36). Fall-related (n = 498), any fracture-related (n = 347), and hip fracture-related hospitalizations (n = 137) and deaths (n = 482) were obtained from linked health records. Associations between FI grades and clinical outcomes were analyzed using multivariable-adjusted Cox-proportional hazard models including age, treatment (calcium/placebo), BMI, smoking history, socioeconomic status, plasma vitamin D (25OHD) status plus season obtained, physical activity, self-reported prevalent falls in the last 3 mo, and self-reported fractures since the age of 50 yr. At baseline, 713 (56.5%), 350 (27.8%), 163 (12.9%), and 35 (2.8%) of women were classified as fit, mildly frail, moderately frail, and severely frail, respectively. Women with mild, moderate, and severe frailty had significantly higher hazards (all P \u3c .05) for a fall-related (46%, 104%, 168%), any fracture-related (88% for moderate, 193% for severe frailty), hip fracture-related hospitalizations (93%, 127%, 129%), and all-cause mortality (47%, 126%, 242%). The FI identified community-dwelling older women at risk for the most serious falls and fractures and may be incorporated into risk assessment tools to identify individuals with poorer clinical prognosis
- …