789 research outputs found

    Comparison of Nitrate Contents for Reed Canarygrass and Orchardgrass in Large Amounts of Compound Fertilization

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    Reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinacea L.) could be an ideal candidate for manure application. We compared its growth, crude protein (CP) and nitrate N (NO3-N) content to that of orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.) on different levels of nitrogen fertilization (3,10,15 and 20g N m-2, applied from May 15 to September 15 after each monthly cutting. The dry weight (DW) of reed canarygrass increased significantly with increasing amounts of N nitrogen on July, August and September. However, orchardgrass only showed a significant increase in yield on September. The concentration of CP of reed canarygrass was significantly lower than that of orchardgrass with 3 g N m-2 on June, July, August and 10 g N m-2 on August. In contrast to this, CP of reed canarygrass was significantly higher than that of orchardgrass with 15 g N m-2 on July and 20 g N m-2 on July and August. NO3-N content of reed canarygrass was significantly lower than that of orchardgrass with 3 g N m-2 and 10 g N m-2 on June, July and August. We had high NO3-N (\u3e 0.15% N as NO3-N was considered unsafe) with 15 g N m-2 and 20 g N m-2 in both forage species and with 10 g N m-2 in orchardgrass. Our results indicate that reed canarygrass accumulates less NO3-N than orchardgrass with applications of 3 g N m-2 and 10 g N m-2 per cutting

    PCV58 the Impact of Comorbid Mental Illness on Costs of Health Care for Inpatients with Heart Failure

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    Nonstructural Carbohydrate Reserves of Temperate Perennial Grasses in Autumn Early Growth

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    The objective of this study was to determine levels of nonstructural carbohydrate reserves of four temperate perennial grasses: Orchardgrass (Dactylis glomerata L.), Timothy (Phleum pratense L.), Perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.), and Reed canarygrass (Phalaris arundinacea L.) in their early growth stages during the cool autumn temperatures in northern Japan. At the time of sampling, all grasses were in their vegetative stage, and Reed canarygrass was not forming rhizomes. Fructosan concentration in reed canarygrass roots (8.04%) was 22 times that of the leaf blade (0.36%) and twice that of the stem (3.40%); the concentration in reed canarygrass root was the highest of the four grasses. Timothy stored fructosan in the root at a significantly higher concentration (1.65%) than did the orchardgrass (0.58%) and perennial ryegrass (0.83%). The concentration of fructosan in the timothy was the highest in the stem, the lowest in the leaf blade and intermediate in the root. On the other hand, orchardgrass and perennial ryegrass stored the highest amount of fructosan in the stem, the lowest amount in the root, and an intermediate amount in the leaf blade. In addition, the root dry weight and the ratio of the root dry weight to the total dry weight were significantly higher in reed canarygrass than in the other three grasses. Timothy was in second place surpassing orchardgrass and perennial ryegrass. We considered that winter survival is the highest in reed canarygrass and second highest in timothy over orchard grass and perennial ryegrass

    A determination of the LMC dark matter subhalo mass using the MW halo stars in its gravitational wake

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    Our goal is to study the gravitational effects caused by the passage of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) in its orbit on the stellar halo of the Milky Way (MW). We employed the Gaia Data Release 3 to construct a halo tracers data set consisting of K-Giant stars and RR-Lyrae variables. Additionally, we have compared the data with a theoretical model to estimate the DM subhalo mass. We have improved the characterisation of the local wake and the collective response due to the LMC orbit. On the other hand, we have estimated for the first time the dark subhalo mass of the Large Magellanic Cloud, of the order of 2×10112\times 10^{11} M⊙_{\odot}, comparable to previously reported values in the literature.Comment: submitted to A&

    Nuclear response to dark matter signals in Ge and Xe odd-mass targets

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    Abstract: The interaction of dark matter particles (WIMPs) with the odd-mass 73^{73}Ge and 131^{131}Xe target nuclei ,{ {that is the recoil rates corresponding to the elastic scattering of WIMPs by these nuclei}}, is analysed in the context of the minimal extensions of the SUSY model. The BCS+QRPA technique plus the quasiparticle-phonon coupling scheme is used to describe the nuclear structure part of the calculations. The resulting values for the nuclear spin content of both nuclei are compared to values previously reported in the literature

    The performance of thin NaI(Tl) scintillator plate for dark matter search

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    A thin (0.05cm) and wide area (5cmX5cm) NaI(Tl) scintillator was developed. The performance of the thin NaI(Tl) plate, energy resolution, single photoelectron energy and position sensitivity were tested. An excellent energy resolution of 20% (FWHM) at 60keV was obtained. The single photoelectron energy was calculated to be approximately 0.42 0.02keV. Position information in the 5cmx5cm area of the detector was also obtained by analyzing the ratio of the number of photons collected at opposite ends of the detector. The position resolution was obtained to be 1cm (FWHM) in the 5cmx5cm area.Comment: 10 pages. Accepted to Journal of Physical Society of Japa
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