176 research outputs found

    Marketing Research Investigates Quality Loss

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    Farm products rise a great deal in value as they move from the farm to the consumer, because of the cost of marketing services required to get them to consumers. On the average, the costs of such services make up more than half of the prices consumers pay for farm products

    The Future of Secondary Level Reading

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    Using A, B, I Grading to Improve Student Achievement

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    Multiple Farrowing

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    One of the topics that is currently undergoing a great deal of discussion in agriculture is changes that are taking place in hog production methods. Heading the list of ideas that might help hog farmers to maintain or increase their farm profits are multiple farrowing, raising in confinement on concrete, and balanced rations. These ideas aren\u27t completely new, but have been modified over a period of years

    A Writer Speaks To MRA Members About Writing

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    Multigrid for two-sided fractional differential equations discretized by finite volume elements on graded meshes

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    It is known that the solution of a conservative steady-state two-sided fractional diffusion problem can exhibit singularities near the boundaries. As consequence of this, and due to the conservative nature of the problem, we adopt a finite volume elements discretization approach over a generic non-uniform mesh. We focus on grids mapped by a smooth function which consist in a combination of a graded mesh near the singularity and a uniform mesh where the solution is smooth. Such a choice gives rise to Toeplitz-like discretization matrices and thus allows a low computational cost of the matrix-vector product and a detailed spectral analysis. The obtained spectral information is used to develop an ad-hoc parameter free multigrid preconditioner for GMRES, which is numerically shown to yield good convergence results in presence of graded meshes mapped by power functions that accumulate points near the singularity. The approximation order of the considered graded meshes is numerically compared with the one of a certain composite mesh given in literature that still leads to Toeplitz-like linear systems and is then still well-suited for our multigrid method. Several numerical tests confirm that power graded meshes result in lower approximation errors than composite ones and that our solver has a wide range of applicability

    The Iowa Homemaker vol.39, no.6

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    Winter Party, Sandra Cruickshank, page 5 Multiple Farrowing, Ken Krause, page 7 ISC Greenhouse, Staff, page 8 I Was A Househusband, Norm Engle, page 12 What’s An Ag, Eldean Borg, page 14 What’s A Home Ec, Martha Keeney, page 15 Meet The German People, Sandra Cruickshank, page 16 Create Beauty With Simplicity, Jill Gaylord and Jackie Andre, page 18 Marketing Research Aids You, Ken Krause, page 20 Please Pass The Popcorn, Donna Read, page 26 New Uses For Ag Products, Jim Stayner, page 29 Their Classroom is Iowa, Gail Devens, page 3

    Modeling Relativistic Electron Precipitation Bremsstrahlung X-Ray Intensities at 10-100 km Manned Vehicle Altitudes

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    Relativisitic electron precipitation (REP) events occur when beams or bunches of relativistic electrons of magnetospheric origin enter the Earth's atmosphere, typically at auroral latitudes. REP events are associated with a variety of space weather effects, including production of transitional and bremsstrahlung radiation, catalytic depletion of stratospheric ozone, and scintillation of transionospheric radio waves. This study examines the intensities of xrays produced at airliner, manned balloon, and space reuseable launch vehicles (sRLVs). The monoenergetic beam is modeled in cylindrical symetry using the paraxial ray equation. Bremsstrahlung photon production is calculated using the traditional SauterElwert crosssection, providing xray emission spectra differential in energy and angle. Attenuation is computed for a planestratified standard atmosphere, and the loss processes include photoionization, Rayleigh and Compton scattering, electronpositron pair production, and photonuclear interaction. Peak altitudes of electron energy deposition and bremsstrahlung xray production were calculated for beams of energies from 1 MeV through 100 MeV. The altitude peak of bremsstrahlung deposition was consistently and significantly lower that that of the electron deposition due to the longer mean free paths of xrays compared to electrons within the atmosphere. For example, for a nadirdirected monoenergetic 5 MeV beam, the peak deposition altitude was calculated to be 42 km, but the resulting bremsstrahlung deposition peaked at 25 km. This has implications for crew and passenger safety, especially with the growth of the space tourism industry. A survey of results covering the 1100 MeV spectrum for the three altitude ranges of interest will be presented

    Capacity building in stakeholders around Detroit River fish consumption advisory issues

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    Abstract The Detroit River is an international water body that has several fish consumption advisories for contaminants that affect human health and economic revenue for the USA and Canada. Despite the importance of these advisories, little progress has been made in developing effective management strategies or coordinating monitoring, research, and policy efforts between the 2 nations. We engaged 44 stakeholder organizations to increase community capacity on these issues for the Detroit River. We assessed capacity with key informant interviews and a network survey. Our analysis identified weak ties in information sharing and collaboration between countries. We used this information to improve stakeholder capacity, which included forming working groups that focused on system analysis, identification of priority issues, and definitions of organizational roles. Outcomes included outreach materials addressing environmental-justice issues and risk-analysis models of polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) body burdens in fish. Our assessment of workshop participants with a longitudinal survey indicated that we increased network capacity and issue awareness in our stakeholders by providing new ways for them to work together. The engagement of stakeholders also improved research outcomes. By identifying stakeholder concerns related to scientific questions about consumption advisories early in the process, researchers were able to direct their efforts to generating translational research that better addressed stakeholder needs

    Rewriting the Central European Early Bronze Age Chronology: Evidence from Large-Scale Radiocarbon Dating

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    The transition from the Neolithic to the Early Bronze Age in Central Europe has often been considered as a supra-regional uniform process, which led to the growing mastery of the new bronze technology. Since the 1920s, archaeologists have divided the Early Bronze Age into two chronological phases (Bronze A1 and A2),which were also seen as stages of technical progress. On the basis of the early radiocarbon dates from the cemetery of Singen, southern Germany, the beginning of the Early Bronze Age in Central Europe was originally dated around 2300/2200 BC and the transition to more complex casting techniques (i.e.,Bronze A2) around 2000 BC. On the basis of 140 newly radiocarbon dated human remains from Final Neolithic, Early and Middle Bronze Age cemeteries south of Augsburg (Bavaria) and a re-dating of ten graves from the cemetery of Singen, we propose a significantly different dating range, which forces us to re-think the traditional relative and absolute chronologies as well as the narrative of technical development. We are now able to date the beginning of the Early Bronze Age to around 2150 BC and its end to around 1700 BC. Moreover, there is no transition between Bronze (Bz) A1 and Bronze (Bz) A2, but a complete overlap between the type objects of the two phases from 1900-1700 BC. We thus present a revised chronology of the assumed diagnostic type objects of the Early Bronze Age and recommend a radiocarbon-based view on the development of the material culture. Finally, we propose that the traditional phases Bz A1 and Bz A2 do not represent a chronological sequence, but regionally different social phenomena connected to the willingness of local actors to appropriate the new bronze technology
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