7,664 research outputs found
Control of apple scab by curative applications of biocontrol agents
In organic apple growing protective applications with copper, sulphur or lime sulphur are
used for apple scab control. Protective applications have to be repeated when new leaves
unfold. The timing of protective sprays depends on the weather forecast. If forecasted
infection conditions fail to appear, treatments were for nothing. With curative control
agents available, the number of treatments could be reduced. In greenhouse trials we
tested control agents for their protective and curative efficiency against apple scab after
artificial inoculation of potted apple trees. Applications were done 2 hours before
inoculation, 5 hours after inoculation on wet leaves, 5 hours after inoculation during
simulated rainfall or 24 hours after inoculation on wet or dry leaves. The optimal time of
application differed between the preparations tested. Vitisan and OmniProtect had their
highest activity when sprayed curative 24 hours after inoculation. Combinations were
found, which revealed a high efficiency against apple scab from 2h before to 24 hours after
inoculation. In a field trial apple scab was effectively controlled by curative applications of
OmniProtect
Astrophysical gyrokinetics: Turbulence in pressure-anisotropic plasmas at ion scales and beyond
We present a theoretical framework for describing electromagnetic kinetic
turbulence in a multi-species, magnetized, pressure-anisotropic plasma.
Turbulent fluctuations are assumed to be small compared to the mean field, to
be spatially anisotropic with respect to it, and to have frequencies small
compared to the ion cyclotron frequency. At scales above the ion Larmor radius,
the theory reduces to the pressure-anisotropic generalization of kinetic
reduced magnetohydrodynamics (KRMHD) formulated by Kunz et al. (2015). At
scales at and below the ion Larmor radius, three main objectives are achieved.
First, we analyse the linear response of the pressure-anisotropic gyrokinetic
system, and show it to be a generalisation of previously explored limits. The
effects of pressure anisotropy on the stability and collisionless damping of
Alfvenic and compressive fluctuations are highlighted, with attention paid to
the spectral location and width of the frequency jump that occurs as Alfven
waves transition into kinetic Alfven waves. Secondly, we derive and discuss a
general free-energy conservation law, which captures both the KRMHD free-energy
conservation at long wavelengths and dual cascades of kinetic Alfven waves and
ion entropy at sub-ion-Larmor scales. We show that non-Maxwellian features in
the distribution function change the amount of phase mixing and the efficiency
of magnetic stresses, and thus influence the partitioning of free energy
amongst the cascade channels. Thirdly, a simple model is used to show that
pressure anisotropy can cause large variations in the ion-to-electron heating
ratio due to the dissipation of Alfvenic turbulence. Our theory provides a
foundation for determining how pressure anisotropy affects the turbulent
fluctuation spectra, the differential heating of particle species, and the
ratio of parallel and perpendicular phase mixing in space and astrophysical
plasmas.Comment: 59 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Journal of Plasma
Physics (original 28 Nov 2017); abstract abridge
The essence of quintessence and the cost of compression
Standard two-parameter compressions of the infinite dimensional dark energy
model space show crippling limitations even with current SN-Ia data. Firstly
they cannot cope with rapid evolution - the best-fit to the latest SN-Ia data
shows late and very rapid evolution to w_0 = -2.85. However all of the standard
parametrisations (incorrectly) claim that this best-fit is ruled out at more
than 2-sigma, primarily because they track it well only at very low redshifts,
z < 0.2. Further they incorrectly rule out the observationally acceptable
region w 1. Secondly the parametrisations give wildly different
estimates for the redshift of acceleration, which vary from z_{acc}=0.14 to
z_{acc}=0.59. Although these failings are largely cured by including
higher-order terms (3 or 4 parameters) this results in new degeneracies which
open up large regions of previously ruled-out parameter space. Finally we test
the parametrisations against a suite of theoretical quintessence models. The
widely used linear expansion in z is generally the worst, with errors of up to
10% at z=1 and 20% at z > 2. All of this casts serious doubt on the usefulness
of the standard two-parameter compressions in the coming era of high-precision
dark energy cosmology and emphasises the need for decorrelated compressions
with at least three parameters.Comment: 7 pages, 4 colour figures, EmulateApJ; v2: includes Bayesian evidence
analysis and table that were only present in published version, because of
increased interest in Bayesian model comparison (no new material beyond the
one in the published ApJL of 2004
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