3,132 research outputs found
ESTIMATING MARKETING MARGIN COST COMPONENTS: AN APPLICATION OF SIMULATION TO PRODUCTS OF THE VEGETABLE OIL INDUSTRY
Demand and Price Analysis,
DYNAMICS OF FOOD PRICE INFLATION
A supply-shift concept of food price inflation is offered as an explanation of why food prices have increased in recent years. This view is consistent with cost-push theories of inflation. The effects of higher farm product prices on food prices are analyzed using Pascal distributed lag models of the price adjustment process. Estimates are presented for 23 selected food products. The results indicate that higher farm prices are passed through to the retail level most quickly for food products which are not highly processed.Demand and Price Analysis,
The Study of the Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian and Some of its Applications
The Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian is not only a topic of fundamental interest,
but also has a rich variety of diverse applications in astrophysics, nonlinear
optics and elementary particle physics etc. We discuss the series
representation of this Lagrangian and a few of its applications in this study.
[In an appendix, we discuss issues related to the renormalization - and the
renormalization-group invariance - of the Heisenberg-Euler Lagrangian and its
two-loop generalization.]Comment: 12 pages, LaTeX; Proceedings of the MRST-2003 conference; talk given
by S. R. Vallur
Age spreads in star forming regions?
Rotation periods and projected equatorial velocities of pre-main-sequence
(PMS) stars in star forming regions can be combined to give projected stellar
radii. Assuming random axial orientation, a Monte-Carlo model is used to
illustrate that distributions of projected stellar radii are very sensitive to
ages and age dispersions between 1 and 10 Myr which, unlike age estimates from
conventional Hertzsprung-Russell diagrams, are relatively immune to
uncertainties due to extinction, variability, distance etc. Application of the
technique to the Orion Nebula cluster reveals radius spreads of a factor of
2--3 (FWHM) at a given effective temperature. Modelling this dispersion as an
age spread suggests that PMS stars in the ONC have an age range larger than the
mean cluster age, that could be reasonably described by the age distribution
deduced from the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram. These radius/age spreads are
certainly large enough to invalidate the assumption of coevality when
considering the evolution of PMS properties (rotation, disks etc.) from one
young cluster to another.Comment: To appear in "The Ages of Stars", E.E. Mamajek, D.R. Soderblom,
R.F.G. Wyse (eds.), IAU Symposium 258, CU
DEMAND AND SUPPLY OF VEGETABLE OIL PRODUCTS IN THE UNITED STATES: A SHORT-RUN ANALYSIS
Demand and Price Analysis,
Cotton, tomato, corn, and onion production with subsurface drip irrigation: A review
Citation: Lamm, F. R. (2016). Cotton, tomato, corn, and onion production with subsurface drip irrigation: A review. Transactions of the Asabe, 59(1), 263-278. doi:10.13031/trans.59.11231The usage of subsurface drip irrigation (SDI) has increased by 89% in the U.S. during the past ten years according to USDA-NASS estimates, and over 93% of the SDI land area is located in just ten states. Combining public entity and private industry perceptions of SDI in these ten states, the major crops were tentatively identified as cotton, processing tomato, field corn, and onion. An extensive literature review of SDI usage for these four crops was performed concentrating on irrigation system comparisons, water and/or nutrient management, and SDI system design criteria. Although many crops potentially can be grown with SDI, the results presented here may be a relatively representative crosssection of the various opportunities and challenges of SDI for general crop production. © 2016 American Society of Agricultural and Biological Engineers
Net Returns for Grain Sorghum and Corn under Alternative Irrigation Systems in Western Kansas
This study evaluates seven irrigation systems for use in production of grain sorghum and corn. These systems are medium pressure center-pivot (MPCP), low pressure center-pivot (LPCP), low drift nozzle center-pivot (LDN) , low energy precision application center-pivot (LEPA), furrow flood (FF) , surge flood (SF), and subsurface drip (SD). After-tax net present value estimates from investing in and using each system over a 10-year period to produce grain sorghum and corn are compared. The surge flood system, has the highest net returns under typical conditions for irrigation of both grain sorghum and corn. The furrow flood system generates the next highest net returns for both crops, followed by the subsurface drip system. The medium pressure center-pivot system is the least profitable for both crops. Of the center-pivot systems, the low pressure system has the highest net return, but is followed very closely by the low drift nozzle system. The results of the sensitivity analysis indicate that the net return estimates and ranking of the subsurface drip system are very sensitive to the yield response to irrigation. Lower than average crop prices also have a substantial impact on the ranking of this system. The original investment cost is also an important determinant of its net return.Crop Production/Industries,
Identifying Advantages and Disadvantages of Variable Rate Irrigation – An Updated Review
Variable rate irrigation (VRI) sprinklers on mechanical move irrigation systems (center pivot or lateral move) have been commercially available since 2004. Although the number of VRI, zone or individual sprinkler, systems adopted to date is lower than expected there is a continued interest to harness this technology, especially when climate variability, regulatory nutrient management, water conservation policies, and declining water for agriculture compound the challenges involved for irrigated crop production. This article reviews the potential advantages and potential disadvantages of VRI technology for moving sprinklers, provides updated examples on such aspects, suggests a protocol for designing and implementing VRI technology and reports on the recent advancements. The advantages of VRI technology are demonstrated in the areas of agronomic improvement, greater economic returns, environmental protection and risk management, while the main drawbacks to VRI technology include the complexity to successfully implement the technology and the lack of evidence that it assures better performance in net profit or water savings. Although advances have been made in VRI technologies, its penetration into the market will continue to depend on tangible and perceived benefits by producers
Existence of immersed spheres minimizing curvature functionals in compact 3-manifolds
We study curvature functionals for immersed 2-spheres in a compact,
three-dimensional Riemannian manifold M. Under the assumption that the
sectional curvature of M is strictly positive, we prove the existence of a
smoothly immersed sphere minimizing the L^{2} integral of the second
fundamental form. Assuming instead that the sectional curvature is less than or
equal to 2, and that there exists a point in M with scalar curvature bigger
than 6, we obtain a smooth 2-sphere minimizing the integral of 1/4|H|^{2} +1,
where H is the mean curvature vector
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