1,126 research outputs found
Feeding with chicory roots reduces the amount of odorous compounds in colon and rectal contents of pigs
Sixteen pigs (eight entire males and eight females) were given individually two diets, control and control added 25% chopped chicory roots for 2 months before slaughter. Samples were taken from the contents in colon and rectum and subjected to GC-MS analysis for amount of odour impact compounds. The compounds 2-pentanone, ethylbutyrate,
propylpropionate, butyric acid, ethyl-2-methylbutyrate, p-cresol, indole and skatole showed a significant difference between the two treatments. The esters, which have relatively pleasant, often fruity odours, increased in the chicory treatment, whereas the malodorous compounds, p-cresol, indole and skatole decreased in the chicory treatment. The measured amounts of compounds were corrected for their odour thresholds as different compounds can have widely different odour thresholds. Principal components analysis was then used to analyse the raw and corrected data results. p-Cresol was the most malodorous compound and together with skatole and indole count as the most malodorous compounds in the colon and rectum cotents. However, butyric acid also had some minor influence. Feeding chicory roots decreased significantly the concentrations of these malodorous compounds, especially if the lowest odour threshold values are used as correction factors
Feeding with chicory roots reduces the amount of odorous compounds in colon contents of pigs
It is known that pure inulin a fructooligosaccharide extracted from chicory roots can:
reduce boar taint (skatole in backfat and blood)reduce parasite infection levels when added to specially composed experimental diets.
However, the entire chicory roots may, in comparison to inulin:
reduce boar taint more effectively improve the taste of cooked meat from both male and female pigs be more effective against parasites when added to normal diet types
Improved stable environment due to:
the reduced malodour coming from pig stables and manure may possibly lead to environmental benefits for the farmer and the public
Mindful Parenting, Parenting Cognitions, and Parent-Youth Communication: Bidirectional Linkages and Mediational Processes
Objectives: Mindful parenting and parenting cognitions likely have important linkages to each other and to parent-child communication, but these linkages have not been tested. In this article, we test the bidirectional linkages between mindful parenting and parenting cognitions (sense of competence, parent-centered attributions) and the underlying mediational processes that link them to parent-child communication (parental solicitation and youth disclosure). Methods: Longitudinal, autoregressive cross-lagged models were run within a longitudinal sample of rural and suburban early adolescents and their mothers (n = 421; mean adolescent age = 12.14, 46% male, 73% white). Results: Significant bidirectional linkages were found between mindful parenting and parenting cognitions across Time 1 and Time 2. Greater mindful parenting at Time 1 was associated with more positive parenting cognitions (e.g., greater perceptions of parental competence and fewer negative parent-centered attributions or self-blame) at Time 2. More positive parenting cognitions at Time 1 were also associated with greater levels of mindful parenting at Time 2. Mindful parenting at Time 2 mediated the association between parenting cognitions (both parent-centered attributions and sense of competence) at Time 1 and parental solicitation at Time 3. Conclusions: Mindful parenting and parenting cognitions influence each other over time. Parenting cognitions can affect parental solicitation via increases in mindful parenting. The discussion focuses on potential underlying processes
The high temperature expansion of the classical chain
We present the -expansion of the Helmholtz free energy of the
classical model, with a single-ion anisotropy term and in the presence of
an external magnetic field, up to order . We compare our results to
the numerical solution of Joyce's [Phys. Rev. Lett. 19, 581 (1967)] expression
for the thermodynamics of the classical model, with neither single-ion
anisotropy term nor external magnetic field. This comparison shows that the
derived analytical expansion is valid for intermediate temperatures such as
. We show that the specific heat and magnetic
susceptibility of the spin-2 antiferromagnetic chain can be approximated by
their respective classical results, up to , within an error
of 2.5%. In the absence of an external magnetic field, the ferromagnetic and
antiferromagnetic chains have the same classical Helmholtz free energy. We show
how this two types of media react to the presence of an external magnetic
field
Influence of chicory roots /Cichorium intybus L) on boar taint in entire male pigs and female pigs
It is known that pure inulin a fructooligosaccharide extracted from chicory roots can:
– reduce boar taint (skatole in backfat and blood)
– reduce parasite infection levels when added to specially composed experimental diets
• However, the entire chicory roots may, in comparison to inulin:
– reduce boar taint more effectively
– improve the taste of cooked meat from both male and female pigs
– be more effective against parasites when added to normal diet types
– contain secondary metabolites that add to the effect of the inulin
– be a cheaper solutio
Stability of mode-locked kinks in the ac driven and damped sine-Gordon lattice
Kink dynamics in the underdamped and strongly discrete sine-Gordon lattice
that is driven by the oscillating force is studied. The investigation is
focused mostly on the properties of the mode-locked states in the {\it
overband} case, when the driving frequency lies above the linear band. With the
help of Floquet theory it is demonstrated that the destabilizing of the
mode-locked state happens either through the Hopf bifurcation or through the
tangential bifurcation. It is also observed that in the overband case the
standing mode-locked kink state maintains its stability for the bias amplitudes
that are by the order of magnitude larger than the amplitudes in the
low-frequency case.Comment: To appear in Springer Series on Wave Phenomena, special volume
devoted to the LENCOS'12 conference; 6 figure
NeutronC scattering near an Efimov state
The low-energy neutronC scattering in a neutron-neutron-core model is
studied with large scattering lengths near the conditions for the appearance of
an Efimov state. We show that the real part of the elastic wave phase-shift
() presents a zero, or a pole in , when the
system has an Efimov excited or virtual state. More precisely the pole scales
with the energy of the Efimov state (bound or virtual). We perform calculations
in the limit of large scattering lengths, disregarding the interaction range,
within a renormalized zero-range approach using subtracted equations. It is
also presented a brief discussion of these findings in the context of ultracold
atom physics with tunable scattering lengths
Efimov Trimers near the Zero-crossing of a Feshbach Resonance
Near a Feshbach resonance, the two-body scattering length can assume any
value. When it approaches zero, the next-order term given by the effective
range is known to diverge. We consider the question of whether this divergence
(and the vanishing of the scattering length) is accompanied by an anomalous
solution of the three-boson Schr\"odinger equation similar to the one found at
infinite scattering length by Efimov. Within a simple zero-range model, we find
no such solutions, and conclude that higher-order terms do not support Efimov
physics.Comment: 8 pages, no figures, final versio
Scaling predictions for radii of weakly bound triatomic molecules
The mean-square radii of the molecules He, HeLi,
HeLi and HeNa are calculated using a three-body model
with contact interactions. They are obtained from a universal scaling function
calculated within a renormalized scheme for three particles interacting through
pairwise Dirac-delta interaction. The root-mean-square distance between two
atoms of mass in a triatomic molecule are estimated to be of de order of
, where is the dimer and the
trimer binding energies, and is a constant (varying from
to ) that depends on the ratio between and . Considering
previous estimates for the trimer energies, we also predict the sizes of
Rubidium and Sodium trimers in atomic traps.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figure
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