7,614 research outputs found
Post-harvest sown catch crops – results from two years of organic field trials
Post-harvest sown catch crops should be sown as early as possible in order to obtain maximum biomass and nutrient uptake in the harvested crop, as biomass production decreased by 2-3.5 percent per day, when time of sowing was postponed throughout August. Furthermore, the winter hardy species included in these experiments had a tendency to yield less than the non-winter hardy catch crops. These experiments imply that early sown catch crops may become a biomass supplement for organic biogas production, provided sufficient yields are obtained and costs for harvest, transportation and storage are adequately low
High-harmonic generation from arbitrarily oriented diatomic molecules including nuclear motion and field-free alignment
We present a theoretical model of high-harmonic generation from diatomic
molecules. The theory includes effects of alignment as well as nuclear motion
and is used to predict results for N, O, H and D. The results
show that the alignment dependence of high-harmonics is governed by the
symmetry of the highest occupied molecular orbital and that the inclusion of
the nuclear motion in the theoretical description generally reduces the
intensity of the harmonic radiation. We compare our model with experimental
results on N and O, and obtain very good agreement.Comment: 12 pages, 8 figures, 2 tables; legends revised on Figs. 1,3,4,6 and
Color singlet suppression of quark-gluon plasma formation
The rate of quark-gluon plasma droplet nucleation in superheated hadronic
matter is calculated within the MIT bag model. The requirements of color
singletness and (to less extent) fixed momentum suppress the nucleation rate by
many orders of magnitude, making thermal nucleation of quark-gluon plasma
droplets unlikely in ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions if the transition
is first order and reasonably described by the bag model.Comment: 9 pages, 3 ps figures. To appear in PhysRevC (April 1996
Ecological effects and environmental fate of solid rocket exhaust
Specific target processes were classified as to the chemical, chemical-physical, and biological reactions and toxic effects of solid rocket emissions within selected ecosystems at Kennedy Space Center. Exposure of Citris seedlings, English peas, and bush beans to SRM exhaust under laboratory conditions demonstrated reduced growth rates, but at very high concentrations. Field studies of natural plant populations in three diverse ecosystems failed to reveal any structural damage at the concentration levels tested. Background information on elemental composition of selected woody plants from two terrestrial ecosystems is reported. LD sub 50 for a native mouse (peromysous gossypinus) exposed to SRM exhaust was determined to be 50 ppm/g body weight. Results strongly indicate that other components of the SRM exhaust act synergically to enhance the toxic effects of HCl gas when inhaled. A brief summary is given regarding the work on SRM exhaust and its possible impact on hatchability of incubating bird eggs
- …