11 research outputs found
BRANCH DEVELOPMENT OF EUCALYPTS MANAGED FOR SAWLOGS
Species of the genus Eucalyptus managed for sawlogs in fast-growing plantations show high potential for substitution for valuable native hardwoods. To obtain high quality wood, technical pruning is necessary. The objective of the study is to analyse the development of the branches for the first and second pruning lifts and to quantify the biomass of the pruned branches. For the study two stands of Eucalyptus grandis were selected (age 18 and 36 months) for evaluating a pruning lift from 0 to 3 m and 3 to 6 m. The average branch diameter and length were 18 mm and 2.1 m in the younger stand and 21 mm and 2.3 m in the older one. The relation between branch diameter and branch length could be expressed in a linear model (R² = 0.8). In both stands a higher proportion of branches were already dead. The oven-dry biomass of the pruned branches was 2.2 ton.ha-1 in the first pruning lift and 1.2 ton.ha-1 in the second. The results showed that branch development in wide spaced and early thinned eucalypt plantations is in line with the objective of high quality wood production. Pruning should take place before 18 month to avoid dead branches. The oven-dry branch biomass cut in the two pruning lifts shows a low volume making a commercial utilization difficult.\u
Diffractive Electroproduction of and Mesons at HERA
Diffractive electroproduction of rho and phi mesons is measured at HERA with
the H1 detector in the elastic and proton dissociative channels. The data
correspond to an integrated luminosity of 51 pb^-1. About 10500 rho and 2000
phi events are analysed in the kinematic range of squared photon virtuality 2.5
< Q^2 < 60 GeV^2, photon-proton centre of mass energy 35 < W < 180 GeV and
squared four-momentum transfer to the proton |t| < 3 GeV^2. The total,
longitudinal and transverse cross sections are measured as a function of Q^2, W
and |t|. The measurements show a transition to a dominantly "hard" behaviour,
typical of high gluon densities and small q\bar{q} dipoles, for Q^2 larger than
10 to 20 GeV^2. They support flavour independence of the diffractive exchange,
expressed in terms of the scaling variable (Q^2 + M_V^2)/4, and proton vertex
factorisation. The spin density matrix elements are measured as a function of
kinematic variables. The ratio of the longitudinal to transverse cross
sections, the ratio of the helicity amplitudes and their relative phases are
extracted. Several of these measurements have not been performed before and
bring new information on the dynamics of diffraction in a QCD framework. The
measurements are discussed in the context of models using generalised parton
distributions or universal dipole cross sections.Comment: Revised version, accepted by Journal. 113 pages, 43 figures, 56
tables. replaced fig 21a by correct versio