24,445 research outputs found
Use of remote sensing in agriculture
The remote sensing studies of (a) cultivated peanut areas in Southeastern Virginia; (b) studies at the Virginia Truck and Ornamentals Research Station near Painter, Virginia, the Eastern Virginia Research Station near Warsaw, Virginia, the Tidewater Research and Continuing Education Center near Suffolk, Virginia, and the Southern Piedmont Research and Continuing Education Center Blackstone, Virginia; and (c) land use classification studies at Virginia Beach, Virginia are presented. The practical feasibility of using false color infrared imagery to detect and determine the areal extent of peanut disease infestation of Cylindrocladium black rot and Sclerotinia blight is demonstrated. These diseases pose a severe hazard to this major agricultural food commodity. The value of remote sensing technology in terrain analyses and land use classification of diverse land areas is also investigated. Continued refinement of spectral signatures of major agronomic crops and documentation of pertinent environmental variables have provided a data base for the generation of an agricultural-environmental prediction model
Doing Science: How to optimise patient and public involvement in your research
This paper considers how best to achieve patient and public involvement in research and how to get the most out of it http://ow.ly/R0hwV
Doing Science: How to optimise patient and public involvement in your research
This paper considers how best to achieve patient and public involvement in research and how to get the most out of it http://ow.ly/R0hw
Gravitational wave asteroseismology with fast rotating neutron stars
We investigate damping and growth times of the f-mode for rapidly rotating
stars and a variety of different polytropic equations of state in the Cowling
approximation. We discuss the differences in the eigenfunctions of co- and
counterrotating modes and compute the damping times of the f-mode for several
EoS and all rotation rates up to the Kepler-limit. This is the first study of
the damping/growth time of this type of oscillations for fast rotating neutron
stars in a general relativistic framework. We use these frequencies and
damping/growth times to create robust empirical formulae which can be used for
gravitational wave asteroseismology. The estimation of the damping/growth time
is based on the quadrupole formula and our results agree very well with
Newtonian ones in the appropriate limit.Comment: 15 pages, 8 figures, version accepted for publication in PhysRev
Review and appraisal - Cost-benefit analyses of earth resources survey satellite systems
Review and assessment of documents concerning cost and benefits of ERS satellites, and value of these studies in directing R and D activitie
Spin Fluctuations and the Pseudogap in Organic Superconductors
We show that there are strong similarities in the spin lattice relaxation of
non-magnetic organic charge transfer salts, and that these similarities can be
understood in terms of spin fluctuations. Further, we show that, in all of the
kappa-phase organic superconductors for which there is nuclear magnetic
resonance data, the energy scale for the spin fluctuations coincides with the
energy scale for the pseudogap. This suggests that the pseudogap is caused by
short-range spin correlations. In the weakly frustrated metals
k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu[N(CN)_2]Br, k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu(NCS)_2, and
k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu[N(CN)_2]Cl (under pressure) the pseudogap opens at the same
temperature as coherence emerges in the (intralayer) transport. We argue that
this is because the spin correlations are cut off by the loss of intralayer
coherence at high temperatures. We discuss what might happen to these two
energy scales at high pressures, where the electronic correlations are weaker.
In these weakly frustrated materials the data is well described by the chemical
pressure hypothesis (that anion substitution is equivalent to hydrostatic
pressure). However, we find important differences in the metallic state of
k-(BEDT-TTF)_2Cu_2(CN)_3, which is highly frustrated and displays a spin liquid
insulating phase. We also show that the characteristic temperature scale of the
spin fluctuations in (TMTSF)_2ClO_4 is the same as superconducting critical
temperature, which may be evidence that spin fluctuations mediate the
superconductivity in the Bechgaard salts.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures; to appear in PR
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