1,514 research outputs found
Prediction of cull cow carcass characteristics from live weight and body condition score measured pre slaughter
peer-reviewedA study was conducted to provide information on the degree of carcass finish of Irish
cull cows and to investigate the usefulness of live animal measurements for the prediction beef breeds (albeit with a moderate R2 value compared to the carcass weight prediction)
using objective, non-intrusive and easily measured live animal measurements, should
be of benefit to farmers finishing cull cows in Ireland.
of cull cow carcass characteristics. Live weight (LW) and body condition score
(BCS) were recorded on cows entering an Irish commercial slaughter facility between
September and November, 2005. Data pertaining to sire breed, age and carcass characteristics
were collected and subsequently collated for each cow. For analysis, cows
(n = 2163) were subdivided into three breed categories: dairy breed sired by Holstein/
Friesian (FR), sired by early-maturing beef breeds (EM) and sired by late-maturing
beef breeds (LM). The proportion of cows slaughtered at the desired (TARGET)
carcass standard (cold carcass weight â„ 272 kg, carcass conformation class â„ P+ and
carcass fat class â„ 3) was low (on average 0.30), but did differ (P < 0.001) between the
dairy and beef breed categories (0.22, 0.47 and 0.53 for FR, EM and LM categories,
respectively). Regression procedures were used to develop equations to predict cold
carcass weight, carcass conformation score, carcass fat score and proportion in the
TARGET category from LW and BCS. Equations predicting cold carcass weight had
high R2 values for all breed categories (0.81, 0.85 and 0.79 for the FR, EM and LM,
respectively). Equations predicting carcass fatness had moderate R2 values for the beef
breed categories (0.65 and 0.59 for the EM and LM, respectively). Equations predicting
carcass conformation and the TARGET category yielded lower R2 values. The successful
prediction of carcass weight for all breed categories and of carcass fatness for th
c-axis Josephson Tunnelling in Twinned and Untwinned YBCO-Pb Junctions
Within a microscopic two band model of planes and chains with a pairing
potential in the planes and off diagonal pairing between planes and chains we
find that the chains make the largest contribution to the Josephson tunnelling
current and that through them the d-wave part of the gap contributes to the
current. This is contrary to the usual assumption that for a d-wave tetragonal
superconductor the c-axis Josephson current for incoherent tunnelling into an
s-wave superconductor is zero while that of a d-wave orthorhombic
superconductor with a small s-wave component to its gap it is small but
non-zero. Nevertheless it has been argued that the effect of twins in YBCO
would lead to cancellation between pairs of twins and so the observation of a
current in c-axis YBCO-Pb experiments is evidence against a d-wave type order
parameter. We argue that both theory and experiment give evidence that the two
twin orientations are not necessarily equally abundant and that the ratio of
tunnelling currents in twinned and untwinned materials should be related to the
relative abundance of the two twin orientations.Comment: 6 pages, RevTeX 3.0, 15 PostScript figur
Associations of body mass index and sarcopenia with screen-detected mild cognitive impairment in older adults in Colombia
Background and objective: More research is required to understand associations of body mass index (BMI) and sarcopenia with cognition, especially in Latin America. The objective of this study was to investigate associations of BMI and sarcopenia with mild cognitive impairment in Colombia. Design setting and participants: Data were from the National Survey of Health, Wellbeing and Aging in Colombia (SABE Colombia, in Spanish). Community-dwelling adults aged 60 years or older were invited to participate. Methods: Trained interviewers administered a shorter version of the mini-mental state examination and mild cognitive impairment was defined as a score of 12 or less out of 19. Body mass index was defined using standard cut-offs. Sarcopenia was defined as low grip strength or slow chair stands. Logistic regression models were adjusted for age, sex, height, education, income, civil status, smoking, and alcohol drinking. Results: The prevalence of mild cognitive impairment was 20% in 23,694 participants in SABE Colombia and 17% in 5,760 participants in the sub-sample in which sarcopenia was assessed. Overweight and obesity were associated with decreased risk of mild cognitive impairment and sarcopenia was associated with increased risk. Sarcopenia was a risk factor for mild cognitive impairment in those with normal BMI (adjusted model included 4,911 men and women). Compared with those with normal BMI and without sarcopenia, the odds ratio for mild cognitive impairment was 1.84 in those with normal BMI and sarcopenia (95% confidence interval: 1.25, 2.71). Sarcopenia was also a risk factor in those with obesity but did not present a greater risk than sarcopenia alone. Compared with those with normal BMI and without sarcopenia, the odds ratio was 1.62 in those with obesity and sarcopenia (95% confidence interval: 1.07, 2.48). Sarcopenia was not a risk factor for mild cognitive impairment in those with overweight. Similar results were observed when reference values from Colombia were used to set cut-offs for grip strength. Similar results were also observed in cross-validation models, which suggests the results are robust. Conclusion: This is the first study of the combined associations of sarcopenia and obesity with cognition in Colombia. The results suggest that sarcopenia is the major predictor of screen-detected mild cognitive impairment in older adults, not overweight or obesity
Strategies and challenges to facilitate situated learning in virtual worlds post-Second Life
Virtual worlds can establish a stimulating environment to support a situated learning approach in which students simulate a task within a safe environment. While in previous years Second Life played a major role in providing such a virtual environment, there are now more and more alternativeâoften OpenSim-basedâsolutions deployed within the educational community. By drawing parallels to social networks, we discuss two aspects: how to link individually hosted virtual worlds together in order to implement context for immersion and how to identify and avoid âfakeâ avatars so people behind these avatars can be held accountable for their actions
A New Spectroscopic and Photometric Analysis of the Transiting Planet Systems TrES-3 and TrES-4
We report new spectroscopic and photometric observations of the parent stars
of the recently discovered transiting planets TrES-3 and TrES-4. A detailed
abundance analysis based on high-resolution spectra yields [Fe/H] , K, and for TrES-3,
and [Fe/H] , K, and for TrES-4. The accuracy of the effective temperatures is supported
by a number of independent consistency checks. The spectroscopic orbital
solution for TrES-3 is improved with our new radial-velocity measurements of
that system, as are the light-curve parameters for both systems based on newly
acquired photometry for TrES-3 and a reanalysis of existing photometry for
TrES-4. We have redetermined the stellar parameters taking advantage of the
strong constraint provided by the light curves in the form of the normalized
separation (related to the stellar density) in conjunction with our
new temperatures and metallicities. The masses and radii we derive are
M_\star=0.928_{-0.048}^{+0.028} M_{\sun},R_\star = 0.829_{-0.022}^{+0.015}
R_{\sun}, and M_\star = 1.404_{-0.134}^{+0.066} M_{\sun},
R_\star=1.846_{-0.087}^{+0.096} R_{\sun} for TrES-3 and TrES-4, respectively.
With these revised stellar parameters we obtain improved values for the
planetary masses and radii. We find , for TrES-3, and
, for TrES-4. We confirm TrES-4 as the planet with the largest
radius among the currently known transiting hot Jupiters.Comment: 42 pages, 10 tables, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in the
Astrophysical Journa
Nucleotide sequence of the structural gene (pyrB) that encodes the catalytic polypeptide of aspartate transcarbamoylase of Escherichia coli.
The deoxyribonucleotide sequence of pyrB, the cistron encoding the catalytic subunit of aspartate transcarbamoylase (carbamoylphosphate: L-aspartate carbamoyltransferase, EC 2.1.3.2), has been determined. The pyrB gene encodes a polypeptide of 311 amino acid residues initiated by an NH2-terminal methionine that is not present in the catalytically active polypeptide. The DNA sequence analysis revealed the presence of an eight-amino-acid sequence beginning at Met-219 that was not detected in previous analyses of amino acid sequence. This octapeptide sequence provides an additional component of the disordered loop in the equatorial domain of the catalytic polypeptide. It had been found previously that the catalytic polypeptide is expressed from a bicistronic operon that also produces the regulatory polypeptide encoded by pyrI. A single transcriptional control region precedes the structural gene of the catalytic polypeptide and a simple 15-base-pair region separates its COOH terminus from the structural gene of the regulatory polypeptide. The chain-terminating codon of the catalytic polypeptide may contribute to the ribosomal binding site for the regulatory polypeptide and thus assist coordinate expression of the two cistrons
Orthorhombically Mixed s and d Wave Superconductivity and Josephson Tunneling
The effect of orthorhombicity on Josephson tunneling in high T
superconductors such as YBCO is studied for both single crystals and highly
twinned crystals. It is shown that experiments on highly twinned crystals
experimentally determine the symmetry of the superconducting twin boundaries
(which can be either even or odd with respect to a reflection in the twinning
plane). Conversely, Josephson experiments on highly twinned crystals can not
experimentally determine whether the superconductivity is predominantly
-wave or predominantly -wave. The direct experimental determination of
the order-parameter symmetry by Josephson tunneling in YBCO thus comes from the
relatively few experiments which have been carried out on untwinned single
crystals.Comment: 5 pages, RevTeX file, 1 figure available on request
([email protected]
Management and Tillage Infl uence Barley Forage Productivity and Water Use in Dryland Cropping Systems
Annual cereal forages are resilient in water use (WU), water use efficiency (WUE), and weed control compared with grain crops in dryland systems. The combined influence of tillage and management systems on annual cereal forage productivity and WU is not well documented. We conducted a field study for the effects of tillage (no-till and tilled) and management (ecological and conventional) systems on WU and performance of forage barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) and weed biomass in two crop rotations (wheat [Triticum aestivum L.]âforage barleyâpea [Pisum sativum L.] and wheatâforage barleyâcorn [Zea mays L.] âpea) from 2004 to 2010 in eastern Montana. Conventional management included recommended seeding rates, broadcast N fertilization, and short stubble height of wheat. Ecological management included 33% greater seeding rates, banded N fertilization at planting, and taller wheat stubble. Forage barley in ecological management had 28 more plants mâ2, 2 cm greater height, 65 more tillers mâ2, 606 kg haâ1 greater crop biomass, 3.5 kg haâ1 mmâ1greater WUE, and 47% reduction in weed biomass at harvest than in conventional management. Pre-plant and post-harvest soil water contents were similar among tillage and management systems, but barley WU was 13 mm greater in 4-yr than 3-yr rotation. Tillage had little effect on barley performance and WU. Dryland forage barley with higher seeding rate and banded N fertilization in more diversified rotation produced more yield and used water more efficiently than that with conventional seeding rate, broadcast N fertilization, and less diversified rotation in the semiarid northern Great Plains
TrES-3: A Nearby, Massive, Transiting Hot Jupiter in a 31-Hour Orbit
We describe the discovery of a massive transiting hot Jupiter with a very
short orbital period (1.30619 d), which we name TrES-3. From spectroscopy of
the host star GSC 03089-00929, we measure T_eff = 5720 +- 150 K, logg=4.6 +-
0.3, and vsini < 2 km/s, and derive a stellar mass of 0.90 +- 0.15 M_sun. We
estimate a planetary mass of 1.92 +- 0.23 M_Jup, based on the sinusoidal
variation of our high-precision radial velocity measurements. This variation
has a period and phase consistent with our transit photometry. Our spectra show
no evidence of line bisector variations that would indicate a blended eclipsing
binary star. From detailed modeling of our B and z photometry of the 2.5%-deep
transits, we determine a stellar radius 0.802 +- 0.046 R_sun and a planetary
radius 1.295 +- 0.081 R_Jup. TrES-3 has one of the shortest orbital periods of
the known transiting exoplanets, facilitating studies of orbital decay and mass
loss due to evaporation, and making it an excellent target for future studies
of infrared emission and reflected starlight.Comment: v1. 14 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables. Submitted to ApJL 27 April 2007.
Accepted for publication in ApJL 14 May 200
Electronic states on a twin boundary of a d-wave superconductor
We show that an induced -wave harmonic in the superconducting gap of an
orthorhombic superconductor strongly affects the excitation
spectrum near a twinning plane. In particular, it yields bound states of zero
energy with areal density proportional to the relative weight of the -wave
component. An unusual scattering process responsible for the thermal
conductivity across the twin boundary at low temperatures is also identified.Comment: 4 pages, ReVTEX, 2 PS-figure
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