15,689 research outputs found

    Studies on growth rates in pigs and the effect of birth weight

    Get PDF
    End of project reportThe purpose of this study was to assess some environmental and management factors that affect growth performance on commercial pig units. In experiment 1, a survey was carried out on 22 pig units of known growth performance in south-west Ireland to compare management factors between those showing poor and good growth rates. Low growth rate appears to be due to the cumulative effect of a combination of factors. Experiment 2 was conducted to determine the effects of providing an additional feeder on performance of weaned piglets. No benefits were recorded. Feed consumed from the additional feeder was a replacement for feed that otherwise would have been consumed from the control hopper feeder. Experiment 3 was designed to determine if pig performance and efficiency of growth were affected by weight at birth and at weaning. Lightweight pigs showed inferior growth performance up to the finisher period. Although they compensated some of the inferior growth towards the time of slaughter, they never reached the weights of the heavy birth-weight animals. Males were either significantly heavier or tended to be heavier than females throughout. There was no significant difference between the sexes in the number of days to slaughter. Light and heavy pigs did not differ in the levels of IGF-1 in their blood plasma; however lightweight pigs had significantly lower IgG preweaning. Experiment 4 aimed to determine whether piglet birth weight influenced growth performance, plasma IGF-1 concentrations and muscle fibre characteristics at day 42 of life. At slaughter (Day 42) light birth weight pigs were significantly (P < 0.001) lighter. Plasma IGF-1 concentration was lower by 28% (P=0.06) in light pigs. Muscle fibre cross sectional area and total fibre number were not significantly different between groups. This study should be repeated with bigger numbers

    The S2 VLBI Correlator: A Correlator for Space VLBI and Geodetic Signal Processing

    Get PDF
    We describe the design of a correlator system for ground and space-based VLBI. The correlator contains unique signal processing functions: flexible LO frequency switching for bandwidth synthesis; 1 ms dump intervals, multi-rate digital signal-processing techniques to allow correlation of signals at different sample rates; and a digital filter for very high resolution cross-power spectra. It also includes autocorrelation, tone extraction, pulsar gating, signal-statistics accumulation.Comment: 44 pages, 13 figure

    Hydrogen-enhanced local plasticity in aluminum: an ab initio study

    Full text link
    Dislocation core properties of Al with and without H impurities are studied using the Peierls-Nabarro model with parameters determined by ab initio calculations. We find that H not only facilitates dislocation emission from the crack tip but also enhances dislocation mobility dramatically, leading to macroscopically softening and thinning of the material ahead of the crack tip. We observe strong binding between H and dislocation cores, with the binding energy depending on dislocation character. This dependence can directly affect the mechanical properties of Al by inhibiting dislocation cross-slip and developing slip planarity.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure

    A study of protein and amino nutrition of growing pigs.

    Get PDF
    End of Project ReportProtein nutrition of the pig is concerned primarily with supplying the amino acid requirements for fast, efficient growth and development of a lean carcass. In addition, surplus protein contributes to a high level of nitrogen excretion in manure which is a problem in complying with the Nitrates Directive. Metabolism of the excess protein / nitrogen in the pig involves creation of urea and this process depresses the efficiency of energy utilisation. As the pig grows, its requirement for individual amino acids falls but the optimum ratio changes. Providing a diet with the correct levels and balance of the principal amino acids is expected to improve performance. Improvements in genetics and changes in management such as slaughter weight require that the amino acid requirements be reassessed periodically. The objective of this study was to examine response of pigs to variation in dietary lysine in several weight ranges with the concentrations of the other principal amino acids held constant. Entire males had superior FCR to females in all trials except 15 to 30kg, but differences in dietary lysine requirements did not occur until the finishing stage. At heavier weights, response of male and female pigs began to diverge at lysine concentrations greater than 10.7 g/kg (ADG) and 9.7 g/kg (FCR). There appeared to be a need to increase the threonine to lysine ratio in the diet from 0.60 to 0.70 when lysine concentration was reduced from 12.0 to 9.5 g/kg as weight of the pig increased. Providing the same mean lysine content (11.1 g/kg) to pigs from 38 to 97 kg in a series of five diets declining in lysine concentration compared with a single diet did not affect performance, or reduce N excretion. However, lowering the overall mean lysine concentration from 11g/kg to 10.0 g/kg reduced overall N excretion by 13 %, without a negative effect on pig performance. Pigs which were offered a low lysine diet in the early stage of growth exhibited a compensatory response during realimentation on a high lysine diet but it was not sufficient to equal the overall performance of pigs previously offered a lysine-adequate diet. Nitrogen excretion was reduced by 23 % while the low lysine diet was fed in the initial period but there was no residual effect on N excretion during realimentation.Teagasc Walsh Fellowship ProgrammeNational Development Programme Funds (NDP

    BCYCLIC: A parallel block tridiagonal matrix cyclic solver

    Get PDF
    13 pages, 6 figures.A block tridiagonal matrix is factored with minimal fill-in using a cyclic reduction algorithm that is easily parallelized. Storage of the factored blocks allows the application of the inverse to multiple right-hand sides which may not be known at factorization time. Scalability with the number of block rows is achieved with cyclic reduction, while scalability with the block size is achieved using multithreaded routines (OpenMP, GotoBLAS) for block matrix manipulation. This dual scalability is a noteworthy feature of this new solver, as well as its ability to efficiently handle arbitrary (non-powers-of-2) block row and processor numbers. Comparison with a state-of-the art parallel sparse solver is presented. It is expected that this new solver will allow many physical applications to optimally use the parallel resources on current supercomputers. Example usage of the solver in magneto-hydrodynamic (MHD), three-dimensional equilibrium solvers for high-temperature fusion plasmas is cited.This research has been sponsored by the US Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC05-00OR22725 with UT-Battelle, LLC. This research used resources of the National Center for Computational Sciences at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, which is supported by the Office of Science of the Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC05-00OR22725.Publicad

    Self-stabilizing robot formations over unreliable networks

    Get PDF
    We describe how a set of mobile robots can arrange themselves on any specified curve on the plane in the presence of dynamic changes both in the underlying ad hoc network and in the set of participating robots. Our strategy is for the mobile robots to implement a self-stabilizing virtual layer consisting of mobile client nodes, stationary Virtual Nodes (VNs), and local broadcast communication. The VNs are associated with predetermined regions in the plane and coordinate among themselves to distribute the client nodes relatively uniformly among the VNs' regions. Each VN directs its local client nodes to align themselves on the local portion of the target curve. The resulting motion coordination protocol is self-stabilizing, in that each robot can begin the execution in any arbitrary state and at any arbitrary location in the plane. In addition, self-stabilization ensures that the robots can adapt to changes in the desired target formation.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant No. CNS-0614993

    Counter Machines and Distributed Automata: A Story about Exchanging Space and Time

    Full text link
    We prove the equivalence of two classes of counter machines and one class of distributed automata. Our counter machines operate on finite words, which they read from left to right while incrementing or decrementing a fixed number of counters. The two classes differ in the extra features they offer: one allows to copy counter values, whereas the other allows to compute copyless sums of counters. Our distributed automata, on the other hand, operate on directed path graphs that represent words. All nodes of a path synchronously execute the same finite-state machine, whose state diagram must be acyclic except for self-loops, and each node receives as input the state of its direct predecessor. These devices form a subclass of linear-time one-way cellular automata.Comment: 15 pages (+ 13 pages of appendices), 5 figures; To appear in the proceedings of AUTOMATA 2018

    Energetics of hydrogen impurities in aluminum and their effect on mechanical properties

    Full text link
    The effects of hydrogen impurities in the bulk and on the surface of aluminum are theoretically investigated. Within the framework of density functional theory, we have obtained the dependence on H concentration of the stacking fault energy, the cleavage energy, the Al/H surface energy and the Al/H/Al interface formation energy. The results indicate a strong dependence of the slip energy barrier in the [2ˉ11][\bar 211] direction the cleavage energy in the [111] direction and the Al/H/Al interface formation energy, on H concentration and on tension. The dependence of the Al/H surface energy on H coverage is less pronounced, while the optimal H coverage is 0.25\leq 0.25 monolayer. The calculated activation energy for diffusion between high symmetry sites in the bulk and on the surface is practically the same, 0.167 eV. From these results, we draw conclusions about the possible effect of H impurities on mechanical properties, and in particular on their role in embrittlement of Al.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
    corecore