418 research outputs found
Numerically optimized Markovian coupling and mixing in one-dimensional maps
Algorithms are introduced that produce optimal Markovian couplings for large finite-state-space discrete-time Markov chains with sparse transition matrices; these algorithms are applied to some toy models motivated by fluid-dynamical mixing problems at high Peclét number. An alternative definition of the time-scale of a mixing process is suggested. Finally, these algorithms are applied to the problem of coupling diffusion processes in an acute-angled triangle, and some of the simplifications that occur in continuum coupling problems are discussed
The Results of Breeding Perennial Grasses: The Evaluation of Developed \u3cem\u3eDactylis glomerata\u3c/em\u3e Hybrids
Perennial grasses are high yielding, pest resistant and less demanding in terms of soil (Peeters, 2008), they are the most important source of roughage. Each species has certain valuable features that make it unique among others and which are desirable to be highlighted for ensuring high productivity, good forage quality, plasticity, strength of various stress conditions, as well as winter hardiness, which is particularly important characteristic of northern latitudes. It is the main task of breeders, as far as possible to combine all the aforesaid properties into one breed. In order to create such a universal variety the breeders of perennial grasses carry out hybridisation outside the borders of one species. At present the work with Festulolium hybrids is important in order to combine the modesty, hardiness and perennity of fescue with high forage quality characteristic of ryegrass in one variety.
At the Latvia University of Agriculture Research Institute of Agriculture (LLU RIA) in Skriveri the breeding work of perennial grasses has been performed for a long time and during the period of 35 years several varieties of species widely used in forage production have been created, including Phleum pratense, Lolium perenne, Festuca pratensis, and Festulolium hybrids
Regional variations in diffuse nitrogen losses from agriculture in the Nordic and Baltic regions
International audienceThis paper describes nitrogen losses from, and the characteristics of, 35 selected catchments (12 to 2000 ha) in the Nordic and Baltic countries. Average annual losses of N in 1994?1997 ranged from 5 to 75 kg ha-1, generally highest and characterised by significant within-country and interannual variations, in Norway and the lowest losses were observed in the Baltic countries. An important finding of the study is that the average nutrient losses varied greatly among the studied catchments. The main explanations for this variability were water runoff, fertiliser use (especially the amount of manure), soil type and erosion (including stream bank erosion). However, there were several exceptions, and it was difficult to find general relationships between the individual factors. For example, there was poor correlation between nitrogen losses and surpluses. Therefore, the results suggest that the observed variability in N losses cannot have been due solely to differences in farm management practices, although the studied catchments do include a wide range of nutrient application levels, animal densities and other relevant elements. There is considerable spatial variation in the physical properties (soil, climate, hydrology, and topography) and the agricultural management of the basins, and the interaction between and relative effects of these factors has an important impact on erosion and nutrient losses. In particular, hydrological processes may have a marked effect on N losses measured in the catchment stream water. The results indicate that significant differences in hydrological pathways (e.g. the relationship between fast- and slow-flow processes) lead to major regional differences in N inputs to surface waters and therefore also in the response to changes in field management practices. Agricultural practices such as crop rotation systems, nutrient inputs and soil conservation measures obviously play a significant role in the site-specific effects, although they cannot explain the large regional differences observed in this study. The interactions between agricultural practices and basic catchment characteristics, including hydrological processes, determine the final losses of nitrogen to surface waters, hence it is necessary to understand these interactions to manage diffuse losses of agricultural nutrients efficiently. Keywords: agriculture, catchments, diffuse sources, nitrogen, losses, Baltic, Nordi
LABAS LAUKSAIMNIECĪBAS PRAKSES (LLP) IZSTRĀDE LATVIJAI
LLP nosacījumu izstrādes nepieciešamību nosaka:Latvijas lauku perspektīvā attīstība;ES nitrātu direktīva (EEC/91/676) ar mērķi samazināt un turpmāk novērst ūdens piesārņošanu no lauksaimniecības avotiem;« Baltijas jūras vides aizsardzības Helsinku konvencijas (HELCOM) pielikums III par lauksaimniecības izraisīto piesārņojumu. Tiek prasīts dalībvalstīm izstrādāt ieviešanas programmu līdz 2Q02.g. un paredzētos pasākumus izvērst līdz 2011.gadam
Flory-Huggins theory for athermal mixtures of hard spheres and larger flexible polymers
A simple analytic theory for mixtures of hard spheres and larger polymers
with excluded volume interactions is developed. The mixture is shown to exhibit
extensive immiscibility. For large polymers with strong excluded volume
interactions, the density of monomers at the critical point for demixing
decreases as one over the square root of the length of the polymer, while the
density of spheres tends to a constant. This is very different to the behaviour
of mixtures of hard spheres and ideal polymers, these mixtures although even
less miscible than those with polymers with excluded volume interactions, have
a much higher polymer density at the critical point of demixing. The theory
applies to the complete range of mixtures of spheres with flexible polymers,
from those with strong excluded volume interactions to ideal polymers.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figure
Conformal Mapping on Rough Boundaries II: Applications to bi-harmonic problems
We use a conformal mapping method introduced in a companion paper to study
the properties of bi-harmonic fields in the vicinity of rough boundaries. We
focus our analysis on two different situations where such bi-harmonic problems
are encountered: a Stokes flow near a rough wall and the stress distribution on
the rough interface of a material in uni-axial tension. We perform a complete
numerical solution of these two-dimensional problems for any univalued rough
surfaces. We present results for sinusoidal and self-affine surface whose slope
can locally reach 2.5. Beyond the numerical solution we present perturbative
solutions of these problems. We show in particular that at first order in
roughness amplitude, the surface stress of a material in uni-axial tension can
be directly obtained from the Hilbert transform of the local slope. In case of
self-affine surfaces, we show that the stress distribution presents, for large
stresses, a power law tail whose exponent continuously depends on the roughness
amplitude
Dynamics of defect formation
A dynamic symmetry-breaking transition with noise and inertia is analyzed.
Exact solution of the linearized equation that describes the critical region
allows precise calculation (exponent and prefactor) of the number of defects
produced as a function of the rate of increase of the critical parameter. The
procedure is valid in both the overdamped and underdamped limits. In one space
dimension, we perform quantitative comparison with numerical simulations of the
nonlinear nonautonomous stochastic partial differential equation and report on
signatures of underdamped dynamics.Comment: 4 pages, LaTeX, 4 figures. Submitted to Physical Revie
The Euler-Maruyama approximation for the absorption time of the CEV diffusion
A standard convergence analysis of the simulation schemes for the hitting
times of diffusions typically requires non-degeneracy of their coefficients on
the boundary, which excludes the possibility of absorption. In this paper we
consider the CEV diffusion from the mathematical finance and show how a weakly
consistent approximation for the absorption time can be constructed, using the
Euler-Maruyama scheme
Brain connectivity using geodesics in HARDI
International audienceWe develop an algorithm for brain connectivity assessment using geodesics in HARDI (high angular resolution diffusion imaging). We propose to recast the problem of finding fibers bundles and connectivity maps to the calculation of shortest paths on a Riemannian manifold defined from fiber ODFs computed from HARDI measurements. Several experiments on real data show that out method is able to segment fibers bundles that are not easily recovered by other existing methods
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