29,937 research outputs found
Heterodyne interferometer with unequal path lengths
Laser interferometry is an extensively used diagnostic for plasma
experiments. Existing plasma interferometers are designed on the presumption
that the scene and reference beam path lengths have to be equal, a requirement
that is costly in both the number of optical components and the alignment
complexity. It is shown here that having equal path lengths is not necessary -
instead what is required is that the path length difference be an even multiple
of the laser cavity length. This assertion has been verified in a heterodyne
laser interferometer that measures typical line-average densities of with an error of .Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Rev. Sci. Instrum. 77 (2006
The Costs of Human Salmonellosis Attributable to Pork: A Stochastic Farm-to-Fork Analysis
Few farm-to-table analyses of the risk pathways for foodborne illnesses exist, and no such analysis exists for the case of salmonellosis and pork products. This paper presents a Monte Carlo simulation model of the US pork system and the transmission pathways of Salmonella. For the year 2000, we estimate the cost of illness attributable to porkborne Salmonella at $45.7 million, with an estimated 43,505 cases of salmonellosis attributable to pork occurring annually.Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety,
DO ANTIBIOTICS REDUCE PRODUCTION RISK FOR U.S. PORK PRODUCERS?
Production risk from live weight variation of market pigs has become a more important concern in U.S. swine production. Packers are concerned about the variation in carcass size because of the demand for standardized cuts and the use of automation in the slaughter process. Swine producers care about standardized pigs because of revenue implications and possible links to animal health and productivity. Pig size variation can be due to various condition and inputs including antibiotics. However, discussions on risk reduction from antibiotic use have generally not been considered. Our work extends previous studies by systematically examining the aspects of production risk reduction and highlights the potential results of banning antibiotics from a risk perspective. Using data from National Animal Health Monitoring System 2000 survey data and PigCHAMP, we identify the relationship between antibiotic use and production risk by an econometric model. Applying production costs for feeder to market pigs and a price matrix, the uncertainty in profits is evaluated. The impacts of risk on the decision making of swine producers are examined under the framework of expected utility and stochastic dominance analysis. Our results show that production risk from weight variability of market hogs is important in determining profits and utility under a pricing system. Production risk (i.e. weight gain variability) is related to the use of sub-therapeutic antibiotics. Swine producers could decrease production risk and enhance utility by adjusting antibiotic use. These results offer some support for optimal use of sub-therapeutic antibiotics.production risk, antibiotics, swine, utility, stochastic dominance, Livestock Production/Industries, Risk and Uncertainty, Q10, Q12, Q14.,
Coulomb blockade in silicon based structures at temperatures up to 50 K
Coulomb blockade has been observed in the current-voltage characteristics of structures fabricated in silicon germanium delta-doped material at temperatures up to 50 K. This is consistent with the estimated effective tunnel capacitance of 10 aF which is significantly smaller than the reported capacitances of tunnel junctions made from Al or GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures
AN ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF THE ECONOMIC CONTRIBUTION OF SUBTHERAPEUTIC ANTIBIOTIC USE IN PORK PRODUCTION
There is growing concern among public health experts regarding the diminishing efficacy of antimicrobial therapy in human and veterinary medicine, and some have called for a ban on subtherapeutic antibiotic use in pork production. This paper develops an econometric analysis to identify the economic contributions of subtherapeutic antibiotic use in swine production.Livestock Production/Industries,
Fabrication of high-quality-factor photonic crystal microcavities in InAsP/InGaAsP membranes
Optical fiber taper waveguides are used to improve the efficiency of room temperature photoluminescence measurements of AlGaAs microdisk resonant cavities with embedded self-assembled InAs quantum dots. As a near-field collection optic, the fiber taper improves the collection efficiency from microdisk lasers by a factor of ∼15–100 times in comparison to conventional normal incidence free-space collection techniques. In addition, the fiber taper can serve as an efficient means for pumping these devices, and initial measurements employing fiber pumping and collection are presented. Implications of this work towards chip-based cavity quantum electrodynamics experiments are discussed
Synchronization in networks of networks: the onset of coherent collective behavior in systems of interacting populations of heterogeneous oscillators
The onset of synchronization in networks of networks is investigated.
Specifically, we consider networks of interacting phase oscillators in which
the set of oscillators is composed of several distinct populations. The
oscillators in a given population are heterogeneous in that their natural
frequencies are drawn from a given distribution, and each population has its
own such distribution. The coupling among the oscillators is global, however,
we permit the coupling strengths between the members of different populations
to be separately specified. We determine the critical condition for the onset
of coherent collective behavior, and develop the illustrative case in which the
oscillator frequencies are drawn from a set of (possibly different)
Cauchy-Lorentz distributions. One motivation is drawn from neurobiology, in
which the collective dynamics of several interacting populations of oscillators
(such as excitatory and inhibitory neurons and glia) are of interest.Comment: The original was replaced with a version that has been accepted to
Phys. Rev. E. The new version has the same content, but the title, abstract,
and the introductory text have been revise
Collective modes of an Anisotropic Quark-Gluon Plasma II
We continue our exploration of the collective modes of an anisotropic quark
gluon plasma by extending our previous analysis to arbitrary Riemann sheets. We
demonstrate that in the presence of momentum-space anisotropies in the parton
distribution functions there are new relevant singularities on the neighboring
unphysical sheets. We then show that for sufficiently strong anisotropies that
these singularities move into the region of spacelike momentum and their effect
can extend down to the physical sheet. In order to demonstrate this explicitly
we consider the polarization tensor for gluons propagating parallel to the
anisotropy direction. We derive analytic expressions for the gluon structure
functions in this case and then analytically continue them to unphysical
Riemann sheets. Using the resulting analytic continuations we numerically
determine the position of the unphysical singularities. We then show that in
the limit of infinite contraction of the distribution function along the
anisotropy direction that the unphysical singularities move onto the physical
sheet and result in real spacelike modes at large momenta for all
"out-of-plane" angles of propagation.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figure
Farm-Level Impacts of Banning Growth- Promoting Antibiotic Use in U.S. Pig Grower/Finisher Operations
Antibiotics have been used by pig producers for several decades, and are now used routinely. This study documents the current productivity and economic impacts of the use of antibiotics for growth promotion (AGP) by pig grower/finishers at the farm level. We evaluate the impacts of an AGP ban, and use of AGP by all pig grower/finishers for 61S90 days (a more production-efficient level), using data from the National Animal Health Monitoring System Swine 2000 Survey. Findings indicate that pig productivity improves with AGP. Relative to current use, an AGP ban would decrease producer profits by 1,992 for each grower/finisher barn when AGP is fed for 61 to 90 days. There is increasing concern about the use of antibiotics in animal production, partly because of the selection for antibiotic resistance. Thus, a careful examination of the value of AGP in pork production is warranted.antibiotics, antimicrobial resistance, growth promotion, pigs, production, Agricultural and Food Policy, Health Economics and Policy, Livestock Production/Industries,
THE INFLUENCE OF SALMONELLA IN PIGS PRE-HARVEST ON SALMONELLA HUMAN HEALTH COSTS AND RISK FROM PORK
Salmonellosis in people is a costly disease, much of it occurring because of food associated exposure. We develop a farm-to-fork model which estimates the pork associated Salmonella risk and human health costs. This analysis focuses on the components of the pork production chain up to the point of producing a chilled pork carcass. Sensitivity and scenario analysis show that changes that occur in Salmonella status during processing are substantially more important for human health risk and have a higher benefit/cost ratio for application of strategies that control Salmonella compared with on-farm strategies.Food Consumption/Nutrition/Food Safety,
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