3,031 research outputs found
Mixed cropping systems for control of weeds and pests in organic oilseed crops
Agricultural advantages of mixed cropping are gained from biological effects like light competition offering weed-suppressing capacities, or by diversification of plant covers to break development cycles of pests. These effects were measured in a two-year project on mixed cropping with organic oilseed crops. It was found that weeds can be efficiently suppressed in organic linseed (Linum usitatissivum) grown in combination with wheat (Triticum aestivum) or false flax (Camelina sativa). Linseed growth was, however, impaired. In organic pea production (Pisum sativum) also, growing the crop as a mixture with false flax led to a significant decrease of weed population. Either culture showed a balanced plant development. In winter rape (Brassica napus) there were suggestions that infestation by insect pests can be directly reduced in mixtures with cereals or legumes and that parasitoids of insect pests are supported
Tensor Products of Operator Systems
The purpose of the present paper is to lay the foundations for a systematic
study of tensor products of operator systems. After giving an axiomatic
definition of tensor products in this category, we examine in detail several
particular examples of tensor products, including a minimal, maximal, maximal
commuting, maximal injective and some asymmetric tensor products. We
characterize these tensor products in terms of their universal properties and
give descriptions of their positive cones. We also characterize the
corresponding tensor products of operator spaces induced by a certain canonical
inclusion of an operator space into an operator system. We examine notions of
nuclearity for our tensor products which, on the category of C*-algebras,
reduce to the classical notion. We exhibit an operator system S which is not
completely order isomorphic to a C*-algebra yet has the property that for every
C*-algebra A, the minimal and maximal tensor product of S and A are equal.Comment: 41 pages Version III Journal of Functional Analysis (to appear
Contribution of organic farming to conserving and improving biodiversity in Germany avi-fauna as an example
Although it is the aim of organic farming to increase biodiversity, there is little information about the impact of organic farming on birds. From 2001 to 2003, the number of breeding birds was recorded annually on the organic experimental farm of the Institute of Organic Farming (600 ha), and on adjacent conventional and organic farms (60 ha and 40 ha) in Northern Germany. The number of skylark (Alauda arvensis) territories increased considerably after the conversion from conventional to organic farming on the premises of the Institute. Their number remained unvaried on the conventional farm. The highest density of skylark territories was found on the farm which has been under organic management for many years. The number of yellowhammer (Emberiza citronella) territories fluctuated largely in relation to the availability of field margin strips, both on conventional and organic land. During the breeding season aerial hunters (swallows and swifts) and raptors significantly preferred organic fields. Outside the breeding season, densities of raptors (in autumn and in winter), seed-eating birds (in autumn) and insect-eating birds (in autumn) were significantly higher on organic than on conventional fields
Development of Collembolans after coversion towards organic farming
In Northern Germany, a diverse and complex experimental farm of the Federal Agricultural Research Centre (FAL) was set-up in 2001 covering all main aspects of organic farming. Previously, the 600 ha farm had been managed conventionally. Adjacent conventional farms were used as reference. The aim of this project was to study collembolans, microbial biomass and soil organic carbon in six organically farmed fields managed as a crop rotation of six different crops compared with an adjacent conventionally managed field. We hypothesised that the specific management in organic farming promotes soil biota. Soil samples were taken during the growing season in 2004. Collembolan abundances and microbial biomass were lower under organic management, but, generally, collembolan diversity was higher in organically farmed fields combined with a shifting in the dominance structure of the species. This result reveals that, even after three years, the soil biota is still changing with management conversion
DFT Calculations as a Tool to Analyse Quadrupole Splittings of Spin Crossover Fe(II) complexes
Density functional methods have been applied to calculate the quadrupole
splitting of a series of iron(II) spin crossover complexes. Experimental and
calculated values are in reasonable agreement. In one case spin-orbit coupling
is necessary to explain the very small quadrupole splitting value of 0.77 mm/s
at 293 K for a high-spin isomer
Robotic Planetary Drill Tests
Several proposed or planned planetary science missions to Mars and other Solar System bodies over the next decade require subsurface access by drilling. This paper discusses the problems of remote robotic drilling, an automation and control architecture based loosely on observed human behaviors in drilling on Earth, and an overview of robotic drilling field test results using this architecture since 2005. Both rotary-drag and rotary-percussive drills are targeted. A hybrid diagnostic approach incorporates heuristics, model-based reasoning and vibration monitoring with neural nets. Ongoing work leads to flight-ready drilling software
Tsirelson's problem and Kirchberg's conjecture
Tsirelson's problem asks whether the set of nonlocal quantum correlations
with a tensor product structure for the Hilbert space coincides with the one
where only commutativity between observables located at different sites is
assumed. Here it is shown that Kirchberg's QWEP conjecture on tensor products
of C*-algebras would imply a positive answer to this question for all bipartite
scenarios. This remains true also if one considers not only spatial
correlations, but also spatiotemporal correlations, where each party is allowed
to apply their measurements in temporal succession; we provide an example of a
state together with observables such that ordinary spatial correlations are
local, while the spatiotemporal correlations reveal nonlocality. Moreover, we
find an extended version of Tsirelson's problem which, for each nontrivial Bell
scenario, is equivalent to the QWEP conjecture. This extended version can be
conveniently formulated in terms of steering the system of a third party.
Finally, a comprehensive mathematical appendix offers background material on
complete positivity, tensor products of C*-algebras, group C*-algebras, and
some simple reformulations of the QWEP conjecture.Comment: 57 pages, to appear in Rev. Math. Phy
Decomposition of time-covariant operations on quantum systems with continuous and/or discrete energy spectrum
Every completely positive map G that commutes which the Hamiltonian time
evolution is an integral or sum over (densely defined) CP-maps G_\sigma where
\sigma is the energy that is transferred to or taken from the environment. If
the spectrum is non-degenerated each G_\sigma is a dephasing channel followed
by an energy shift. The dephasing is given by the Hadamard product of the
density operator with a (formally defined) positive operator. The Kraus
operator of the energy shift is a partial isometry which defines a translation
on R with respect to a non-translation-invariant measure.
As an example, I calculate this decomposition explicitly for the rotation
invariant gaussian channel on a single mode.
I address the question under what conditions a covariant channel destroys
superpositions between mutually orthogonal states on the same orbit. For
channels which allow mutually orthogonal output states on the same orbit, a
lower bound on the quantum capacity is derived using the Fourier transform of
the CP-map-valued measure (G_\sigma).Comment: latex, 33 pages, domains of unbounded operators are now explicitly
specified. Presentation more detailed. Implementing the shift after the
dephasing is sometimes more convenien
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