605 research outputs found

    Моделювання еволюції надпотужних конвективних утворень над Кримом під час проходження смерчів

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    Предметом даного дослідження були умови формування осередків надпотужних вертикальних рухів, сильних вихорів та надпотужних конвективних утворень під час проходження смерчів над центральною частиною Криму 22 липня 2002 р. Тривимірні прогностичні мікрофізичні моделі фронтальних систем хмар з урахуванням та без урахування складного рельєфу, розроблені в УкрНДГМІ, було адаптовано до умов розвитку хмарності в екстремальних умовах розвитку смерчів. Проведено декілька серій чисельних експериментів для пошуку ключових параметрів, які спричиняли та визначали характер розвитку вихрових утворень і процесів, що їх супроводжують.Предметом исследования в работе были условия формирования ячеек сверхмощных вертикальных движений, сильных вихрей, сверхмощных конвективных образований во время прохождения смерчей над центральной частью Крыма 22 июля 2002 года. Трехмерные прогностические микрофизические модели с учетом и без учета орографии, разработанные в УкрНИГМИ, были адаптированы для условий эволюции фронтальных облачных систем в экстремальных условиях развития смерчей. Проведено несколько серий численных экспериментов с целью поиска ключевых параметров, определяющих характер развития вихревых образований и сопровождающих их явлений

    Survival of blackleg pathogen inoculum in canola stubble under simulated flooding conditions

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    Non-Peer ReviewedBlackleg of canola (Brassica napus), caused by two Leptosphaeria spp, is a significant constraint to canola production worldwide except in china where only the less virulent L. biglobosa has been reported. In China, the disease is caused by a less pathogenic species, L. biglobosa, and there is a concern that importing canola from Canada may introduce the virulent L. maculans, impacting the crop there negatively. In China, canola (or rapeseed) production is centered in several eastern and central provinces where winter rapeseed is often followed by paddy rice that normally is flooded for weeks during late spring and summer. L. maculans or L. biglobosa in diseased canola stubbles serves as the key inoculum source to cause blackleg, and it has been questioned if the flooding practice may help suppress the inoculum. A study was initiated to determine the effect of flooding temperature (12 to 40°C) and duration (2 to 12 weeks) on survival of blackleg pathogen in canola stubbles. Experiments were set up on a Thermogradient Plate that is capable of simultaneously creating 96 independent temperature settings. Diseased stubbles with > scale-3 level of basal stem-canker symptoms used for the experiments were collected from a Westar canola plot in Melfort after 2011 harvest. Flooded stubbles were sampled every two weeks, surface sterilized, and incubated on V8-juice medium amended with antibiotics for 10 days to observe pycnidia cultures of L. maculans or L. biglobosa as the evidence of pathogen survival. Two trials were set up in RCBD with four replications, and pathogen incidence data (based on 25 stubble pieces per replicated) were subject to ANOVA. Significant reduction (P= 0.01) of pathogen incidence was observed at 2-week flooding treatment relative to control (non-flooded) and there was no pathogen recovery after 4weeks of flooding till 12 weeks of experiment. Lower flooding temperatures of 12oC and 16oC appeared to be slightly less effective than higher temperatures (20-40 oC) in reducing pathogen survival. Stubble tissues degraded sharply after 2weeks (contrast, P= 0.05) in response to the flooding temperature and the dry weight was reduced more substantially (40%) at higher temperatures. Virulence of any survived pathogen propagule after flooding is still intact and survival at any temperature or duration of flooding does not differentiate between L. maculans or L. biglobosa. High proportion of survived blackleg pathogen (pycnidia) from flooding were L. maculans (67%) and the rest L. biglobosa (33.0%) under Westar cotyledon test

    Integrated disease management of leaf spots and crown rust of oat

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    Non-Peer ReviewedCrown rust and leaf spots can reduce the yield and quality of oats. The objective of this research was to determine the effect of conventional fungicides, Actigard® and oat cultivars that vary in resistance to crown rust on leaf spot and crown rust severity, and oat yield and quality. Two experiments were established at each location in Saskatchewan: Saskatoon and Melfort. Experiment one consisted of three oat varieties: AC Morgan (crown rust susceptible), CDC Dancer (intermediate) and CDC Morrison (resistant) and three fungicide treatments: check (unsprayed), propiconazole and pyraclostrobin. Experiment two consisted of the application of Actigard® at two rates: 8.75 g ai/ha and 26.25 g ai/ha; three crop growth stages: seedling, boot and heading; on two varieties: CDC Dancer and CDC Morrison, with an unsprayed check for each variety. At Saskatoon, crown rust was observed while leaf spot severity was low. At Melfort, no crown rust was observed but leaf spot severity was low to moderate. Fungicide reduced the severity of crown rust and increased yield and quality of oat at Saskatoon for the susceptible variety (AC Morgan) and somewhat for the moderately susceptible variety (CDC Dancer). The crown rust resistant variety (CDC Morrison) did not benefit from fungicide. Leaf spots were reduced by fungicide application at Melfort, but little increase in yield or quality was detected. There was little difference between AC Morgan and CDC Morrison for leaf spot symptoms, but CDC Dancer appeared to suffer slightly more than the other varieties. There was no impact of fungicide on beta-glucan content at either location, although there were differences among varieties, but only at Saskatoon. Actigard® was not observed to have any positive or negative effects on disease severity (crown rust or leaf spots) or any of the factors measured, including nutritional characteristics, at either location, although there were differences among varieties for many of the factors measured

    Integrated disease management of leaf spots and crown rust of oat

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    Non-Peer ReviewedCrown rust and leaf spots can reduce the yield and quality of oats. The objective of this research was to determine the effect of conventional fungicides, Actigard® and oat cultivars that vary in resistance to crown rust on leaf spot and crown rust severity, and oat yield and quality. Two experiments were established at two locations in Saskatchewan: Saskatoon and Melfort. Experiment 1 consisted of three oat varieties: AC Morgan (crown rust susceptible), CDC Dancer (intermediate) and CDC Morrison (resistant) and three fungicide treatments: check (unsprayed), propiconazole and pyraclostrobin. Experiment 2 consisted of the application of Actigard® at two rates: 8.75 g ai/ha and 26.25 g ai/ha; three crop growth stages: seedling, boot and heading; on two varieties: CDC Dancer and CDC Morrison, with an unsprayed check for each variety. At Saskatoon, crown rust was observed while leaf spot severity was low. At Melfort, no crown rust was observed and leaf spot severity was low. Fungicide reduced the severity of crown rust and increased yield and quality of oat at Saskatoon for the susceptible variety (AC Morgan) and somewhat for the moderately susceptible variety (CDC Dancer). The crown rust resistant variety (CDC Morrison) did not benefit from fungicide. Leaf spots were reduced by fungicide application at Melfort, but little increase in yield or quality was detected. There was little difference between AC Morgan and CDC Morrison for leaf spot symptoms, but CDC Dancer appeared to suffer slightly more than the other varieties. There was no impact of fungicide on beta-glucan content at either location, although there were differences among varieties, but only at Saskatoon. Actigard® was not observed to have any positive or negative effects on disease severity (crown rust or leaf spots) or any of the factors measured, including nutritional characteristics, at either location, although there were differences among varieties for many of the factors measured

    Low Q2Q^2 wave-functions of pions and kaons and their parton distribution functions

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    We study the low Q2Q^2 wave-functions of pions and kaons as an expansion in terms of hadron-like Fock state fluctuations. In this formalism, pion and kaon wave-functions are related one another. Consequently, the knowledge of the pion structure allows the determination of parton distributions in kaons. In addition, we show that the intrinsic (low Q2Q^2) sea of pions and kaons are different due to their different valence quark structure. Finally, we analize the feasibility of a method to extract kaon's parton distribution functions within this approach and compare with available experimental data.Comment: 13 pages, 3 postscript figures include

    Mitigating the risk of blackleg disease of canola using fungicide strategies

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    Non-Peer ReviewedBlackleg, the most widespread disease on canola on the prairies, has been managed mainly through use of resistant cultivars in combination with crop rotation. Over the past few years, crop rotation has been tightened in favor of canola production due largely to profitability considerations but this practice can speed up changes in pathogen race structure that may lead to losses of resistance for some of the current canola cultivars. In this study, fungicides strategies were assessed as a second line of defense for control of blackleg and canola yield benefit in case when the variety resistance is overcome by the pathogen. In 2011, the fungicide Headline, Quadris, and Quilt were applied at 2-4 leaf stage and/or bolting to target varying periods of infection at three locations on the prairies. On the susceptible cultivar Westar, an early application (2-4 leaf) of Headline or Quadris reduced the disease at Carman, MB, but not at Melfort or Vegreville relative to non-treated controls. None of the fungicide treatments increased canola yield substantially either. The study will be continued for two more years at multiple locations across the prairies

    Interference-induced gain in Autler-Townes doublet of a V-type atom in a cavity

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    We study the Autler-Townes spectrum of a V-type atom coupled to a single-mode, frequency-tunable cavity field at finite termperature, with a pre-selected polarization in the bad cavity limit, and show that, when the mean number of thermal photons N1N\gg 1 and the excited sublevel splitting is very large (the same order as the cavity linewidth), the probe gain may occur at either sideband of the doublet, depending on the cavity frequency, due to the cavity-induced interference.Comment: Minor changes are mad

    Solidification of Al-Sn-Cu based immiscible alloys under intense shearing

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    The official published version of the Article can be accessed from the link below - Copyright @ 2009 The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM InternationalThe growing importance of Al-Sn based alloys as materials for engineering applications necessitates the development of uniform microstructures with improved performance. Guided by the recently thermodynamically assessed Al-Sn-Cu system, two model immiscible alloys, Al-45Sn-10Cu and Al-20Sn-10Cu, were selected to investigate the effects of intensive melt shearing provided by the novel melt conditioning by advanced shear technology (MCAST) unit on the uniform dispersion of the soft Sn phase in a hard Al matrix. Our experimental results have confirmed that intensive melt shearing is an effective way to achieve fine and uniform dispersion of the soft phase without macro-demixing, and that such dispersed microstructure can be further refined in alloys with precipitation of the primary Al phase prior to the demixing reaction. In addition, it was found that melt shearing at 200 rpm and 60 seconds will be adequate to produce fine and uniform dispersion of the Sn phase, and that higher shearing speed and prolonged shearing time can only achieve minor further refinement.This work is funded by the EPSRC and DT

    Instanton counting, Macdonald function and the moduli space of D-branes

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    We argue the connection of Nekrasov's partition function in the \Omega background and the moduli space of D-branes, suggested by the idea of geometric engineering and Gopakumar-Vafa invariants. In the instanton expansion of N=2 SU(2) Yang-Mills theory the Nakrasov's partition function with equivariant parameters \epsilon_1, \epsilon_2 of toric action on C^2 factorizes correctly as the character of SU(2)_L \times SU(2)_R spin representation. We show that up to two instantons the spin contents are consistent with the Lefschetz action on the moduli space of D2-branes on (local) F_0. We also present an attempt at constructing a refined topological vertex in terms of the Macdonald function. The refined topological vertex with two parameters of T^2 action allows us to obtain the generating functions of equivariant \chi_y and elliptic genera of the Hilbert scheme of n points on C^2 by the method of topological vertex.Comment: 33 pages, 2 figures, (v2) minor changes, references added, (v3) Comments and more references adde
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