12,098 research outputs found

    Intestinal Strangulation in a Dachshund.

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    On June 24, 1950, a 2 year-old male, smooth-haired Dachshund was admitted to the Stange Memorial Clinic for treatment. The history given by the owner was that the dog had been off feed and vomiting frequently for at least three days

    Frost increases internal potassium requirements for alleviation of sterility and grain yield of wheat

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    Low potassium (K) in topsoils and subsoils is common in the grains belt of West Australia (Weaver and Wong 2011). Frost is increasing in frequency and severity during the spring coinciding with the young microspore stage of pollen development, and is manifest as severe grain yield loss from frost-induced sterility. Our aim was to determine whether K increased wheat crop tolerance to frost during early pollen development and whether this was related to internal K concentrations

    Unified criteria for multipartite quantum nonlocality

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    Wiseman and co-workers (Phys. Rev. Lett. 98, 140402, 2007) proposed a distinction between the nonlocality classes of Bell's nonlocality, steering and entanglement based on whether or not an overseer trusts each party in a bipartite scenario where they are asked to demonstrate entanglement. Here we extend that concept to the multipartite case and derive inequalities that progressively test for those classes of nonlocality, with different thresholds for each level. This framework includes the three classes of nonlocality above in special cases and introduces a family of others.Comment: V2: corrected image display; V3: substantial changes including new proofs, arguments, and result

    Water management and livelihood choices in southwestern Bangladesh

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    Coastal Bangladesh faces an increasing number of challenges including cyclones, tidal surges, floods, drought, saline water intrusion, waterlogging and land subsidence, which pose substantial threats to the livelihoods of the coastal inhabitants. In addition to these threats, profound social and land-use changes are complicating the livelihoods of resource users in the region, including the introduction of aquaculture and increasing competition for ground and surface water sources. The government of Bangladesh has targeted this region for investment with irrigation expansion. This paper uses a sustainable livelihood lens to understand the role of investments in water management and irrigation in driving and shaping livelihood changes and transitions over the past ten years and offers recommendations for investments. We find that while water infrastructure development has greatly enhanced the role of agriculture in coastal livelihoods over the last 10 years, further development of irrigation infrastructure should only be prioritized after issues of water governance and inequity across agricultural and aquacultural livelihoods are addressed

    Structural and dynamical properties of ionic liquids: a molecular dynamics study employing DL_POLY 4

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    Molecular dynamics simulations are often used to study the structures and dynamics of ionic liquids. Here, we have simulated three ionic liquids, trihexyl(tetradecyl)-phosphonium chloride [P66614][Cl], 1-butyl-3-methylimidazolium acecate [BMIm][Oac] and 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium dicyanamide, [EMIm][DCA] in a comparison of two force fields, GAFF and CL&PFF. In most cases, the resulting theoretical densities agree with experimental values within a 2% error. Diffusive properties were characterised by mean squared displacements to show the significant effect of the alkyl chain on the movement of the [P66614] cation. Activation energies of diffusion were calculated from linear Arrhenius plots which agree with previous studies. Simulations of the dynamical behaviour show retention of short and medium-range structure of the ionic liquids with temperature. However, although with increasing temperature more high energy local configurations become accessible, they are observed less frequently as energy barriers are more easily overcome, resulting in more ordered time-averaged structures

    Long-term rundown of plant-available potassium in Western Australia requires a re-evaluation of potassium management for grain production: A review

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    Abstract Negative potassium (K) balances on farmlands globally are widespread because fertiliser K input is often less than losses (leaching) and removal of K in hay, straw and grain, which leads to a rundown of plant-available K. When soil K reserves are not large and the plant-available K pools are not well buffered, the risk of K rundown in soils is high. In the south-west of Western Australia, soil K rundown, particularly by continuous cropping or in systems where a large portion of crop biomass is removed, is increasing the prevalence of crop K deficiency even on soils where K was not previously a limiting factor for crop yields. While fertiliser K is required for adequate supply of plant-available K, maximising K use efficiency is also important for cropping profitability and sustainability in dryland agriculture. Plant K uptake and use efficiency can be affected by soil types, crop species and sequences, seasonal conditions, and K management. In water-limited environments, crop K nutrition, especially root access to subsoil K, plays a crucial role in promoting root growth, regulating plant water relations and alleviating biotic and abiotic stresses. Optimised use of both soil and fertiliser K is increasingly necessary to sustain crop yields under stressed conditions in the context of K rundown in soils

    Developing and Implementing Strategies to Address “Freddie Freeroader”

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    Although the majority Kentucky’s citizens pay their fair share of motor vehicle registration taxes, there are indications that a number of citizens evade motor vehicle property and usage tax through a variety of means. Some individuals license their cars in states that have no, or very low, property taxes on motor vehicles; others abuse the use of temporary tags, or simply fail to renew the registration on their vehicles. As a result, Kentucky is losing income that would be used to repair the state’s roadways and fund local services such as schools, libraries, health departments, and police and fire services. Despite the efforts of the Kentucky Department of Revenue and Kentucky State Police, collections from vehicle usage tax and property tax evaders have never reached their potential. This is primarily due to the limited resources available to these agencies and past technological challenges that prevented the ready identification of tax evaders. The objective of this research was to study new investigative techniques and technologies that are now available, and which could help to improve and streamline the Department of Revenue’s collection efforts. There are more tools available now to compliance staff within the Department of Revenue that will facilitate efforts to identify and verify a person’s residence. However, a more concerted effort is necessary to increase the collection of vehicle property and usage taxes. These tools have made the process more efficient, but additional resource commitments must be made in order to ensure that tax evaders — once identified — ultimately pay their taxes, penalties and interest

    Dynamical preparation of EPR entanglement in two-well Bose-Einstein condensates

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    We propose to generate Einstein-Podolsky-Rosen (EPR) entanglement between groups of atoms in a two-well Bose-Einstein condensate using a dynamical process similar to that employed in quantum optics. The local nonlinear S-wave scattering interaction has the effect of creating a spin squeezing at each well, while the tunneling, analogous to a beam splitter in optics, introduces an interference between these fields that results in an inter-well entanglement. We consider two internal modes at each well, so that the entanglement can be detected by measuring a reduction in the variances of the sums of local Schwinger spin observables. As is typical of continuous variable (CV) entanglement, the entanglement is predicted to increase with atom number, and becomes sufficiently strong at higher numbers of atoms that the EPR paradox and steering non-locality can be realized. The entanglement is predicted using an analytical approach and, for larger atom numbers, stochastic simulations based on truncated Wigner function. We find generally that strong tunnelling is favourable, and that entanglement persists and is even enhanced in the presence of realistic nonlinear losses.Comment: 15 pages, 19 figure

    Bell inequalities for Continuous-Variable Measurements

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    Tests of local hidden variable theories using measurements with continuous variable (CV) outcomes are developed, and a comparison of different methods is presented. As examples, we focus on multipartite entangled GHZ and cluster states. We suggest a physical process that produces the states proposed here, and investigate experiments both with and without binning of the continuous variable. In the former case, the Mermin-Klyshko inequalities can be used directly. For unbinned outcomes, the moment-based CFRD inequalities are extended to functional inequalities by considering arbitrary functions of the measurements at each site. By optimising these functions, we obtain more robust violations of local hidden variable theories than with either binning or moments. Recent inequalities based on the algebra of quaternions and octonions are compared with these methods. Since the prime advantage of CV experiments is to provide a route to highly efficient detection via homodyne measurements, we analyse the effect of noise and detection losses in both binned and unbinned cases. The CV moment inequalities with an optimal function have greater robustness to both loss and noise. This could permit a loophole-free test of Bell inequalities.Comment: 17 pages, 6 figure

    Testing for Multipartite Quantum Nonlocality Using Functional Bell Inequalities

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    We show that arbitrary functions of continuous variables, e.g. position and momentum, can be used to generate tests that distinguish quantum theory from local hidden variable theories. By optimising these functions, we obtain more robust violations of local causality than obtained previously. We analytically calculate the optimal function and include the effect of nonideal detectors and noise, revealing that optimized functional inequalities are resistant to standard forms of decoherence. These inequalities could allow a loophole-free Bell test with efficient homodyne detection
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