1,195 research outputs found

    The effect of tyres and a rubber track at high axle loads on soil compaction-Part 2: Multi-axle machine studies

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    This paper reports on a study of the effect of the passage of multi-axle harvesting machines on the soil physical properties. In particular, it investigates the effect of the rear tyre of a combine harvester on the amount of soil compaction subsequent to the passage of the front tyre/track. The work was conducted in controlled laboratory conditions to determine the effect of a simulated self-propelled combine harvester with a total machine weight of 30–33 t. This was assessed by embedding talcum powder tracer lines in the soil to measure soil displacement and soil density changes. Dry bulk density and penetrometer resistance were also measured. The results showed that the benefit of the rubber track found by Ansorge and Godwin [2007a. The effect of tyres and a rubber track at high axle loads on soil compaction: Part 1: Single Axle Studies. Biosystems Engineering 98 (1), 115–126] was maintained after the additional passage of the rear tyre. After the passage of a track the effect of rear tyre size was insignificant, but the rear tyre size had a significant influence on soil density when following a leading tyre. This was due to a higher strength layer at the soil surface created by the track which was able to withstand the load of the subsequent passes and protect the soil below from further compaction. Results similar to those found for a tracked machine were also achieved by three passes of a 900 mm section width tyre at 5 t load and 0.5 bar inflation pressure. The track results for the 33 t machine were very similar to those of a smaller combine harvester with a total load of 11 t and similar rut width. The study confirmed the benefit of tracks with regard to soil compaction and emphasised the fact that total axle loads and machine weights are less important than how the loads are distributed to the soil

    Multiplicities in ultrarelativistic proton-(anti)proton collisions and negative binomial distribution fits

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    Likelihood ratio tests are performed for the hypothesis that charged-particle multiplicities measured in proton-(anti)proton collisions at s\sqrt{s} = 0.9 and 2.36 TeV are distributed according to the negative binomial form. Results indicate that the hypothesis should be rejected in the all cases of ALICE-LHC measurements in the limited pseudo-rapidity windows, whereas should be accepted in the corresponding cases of UA5 data. Possible explanations of that and of the disagreement with the least-squares fitting method are given.Comment: 14 pages, clarified version, reference added. To appear in International Journal of Modern Physics

    Forward-Backward Multiplicity Correlations in Au+Au Collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 Gev

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    The study of correlations among particles produced in different rapidity regions may provide understanding of the mechanisms of particle production. Correlations that extend over a longer range are observed in hadron-hadron interactions only at higher energies. Results for short and long-range multiplicity correlations (Forward-Backward) are presented for Au+Au collisions at sNN\sqrt{s_{NN}} = 200 GeV. The growth of long range correlations are observed as a function of the pseudorapidity gap in central Au+Au collisions. The Dual Parton model and Color Glass Condensate phenomenology have been explored to understand the origin of long range correlations.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, IWCF06, Hangzhou, China, Nov. 21-24, 200

    The Conrad Rise as an obstruction to the Antarctic Circumpolar Current

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    The Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC) carries water freely around the whole continent of Antarctica, but not without obstructions. Some, such as the Drake Passage, constrict its path, while others, such as mid-ocean ridges, may induce meandering in the current's cores and may cause the genesis of mesoscale turbulence. It has recently been demonstrated that some regions that are only relatively shallow may also have a major effect on the flow patterns of the ACC. This is here shown to be particularly true for the Conrad Rise. Using the trajectories of surface drifters, altimetry and the simulated velocities from a numerical model, we show that the ACC bifurcates at the western side of this Rise. In this process it forms two intense jets at the two meridional extremities of the Rise with a relatively stagnant water body over the Rise itself. Preliminary results from a recent cruise provide compelling support for this portrayal

    Expectation of forward-backward rapidity correlations in p+pp+p collisions at the LHC energies

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    Forward-backward correlation strength (bb) as a function of pesudorapidity intervals for experimental data from p+pˉp+\bar{p} non-singly diffractive collisions are compared to PYTHIA and PHOJET model calculations. The correlations are discussed as a function of rapidity window (Δη\Delta \eta) symmetric about the central rapidity as well as rapidity window separated by a gap (ηgap\eta_{gap}) between forward and backward regions. While the correlations are observed to be independent of Δη\Delta \eta, it is found to decrease with increase in ηgap\eta_{gap}. This reflects the role of short range correlations and justifies the use of ηgap\eta_{gap} to obtain the accurate information about the physics of interest, the long range correlations. The experimental bb value shows a linear dependence on lns\ln \sqrt{s} with the maximum value of unity being reached at s\sqrt{s} = 16 TeV, beyond the top LHC energy. However calculations from the PYTHIA and PHOJET models indicate a deviation from linear dependence on lns\ln \sqrt{s} and saturation in the bb values being reached beyond s\sqrt{s} = 1.8 TeV. Such a saturation in correlation values could have interesting physical interpretations related to clan structures in particle production. Strong forward-backward correlations are associated with cluster production in the collisions. The average number of charged particles to which the clusters fragments, called the cluster size, are found to also increase linearly with lns\ln \sqrt{s} for both data and the models studied. The rate of increase in cluster size vs. lns\ln \sqrt{s} from models studied are larger compared to those from the data and higher for PHOJET compared to PYTHIA. Our study indicates that the forward-backward measurements will provide a clear distinguishing observable for the models studied at LHC energies.Comment: 15 pages, 14 Figures, accepted for publication in International Journal of Modern Physics

    Energy dependence of transverse mass spectra of kaons produced in p+p and p+pbar interactions.A compilation

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    The data on m_T spectra of K0S K+ and K- mesons produced in all inelastic p+p and p+pbar interactions in the energy range sqrt(s)NN=4.7-1800GeV are compiled and analyzed. The spectra are parameterized by a single exponential function, dN/(m_T*dm_T)=C exp(-m_T/T), and the inverse slope parameter T is the main object of study. The T parameter is found to be similar for K0S, K+ and K- mesons. It increases monotonically with collision energy from T~30MeV at sqrt(s)NN=4.7GeV to T~220MeV at sqrt(s)NN=1800GeV. The T parameter measured in p+p and p+pbar interactions is significantly lower than the corresponding parameter obtained for central Pb+Pb collisions at all studied energies. Also the shape of the energy dependence of TT is different for central Pb+Pb collisions and p+p(pbar) interactions.Comment: more differential analysis adde

    Surface drift at the western edge of the Agulhas Bank

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    The Agulhas Bank is a wide continental shelf that forms the southern tip of the African continent. On the eastern side of this shelf the flow of water is dominated by the adjacent Agulhas Current. On its western border, the movement is more complex. It is influenced by the Benguela Current, by the occasional presence of products from the Agulhas Current such as Agulhas rings, Agulhas filaments and by lee eddies. Understanding the flow on this western side of the Agulhas Bank is of considerable ecological importance because it has been assumed that a shelf edge jet carries immotile or weakly motile fish larvae and eggs from the spawning region on the bank to the biologically productive regions of the Benguela upwelling regime. We have used the tracks of a set of surface drifters to study the movement at the western edge of the bank, and show that on average the movement is indeed equatorward along this shelf edge, but that this movement is not persistent in direction or magnitude. Instead, this movement appears to be driven entirely by mesoscale turbulence created at the termination of the Agulhas Current

    Ocean currents south of Africa from drifters

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    The ocean currents and their variability south of Africa are known to cover a wide spectrum, spatially and possibly temporally. Hydrographic observations in this vast ocean region are logistically demanding and expensive. In recent years the prevalence of drifting buoys has allowed one to infer certain current characteristics for the region that otherwise would be difficult. Observations from satellite-tracked drifters drogued at a depth of 15 m, collected between 1988 and 2005, were used to infer the mean surface circulation and kinetic energy distributions of the surface flow in the African sector of the Southern Ocean between 30 and 60°S. Regions of intensified flow and of higher levels of eddy kinetic energy were identified and agree fairly well with those established from remote sensing products. These results confirm the value of these observations and indicate the increasing usefulness of this data set as the number of drifter tracks increases
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