13,262 research outputs found
Nitrogen transfer between clover and wheat in an intercropping experiment
A novel approach to the problem of improving nitrogen supply in organic farming is to use intercropping of cereals with a legume to provide nitrogen transfer within a season and/or to following crops. The affects of intercropping were studied in a column experiment using mixtures of winter wheat (Triticum aestivum cv. Claire), with white clover (w.c.) (Trifolium repens cv. Barblanca) and with red clover (r.c.) (Trifolium pratense cv. Britta). The effects of cutting and removal above ground clover material with and without additional soil disturbance were compared to leaving clover plants in situ and intercropped with wheat in a split root design. Wheat and clover plants, as monocultures, were used for the controls. 15N ammonium nitrate solution was applied. The wheat seeds were sown into the column without nitrogen. We found that the cutting treatment produced the highest yield of wheat. Available ammonium-N in the soil was greatest in the clover control treatment for the column with only red clover roots and in the cutting+soil disturbance treatment for the column with only white clover roots. Available nitrate-N was greatest in the soil disturbance treatment in the column with clover and wheat roots for both red and white clover. The cutting treatment produced the highest yield of wheat
Steep Slopes and Preferred Breaks in GRB Spectra: the Role of Photospheres and Comptonization
The role of a photospheric component and of pair breakdown is examined in the
internal shock model of gamma-ray bursts. We discuss some of the mechanisms by
which they would produce anomalously steep low energy slopes, X-ray excesses
and preferred energy breaks. Sub-relativistic comptonization should dominate in
high comoving luminosity bursts with high baryon load, while synchrotron
radiation dominates the power law component in bursts which have lower comoving
luminosity or have moderate to low baryon loads. A photosphere leading to steep
low energy spectral slopes should be prominent in the lowest baryon loadComment: ApJ'00, in press; minor revs. 10/5/99; (uses aaspp4.sty), 15 pages, 3
figure
Radiation Front Sweeping the Ambient Medium of Gamma-Ray Bursts
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are emitted by relativistic ejecta from powerful
cosmic explosions. Their light curves suggest that the gamma-ray emission
occurs at early stages of the ejecta expansion, well before it decelerates in
the ambient medium. If so, the launched gamma-ray front must overtake the
ejecta and sweep the ambient medium outward. As a result a gap is opened
between the ejecta and the medium that surfs the radiation front ahead.
Effectively, the ejecta moves in a cavity until it reaches a radius
R_{gap}=10^{16}E_{54}^{1/2} cm where E is the isotropic energy of the GRB. At
R=R_{gap} the gap is closed, a blast wave forms and collects the medium swept
by radiation. Further development of the blast wave is strongly affected by the
leading radiation front: the front plays the role of a precursor where the
medium is loaded with e+- pairs and preaccelerated just ahead of the blast. It
impacts the emission from the blast at R < R_{load}=5R_{gap} (the early
afterglow). A spectacular observational effect results: GRB afterglows should
start in optical/UV and evolve fast (< min) to a normal X-ray afterglow. The
early optical emission observed in GRB 990123 may be explained in this way. The
impact of the front is especially strong if the ambient medium is a wind from a
massive progenitor of the GRB. In this case three phenomena are predicted: (1)
The ejecta decelerates at R<R_{load} producing a lot of soft radiation. (2) The
light curve of soft emission peaks at
t_{peak}=40(1+z)E_{54}^{1/2}(Gamma_{ej}/100)^{-2} s where Gamma_{ej} is the
Lorentz factor of the ejecta. Given measured redshift z and t_{peak}, one finds
Gamma_{ej}. (3) The GRB acquires a spectral break at 5 - 50 MeV because harder
photons are absorbed by radiation scattered in the wind.Comment: 20 pages, accepted to Ap
Improving supply and phosphorous use efficiency in organic farming systems
Phosphorus (P) is an essential plant nutrient that needs to be managed carefully in organic systems so that crop yield and quality remain sustainable without contributing to environmental damage, particularly that associated with eutrophication. Under organic regulations, minimally processed rock phosphate (PR) can be used to amend low P fertility soils, although the solubility is extremely low at optimum soil pH for most crop growth (pH 6.5). This paper describes a project (PLINK) which aims to develop methods of improving P efficiency on organic farms, although the same approaches may also be applicable on conventional and low-input farms. The methodologies that the project is developing include the fermentation and composting of crop waste material with PR in order to solubilise P and make it more available to the crop. Some initial results are described here. In addition, the project will investigate the alteration of the rotation to include crops or varieties with high P uptake efficiency, or roots that possess acidifying properties which improve P availability for following crops
The AGN Obscuring Torus -- End of the "Doughnut" Paradigm?
Unified schemes of active galactic nuclei (AGN) require an obscuring dusty
torus around the central engine. The compact sizes (only a few pc) determined
in recent high-resolution observations require that the obscuring matter be
clumpy and located inside the region where the black-hole gravity dominates
over the galactic bulge. This location is in line with the scenario depicting
the torus as the region of the clumpy wind coming off the accretion disk in
which the clouds are dusty and optically thick. We study here the outflow
scenario within the framework of hydromagnetic disk winds, incorporating the
cloud properties determined from detailed modeling of the IR emission from
clumpy tori. We find that torus clouds were likely detected in recent water
maser observations of NGC 3079. In the wind scenario, the AGN main dynamic
channel for release of accreted mass seems to be switching at low luminosities
from torus outflow to radio jets. The torus disappears when the bolometric
luminosity decreases below about \E{42} erg/sec because the accretion onto the
central black hole can no longer sustain the required cloud outflow rate. This
disappearance seems to have been observed in both LINERs and radio galaxies.
With further luminosity decrease, suppression of cloud outflow spreads radially
inward from the disk's dusty, molecular region into its atomic, ionized zone,
resulting in disappearance of the broad emission line region at lower
luminosities, yet to be determined.Comment: ApJ Letters, to be publishe
HST STIS Ultraviolet Spectral Evidence of Outflow in Extreme Narrow-line Seyfert 1 Galaxies: II. Modeling and Interpretation
We present modeling to explore the conditions of the broad-line emitting gas
in two extreme Narrow-line Seyfert 1 galaxies, using the observational results
described in the first paper of this series. Photoionization modeling using
Cloudy was conducted for the broad, blueshifted wind lines and the narrow,
symmetric, rest-wavelength-centered disk lines separately. A broad range of
physical conditions were explored for the wind component, and a figure of merit
was used to quantitatively evaluate the simulation results. Of the three minima
in the figure-of-merit parameter space, we favor the solution characterized by
an X-ray weak continuum, elevated abundances, a small column density
(log(N_H)\approx 21.4), relatively high ionization parameter (log(U)\approx
-1.2 - -0.2), a wide range of densities (log(n)\approx 7 - 11), and a covering
fraction of ~0.15. The presence of low-ionization emission lines implies the
disk component is optically thick to the continuum, and the SiIII]/CIII] ratio
implies a density of 10^10 - 10^10.25 cm^-3. A low ionization parameter
(log(U)=-3) is inferred for the intermediate-ionization lines, unless the
continuum is ``filtered'' through the wind before illuminating the
intermediate-line emitting gas, in which case log(U)=-2.1. The location of the
emission regions was inferred from the photoionization modeling and a simple
``toy'' dynamical model. A large black hole mass (1.3 x 10^8 M_\odot) radiating
at 11% of the Eddington luminosity is consistent with the kinematics of both
the disk and wind lines, and an emission radius of ~10^4 R_S is inferred for
both. We compare these results with previous work and discuss implications.Comment: 45 pages, 15 figures (4 color), accepted for publication in ApJ,
abstract shortene
Cosmic Renaissance: The First Sources of Light
I review recent progress in understanding the formation of the first stars
and quasars. The initial conditions for their emergence are given by the now
firmly established model of cosmological structure formation. Numerical
simulations of the collapse and fragmentation of primordial gas indicate that
the first stars formed at redshifts z ~ 20 - 30, and that they were
predominantly very massive, with M_* > 100 M_sun. Important uncertainties,
however, remain. Paramount among them is the accretion process, which builds up
the final stellar mass by incorporating part of the diffuse, dust-free envelope
into the central protostellar core. The first quasars, on the other hand, are
predicted to have formed later on, at z ~ 10, in more massive dark matter
halos, with total masses, ~ 10^8 M_sun, characteristic of dwarf galaxies.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, invited review, to appear in PASP, Feb. 200
Formation and Disruption of Cosmological Low Mass Objects
We investigate the evolution of cosmological low mass (low virial
temperature) objects and the formation of the first luminous objects. First,
the `cooling diagram' for low mass objects is shown. We assess the cooling rate
taking into account the contribution of H_2, which is not in chemical
equilibrium generally, with a simple argument of time scales. The reaction
rates and the cooling rate of H_2 are taken from the recent results by Galli &
Palla (1998). Using this cooling diagram, we also estimate the formation
condition of luminous objects taking into account the supernova (SN) disruption
of virialized clouds. We find that the mass of the first luminous object is
several times 10^7 solar mass, because smaller objects may be disrupted by the
SNe before they become luminous. Metal pollution of low mass (Ly-alpha) clouds
also discussed. The resultant metallicity of the clouds is about 1/1000 of the
solar metallicity.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, To appear in ApJ
Topological regluing of rational functions
Regluing is a topological operation that helps to construct topological
models for rational functions on the boundaries of certain hyperbolic
components. It also has a holomorphic interpretation, with the flavor of
infinite dimensional Thurston--Teichm\"uller theory. We will discuss a
topological theory of regluing, and trace a direction in which a holomorphic
theory can develop.Comment: 38 page
Border parasites: schistosomiasis control among Uganda's fisherfolk
Copyright @ 2012 Taylor & Francis. This article has been made publically available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.It is recognized that the control of schistosomisais in Uganda requires a focus on
fisherfolk. Large numbers suffer from this water-borne parasitic disease; notably along the shores of lakes Albert and Victoria and along the River Nile. Since 2004, a policy has been adopted of providing drugs, free of charge, to all those at risk. The strategy has been reported to be successful, but closer investigation reveals serious problems. This paper draws upon long-term research undertaken at three locations in northwestern and southeastern Uganda. It highlights consequences of not engaging with the day to day realities of fisherfolk
livelihoods; attributable, in part, to the fact that so many fisherfolk live and work in places located at the country’s international borders, and to a related
tendency to treat them as "feckless" and "ungovernable". Endeavours to roll out
treatment end up being haphazard, erratic and location-specific. In some places,
concerted efforts have been made to treat fisherfolk; but there is no effective
monitoring, and it is difficult to gauge what proportion have actually swallowed
the tablets. In other places, fisherfolk are, in practice, largely ignored, or are
actively harassed in ways that make treatment almost impossible. At all sites, the current reliance upon resident "community" drug distributors or staff based at static clinics and schools was found to be flawed.The Schistosomiasis Control Initiative, Imperial College, under the auspices of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
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