614 research outputs found
Optimizing nitrogen fertilizer response by winter wheat and rye
Non-Peer ReviewedSouthwestern Alberta has been the traditional winter wheat production area in western Canada. In recent years, the adoption of a practical snow management system, which utilizes no-till seeding into standing stubble immediately after harvest of the previous crop, has resulted in an extension of this production area to include most of the western Canadian prairies. Winter rye is also adapted to the no-till production system developed for winter wheat. Most stubble fields are deficient in available soil nitrogen (N) with the result that N fertilizer is a major input cost in the production of no-till winter wheat and rye. This report
summarizes the N response observed in 40 winter wheat and 20 winter rye trials representing a broad range of soil types and environments in western Canada. Nitrogen fertilizer did not have a significant influence on heading date, maturity, hectoliter weight or kernel size in most trials. Where a significant N response was detected, maximum differences were a one and two day delay in heading, a two and nine day delay in maturity, a three and three kg reduction in hectoliter weight, and a seven and nine mg reduction in seed size for wheat and rye, respectively. A significant N response was observed more frequently for height. In this instance, the response was not directional and increases up to 25 and eight cm and reductions to nine and nine cm were observed with increased N for wheat and rye, respectively.
The Gompertz equation provided the most complete description of the relationship between protein concentration and total plant-available N. Predicted grain protein concentration from this equation explained 98 and 93 percent of the variability in actual grain protein concentration for wheat and rye, respectively. The N response curves for protein concentration were similar for winter wheat and rye. After an initial lag, protein concentration increased rapidly, and then tailed off at high N levels. An inverse polynomial function was employed to describe grain and protein yield response to N fertilizer. Predicted yields from these equations explained 96 and 88 percent of the variability in actual grain yield and 94 and 89 percent of the variability in actual protein yield for wheat and rye, respectively. Winter rye demonstrated a greater N use efficiency and yield potential than winter wheat. There was a large interdependence of N response and environmental conditions, especially moisture supply, in determining yield in these trials
Trajectory-Based Dynamic Map Labeling
In this paper we introduce trajectory-based labeling, a new variant of
dynamic map labeling, where a movement trajectory for the map viewport is
given. We define a general labeling model and study the active range
maximization problem in this model. The problem is NP-complete and W[1]-hard.
In the restricted, yet practically relevant case that no more than k labels can
be active at any time, we give polynomial-time algorithms. For the general case
we present a practical ILP formulation with an experimental evaluation as well
as approximation algorithms.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures, extended version of a paper to appear at ISAAC
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A Compact 3H(p,gamma)4He 19.8-MeV Gamma-Ray Source for Energy Calibration at the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory
The Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) is a new 1000-tonne D2O Cerenkov solar
neutrino detector. A high energy gamma-ray source is needed to calibrate SNO
beyond the 8B solar neutrino endpoint of 15 MeV. This paper describes the
design and construction of a source that generates 19.8-MeV gamma rays using
the 3H(p,gamma)4He reaction (``pt''), and demonstrates that the source meets
all the physical, operational and lifetime requirements for calibrating SNO. An
ion source was built into this unit to generate and to accelerate protons up to
30 keV, and a high purity scandium tritide target with a scandium-tritium
atomic ratio of 1:2.0+/-0.2 was included. This pt source is the first
self-contained, compact, and portable high energy gamma-ray source (E>10 MeV).Comment: 33 pages (including 2 table, 12 figures) This is the revised
manuscript, accepted for publication in NIM A. This revision relfects minor
editorial changes from the previous versio
From respect to reburial: negotiating pagan interest in prehistoric human remains in Britain, through the Avebury consultation
The recent Avebury Consultation on reburial has drawn considerable public and professional attention to the issue of pagan calls for respect towards the care of human remains. Our work has pointed to the importance of archaeologists and others engaging seriously and respectfully with pagans as significant stakeholders in our heritage. The Avebury Reburial Consultation suggests this dialogue is increasing in strength, but we identify problems in the process. We focus here on approaches to the prehistoric dead and worldviews enabling communication from which calls or ‘claims’ for the reburial of prehistoric pagan human remains, versus their retention for scientific study, are articulated; frameworks for assessing and adjudicating such ‘claims’; and implications for the interest groups concerned. We argue that room must be made for philosophical debate and the emotional and spiritual views of pagans, in order to improve dialogue, develop common ground, and enable participatory decision-making and situational pragmatism
A note on dimer models and McKay quivers
We give one formulation of an algorithm of Hanany and Vegh which takes a
lattice polygon as an input and produces a set of isoradial dimer models. We
study the case of lattice triangles in detail and discuss the relation with
coamoebas following Feng, He, Kennaway and Vafa.Comment: 25 pages, 35 figures. v3:completely rewritte
Coloring translates and homothets of a convex body
We obtain improved upper bounds and new lower bounds on the chromatic number
as a linear function of the clique number, for the intersection graphs (and
their complements) of finite families of translates and homothets of a convex
body in \RR^n.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figure
Characterization of the light harvesting antennas of photosynthetic purple bacteria by Stark spectroscopy. 2. LH2 complexes: influence of the protein environment
We have performed low-temperature Stark spectroscopy on a variety of different LH2 complexes from four photosynthetic bacteria, with the aim of characterizing the electric field response of the B800 and B850 absorption properties as a function of the protein environment. The following LH2 complexes were investigated: B800-850 and B800-820 of Rhodopseudomonas (Rps) acidophila; B800-850, B800-840 (αTyr+13→Phe), and B800-826 (αTyr+13→Phe, αTyr+14→Leu) of Rhodobacter (Rb.) sphaeroides; B800-850 and B800-830 (obtained at high LDAO) of Ectothiorhodospira sp.; and B800-850 of Rhodospirillum (Rsp.) molischianum. For all these cases the spectral blue shift of B850 has been assigned to the loss hydrogen-bonding interaction with the acetyl carbonyl of bacteriochlorophyll a. |Δμ| values for the 850 nm bands as well as for the blue-shifted bands are all on the order of 3-4.5 D/f. The loss of hydrogen-bonding interactions has only small effects on |Δμ| in these complexes. The values of the difference polarizability, Tr(Δαa), are large (600-1400 Å3/f2). The results are discussed in terms of crystal-structure-based models for LH2, in which pigment-pigment and pigment-protein interactions are considered; strong pigment-pigment interactions were found to be especially important. The values of |Δμ| for the 800 nm band are small, 1.0-1.5 D/f for LH2 complexes from Rb. sphaeroides and Rps. acidophila. However, in Rsp. molischianum and Ectothiorhodospira sp. |Δμ| values are much larger, of the order of 3 D/f. The difference in the B800 band is assigned to the difference in orientation of the B800 pigments in Rsp. molischianum and Ectothiorhodospira sp., as compared to the Rps. acidophila and Rb. sphaeroides. Due to the difference in orientation, the interactions of the Bchl a with the surrounding protein and neighboring carotenoid pigments are also not identical.Peer Reviewe
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Risk-based systems analysis for emerging technologies: Applications of a technology risk assessment model to public decision making
The risk-based systems analysis model was designed to establish funding priorities among competing technologies for tank waste remediation. The model addresses a gap in the Department of Energy`s (DOE`s) ``toolkit`` for establishing funding priorities among emerging technologies by providing disciplined risk and cost assessments of candidate technologies within the context of a complete remediation system. The model is comprised of a risk and cost assessment and a decision interface. The former assesses the potential reductions in risk and cost offered by new technology relative to the baseline risk and cost of an entire system. The latter places this critical information in context of other values articulated by decision makers and stakeholders in the DOE system. The risk assessment portion of the model is demonstrated for two candidate technologies for tank waste retrieval (arm-based mechanical retrieval -- the ``long reach arm``) and subsurface barriers (close-coupled chemical barriers). Relative changes from the base case in cost and risk are presented for these two technologies to illustrate how the model works. The model and associated software build on previous work performed for DOE`s Office of Technology Development and the former Underground Storage Tank Integrated Demonstration, and complement a decision making tool presented at Waste Management 1994 for integrating technical judgements and non-technical (stakeholder) values when making technology funding decisions
Alpha scattering and capture reactions in the A = 7 system at low energies
Differential cross sections for He- scattering were measured in
the energy range up to 3 MeV. These data together with other available
experimental results for He and H scattering were
analyzed in the framework of the optical model using double-folded potentials.
The optical potentials obtained were used to calculate the astrophysical
S-factors of the capture reactions HeBe and
HLi, and the branching ratios for the transitions into
the two final Be and Li bound states, respectively. For
HeBe excellent agreement between calculated and
experimental data is obtained. For HLi a value
has been found which is a factor of about 1.5 larger than the adopted value.
For both capture reactions a similar branching ratio of has been obtained.Comment: submitted to Phys.Rev.C, 34 pages, figures available from one of the
authors, LaTeX with RevTeX, IK-TUW-Preprint 930540
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