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Damages caused by cotton rat, Sigmodon hispidus zanjonensis, on sugar cane in San Pedrosula, Honduras
Technical assistance was given to CompañĂa Azucarera Hondureña, S.A. (Agro-Industrial Co.), Honduras, Central America, to determine if a campaign against noxious rodents to agriculture crops was needed. Several trappings were carried out at different places using snap traps to determine the population structure of rodents associated with the crop, and live traps to determine the index or density of the Sigmodon hispidus rat population, which was identified as being responsible for the damage to sugarcane. Results were 43.24% adult males, 14.86% young males, 31.41% adult females, and 10.47% young females. Of the adult females captured, 54.83% were pregnant with an average of 3 to 4 embryos per rat. A control demonstration combat was carried out at one of the experimental stations with a bait prepared with 2% zinc phosphide in a place where it had been previously determined there was a population of 39 rats per hectare. After such control, the population was reduced to 18 rats per hectare, which represents an efficiency of 53.85%. An evaluation of damages was also measured at different places to determine the degree of loss caused by the rats, which proved to be 22.79% damage. The size of the sample was estimated in 3 samples per hectare, with a level of confidence of 95%
Comment on "Feynman Effective Classical Potential in the Schrodinger Formulation"
We comment on the paper "Feynman Effective Classical Potential in the
Schrodinger Formulation"[Phys. Rev. Lett. 81, 3303 (1998)]. We show that the
results in this paper about the time evolution of a wave packet in a double
well potential can be properly explained by resorting to a variational
principle for the effective action. A way to improve on these results is also
discussed.Comment: 1 page, 2eps figures, Revte
The Effect of Ru substitution for Ni on the superconductivity in MgCNi3-xRux
The superconductor MgCNi3 has been chemically doped by partial substitution
of Ru for Ni in the solid solution MgCNi3-xRux for 0<x<0.5. Magnetic and
specific heat measurements show that the Sommerfeld parameter (gamma_exp) and
TC decrease immediately on Ru substitution, but that a TC above 2K is
maintained even for a relatively large decrease in gamma_exp. Ferromagnetism is
not observed to develop through Ru substitution, and the normal state magnetic
susceptibility is suppressed.Comment: 18 pages, 13 figure
Chemical abundances of damped Lyman alpha systems in the XQ-100 survey
The XQ-100 survey has provided high signal-noise spectra of 100 redshift
3-4.5 quasars with the X-Shooter spectrograph. The metal abundances for 13
elements in the 41 damped Lyman alpha systems (DLAs) identified in the XQ-100
sample are presented, and an investigation into abundances of a variety of DLA
classes is conducted. The XQ-100 DLA sample contains five DLAs within 5000 km/s
of their host quasar (proximate DLAs; PDLAs) as well as three sightlines which
contain two DLAs within 10,000 km/s of each other along the same line-of-sight
(multiple DLAs; MDLAs). Combined with previous observations in the literature,
we demonstrate that PDLAs with logN(HI)<21.0 show lower [S/H] and [Fe/H]
(relative to intervening systems with similar redshift and N(HI)), whilst
higher [S/H] and [Si/H] are seen in PDLAs with logN(HI)>21.0. These abundance
discrepancies are independent of their line-of-sight velocity separation from
the host quasar, and the velocity width of the metal lines (v90). Contrary to
previous studies, MDLAs show no difference in [alpha/Fe] relative to single
DLAs matched in metallicity and redshift. In addition, we present follow-up
UVES data of J0034+1639, a sightline containing three DLAs, including a
metal-poor DLA with [Fe/H]=-2.82 (the third lowest [Fe/H] in DLAs identified to
date) at z=4.25. Lastly we study the dust-corrected [Zn/Fe], emphasizing that
near-IR coverage of X-Shooter provides unprecedented access to MgII, CaII and
TiII lines (at redshifts 3-4) to provide additional evidence for subsolar
[Zn/Fe] ratio in DLAs.Comment: Accepted to MNRAS. 19 pages plus Appendix material (102 pages total
Structure of Pion Photoproduction Amplitudes
We derive and apply the finite energy sum rules to pion photoproduction. We
evaluate the low energy part of the sum rules using several state-of-the-art
models. We show how the differences in the low energy side of the sum rules
might originate from different quantum number assignments of baryon resonances.
We interpret the observed features in the low energy side of the sum rules with
the expectation from Regge theory. Finally, we present a model, in terms of a
Regge-pole expansion, that matches the sum rules and the high-energy
observables.Comment: 19 pages, 15 figures and 4 table
Ordering in the pyrochlore antiferromagnet due to Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interactions
The Heisenberg nearest neighbour antiferromagnet on the pyrochlore (3D)
lattice is highly frustrated and does not order at low temperature where
spin-spin correlations remain short ranged. Dzyaloshinsky-Moriya interactions
(DMI) may be present in pyrochlore compounds as is shown, and the consequences
of such interactions on the magnetic properties are investigated through mean
field approximation and monte carlo simulations. It is found that DMI (if
present) tremendously change the low temperature behaviour of the system. At a
temperature of the order of the DMI a phase transition to a long range ordered
state takes place. The ordered magnetic structures are explicited for the
different possible DMI which are introduced on the basis of symmetry arguments.
The relevance of such a scenario for pyrochlore compounds in which an ordered
magnetic structure is observed experimentally is dicussed
Slow spin relaxation in a highly polarized cooperative paramagnet
We report measurements of the ac susceptibility of the cooperative paramagnet
Tb2Ti2O7 in a strong magnetic field. Our data show the expected saturation
maximum in chi(T) and also an unexpected low frequency dependence (< 1 Hz) of
this peak, suggesting very slow spin relaxations are occurring. Measurements on
samples diluted with nonmagnetic Y3+ or Lu3+ and complementary measurements on
pure and diluted Dy2Ti2O7 strongly suggest that the relaxation is associated
with dipolar spin correlations, representing unusual cooperative behavior in a
paramagnetic system.Comment: Accepted for publication in Physical Review Letter
Spin ice in a field: quasi-phases and pseudo-transitions
Thermodynamics of the short-range model of spin ice magnets in a field is
considered in the Bethe - Peierls approximation. The results obtained for
[111], [100] and [011] fields agrees reasonably well with the existing
Monte-Carlo simulations and some experiments. In this approximation all
extremely sharp field-induced anomalies are described by the analytical
functions of temperature and applied field. In spite of the absence of true
phase transitions the analysis of the entropy and specific heat reliefs over
H-T plane allows to discern the "pseudo-phases" with specific character of spin
fluctuations and define the lines of more or less sharp "pseudo-transitions"
between them.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figure
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