23,935 research outputs found
Why Not Eat Insects? Vincent M. Holt. Hanworth, Middlesex: reprinted by E. W. Classey, 1967. 99 pp. $2.10.
Excerpt: According to the British Museum Catalogue, this curious and interesting little work was first printed in 1885. F. S. Bodenheimer devotes several pages to it in his Insects as Human Food, and notes that the booklet has now [1951] almost disappeared. In London it was apparently only available at the British Museum, where it was destroyed by bombing. The only copy to be found by the author was in the University Library at Oxford . . . I have located no copies in the United States except the one at the USDA Library. Due to its extreme rarity, and its timeliness now that our population explosion and dwindling resources have given us a rather unpalatable source of \u27food for thought\u27, Why Not Ear Insects? is well worth reprinting, and E. W. Classey has performed the service
Nectria galligena as the cause of a collar rot disease in organically grown Topaz apple trees
Symptoms resembling collar rot were detected in organically managed Topaz trees aged 3-10 years, occur-ring one to several years after planting of the orchard. Trees were killed within the same growing season in which symptoms were first observed. The disease commonly progressed as a complete covered canker at the base of the tree trunk. Isolation attempts were negative for Phytophthora and other Oomycetes, but con-sistently yielded Nectria galligena. The possibility of latent (endophytic) infections of N. galligena as the cause of delayed collar rot symptoms is briefly discussed
What can we learn by squeezing a liquid
Relaxation times for different temperatures, T, and specific volumes, V,
collapse to a master curve versus TV^g, with g a material constant. The
isochoric fragility, m_V, is also a material constant, inversely correlated
with g. From these we obtain a 3-parameter function, which fits accurately
relaxation times of several glass-formers over the supercooled regime, without
any divergence below Tg. Although the 3 parameters depend on the material, only
g significant varies; thus, by normalizing material-specific quantities related
to g, a universal power law for the dynamics is obtained.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figure
Symmetry properties of vibrational modes in graphene nanoribbons
We present symmetry properties of the lattice vibrations of graphene
nanoribbons with pure armchair (AGNR) and zigzag edges (ZGNR). In
non-symmorphic nanoribbons the phonon modes at the edge of the Brillouin zone
are twofold degenerate, whereas the phonon modes in symmorphic nanoribbons are
non-degenerate. We identified the Raman-active and infrared-active modes. We
predict 3N and 3(N+1) Raman-active modes for N-ZGNRs and N-AGNRs, respectively
(N is the number of dimers per unit cell). These modes can be used for the
experimental characterization of graphene nanoribbons. Calculations based on
density functional theory suggest that the frequency splitting of the LO and TO
in AGNRs (corresponding to the E2g mode in graphene) exhibits characteristic
width and family dependence. Further, all graphene nanoribbons have a
Raman-active breathing-like mode, the frequency of which is inversely
proportional to the nanoribbon width and thus might be used for experimental
determination of the width of graphene nanoribbons.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figure
Diplodia seriata, cause of black fruit rot in organically grown apples in Holland, Belgium and Northern Germany
A fruit rot resembling Gloeosporium infections but appearing on fruits prior to harvest was
noticed in organic apple orchards in Holland, Belgium and Northern Germany in 2007.
Infections were most commonly observed on âElstarâ, but other cultivars were also
affected. Fruit colonisation progressed in two steps, whereby a latent stage of sunken
black lesions in immature fruits gave rise to a rapidly spreading firm brown rot upon fruit
ripening. Isolation experiments from both stages consistently yielded a single species of
fungus identified as Diplodia seriata, formerly known under the teleomorph name
Botryosphaeria obtusa. Lesions of D. seriata were also seen on leaves as necrotic light
brown spots surrounded by a purple halo, and occasionally on small twigs as cankers.
Fruit mummies on apple twigs were heavily colonised by D. seriata and are thus likely to
carry inoculum for fruit infections during late summer or in the following growing season
A centrifugo-magnetically actuated gas micropump
This paper describes a novel gas micropump on a centrifugal microfluidic platform. The pump is integrated on a passive and microstructured polymer disk which is sealed with an elastomer lid featuring paramagnetic inlays. The rotational motion of this hybrid disk over a stationary magnet induces a designated sequence of volume displacements of the elastic lid, leading to a net transport of gas. The pumping pressure scales linearly with the frequency, with a maximum observable pressure of 4.1 kPa. The first application of this rotary device is the production of gas-liquid flows by pumping ambient air into a continuous centrifugal flow of liquid. The injected gas volume segments the liquid stream into a series of liquid compartments. Apart from such multi-phase flows, the new pumping technique supplements a generic air-to-liquid sampling method to centrifugal microfluidic platforms
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