616 research outputs found

    Soil quality

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    Soil—the thin, unconsolidated, vertically differentiated portion of the Earth's surface—is ubiquitous and often ignored despite its many important environmental and life-sustaining functions. Soil is necessary for the production of food, feed, and fiber products, and supports buildings, roads, and playing fields. Soil helps to safely dispose of and process biological and industrial wastes, and it purifies and filters water that may enter drinking water supplies. Usually, soil performs more than one of these roles simultaneously. Soil is in large but finite supply. It varies greatly in chemical and physical properties both in short distances and regionally. Some soil components cannot be easily renewed within a human time frame; thus the condition of soil in agriculture and the environment is an issue of global concern. For these reasons, an effort has been made to distinguish among the many kinds of soils and identify those best suited for specific uses. The concept of soil quality stems from the desire to evaluate soils, match appropriate management and uses for each soil, and measure changes in soil properties.

    Sequential vector and axial-vector meson exchange and chiral loops in radiative phi decay

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    We study the radiative ϕ\phi decay into π0π0γ\pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma and π0ηγ\pi^0 \eta \gamma taking into account mechanisms in which there are two sequential vector-vector-pseudoscalar or axial-vector--vector--pseudoscalar steps followed by the coupling of a vector meson to the photon, considering the final state interaction of the two mesons. There are other mechanisms in which two kaons are produced through the same sequential mechanisms or from ϕ\phi decay into two kaons and then undergo final state interaction leading to the final pair of pions or π0η\pi^0 \eta, this latter mechanism being the leading one. The results of the parameter free theory, together with the theoretical uncertainties, are compared with the latest experimental results of KLOE at Frascati.Comment: 28 pages, 20 figure

    Rare charm meson decays D->Pl^+l^- and c->ul^+l^- in SM and MSSM

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    We study the nine possible rare charm meson decays D->Pl^+l^- (P=pi,K,eta,eta') using the Heavy Meson Chiral Lagrangians and find them to be dominated by the long distance contributions. The decay D^+ -> pi^+l^+l^- with the branching ratio 1*10^(-6) is expected to have the best chances for an early experimental discovery. The short distance contribution in the five Cabibbo suppressed channels arises via the c->ul^+l^- transition; we find that this contribution is detectable only in the D->pi l^+l^- decay, where it dominates the differential spectrum at high-q^2. The general Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model can enhance the c->ul^+l^- rate by up to an order of magnitude; its effect on the D->Pl^+l^- rates is small since the c->ul^+l^- enhancement is sizable in low-q^2 region, which is inhibited in the hadronic decay.Comment: 17 page

    Higher meson resonances in ρπ0π0γ\rho \to \pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma and ωπ0π0γ\omega \to \pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma

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    The role of higher meson resonances with spin 1 and 2 is investigated quantitatively in the decay processes of ρπ0π0γ\rho \to \pi^0\pi^0 \gamma and ωπ0π0γ\omega \to \pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma. Among the higher resonances, we find that the f2(1270)f_2(1270) tensor meson can give a nontrivial contribution especially to the ωπ0π0γ\omega \to \pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma decay process. When the f2f_2 contribution is combined with the processes involving the vector and scalar meson intermediate states, a good agreement with the recent measurements is achieved for both decays. The effect of the f2(1270)f_2(1270) is found to be sizable at the intermediate photon energies and may be verified by precise measurements of the recoil photon spectrum of the ωπ0π0γ\omega \to \pi^0 \pi^0 \gamma decay. The dependence of the decay widths on various models for the ρ\rho-ω\omega mixing in the literature is also investigated.Comment: 16 pages, REVTeX, 6 figures, revised version, to appear in Phys. Rev.

    Prenatal phthalate exposures and child temperament at 12 and 24 months

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    Introduction Gestational phthalate exposures have been adversely associated with attention, externalizing, and internalizing behaviors in childhood. Early childhood temperament may be a marker of later behavioral patterns. We therefore sought to determine whether gestational phthalate exposures were associated with infant and toddler temperament. Methods The Mount Sinai Children's Environmental Health Study is a prospective cohort study of children born between May 1998 and July 2001 in New York City (N = 404). Phthalate metabolites were measured in spot urine samples collected from pregnant women in their third trimester. Child temperament was assessed by parental report at 12-months using the Infant Behavior Questionnaire (IBQ) (N = 204) and at 24-months using the Toddler Behavior Assessment Questionnaire (TBAQ) (N = 279). We used multiple linear regression to evaluate associations between urinary phthalate metabolites and eleven temperament domains. Results Phthalate biomarker concentrations were weakly associated with lower gross motor activity levels as well as higher duration of orienting at the 12-month assessment. Mono(3-carboxypropyl) phthalate (MCPP), monobenzyl phthalate (MBzP) and the sum of metabolites of di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate (∑DEHP) were associated with lower levels of smiling and laughing at 12 months. At 24-months, social fear and lower pleasure was linked to higher concentrations of MCPP and MBzP, and higher ∑DEHP was weakly associated with increased anger levels at 24-months. Conclusions Though we observed some weak associations between biomarkers of prenatal exposure to phthalates and temperament at 12- and 24-months, overall phthalates biomarkers were not strongly associated with alterations in temperament

    Confinement and Chiral Symmetry Breaking via Domain-Like Structures in the QCD Vacuum

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    A qualitative mechanism for the emergence of domain structured background gluon fields due to singularities in gauge field configurations is considered, and a model displaying a type of mean field approximation to the QCD partition function based on this mechanism is formulated. Estimation of the vacuum parameters (gluon condensate, topological susceptibility, string constant and quark condensate) indicates that domain-like structures lead to an area law for the Wilson loop, nonzero topological susceptibility and spontaneous breakdown of chiral symmetry. Gluon and ghost propagators in the presence of domains are calculated explicitly and their analytical properties are discussed. The Fourier transforms of the propagators are entire functions and thus describe confined dynamical fields.Comment: RevTeX, 48 pages (32 pages + Appendices A-E), new references added [1,2,4,5] and minor formulae corrected for typographical error
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