713 research outputs found
Plant viruses
1. Barley Yellow Dwarf Virus: G.D. McLean, T.N. Khan, J. Sandow. 2. Clover Viruses: G.D. McLean, J. Sandow. BYDV: Survey of incidence - Locations: Esperance (80ES53) sown June 27, 1980 Williams (80NA35) sown June 19, 1980 Kojonup (80KA28) sown June 19, 1980 Bokerup (80MA11) sown July 8, 1980 Jerramungup (80JE14) sown June 26, 1980 Albany (80AL30) sown July 3, 1980 Busselton (80BU3) sown July 8, 1980 Bridgetown (80BR19) sown June s, 1980 Northam (80N026) sown June 16, 1980 All these plots were located at the cultivar variety trial sites. Sites varied considerably in BYDV incidence as well as in rate of disease progress. There was evidence of recovery in some plants, and at Narrogin most infected plants recovered. Taking the mean disease score in the last recording; Manjimup, Albany, Bridgetown, Katanning and Narrogin showed decreasing amounts of incidence in that order. The lower rainfall sites (Katanning and Narrogin) had a much lower incidence of BYDV than the higher rainfall sites. Clover Viruses - 80AL29, 80BR15, 80BU2, 80BY6, 80ES52, 80MA10
A Position-Space Renormalization-Group Approach for Driven Diffusive Systems Applied to the Asymmetric Exclusion Model
This paper introduces a position-space renormalization-group approach for
nonequilibrium systems and applies the method to a driven stochastic
one-dimensional gas with open boundaries. The dynamics are characterized by
three parameters: the probability that a particle will flow into the
chain to the leftmost site, the probability that a particle will flow
out from the rightmost site, and the probability that a particle will jump
to the right if the site to the right is empty. The renormalization-group
procedure is conducted within the space of these transition probabilities,
which are relevant to the system's dynamics. The method yields a critical point
at ,in agreement with the exact values, and the critical
exponent , as compared with the exact value .Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
Will jams get worse when slow cars move over?
Motivated by an analogy with traffic, we simulate two species of particles
(`vehicles'), moving stochastically in opposite directions on a two-lane ring
road. Each species prefers one lane over the other, controlled by a parameter
such that corresponds to random lane choice and
to perfect `laning'. We find that the system displays one large cluster (`jam')
whose size increases with , contrary to intuition. Even more remarkably, the
lane `charge' (a measure for the number of particles in their preferred lane)
exhibits a region of negative response: even though vehicles experience a
stronger preference for the `right' lane, more of them find themselves in the
`wrong' one! For very close to 1, a sharp transition restores a homogeneous
state. Various characteristics of the system are computed analytically, in good
agreement with simulation data.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures; to appear in Europhysics Letters (2005
Barley yellow dwarf virus in barley and oats (79MT20, 79PE13) Experimental summary 1979
(1) Yield assessments have continued similar to those used in 1977 and 1978. Essentially, plants with symptoms typical of BYDV are marked in the early spring as well as a similar number without symptoms. Yield differences were obtained both for Clipper Barley and an oats variety. (2) Two pilot experiments using viruliferous aphids were carried out at Mount Barker (79MT20) and at South Perth · (79PE13). Both Rhopalosiphum padi and R. maidis were used. Infection at Mt Barker failed, and therefore no data is presented. The Perth experiment was planted on August 31, 1979. The original plan was to have two treatments, i.e. Aphid infestation vs. Control in 4 replications. However, as two different species of aphid became available, the experiment was split into two smaller ones, each using a different species of aphid with 2 replications. RESULTS: See Tables 1 and 2
Phase diagram of a generalized ABC model on the interval
We study the equilibrium phase diagram of a generalized ABC model on an
interval of the one-dimensional lattice: each site is occupied by a
particle of type \a=A,B,C, with the average density of each particle species
N_\a/N=r_\a fixed. These particles interact via a mean field
non-reflection-symmetric pair interaction. The interaction need not be
invariant under cyclic permutation of the particle species as in the standard
ABC model studied earlier. We prove in some cases and conjecture in others that
the scaled infinite system N\rw\infty, i/N\rw x\in[0,1] has a unique
density profile \p_\a(x) except for some special values of the r_\a for
which the system undergoes a second order phase transition from a uniform to a
nonuniform periodic profile at a critical temperature .Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure
Applying psychological type theory to cathedral visitors : a case study of two cathedrals in England and Wales
This study employs Jungian psychological type theory to profile visitors to Chester Cathedral in England and St Davids Cathedral in Wales. Psychological type theory offers a fourfold psychographic segmentation of visitors, distinguishing between introversion and extraversion, sensing and intuition, thinking and feeling, and judging and perceiving. New data provided by 157 visitors to Chester Cathedral (considered alongside previously published data provided by 381 visitors to St Davids Cathedral) demonstrated that these two cathedrals attract more introverts than extraverts, more sensers than intuitives, and more judgers than perceivers, but equal proportions of thinkers and feelers. Comparison with the population norms demonstrated that extraverts and perceivers are significantly under-represented among visitors to these two cathedrals. The implications of these findings are discussed both for maximising the visitor experiences of those already attracted to these cathedrals and for discovering ways of attracting more extraverts and more perceivers to explore these cathedrals
Exact Solution of Two-Species Ballistic Annihilation with General Pair-Reaction Probability
The reaction process is modelled for ballistic reactants on an
infinite line with particle velocities and and initially
segregated conditions, i.e. all A particles to the left and all B particles to
the right of the origin. Previous, models of ballistic annihilation have
particles that always react on contact, i.e. pair-reaction probability .
The evolution of such systems are wholly determined by the initial distribution
of particles and therefore do not have a stochastic dynamics. However, in this
paper the generalisation is made to , allowing particles to pass through
each other without necessarily reacting. In this way, the A and B particle
domains overlap to form a fluctuating, finite-sized reaction zone where the
product C is created. Fluctuations are also included in the currents of A and B
particles entering the overlap region, thereby inducing a stochastic motion of
the reaction zone as a whole. These two types of fluctuations, in the reactions
and particle currents, are characterised by the `intrinsic reaction rate', seen
in a single system, and the `extrinsic reaction rate', seen in an average over
many systems. The intrinsic and extrinsic behaviours are examined and compared
to the case of isotropically diffusing reactants.Comment: 22 pages, 2 figures, typos correcte
Transport of interface states in the Heisenberg chain
We demonstrate the transport of interface states in the one-dimensional
ferromagnetic Heisenberg model by a time dependent magnetic field. Our analysis
is based on the standard Adiabatic Theorem. This is supplemented by a numerical
analysis via the recently developed time dependent DMRG method, where we
calculate the adiabatic constant as a function of the strength of the magnetic
field and the anisotropy of the interaction.Comment: minor revision, final version; 13 pages, 4 figure
Electronic correlation effects and the Coulomb gap at finite temperature
We have investigated the effect of the long-range Coulomb interaction on the
one-particle excitation spectrum of n-type Germanium, using tunneling
spectroscopy on mechanically controllable break junctions. The tunnel
conductance was measured as a function of energy and temperature. At low
temperatures, the spectra reveal a minimum at zero bias voltage due to the
Coulomb gap. In the temperature range above 1 K the Coulomb gap is filled by
thermal excitations. This behavior is reflected in the temperature dependence
of the variable-range hopping resitivity measured on the same samples: Up to a
few degrees Kelvin the Efros-Shkovskii ln law is obeyed,
whereas at higher temperatures deviations from this law are observed,
indicating a cross-over to Mott's ln law. The mechanism of
this cross-over is different from that considered previously in the literature.Comment: 3 pages, 3 figure
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