912 research outputs found
Productivity levels of some Iowa soils
This report presents crop yield estimates for corn, soybeans, oats, and hay on 290 selected soil types and phases. These yield estimates are believed attainable as a 5-year average with the technology available in 1971 and average weather conditions.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/specialreports/1063/thumbnail.jp
Opportunity Recognition: Perceptions of Highly Successful Entrpreneurs
This study examined multiple dimensions of opportunity recognition (OR) among a group of exceptionally successful entrepreneurs and a control group of more randomly selected entrepreneurs. There were few differences between the two groups. Results indicated that OR stemmed from prior experience, focusing on markets and customers, and responses to specific problems along with several other sources. Furthermore, OR appeared to he a multiple-step process far more frequently than a "eureka" experience. These results support much of the conventional wisdom about OR and indicate that multiple approaches to OR can lead to success
Simultaneous IUE, EXOSAT and optical observations of the unusual AM Her type variable H058+608
Simultaneous observations of the AM Her type variable H0538+608 made with IUE, EXOSAT, and a 1.3 m ground based telescope, and subsequent optical spectrophotometry at high and low resolution are discussed. The X-ray and optical data show clear evidence of a 3.30 + or - 0.03 hr period. Three SWP spectra were taken outside of eclipse and during overlapping phase intervals. The UV spectra contain strong emission lines characteristic of this class of objects and a flat continuum which appears to be deficient, given the brightness of source at optical and X-ray wavelengths. There is evidence for intensity variations in emission lines, particularly C IV. The X-ray light curves for H0538+608 reveal behavior which may be related to irregularities in its accretion flow
Soil and Crop Management Practices for Iowa - Part II: Corn and Soybeans
Soil and crop management practices for oats and meadow appeared in the January issue of Iowa Farm Science. This second section by the same authors deals with soil and crop management practices for corn and soybeans
Soil and Crop Management Practices for Iowa - Part I: Oats and Meadows
We believe you now have a greater latitude and more alternatives in soil and crop management than was thought possible even 5 years ago. But to obtain highest yields, these management practices may be more exacting than was previously believed to be true
Optimal routing and scheduling for a simple network coding scheme
We consider jointly optimal routing, scheduling, and network coding strategies to maximize throughput in wireless networks. While routing and scheduling techniques for wireless networks have been studied for decades, network coding is a relatively new technique that allows for an increase in throughput under certain topological and routing conditions. In this work we introduce k-tuple coding, a generalization of pairwise coding with next-hop decodability, and fully characterize the region of arrival rates for which the network queues can be stabilized under this coding strategy. We propose a dynamic control policy for routing, scheduling, and k-tuple coding, and prove that our policy is throughput optimal subject to the k-tuple coding constraint. We provide analytical bounds on the coding gain of our policy, and present numerical results to support our analytical findings. We show that most of the gains are achieved with pairwise coding, and that the coding gain is greater under 2-hop than 1-hop interference. Simulations show that under 2-hop interference our policy yields median throughput gains of 31% beyond optimal scheduling and routing on random topologies with 16 nodes.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (grant CNS-0915988)United States. Office of Naval Research (grant N00014-12-1-0064)United States. Office of Naval Research. Multidisciplinary University Research Initiative (grant number W911NF-08-1-0238)United States. Air ForceUnited States. Dept. of Defense (Contract No. FA8721-05-C-0002
Distributed CSMA with pairwise coding
We consider distributed strategies for joint routing, scheduling, and network coding to maximize throughput in wireless networks. Network coding allows for an increase in network throughput under certain routing conditions. We previously developed a centralized control policy to jointly optimize for routing and scheduling combined with a simple network coding strategy using max-weight scheduling (MWS) [9]. In this work we focus on pairwise network coding and develop a distributed carrier sense multiple access (CSMA) policy that supports all arrival rates allowed by the network subject to the pairwise coding constraint. We extend our scheme to optimize for packet overhearing to increase the number of beneficial coding opportunities. Simulation results show that the CSMA strategy yields the same throughput as the optimal centralized policy of [9], but at the cost of increased delay. Moreover, overhearing provides up to an additional 25% increase in throughput on random topologies.United States. Dept. of Defense. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research & EngineeringUnited States. Air Force (Air Force Contract FA8721-05-C-0002
Topology control for wireless networks with highly-directional antennas
In order to steer antenna beams towards one another for communication, wireless nodes with highly-directional antennas must track the channel state of their neighbors. To keep this overhead manageable, each node must limit the number of neighbors that it tracks. The subset of neighbors that each node chooses to track constitutes a network topology over which traffic can be routed. We consider this topology design problem, taking into account channel modeling, transmission scheduling, and traffic demand. We formulate the optimal topology design problem, with the objective of maximizing the scaling of traffic demand, and propose a distributed method, where each node rapidly builds a segment of the topology around itself by forming connections with its nearest neighbors in discretized angular regions. The method has low complexity and message passing overhead. The resulting topologies are shown to have desirable structural properties and approach the optimal solution in high path loss environments.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant CNS-1524317)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant CNS-1116209)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (Grant AST-1547331)United States. Air Force (Contract FA8721-05-C-0002
Yield response of corn in a Planosol soil to subsurface drainage with variable tile spacings
The Edina soil series of southeastern Iowa and northern Missouri are soils of relatively flat topography and poor internal drainage. The need for research data on the feasibility of drainage (both surface and subsurface) on the Edina soils was recognized at the time experiments were begun on the Southern Iowa Experimental Farm, Davis County, Iowa. The yield response of corn to surface drainage by bedding was summarized and reported by Beer et al.3 in 1961. Since initiation of the subsurface drainage experiment in 1949, data on crop-yield response to tile drainage have been collected. The purpose of this bulletin is to present the results of this study as related to the effects of tile drainage on crop yields, with the emphasis on corn, during the period of record. The nature of tile discharge during the growing seasons from 1951 to 1963 also is presented
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