8,375 research outputs found
Analysis of the carbon and nitrogen limitations to soybean yield
Soybeans are hypothesized to be âself-destructiveâ since they apparently need to translocate large amounts of nitrogen from vegetative tissues during seed-fill to sustain seed growth. To assess the possible limitations of this characteristic on soybean seed yield, a simple, dynamic simulation model is developed which accounts for the availability of nitrogen and photosynthate within the plant. The simulations show that the duration of seedfill and seed yield is clearly limited by the self-destructive characteristic. Increased availability of nitrogen within the plant is required for significant increases in soybean yields. Possible alterations of the model required to mimic actual soybean seed growth are presented
A re-appraisal of the fertility response to the Australian baby bonus
The Australian baby bonus offering parents 39000 per extra child.Fertility Rate, Time Series, baby bonus
Informational Regulation of Industrial Safety - An Examination of the U.S. "Local Emergency Planning Committees"
A major trend in the regulation of industrial risks to human health and the environment is the provision of relevant information to (and the empowerment of) all stakeholders and risk bearers. This paper provides a concrete look at one of the key items in implementing this "regulation by information" in the United States: the so-called LEPCs or Local Emergency Planning Committees. We summarize the literature on the subject, report on some interviews we made at selected LEPCs in the states of Vermont and Maryland, and present preliminary figures from a recent survey we just completed of more than 200 LEPCs. The ending sections also contain some international comparisons and an appraisal of the actual LEPCs. La nouvelle tendance dans les rĂ©glementations concernant les risques industriels Ă la santĂ© humaine et Ă l'environnement est de diffuser l'information pertinente Ă toutes les parties prenantes. Cet article considĂšre l'un des outils clĂ©s de cette « rĂ©gulation des risques par l'information » : les comitĂ©s locaux de planification d'urgence, aux Etats-Unis (dĂ©signĂ©s en anglais par le sigle LEPC). Nous dressons un bilan de la littĂ©rature sur le sujet. Nous intĂ©grons des Ă©lĂ©ments importants rĂ©sultant d'entrevues faites auprĂšs de LEPCs sĂ©lectionnĂ©s dans les Ătats du Vermont et du Maryland. Et nous prĂ©sentons certains rĂ©sultats prĂ©liminaires d'une enquĂȘte rĂ©cente que nous venons de rĂ©aliser auprĂšs de plus de 200 LEPCs. Les sections finales contiennent Ă©galement plusieurs comparaisons internationales et une apprĂ©ciation du fonctionnement actuel des LEPCs.Chemical plant safety, Community participation, US Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act, Clean Air Act, Local Emergency Planning Committees (LEPCs), Risk Management Program, Stakeholders involvement, SĂ»retĂ© des usines chimiques, participation du public, US Emergency Planning and Community Right-To-Know Act (EPCRA), Clean Air Act, ComitĂ©s locaux de planification d'urgence (LEPC), Programme de gestion de risque, Implication des parties prenantes
A method to study complex systems of mesons in Lattice QCD
Finite density systems can be explored with Lattice QCD through the
calculation of multi-hadron correlation functions. Recently, systems with up to
12 's or 's have been studied to determine the 3- and
3- interactions, and the corresponding chemical potentials have been
determined as a function of density. We derive recursion relations between
correlation functions that allow this work to be extended to systems of
arbitrary numbers of mesons and to systems containing many different types of
mesons, such as 's, 's, 's and 's. These relations
allow for the study of finite-density systems in arbitrary volumes, and for the
study of high-density systems.Comment: JLAB-THY-10-1121, NT@UW-10-01, journal versio
Lattice QCD at non-zero isospin chemical potential
Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) at non-zero isospin chemical potential is
studied in a canonical approach by analyzing systems of fixed isospin number
density. To construct these systems, we develop a range of new algorithms for
performing the factorially large numbers of Wick contractions required in
multi-hadron systems. We then use these methods to study systems with the
quantum numbers of up to 72 's on three ensembles of gauge
configurations with spatial extents 2.0, 2.5 and 3.0 fm, and light
quark masses corresponding to a pion mass of {390 MeV}. The ground state
energies of these systems are extracted and the volume dependence of these
energies is utilized to determine the two- and three- body interactions amongst
's. The systems studied correspond to isospin densities of up to
and probe isospin chemical potentials, ,
in the range m_\pi\ \lsim \mu_I\ \lsim 4.5\ m_\pi, allowing us to investigate
aspects of the QCD phase diagram at low temperature and for varying isospin
chemical potential. By studying the energy density of the system, we provide
numerical evidence for the conjectured transition of the system to a
Bose-Einstein condensed phase at \mu_I\ \gsim m_\pi.Comment: 32 pages, 22 figure
The finite temperature transition for 3-flavour lattice QCD at finite isospin density
We simulate 3-flavour lattice QCD with a small chemical potential for
isospin, at temperatures close to the finite temperature transition. Using
quark masses just above the critical mass for zero chemical potential, we
determine the position of the transition from hadronic matter to a quark-gluon
plasma as a function of . We see evidence for a critical endpoint where
the transition changes from a crossover to a first-order transition as
is increased. We argue that QCD at finite and QCD at finite
quark-numberchemical potential should behave similarly in this region.Comment: 3 pages LaTex, 2 postscript figures. Parallel talk presented at
Lattice 2004 (non-zero), Fermila
Effect of gain and phase errors on SKA1-low imaging quality from 50-600 MHz
Simulations of SKA1-low were performed to estimate the noise level in images
produced by the telescope over a frequency range 50-600 MHz, which extends the
50-350 MHz range of the current baseline design. The root-mean-square (RMS)
deviation between images produced by an ideal, error-free SKA1-low and those
produced by SKA1-low with varying levels of uncorrelated gain and phase errors
was simulated. The residual in-field and sidelobe noise levels were assessed.
It was found that the RMS deviations decreased as the frequency increased. The
residual sidelobe noise decreased by a factor of ~5 from 50 to 100 MHz, and
continued to decrease at higher frequencies, attributable to wider strong
sidelobes and brighter sources at lower frequencies. The thermal noise limit is
found to range between ~10 - 0.3 Jy and is reached after ~100-100 000 hrs
integration, depending on observation frequency, with the shortest integration
time required at ~100 MHz.Comment: 23 pages, 11 figures Typo correcte
Lattice QCD at finite isospin density and/or temperature
We simulate two-flavour lattice QCD with at a finite chemical potential
for isospin, and finite temperature. At small , we determine the
position of the crossover from hadronic matter to a quark-gluon plasma as a
function of . At larger we observe the phase transition from the
superfluid pion-condensed phase to a quark-gluon plasma, noting its change from
second order to first order as is increased. We also simulate
two-flavour lattice QCD at zero quark mass, using an action which includes an
additional 4-fermion interaction, at temperatures close to the chiral
transition on lattices.Comment: 3 pages LaTex, 3 postscript figures. Parallel talk at
Lattice2003(nonzero
- âŠ