2,316 research outputs found

    Isolation of Mycoplasma from the Genital Tracts of Elephants

    Get PDF
    The authors report finding arthritogenic agents, mycoplasmas, for the first time in a large group of captive elephants that are frequently crippled with rheumatism

    Efficiency of Nitrogen Use with Corn on a Tiled and Untiled Soil

    Get PDF
    Excessive water is one of the largest contributors to the inefficient use of nitrogen in Kentucky. Because of this, nitrogen is often lost by both leaching and,denitrification. The amount, of these losses can be great depending on soil type and weather. Well-drained soils in Kentucky have been shown to lose less nitrogen than poorly drained soils. The nitrogen lost from well drained soils is usually due, to leaching. The nitrogen in the soil, even soon after applying non-nitrate forms of fertilizer N, is mostly in the water soluble nitrate form. When more water falls onto a well-drained soil than the soil can hold, then both water and nitrogen move through the soil below the root zone and are lost for plant use. On poorly-drained soils, the mostly likely method of nitrogen loss is due to denitrification. Nitrogen loss by this mechanism is due to the soil becoming saturated with water (waterlogged) and forcing the air out of the soil. In an effort to survive, some of the microorganisms in the soil take oxygen from nitrate. This process (denitrification) turns the nitrogen into a gas that will diffuse out of the saturated soil and be lost ,into the air. It usually occurs when the soil temperature is above 50°F and the soil is saturated for more than a two day period. If nitrogen fertilizer has been added to the soil prior to the existence of the above conditions, then fairly large amounts of nitrogen can be lost. These conditions are most prevalent in Kentucky on poorly drained soil in April and May. In the past, most farmers have tried to manage this problem by adding excess fertilizer nitrogen to still obtain maximum yields after the loss has been sustained. This management practice may not be economically feasible in the future if nitrogen prices continue to escalate. An alternative management practice used by many farmers is to reduce the amount of nitrogen lost by simply delaying the application of nitrogen until the conditions for denitrification have little chance of occurring. This usually means that the nitrogen is applied in late May or June after the corn has been planted and the risk of waterlogged soil conditions is greatly reduced. To determine the magnitude of such factors, we began an experiment on a poorly drained bottom soil in 1970 to determine 1) the proper rates of preplant nitrogen 2) effectiveness of sidedressing nitrogen and 3) effect of soil tiling on the above two factors

    Review of Alpha-Ketoglutaric Acid (AKGA) Hydrazine and Monomethylhydrazine (MMH) Neutralizing Compound

    Get PDF
    The Johnson Space Center (JSC) White Sands Test Facility (WSTF) and NASA Engineering and Safety Center (NESC) were requested by NASA Associate Administrator for Space Operations to perform an evaluation of a proposed hydrazine/monomethylhydrazine (MMH) fuel treatment method using alpha-ketoglutaric acid (AKGA). This evaluation request was prompted by preliminary tests at the Kennedy Space Center (KSC), suggesting cost and operational benefits to NASA for the Space Shuttle Program (SSP) and other hardware decontamination and decommissioning, in addition to hydrazine and MMH waste treatment activities. This paper provides the team's position on the current KSC and New Mexico Highlands University (NMHU) efforts toward implementing the AKGA treatment technology with flight hardware, ground support equipment (GSE), hydrazine and MMH spills, and vapor control. This evaluation is current to the last data examined (approximately September 2008)

    Analysis of Cotton Quality on the High Plains of Texas.

    Get PDF
    8 p

    The Future of Capital Punishment in Florida: Analysis and Recommendations

    Get PDF
    The Supreme Court\u27s decision abolishing the death penalty, at least as it existed in most jurisdictions, hardly represents the final resolution of the controversy over capital punishment. Given substantial public sentiment which apparently favors capital punishment in some form-voiced, for example, in the results of the recent referendum in California-various legislative bodies will face the question of whether capital punishment can and should be legislatively reinstated. In December 1972 the State of Florida became the first jurisdiction to pass judgment on this question. The legislature enacted a bill allowing imposition of the death penalty in certain circumstances. The two articles which follow highlight the competing policy and legal considerations which face legislatures after Furman, and illustrate one state\u27s response to those considerations. The first article is a slightly revised version of a memorandum to the Florida Governor\u27s Committee to Study Capital Punishment, submitted by the Committee\u27s Legal Advisory Staff. It sketches the various possible legislative responses to Furman and recommends one. The second indicates other recommendations made to the legislators and comments on the ultimate legislative determination

    Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome in Children: Report of the Centers for Disease Control National Surveillance, 1982 to 1985

    Get PDF
    Since national surveillance for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) began in 1981, the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) has received reports of more than 20,000 cases of AIDS in the United States. As of December 31, 1985, 307 of these cases had been diagnosed in children younger than 13 years of age. The number of cases is increasing rapidly. The number of cases reported in 1985 more than doubled those reported in 1984. The major risk factors in children for acquiring infection with the causative agent, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), were (1) having a mother known to be infected and/or at increased risk for infection and (2) receiving a transfusion of blood or blood products. Of the 307 children with AIDS, 73% were reported from one of four states: New York, New Jersey, Florida, and California. Most AIDS cases in children occur in black or Hispanic infants and toddlers. The estimated incubation period for AIDS in children has increased each surveillance year, with the longest incubation exceeding 7 years. The prognosis for children with AIDS is poor and infants less than 1 year of age have the shortest survival time following diagnosis. Continued national surveillance for AIDS is mandatory for establishing effective prevention programs to control the spread of the disease. The CDC encourages all health care personnel to report cases of AIDS to their public health departments

    Influence of Time of Application of Nitrogen Fertilizer on Corn Yields

    Get PDF
    Soil moisture conditions can have a large effect on crop responses to nitrogen fertilization. Kentucky\u27s usual climatic pattern of periods of heavy rainfall and relatively warm temperatures during the winter and spring seasons influences expected yield responses of corn to applied nitrogen. If nitrogen fertilizer is applied in late winter or early spring, some of it may be lost before the plants have made sufficient growth to take up appreciable quantities. The amount of loss that might be expected will be influenced by the amount of rainfall, temperature, amount of organic matter and drainage of the soil

    Integrity testing of brush seal in shroud ring of T-700 engine

    Get PDF
    A split-ring brush seal was fabricated, installed between two labyrinth-honeycomb shroud seals, and tested in the fourth-stage turbine of a T-700 engine. The annealed Haynes 25 bristles rubbed directly against the nonconditioned, irregular Rene 80 turbine blade shroud surface. A total of 30 hr of cyclic and steady-state data were taken with surface speeds to 335 m/s (1100 ft/s) and shroud temperatures to 620 C (1150 F). Wear appeared to be rapid initially, with an orange flash of hot brush fragments during the first engine startup, to minimal after 10 hr of operation. The brush survived the testing but experienced some bristle pullouts and severe bristle wear; some turbine interface wear and possible material transfer was noted. Future design concerns center on tribological behavior at the interface with or without lubricants

    Integrity testing of brush seal in a T-700 engine

    Get PDF
    A split-ring brush seal was fabricated, installed between two labyrinth-honeycomb shroud seals, and tested in the fourth-stage turbine of a T-700 engine. The annealed Haynes 25 bristles rubbed directly against the nonconditioned, irregular Rene 80 turbine blade shroud surface. A total of 21 hr of cyclic and steady-state data were taken with surface speeds of 335 m/s (1100 ft/s) and shroud temperatures to 620 C (1150 F). Wear appeared to be rapid initially, with an orange flash of hot brush fragments during the first engine startup, to minimal after 10 hr of operation. The brush survived the testing but experienced some bristle pullouts and severe bristle wear; some turbine interface wear and possible material transfer was noted. Future design concerns center on tribological behavior at the interface with or without lubricants
    • …
    corecore