1,500 research outputs found
Effects of burying and removing dead leaves from the ground on the development of scab epidemics in an apple organic orchard.
Ascospores produced on scabbed leaves in the leaf litter constitute the primary
inoculum causing scab infections in apple orchards during the year. The trial, carried
out in a commercial organic orchard, permitted to evaluate the effects of the
removal of dead leaves located on the inter-row supplemented by the ploughing in of
the leaves left on the row, on the development of scab epidemics. From the first
recorded contamination to harvest time, lesions on leaves and fruits were counted to
determine reduction in disease incidence and severity, compared with the untreated
plots. Disease severity as a function of the distance from the untreated plot was also
observed, to evaluate the spore dispersal gradient within the orchard. The results
show that the ploughing in and the removal of the litter reduced disease incidence by
62% on leaves, and by almost 82% on fruits to harvest. Moreover, measurements of
the dispersal gradient show that the spores do not disperse, or little, beyond 20m of
the untreated zone
Smearing of the 2D Kohn anomaly in a nonquantizing magnetic field: Implications for the interaction effects
Thermodynamic and transport characteristics of a clean two-dimensional
interacting electron gas are shown to be sensitive to the weak perpendicular
magnetic field even at temperatures much higher than the cyclotron energy, when
the quantum oscillations are completely washed out. We demonstrate this
sensitivity for two interaction-related characteristics: electron lifetime and
the tunnel density of states. The origin of the sensitivity is traced to the
field-induced smearing of the Kohn anomaly; this smearing is the result of
curving of the semiclassical electron trajectories in magnetic field.Comment: 4.5 pages, 3 figures, published versio
The relativistic massless harmonic oscillator
A detailed study of the relativistic classical and quantum mechanics of the
massless harmonic oscillator is presented.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figure
Fronts and interfaces in bistable extended mappings
We study the interfaces' time evolution in one-dimensional bistable extended
dynamical systems with discrete time. The dynamics is governed by the
competition between a local piece-wise affine bistable mapping and any
couplings given by the convolution with a function of bounded variation. We
prove the existence of travelling wave interfaces, namely fronts, and the
uniqueness of the corresponding selected velocity and shape. This selected
velocity is shown to be the propagating velocity for any interface, to depend
continuously on the couplings and to increase with the symmetry parameter of
the local nonlinearity. We apply the results to several examples including
discrete and continuous couplings, and the planar fronts' dynamics in
multi-dimensional Coupled Map Lattices. We eventually emphasize on the
extension to other kinds of fronts and to a more general class of bistable
extended mappings for which the couplings are allowed to be nonlinear and the
local map to be smooth.Comment: 27 pages, 3 figures, submitted to Nonlinearit
Ellipsoidal Universe Can Solve The CMB Quadrupole Problem
The recent three-year WMAP data have confirmed the anomaly concerning the low
quadrupole amplitude compared to the best-fit \Lambda CDM prediction. We show
that, allowing the large-scale spatial geometry of our universe to be
plane-symmetric with eccentricity at decoupling or order 10^{-2}, the
quadrupole amplitude can be drastically reduced without affecting higher
multipoles of the angular power spectrum of the temperature anisotropy.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, minor changes, reference added, to appear in
Phys. Rev. Let
Scattering and delay time for 1D asymmetric potentials: the step-linear and the step-exponential cases
We analyze the quantum-mechanical behavior of a system described by a
one-dimensional asymmetric potential constituted by a step plus (i) a linear
barrier or (ii) an exponential barrier. We solve the energy eigenvalue equation
by means of the integral representation method, classifying the independent
solutions as equivalence classes of homotopic paths in the complex plane.
We discuss the structure of the bound states as function of the height U_0 of
the step and we study the propagation of a sharp-peaked wave packet reflected
by the barrier. For both the linear and the exponential barrier we provide an
explicit formula for the delay time \tau(E) as a function of the peak energy E.
We display the resonant behavior of \tau(E) at energies close to U_0. By
analyzing the asymptotic behavior for large energies of the eigenfunctions of
the continuous spectrum we also show that, as expected, \tau(E) approaches the
classical value for E -> \infty, thus diverging for the step-linear case and
vanishing for the step-exponential one.Comment: 14 pages, 10 figure
Exciton-LO-phonon dynamics in InAs/GaAs quantum dots: Effects of zone-edge phonon damping
The dynamics of an exciton-LO-phonon system after an ultrafast optical
excitation in an InAs/GaAs quantum dot is studied theoretically. Influence of
anharmonic phonon damping and its interplay with the phonon dispersion is
analyzed. The signatures of the zone-edge decay process in the absorption
spectrum and time evolution are highlighted, providing a possible way of
experimental investigation on phonon anharmonicity effects.Comment: 10 pages, 2 figure
The added value of accounting for activity space when examining the association between tobacco retailer availability and smoking among young adults
Background: Despite a declining prevalence in many countries, smoking rates remain consistently
high among young adults. Targeting contextual influences on smoking, such as the availability of
tobacco retailers, is one promising avenue of intervention. Most studies have focused on residential
or school neighbourhoods without accounting for other settings where individuals spend time, i.e.,
their activity space. We investigated the association between tobacco retailer availability in the
residential neighbourhood and in the activity space and smoking status. Methods: Cross-sectional
baseline data from 1,994 young adults (age 18-25) participating in the Interdisciplinary Study of
Inequalities in Smoking (Montreal, Canada, 2011-2012) were analyzed. Residential and activity
locations served to derive two measures of tobacco retailer availability: counts within 500-meter
buffers and proximity to the nearest retailer. Prevalence ratios for the association between each
tobacco retailer measure and smoking status were estimated using log-binomial regression. Results:
Participants encountering high numbers of tobacco retailers in their residential neighbourhood, and
both medium and high retailer counts in their activity space, were more likely to smoke compared to
those exposed to fewer retailers. While residential proximity was not associated with smoking, we
found 36% and 42% higher smoking prevalences among participants conducting activities within
medium and high proximity to tobacco retailers compared to those conducting activities further
from such outlets. Conclusion: This study adds to the sparse literature on contextual correlates of
smoking among young adults, and illustrates the added value of considering individuals’ activity
space in contextual studies of smoking
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