1,533 research outputs found
Studies of Autumn calving suckler cows, bulls at pasture and winter grazing
End of project reportMost beef and dairy cows are spring calving leading to distinct seasonality of supply. Calving
a proportion of the beef herd in the autumn would lead to a more uniform annual supply of
cattle for slaughter and potentially increase the proportion of grazed grass in the diet of the
suckler progeny. Autumn calving sucklers also facilitate the use of AI, which should enhance
the product quality.
This project aimed to address the technical aspects of autumn calving sucklers, which differ
from those of spring calvers. The currently available international energy models were
evaluated for autumn calving lactating suckler cows using the type of cow typically found in
Irish suckler herds (Experiment 1). The winter accommodation of the suckler cow and calf
unit and its impact on cow reproductive performance was evaluated (Experiment 2).
The final part of the project evolved into component studies to determine the effect of
supplementary feed on the performance of grazing bulls (Experiment 3), and the
consequences of weanling cattle grazing pasture in winter as an alternative to housing them in winter (Experiments 4 to 7)
Modulation of internuclear communication in multinuclear Ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes
The syntheses and characterisation of a series of mononuclear and dinuclear ruthenium polypyridyl complexes based on the bridging ligands 1,3-bis-[5-(2-pyridyl)-1H-1,2,4-triazol-3-yl]benzene, 1,4-bis-[5-(2-pyridyl)-1H-1,2,4-triazol-3-yl]benzene, 2,5-bis-[5-(2-pyridyl)-1H-1,2,4-triazol-3-yl]thiophene, 2,5-bis-[5-pyrazinyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-3-yl]thiophene are reported. Electrochemical studies indicate that in these systems, the ground state interaction is critically dependent on the nature of the bridging ligand and its protonation state, with strong and weak interactions being observed for thiophene- and phenylene-bridged complexes, respectively
Gravitational couplings of charged leptons in a medium
We calculate the leading order matter-induced corrections to the
gravitational interactions of charged leptons and their antiparticles in a
medium that contains electrons but not the other charged leptons, such as
normal matter. The gravitational coupling, which is universal at the tree
level, is found to be flavor-dependent, and also different for the
corresponding antiparticles, when the corrections of are taken into
account. General expressions are obtained for the matter-induced corrections to
the gravitational mass in a generic matter background, and explicit formulas
for those corrections are given in terms of the macroscopic parameters of the
medium for particular conditions of the background gases.Comment: Latex, axodraw, 39 pages. Added a few stylistic corrections and
clarifying statements in the treatment of the photon tadpole diagra
Gluon Condensate and Non-Perturbative Quark-Photon Vertex
We evaluate the quark-photon vertex non-perturbatively taking into account
the gluon condensate at finite temperature. This vertex is related to the
previously derived effective quark propagator by a QED like Ward-Takahashi
identity. The importance of the effective vertex for the dilepton production
rate from a quark-gluon plasma is stressed.Comment: 9 pages including two figure
Suppression of Bremsstrahlung at Non-Zero Temperature
The first-order bremsstrahlung emission spectrum is
at zero temperature. If the radiation is emitted into a region that contains a
thermal distribution of photons, then the rate is increased by a factor
where is the Bose-Einstein function. The stimulated
emission changes the spectrum to for . If this were correct, an infinite amount of energy would be radiated in the
low frequency modes. This unphysical result indicates a breakdown of
perturbation theory. The paper computes the bremsstrahlung rate to all orders
of perturbation theory, neglecting the recoil of the charged particle. When the
perturbation series is summed, it has a different low-energy behavior. For
, the spectrum is independent of and has a value
proportional to .Comment: 16 pages (plain TeX), figures available on reques
Reply to "Comment on 'Light-Front Schwinger Model at Finite Temperature'"
In hep-th/0310278, Blankleider and Kvinikhidze propose an alternate thermal
propagator for the fermions in the light-front Schwinger model. We show that
such a propagator does not describe correctly the thermal behavior of fermions
in this theory and, as a consequence, the claims made in their paper are not
correct.Comment: 3pages, version to be published in Phys. Rev.
Disease driven extinction in the wild of the Kihansi spray toad, Nectophrynoides asperginis
The Kihansi spray toad, Nectophrynoides asperginis, became extinct in the wild despite population monitoring and conservation management of its habitat in the Kihansi gorge, Tanzania. Previous investigations have indicated human induced habitat modification, predators, pesticides and disease as possible causes of a rapid population decline and the species extirpation. Here, we systematically investigate the role of disease in the extinction event of the wild toad population. The amphibian chytrid fungus, Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis, was detected in spray toads that died during the extinction event and subsequently in other amphibian species in Kihansi Gorge and the adjacent Udagaji Gorge, but not in any toads collected prior to this. Following the population decline, the remaining spray toad population gradually disappeared over a nine-month period. We demonstrate how demographic (rare, low fecundity, high elevation species) and behavioural (congregate in high densities) attributes predisposed the spray toads to chytridiomycosis, as a result of B. dendrobatidis infections, and how epidemic disease could have been exacerbated by altered environmental conditions in the spray wetlands. Our results show that chytridiomycosis was the proximate cause of extinction in the wild of N. asperginis. This represents the first known case of extinction by disease of an amphibian species in Africa. Captive breeding programs, in both the US and Tanzania, have been introduced in order to ensure the survival of the species and a reintroduction program is underway. However, we caution that chytridiomycosis remains an existing threat, which requires a comprehensive mitigation strategy before the desired conservation outcome of an established population of repatriated toads can be achieved
Structure of the Quark Propagator at High Temperature
In the high temperature, chirally invariant phase of QCD, the quark
propagator is shown to have two sets of poles with different dispersion
relations. A reflection property in momentum space relates all derivatives at
zero-momentum of the particle and hole energies, the particle and hole damping
rates, and the particle and hole residues. No use is made of perturbation
theory.Comment: 8 pages, Latex twocolum
THERMAL EFFECTS ON THE CATALYSIS BY A MAGNETIC FIELD
We show that the formation of condensates in the presence of a constant
magnetic field in 2+1 dimensions is extremely unstable. It disappears as soon
as a heat bath is introduced with or without a chemical potential. We point out
some new nonanalytic behavior that develops in this system at finite
temperature.Comment: 10 pages, plain Te
Color, Spin and Flavor Diffusion in Quark-Gluon Plasmas
In weakly interacting quark-gluon plasmas diffusion of color is found to be
much slower than the diffusion of spin and flavor because color is easily
exchanged by the gluons in the very singular forward scattering processes. If
the infrared divergence is cut off by a magnetic mass, ,
the color diffusion is , a
factor smaller than spin and flavor diffusion. A similar effect is
expected in electroweak plasmas above due to exchanges. The color
conductivity in quark-gluon plasmas and the electrical conductivity in
electroweak plasmas are correspondingly small in relativistic heavy ion
collisions and the very early universe.Comment: 5 pages, no figure
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