174 research outputs found

    The potential for increasing net incomes on limited resource farms in Upper East Tennessee

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    The overall objective of this study was to explore the possibilities for improving the net farm income positions of full-time limited resource farm operators in Upper East Tennessee. The improvement in income was based on the optimal employment of available resources to produce a unique enterprise mix which maximized income. Forty full-time farmers with gross earnings of less than 10,000in1976wereinterviewed.Fivedecisionvariableswereusedtogroupthesurveyfarmsintohomogeneouslimitedresourcefarmgroups.Thesevariableswereland−laborindex,tobaccospaceindex,dairyenterprisepotential,netincomeobservedforeachfarm,andpotentialnetincome.Resourcesofafarmwereusedinalinearprogramtomaximizetheincomesofeachfarmandtheresultsaveragedwithintheappropriatelimitedresourcefarmgroup.Sevensituationswereanalyzedwhichvariedtheassumptionsandconstraints.Theanalysesweredividedintotwocategories:(a)thoselimitingenterprisealternativestothosethatexistedonafarmwhensurveyed,and(b)thoseallowingvaryingdegreesofenterprisemobility.Eachanalysisincorporatedeithervariableexpensesintotheobjectivefunctionwhichrepresentedashort−runsolution,orvariableandfixedexpenseswhichrepresentedalong−runsolution.Theresultsofthesesituationsrepresentedtheincomepotentialoflimitedresourcefarmersrangingfromincorporationofstatictodynamicconditionsintothemodel.Theresourceadvantagesofthedifferentlevelsofresourcebasefarmerstendedtodeclineinrelativeimportanceasincomegeneratinglaboravailablewasfullyutilizedforalllimitedresourcefarmgroups.Themostlimitedresourcegroupoffarmerswasobservedtohaveanetincomeof10,000 in 1976 were interviewed. Five decision variables were used to group the survey farms into homogeneous limited resource farm groups. These variables were land-labor index, tobacco space index, dairy enterprise potential, net income observed for each farm, and potential net income. Resources of a farm were used in a linear program to maximize the incomes of each farm and the results averaged within the appropriate limited resource farm group. Seven situations were analyzed which varied the assumptions and constraints. The analyses were divided into two categories: (a) those limiting enterprise alternatives to those that existed on a farm when surveyed, and (b) those allowing varying degrees of enterprise mobility. Each analysis incorporated either variable expenses into the objective function which represented a short-run solution, or variable and fixed expenses which represented a long-run solution. The results of these situations represented the income potential of limited resource farmers ranging from incorporation of static to dynamic conditions into the model. The resource advantages of the different levels of resource base farmers tended to decline in relative importance as income generating labor available was fully utilized for all limited resource farm groups. The most limited resource group of farmers was observed to have a net income of 1,319 while the relatively least limited resource group of farmers had an income of 15,533.Whenfeederpigswereallowedtoenter,incomeswereallowedtobemaximizedthemostto15,533. When feeder pigs were allowed to enter, incomes were allowed to be maximized the most to 7,208 and 22,846forfarmsinGroup1andGroup4,respectively.Themajorenterprisesgeneratingthisincomewerefeederpigs,corn,pasture,andtobacco.Disallowingfeederpigproductionandallowingthesubstitutionofhayandtobaccocapacitywasthenextbestalternativeforthelimitedresourcefarmgroups.Thissituationhadtheeffectofdoublingtobaccoproductionoverobservedbenchmarklevelswhileleavingtheotherenterpriselevelsunaffected.Theleastdynamicprogramrestrictedenterprisesallowedtothoseobservedonafarm,allowedfornovegetableorfeederpigproductiononfarmswheretheseenterpriseswerenotobserved,allowedfornosubstitutionofhayspacefortobaccospace,andlimitedtheamountoftobaccoquotaleased−into1,575poundsperfarm.Thisprogramallowedthefarmtoincreasetheirincomesbyanaverageof2722,846 for farms in Group 1 and Group 4, respectively. The major enterprises generating this income were feeder pigs, corn, pasture, and tobacco. Disallowing feeder pig production and allowing the substitution of hay and tobacco capacity was the next best alternative for the limited resource farm groups. This situation had the effect of doubling tobacco production over observed bench mark levels while leaving the other enterprise levels unaffected. The least dynamic program restricted enterprises allowed to those observed on a farm, allowed for no vegetable or feeder pig production on farms where these enterprises were not observed, allowed for no substitution of hay space for tobacco space, and limited the amount of tobacco quota leased-in to 1,575 pounds per farm. This program allowed the farm to increase their incomes by an average of 27% in the short- run to an average of 6,908 per farm

    Impacts of Coastal Land Use and Shoreline Armoring on Estuarine Ecosystems: an Introduction to a Special Issue

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    The nearshore land-water interface is an important ecological zone that faces anthropogenic pressure from development in coastal regions throughout the world. Coastal waters and estuaries like Chesapeake Bay receive and process land discharges loaded with anthropogenic nutrients and other pollutants that cause eutrophication, hypoxia, and other damage to shallow-water ecosystems. In addition, shorelines are increasingly armored with bulkhead (seawall), riprap, and other structures to protect human infrastructure against the threats of sea-level rise, storm surge, and erosion. Armoring can further influence estuarine and nearshore marine ecosystem functions by degrading water quality, spreading invasive species, and destroying ecologically valuable habitat. These detrimental effects on ecosystem function have ramifications for ecologically and economically important flora and fauna. This special issue of Estuaries and Coasts explores the interacting effects of coastal land use and shoreline armoring on estuarine and coastal marine ecosystems. The majority of papers focus on the Chesapeake Bay region, USA, where 50 major tributaries and an extensive watershed (similar to 167,000 km(2)), provide an ideal model to examine the impacts of human activities at scales ranging from the local shoreline to the entire watershed. The papers consider the influence of watershed land use and natural versus armored shorelines on ecosystem properties and processes as well as on key natural resources

    Photoproduction of phi(1020) mesons on the proton at large momentum transfer

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    The cross section for ϕ\phi meson photoproduction on the proton has been measured for the first time up to a four-momentum transfer -t = 4 GeV^2, using the CLAS detector at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility. At low four-momentum transfer, the differential cross section is well described by Pomeron exchange. At large four-momentum transfer, above -t = 1.8 GeV^2, the data support a model where the Pomeron is resolved into its simplest component, two gluons, which may couple to any quark in the proton and in the ϕ\phi.Comment: 5 pages; 7 figure

    The e p -> e' p eta reaction at and above the S11(1535) baryon resonance

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    New cross sections for the reaction e p -> ep eta are reported for total center of mass energy W = 1.5--1.86 GeV and invariant momentum transfer Q^2 = 0.25--1.5 GeV^2. This large kinematic range allows extraction of important new information about response functions, photocouplings, and eta N coupling strengths of baryon resonances. Expanded W coverage shows sharp structure at W \~ 1.7 GeV; this is shown to come from interference between S and P waves and can be interpreted in terms of known resonances. Improved values are derived for the photon coupling amplitude for the S11(1535) resonance.Comment: 11 pages, RevTeX, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let

    Deeply virtual and exclusive electroproduction of omega mesons

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    The exclusive omega electroproduction off the proton was studied in a large kinematical domain above the nucleon resonance region and for the highest possible photon virtuality (Q2) with the 5.75 GeV beam at CEBAF and the CLAS spectrometer. Cross sections were measured up to large values of the four-momentum transfer (-t < 2.7 GeV2) to the proton. The contributions of the interference terms sigma_TT and sigma_TL to the cross sections, as well as an analysis of the omega spin density matrix, indicate that helicity is not conserved in this process. The t-channel pi0 exchange, or more generally the exchange of the associated Regge trajectory, seems to dominate the reaction gamma* p -> omega p, even for Q2 as large as 5 GeV2. Contributions of handbag diagrams, related to Generalized Parton Distributions in the nucleon, are therefore difficult to extract for this process. Remarkably, the high-t behaviour of the cross sections is nearly Q2-independent, which may be interpreted as a coupling of the photon to a point-like object in this kinematical limit.Comment: 15 pages,19 figure

    Q^2 Dependence of the S_{11}(1535) Photocoupling and Evidence for a P-wave resonance in eta electroproduction

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    New cross sections for the reaction ep→eâ€Čηpep \to e'\eta p are reported for total center of mass energy WW=1.5--2.3 GeV and invariant squared momentum transfer Q2Q^2=0.13--3.3 GeV2^2. This large kinematic range allows extraction of new information about response functions, photocouplings, and ηN\eta N coupling strengths of baryon resonances. A sharp structure is seen at W∌W\sim 1.7 GeV. The shape of the differential cross section is indicative of the presence of a PP-wave resonance that persists to high Q2Q^2. Improved values are derived for the photon coupling amplitude for the S11S_{11}(1535) resonance. The new data greatly expands the Q2Q^2 range covered and an interpretation of all data with a consistent parameterization is provided.Comment: 31 pages, 9 figure

    Measurement of Inclusive Spin Structure Functions of the Deuteron

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    We report the results of a new measurement of spin structure functions of the deuteron in the region of moderate momentum transfer (Q2Q^2 = 0.27 -- 1.3 (GeV/c)2^2) and final hadronic state mass in the nucleon resonance region (WW = 1.08 -- 2.0 GeV). We scattered a 2.5 GeV polarized continuous electron beam at Jefferson Lab off a dynamically polarized cryogenic solid state target (15^{15}ND3_3) and detected the scattered electrons with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS). From our data, we extract the longitudinal double spin asymmetry A∣∣A_{||} and the spin structure function g1dg_1^d. Our data are generally in reasonable agreement with existing data from SLAC where they overlap, and they represent a substantial improvement in statistical precision. We compare our results with expectations for resonance asymmetries and extrapolated deep inelastic scaling results. Finally, we evaluate the first moment of the structure function g1dg_1^d and study its approach to both the deep inelastic limit at large Q2Q^2 and to the Gerasimov-Drell-Hearn sum rule at the real photon limit (Q2→0Q^2 \to 0). We find that the first moment varies rapidly in the Q2Q^2 range of our experiment and crosses zero at Q2Q^2 between 0.5 and 0.8 (GeV/c)2^2, indicating the importance of the Δ\Delta resonance at these momentum transfers.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures, ReVTeX 4, final version as accepted by Phys. Rev.

    Measurement of the Polarized Structure Function σLTâ€Č\sigma_{LT^\prime} for p(e⃗,eâ€Čπ+)np(\vec{e},e'\pi^+)n in the Δ(1232)\Delta(1232) Resonance Region

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    The polarized longitudinal-transverse structure function σLTâ€Č\sigma_{LT^\prime} has been measured using the p(e⃗,eâ€Čπ+)np(\vec e,e'\pi^+)n reaction in the Δ(1232)\Delta(1232) resonance region at Q2=0.40Q^2=0.40 and 0.65 GeV2^2. No previous σLTâ€Č\sigma_{LT^\prime} data exist for this reaction channel. The kinematically complete experiment was performed at Jefferson Lab with the CEBAF Large Acceptance Spectrometer (CLAS) using longitudinally polarized electrons at an energy of 1.515 GeV. A partial wave analysis of the data shows generally better agreement with recent phenomenological models of pion electroproduction compared to the previously measured π0p\pi^0 p channel. A fit to both π0p\pi^0 p and π+n\pi^+ n channels using a unitary isobar model suggests the unitarized Born terms provide a consistent description of the non-resonant background. The tt-channel pion pole term is important in the π0p\pi^0 p channel through a rescattering correction, which could be model-dependent.Comment: 6 pages, LaTex, 5 eps figures: Submitted to PRC/Brief Reports v2: Updated referenc

    Q2Q^2 Dependence of Quadrupole Strength in the γ∗p→Δ+(1232)→pπ0\gamma^*p\to\Delta^+(1232)\to p \pi^0 Transition

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    Models of baryon structure predict a small quadrupole deformation of the nucleon due to residual tensor forces between quarks or distortions from the pion cloud. Sensitivity to quark versus pion degrees of freedom occurs through the Q2Q^2 dependence of the magnetic (M1+M_{1+}), electric (E1+E_{1+}), and scalar (S1+S_{1+}) multipoles in the γ∗p→Δ+→pπ0\gamma^* p \to \Delta^+ \to p \pi^0 transition. We report new experimental values for the ratios E1+/M1+E_{1+}/M_{1+} and S1+/M1+S_{1+}/M_{1+} over the range Q2Q^2= 0.4-1.8 GeV2^2, extracted from precision p(e,eâ€Čp)π∘p(e,e 'p)\pi^{\circ} data using a truncated multipole expansion. Results are best described by recent unitary models in which the pion cloud plays a dominant role.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, 1 table. To be published in Phys. Rev. Lett. (References, figures and table updated, minor changes.
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