3,294 research outputs found

    OPERATIONAL COSTS OF CANAL COMPANIES AND IRRIGATION DISTRICTS IN THE INTERMOUNTAIN REGION

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    This study reports on the trends of operational costs of farmer owned and operated irrigation enterprises (irrigation districts and canal companies) in five intermountain states. Administrative costs have risen faster then operation and maintenance costs. While salaries of employees have not risen significantly over time, legal costs have greatly escalated.Agribusiness,

    A Small Family of Elements with Long Inverted Repeats is Located Near Sites of Developmentally Regulated DNA Rearrangement in \u3cem\u3eTetrahymena thermophila\u3c/em\u3e

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    Extensive DNA rearrangement occurs during the development of the somatic macronucleus from the germ line micronucleus in ciliated protozoans. The micronuclear junctions and the macronuclear product of a developmentally regulated DNA rearrangement in Tetrahymena thermophila, Tlr1, have been cloned. The intrachromosomal rearrangement joins sequences that are separated by more than 13 kb in the micronucleus with the elimination of moderately repeated micronucleus-specific DNA sequences. There is a long, 825-bp, inverted repeat near the micronuclear junctions. The inverted repeat contains two different 19-bp tandem repeats. The 19-bp repeats are associated with each other and with DNA rearrangements at seven locations in the micronuclear genome. Southern blot analysis is consistent with the occurrence of the 19-bp repeats within pairs of larger repeated sequences. Another family member was isolated. The 19-mers in that clone are also in close proximity to a rearrangement junction. We propose that the 19-mers define a small family of developmentally regulated DNA rearrangements having elements with long inverted repeats near the junction sites. We discuss the possibility that transposable elements evolve by capture of molecular machinery required for essential cellular functions

    Invisible Higgs Decays from Higgs Graviscalar Mixing

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    We recompute the invisible Higgs decay width arising from Higgs-graviscalar mixing in the ADD model, comparing the original derivation in the non-diagonal mass basis to that in a diagonal mass basis. The results obtained are identical (and differ by a factor of 2 from the original calculation) but the diagonal-basis derivation is pedagogically useful for clarifying the physics of the invisible width from mixing. We emphasize that both derivations make it clear that a direct scan in energy for a process such as WWWWWW\to WW mediated by Higgs plus graviscalar intermediate resonances would follow a {\it single} Breit-Wigner form with total width given by Γtot=ΓhSM+Γinvisible\Gamma^{tot}=\Gamma_h^{SM}+\Gamma_{invisible}. We also compute the additional contributions to the invisible width due to direct Higgs to graviscalar pair decays. We find that the invisible width due to the latter is relatively small unless the Higgs mass is comparable to or larger than the effective extra-dimensional Planck mass.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figures, minor improvements include

    Gastroduodenal Ulcerations in Patients Receiving Selective Hepatic Artery Infusion Chemotherapy

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/72124/1/j.1572-0241.1985.tb02137.x.pd

    Porciones 69, 70, 71, 72

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    From John Closner and Family Collection, contains two typed documents: 1) Affidavit of Francisco Tagle, Sr. as to possession of Porciones No. 71 and 72 (12 March 1906); 2) affidavit describing property purchase options among John Closner, J. P. Withers, James B. Wells (2 May 1902). Porcion 69, 70, 71, 72, 1902-1906, Container: 39, Box: 1, Folder: 8. University of Texas Rio Grande Valley Special Collections and Archives, Edinburg Campus. https://archives.lib.utrgv.edu/repositories/2/archival_objects/80722https://scholarworks.utrgv.edu/hidalgohist/1011/thumbnail.jp

    Thermal Convection over Fractal Surfaces

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    We use well resolved numerical simulations with the Lattice Boltzmann Method to study Rayleigh-B\'enard convection in cells with a fractal boundary in two dimensions for Pr=1Pr = 1 and Ra[107,1010]Ra \in \left[10^7, 10^{10}\right]. The fractal boundaries are functions characterized by power spectral densities S(k)S(k) that decay with wavenumber, kk, as S(k)kpS(k) \sim k^{p} (p<0p < 0). The degree of roughness is quantified by the exponent pp with p<3p < -3 for smooth (differentiable) surfaces and 3p<1-3 \le p < -1 for rough surfaces with Hausdorff dimension Df=12(p+5)D_f=\frac{1}{2}(p+5). By computing the exponent β\beta in power law fits NuRaβNu \sim Ra^{\beta}, where NuNu and RaRa are the Nusselt and the Rayleigh numbers for Ra[108,1010]Ra \in \left[10^8, 10^{10}\right], we observe that heat transport scaling increases with roughness over the top two decades of Ra[108,1010]Ra \in \left[10^8, 10^{10}\right]. For pp =3.0= -3.0, 2.0-2.0 and 1.5-1.5 we find β=0.288±0.005,0.329±0.006\beta = 0.288 \pm 0.005, 0.329 \pm 0.006 and 0.352±0.0110.352 \pm 0.011, respectively. We also observe that the Reynolds number, ReRe, scales as ReRaξRe \sim Ra^{\xi}, where ξ0.57\xi \approx 0.57 over Ra[107,1010]Ra \in \left[10^7, 10^{10}\right], for all pp used in the study. For a given value of pp, the averaged NuNu and ReRe are insensitive to the specific realization of the roughness.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figure

    Structural behaviour of copper chloride catalysts during the chlorination of CO to phosgene

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    The interaction of CO with an attapulgite-supported Cu(II)Cl2 catalyst has been examined in a micro-reactor arrangement. CO exposure to the dried, as-received catalyst at elevated temperatures leads to the formation of CO2 as the only identifiable product. However, phosgene production can be induced by a catalyst pre-treatment where the supported Cu(II)Cl2 sample is exposed to a diluted stream of chlorine. Subsequent CO exposure at ~ 370°C then leads to phosgene production. In order to investigate the origins of this atypical set of reaction characteristics, a series of x-ray absorption experiments were performed that were supplemented by DFT calculations. XANES measurements establish that at the elevated temperatures connected with phosgene formation, the catalyst is comprised of Cu+ and a small amount of Cu2+. Moreover, the data show that unique to the chlorine pre-treated sample, CO exposure at elevated temperature results in a short-lived oxidation of the copper. On the basis of calculated CO adsorption energies, DFT calculations indicate that a mixed Cu+/Cu2+ catalyst is required to support CO chemisorption

    Objectively measured physical activity and fat mass in a large cohort of children

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    Background Previous studies have been unable to characterise the association between physical activity and obesity, possibly because most relied on inaccurate measures of physical activity and obesity. Methods and Findings We carried out a cross sectional analysis on 5,500 12-year-old children enrolled in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children. Total physical activity and minutes of moderate and vigorous physical activity (MVPA) were measured using the Actigraph accelerometer. Fat mass and obesity (defined as the top decile of fat mass) were measured using the Lunar Prodigy dual x-ray emission absorptiometry scanner. We found strong negative associations between MVPA and fat mass that were unaltered after adjustment for total physical activity. We found a strong negative dose-response association between MVPA and obesity. The odds ratio for obesity in adjusted models between top and the bottom quintiles of minutes of MVPA was 0.03 (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.01-0.13, p-value for trend &lt; 0.0001) in boys and 0.36 (95% CI 0.17-0.74, p-value for trend = 0.006) in girls. Conclusions We demonstrated a strong graded inverse association between physical activity and obesity that was stronger in boys. Our data suggest that higher intensity physical activity may be more important than total activity
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