702 research outputs found
EC1806 Revised 1955 Cedar Apple Rust
Extension Circular 1806 Revised 1955 is called Cedar Apple Rust and is about the symptoms of the Cedar Tree and Apple Tree when they rust. The symptoms of the Cedar tree are having many orange-colored, gelatinous, flower-like galls on the trees. They are first noticed in June and they grow fast over the summer months and reach adult size by fall. The spread of rust is only from the red cedar to apple trees then from the apple and related species back to the cedar. The symptoms of the Apple trees are during June, orange-colored spots appear on the leaves. When the leaves are infected badly they turn yellow and this weakens the tree and reduces the number and sized of the fruits. There are three ways to control the rust, 1) spraying, 2) removal of the red cedars in the vicinity of the apples, or 3) planting the more resistant varieties
EC55-1814 Fire Blight of Apples and Pears
Extension Circular 55-1814: This is about fire blight of apples and pears. Includes symptoms, cause, control, and resistant and susceptible varieties
Lender Liability Under Superfund After Fleet Factors: An Evaluation of Proposed Corrective Action
Predicting QSO Continua in the Ly Alpha Forest
We present a method to make predictions with sets of correlated data values,
in this case QSO flux spectra. We predict the continuum in the Lyman-Alpha
forest of a QSO, from 1020 -- 1216 A, using the spectrum of that QSO from 1216
-- 1600 A . We find correlations between the unabsorbed flux in these two
wavelengths regions in the HST spectra of 50 QSOs. We use principal component
analysis (PCA) to summarize the variety of these spectra and we relate the
weights of the principal components for 1020 -- 1600 A to the weights for 1216
-- 1600 A, and we apply this relation to make predictions. We test the method
on the HST spectra, and we find an average absolute flux error of 9%, with a
range 3 -- 30%, where individual predictions are systematically too low or too
high. We mention several ways in which the predictions might be improved.Comment: 17 pages, 4 figures, submitted to Ap
Two Letters from Sierra States University President and Student Leaders to the United States Immigration Service in support of Student Richard Auras, 1942
Two letters, dated January 15, 1942, were written in support of Richard Auras, a student at Sierra State University. The first, written by the college president, Dr. Raymond L. Peters, describes Auras as a good student. Dr. Peters says he would like to see Auras finish his course so he can graduate with the other students of his class.
The second letter, written by the student body president John C. Fischer and student body secretary Muriel Whitney describes Auras as honest and sincere and also urges that he be allowed to return to school.
See also:
Petition and Affidavit By Curt Benedict arguing for overturn of denial of release of Richard Auras from Internment, 1946
Letter from Richard Auras to William Langer regarding his internment status decision, 1946https://commons.und.edu/langer-papers/1161/thumbnail.jp
Development and Testing of a High Stability Engine Control (HISTEC) System
Flight tests were recently completed to demonstrate an inlet-distortion-tolerant engine control system. These flight tests were part of NASA's High Stability Engine Control (HISTEC) program. The objective of the HISTEC program was to design, develop, and flight demonstrate an advanced integrated engine control system that uses measurement-based, real-time estimates of inlet airflow distortion to enhance engine stability. With improved stability and tolerance of inlet airflow distortion, future engine designs may benefit from a reduction in design stall-margin requirements and enhanced reliability, with a corresponding increase in performance and decrease in fuel consumption. This paper describes the HISTEC methodology, presents an aircraft test bed description (including HISTEC-specific modifications) and verification and validation ground tests. Additionally, flight test safety considerations, test plan and technique design and approach, and flight operations are addressed. Some illustrative results are presented to demonstrate the type of analysis and results produced from the flight test program
An Expository Note on the Existence of Moments of Fuller and HFUL Estimators
In a recent paper, Hausman, Newey, Woutersen, Chao, and Swanson (2012) propose a new estimator, HFUL (Heteroscedasticity robust Fuller), for the linear model with endogeneity. This estimator is consistent and asymptotically normally distributed in the many instruments and many weak instruments asymptotics. Moreover, this estimator has moments, just like the estimator by Fuller (1977). The purpose of this note is to discuss at greater length the existence of moments result given in Hausman et al. (2012). In particular, we intend to answer the following questions: Why does LIML not have moments? Why does the Fuller modification lead to estimators with moments? Is normality required for the Fuller estimator to have moments? Why do we need a condition such as Hausman et al. (2012), Assumption 9? Why do we have the adjustment formula
Combining Two Consistent Estimators
This chapter shows how a weighted average of a forward and reverse Jackknife IV estimator (JIVE) yields estimators that are robust against heteroscedasticity and many instruments. These estimators, called HFUL (Heteroscedasticity robust Fuller) and HLIM (Heteroskedasticity robust limited information maximum likelihood (LIML)) were introduced by Hausman, Newey, Woutersen, Chao, and Swanson (2012), but without derivation. Combining consistent estimators is a theme that is associated with Jerry Hausman and, therefore, we present this derivation in this volume. Additionally, and in order to further understand and interpret HFUL and HLIM in the context of jackknife type variance ratio estimators, we show that a new variant of HLIM, under specific grouped data settings with dummy instruments, simplifies to the Bekker and van der Ploeg (2005) MM (method of moments) estimator
A Disk Shadow Around the Young Star ASR 41 in NGC 1333
We present images of the young stellar object ASR 41 in the NGC 1333 star
forming region at the wavelengths of H_alpha and [SII] and in the I, J, H, and
K-bands.
ASR 41 has the near-infrared morphology of an edge-on disk object, but
appears an order of magnitude larger than typical systems of this kind.
We also present detailed models of the scattering and radiative transfer in
systems consisting of a young star surrounded by a proto-planetary disk, and
the whole system being embedded in either an infalling envelope or a uniform
molecular cloud. The best fit to the observed morphology can be achieved with a
disk of approx. 200 AU diameter, immersed in a low density cloud. The low cloud
density is necessary to stay below the sub-mm flux upper limits and to preserve
the shadow cast by the disk via single scattering.
The results demonstrate that ASR 41 is probably not inherently different from
typical edge-on disk objects, and that its large apparent size is due to the
shadow of a much smaller disk being projected into the surrounding dusty
molecular material
Psychedelics Promote Structural and Functional Neural Plasticity.
Atrophy of neurons in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) plays a key role in the pathophysiology of depression and related disorders. The ability to promote both structural and functional plasticity in the PFC has been hypothesized to underlie the fast-acting antidepressant properties of the dissociative anesthetic ketamine. Here, we report that, like ketamine, serotonergic psychedelics are capable of robustly increasing neuritogenesis and/or spinogenesis both in vitro and in vivo. These changes in neuronal structure are accompanied by increased synapse number and function, as measured by fluorescence microscopy and electrophysiology. The structural changes induced by psychedelics appear to result from stimulation of the TrkB, mTOR, and 5-HT2A signaling pathways and could possibly explain the clinical effectiveness of these compounds. Our results underscore the therapeutic potential of psychedelics and, importantly, identify several lead scaffolds for medicinal chemistry efforts focused on developing plasticity-promoting compounds as safe, effective, and fast-acting treatments for depression and related disorders
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