2,278 research outputs found

    Effects of total replacement of corn silage with sorghum silage on milk yield, composition, and quality

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    BACKGROUND: In the last years, difficulties occurring in corn cultivation (i.e., groundwater shortages, mycotoxin contamination) have been forcing dairy farmers to consider alternative silages. Some experiments conducted on lactating cows have proven that the total replacement of corn silage with sorghum silage did not reduce milk yield. However, this kind of substitution involves supplementing sorghum-based diets with grains, to compensate for the lower starch content of sorghum silage compared to corn silage. Change of silage type and inclusion of starch sources in the diet would influence rumen fermentations, with possible effects on milk composition (i.e., fatty acid profile) and coagulation properties. A worsening of milk coagulation properties would have a negative economic impact in Italy, where most of the milk produced is processed into cheese. This study was designed to compare milk composition and quality, with emphasis on fatty acid profile and coagulation properties, in dairy cows fed two diets based on corn or sorghum silage. RESULTS: The sorghum diet reduced milk yield (P = 0.043) but not 4% fat corrected milk (P = 0.85). Feeding sorghum silage did not influence milk contents of protein (P = 0.07) and lactose (P = 0.65), and increased fat content (P = 0.024). No differences emerged for milk concentrations of saturated (P = 0.61) and monounsaturated fatty acids (P = 0.50), whereas polyunsaturated fatty acids were lower (P < 0.001) for the sorghum diet. Concentrations of n-6 (P < 0.001) and n-3 fatty acids (P = 0.017) were lower in milk of cows fed the sorghum diet. Milk coagulation properties did not differ between the two diets, except the “a30” (the curd firmness, expressed in mm, 30 min after rennet addition), that was lower (P = 0.042) for the sorghum diet. CONCLUSIONS: Feeding a forage sorghum silage, properly supplemented with corn meal, as total replacement of corn silage maintained milk composition and did not influence negatively milk coagulation properties, which have a great economic relevance for the Italian dairy industry. Thus, silages obtained from forage sorghums could have a potential as substitute of corn silages in dairy cow diets

    On the correlation of Short Gamma--Ray Bursts and Clusters of galaxies

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    We cross correlate Gamma--Ray Bursts and X--Ray selected clusters of galaxies at z\leq0.45. We find a positive 2\sigma signal for the angular cross--correlation function w_{bc}(\theta) on scales \theta\leq 3 deg between short GRBs and clusters. Conversely, no correlation is found between clusters and the population of long GRBs. The comparison with the cluster autocorrelation function shows that short GRBs do not trace the cluster distribution as not all short GRBs are found in clusters. A higher signal in w_{bc}(\theta) is found if we only consider the cluster population up to z=0.1. By comparing the short burst autocorrelation function with model predictions we then constrain short bursts to mostly originate within \sim 270 Mpc (i.e. z\leq 0.06). Our analysis also reveals that short GRBs are better correlated with ``normal'' galaxies. The double compact object merger model for short GRBs would associate them preferentially to early--type galaxies but the present statistics do not allow us to exclude that at least a fraction of these events might also take place in late--type galaxies, in agreement with recent evidences.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA

    Is the Universe Homogeneous? (On Large Scales)

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    I critically discuss in a pedagogical and phenomenological way a few crucial tests challenging the claims by Pietronero and collaborators that there is no evidence from available galaxy catalogues that the Universe is actually homogeneous above a certain scale. In a series of papers, these authors assert that observations are consistent with a fractal distribution of objects extending to the limit of the present data. I show that while galaxies are indeed clustered in a scale-free way on small and intermediate scales, this behaviour does not continue indefinitely. Although the specific wavelength at which the galaxy distribution apparently turns to homogeneity is dangerously close to the size of the largest samples presently available, there are serious hints suggesting that this turnover is real and that its effects are detected in the behaviour of statistical estimators. The most recent claims of a continuing fractal hierarchy up to scales of several hundreds Mpc seem to be abscribable to the use of incomplete samples or to an improper treatment of otherwise high- quality data sets. The fractal perspective, nevertheless, can represent a fruitful way to look at the clustering properties of galaxies, when properly coupled to the traditional gravitational instability scenario. In the last part of this paper I therefore try to clarify, at a very simple level, some of the confusion existing on the actual scaling properties of the galaxy distribution. In this context, I shall discuss how these can provide hints on the evolution of the large-scale structure of the Universe, when one properly takes into account the effect of both initial conditions and nonlinear gravitational growth in producing the presently observed distribution

    Easylife: the data reduction and survey handling system for VIPERS

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    We present Easylife, the software environment developed within the framework of the VIPERS project for automatic data reduction and survey handling. Easylife is a comprehensive system to automatically reduce spectroscopic data, to monitor the survey advancement at all stages, to distribute data within the collaboration and to release data to the whole community. It is based on the OPTICON founded project FASE, and inherits the FASE capabilities of modularity and scalability. After describing the software architecture, the main reduction and quality control features and the main services made available, we show its performance in terms of reliability of results. We also show how it can be ported to other projects having different characteristics.Comment: pre-print, 17 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacifi
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