21,273 research outputs found

    Impacts of climate change on rice production in Africa and causes of simulated yield changes

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    This study is the first of its kind to quantify possible effects of climate change on rice production in Africa. We simulated impacts on rice in irrigated systems (dry season and wet season) and rainfed systems (upland and lowland). We simulated the use of rice varieties with a higher temperature sum as adaptation option. We simulated rice yields for 4 RCP climate change scenarios and identified causes of yield declines. Without adaptation, shortening of the growing period due to higher temperatures had a negative impact on yields (āˆ’24% in RCP 8.5 in 2070 compared with the baseline year 2000). With varieties that have a high temperature sum, the length of the growing period would remain the same as under the baseline conditions. With this adaptation option rainfed rice yields would increase slightly (+8%) but they remain subject to water availability constraints. Irrigated rice yields in East Africa would increase (+25%) due to more favourable temperatures and due to CO2 fertilization. Wet season irrigated rice yields in West Africa were projected to change by āˆ’21% or +7% (without/with adaptation). Without adaptation irrigated rice yields in West Africa in the dry season would decrease by āˆ’45% with adaptation they would decrease significantly less (āˆ’15%). The main cause of this decline was reduced photosynthesis at extremely high temperatures. Simulated heat sterility hardly increased and was not found a major cause for yield decline. The implications for these findings are as follows. For East Africa to benefit from climate change, improved water and nutrient management will be needed to benefit fully from the more favourable temperatures and increased CO2 concentrations. For West Africa, more research is needed on photosynthesis processes at extreme temperatures and on adaptation options such as shifting sowing dates

    Transient video signal recording with expanded playback Patent

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    Transient video signal tape recorder with expanded playbac

    Blockholder dispersion and firm value

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    This paper analyzes the impact of blockownership dispersion on firm value. Blockholdings by multiple blockholders is a widespread phenomenon in the U.S. market. It is not clear, however, whether dispersion among blockholder is preferable to having a more concentrated ownership structure. To test for the direction of the effect, we use a large dataset of U.S. firms that combines blockholder information, shareholder rights information, debt ratings, accounting information, and financial markets information. We find that a large fraction of aggregated block ownership negatively affects Tobinā€™s Q. The negative impact is larger if blockowners are more dispersed, suggesting that a concentrated ownership structure is to be preferred on average. Results are robust to controlling for blockholder type as well as proxies for shareholder rights. Our empirical findings are also confirmed if we study the impact of ownership dispersion on firm debt ratings rather than Tobinā€™s Q. JEL Classification: G3, G3

    Matched wideband low-noise amplifiers for radio astronomy

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    Two packaged low noise amplifiers for the 0.3ā€“4 GHz frequency range are described. The amplifiers can be operated at temperatures of 300ā€“4 K and achieve noise temperatures in the 5 K range (<0.1 dB noise figure) at 15 K physical temperature. One amplifier utilizes commercially available, plastic-packaged SiGe transistors for first and second stages; the second amplifier is identical except it utilizes an experimental chip transistor as the first stage. Both amplifiers use resistive feedback to provide input reflection coefficient S11<āˆ’10 dB over a decade bandwidth with gain over 30 dB. The amplifiers can be used as rf amplifiers in very low noise radio astronomy systems or as i.f. amplifiers following superconducting mixers operating in the millimeter and submillimeter frequency range

    Rice Intensification in a Changing Environment: Impact on Water Availability in Inland Valley Landscapes in Benin

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    This study assesses the impact of climate change on hydrological processes under rice intensification in three headwater inland valley watersheds characterized by different land conditions. The Soil and Water Assessment Tool was used to simulate the combined impacts of two land use scenarios defined as converting 25% and 75% of lowland savannah into rice cultivation, and two climate scenarios (A1B and B1) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on Emissions Scenarios. The simulations were performed based on the traditional and the rainfed-bunded rice cultivation systems and analyzed up to the year 2049 with a special focus on the period of 2030ā€“2049. Compared to land use, climate change impact on hydrological processes was overwhelming at all watersheds. The watersheds with a high portion of cultivated areas are more sensitive to changes in climate resulting in a decrease of water yield of up to 50% (145 mm). Bunded fields cause a rise in surface runoff projected to be up to 28% (18 mm) in their lowlands, while processes were insignificantly affected at the vegetation dominated-watershed. Analyzing three watersheds instead of one as is usually done provides further insight into the natural variability and therefore gives more evidence of possible future processes and management strategie

    Nivat's conjecture holds for sums of two periodic configurations

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    Nivat's conjecture is a long-standing open combinatorial problem. It concerns two-dimensional configurations, that is, maps Z2ā†’A\mathbb Z^2 \rightarrow \mathcal A where A\mathcal A is a finite set of symbols. Such configurations are often understood as colorings of a two-dimensional square grid. Let Pc(m,n)P_c(m,n) denote the number of distinct mƗnm \times n block patterns occurring in a configuration cc. Configurations satisfying Pc(m,n)ā‰¤mnP_c(m,n) \leq mn for some m,nāˆˆNm,n \in \mathbb N are said to have low rectangular complexity. Nivat conjectured that such configurations are necessarily periodic. Recently, Kari and the author showed that low complexity configurations can be decomposed into a sum of periodic configurations. In this paper we show that if there are at most two components, Nivat's conjecture holds. As a corollary we obtain an alternative proof of a result of Cyr and Kra: If there exist m,nāˆˆNm,n \in \mathbb N such that Pc(m,n)ā‰¤mn/2P_c(m,n) \leq mn/2, then cc is periodic. The technique used in this paper combines the algebraic approach of Kari and the author with balanced sets of Cyr and Kra.Comment: Accepted for SOFSEM 2018. This version includes an appendix with proofs. 12 pages + references + appendi

    Density functional theory calculations of adsorption-induced surface stress changes

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    Density functional theory calculations of adsorbate-induced surface stress changes have been performed for a number of adsorbate and overlayer systems for which experimental data exists, namely: oxygen and sulphur adsorption on Ni(1 0 0); oxygen adsorption on W(1 1 0); pseudomorphic growth of Ni on Cu(1 0 0) and of Fe on W(1 1 0); oxygen adsorption on a 5 ML pseudomorphic film of Ni(1 0 0) grown on Cu(1 0 0). The theoretical calculations reproduce all the qualitative features of the experimental data, but there are some significant quantitative differences, most notably for the two atomic adsorbates on the bulk Ni(1 0 0) surface, for which the theoretical stress changes are substantially smaller than the experimental ones, a situation not obviously attributable to experimental error. For the W(1 1 0)/Fe system there is also a marked difference between experiment and theory in the coverage at which key surface stress changes occur
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