9,396 research outputs found
The growth of plant embryos in vitro. Preliminary experiments on the role of accessory substances
The aseptic culture of plant embryos isolated from the seed dates back to the work of Brown and Morris,(1) Hannig(2) and Dietrich.(3) More recent contributions to our knowledge concerning the culture in vitro of excised embryos have been made by Tukey,(4) Brunner(5) and LaRue,(6) among others. It has been recognized by, for example, Ray(7) that the embryo culture technique offers a useful tool for biochemical investigations, and it has also been recognized(4,8) that it may be used as a practical measure to circumvent the abortion of embryos. It has, however, been found that in general the growth of the excised embryo, even upon a medium containing essential inorganic materials and sugar, is far less than that of normal intact seedlings. This has led to the suggestion(5) that "accessory growth factors" which are needed in minute amounts, are required by the developing plant as they are by the developing animal organism. The present work, as well as that of Kogl and Haagen-Smit,(9) furnish final proof that this is the case; that these accessory substances, although normally furnished by the seed, may be replaced to some extent by pure compounds added in small amounts to the embryo culture medium. These investigations, taken up early in 1936, are concerned particularly with orienting experiments undertaken with an ultimate view toward the elucidation of the nature and mode of action of these accessory growth factors. The embryo culture technique is here to be used as a tool in the "hormonal" analysis of plant development
Robotic planner expert system (RPLANES)
The Artificial Intelligence Section of the Mission Planning and Analysis of the Johnson Space Center has developed a prototype of an expert system for robotic planning. A robot is given a high level goal to perform an action (i.e., swap, adjust, or stow) on a component unit of an object such as a satellite and the Robotic Planner Expert System (RPLANES) generates the necessary goals for arm actions. RPLANES is designed using the Inference Corp. Automated Reasoning Tool (ART) development tool. It resides on a SYMBOLICS 3670. RPLANES and its evolution are described
Case study: Duchy College Organic Studies Centre
This report was presented at the UK Organic Research 2002 Conference. Coswinsawsin Organic Demonstration Farm supports a stockless vegetable and cereal rotation and achieved organic status in January 2001. Over 18 months 430 people attended 18 organic farming events. Work included trials and demonstration plots, monitoring of small mammal and bird populations and a green waste composting project which are ongoing. £972,199 Objective 1 funding was awarded to expand activity across all sectors of production and establish the Organic Studies Centre at Duchy College. The project will link organic research to demonstration, technology transfer and training. The emphasis will be on farmer participation and research will be taken onto commercial farms. 82% of respondents to a farmer survey were interested in participation in organic trials and demonstration. It is anticipated that dissemination of up to date information at farm level will improve competitiveness and financial viability of farm businesses
Editorial: Relevance Theory and Intercultural Communication Problems
This editorial to the special issue of RiL dedicated to relevance theory and problems of intercultural communication addresses the general requirements that a theory of communication must meet to be applicable to the analysis of intercultural communication. Then it discusses criticism levelled against Grice’s theory of conversational implicature and Brown and Levinson’s theory of politeness on the grounds that these theories were not universal enough to be applied to all data. Finally, it offers some remarks on the applicability of relevance theory to intercultural pragmatics
Generating the local oscillator "locally" in continuous-variable quantum key distribution based on coherent detection
Continuous-variable quantum key distribution (CV-QKD) protocols based on
coherent detection have been studied extensively in both theory and experiment.
In all the existing implementations of CV-QKD, both the quantum signal and the
local oscillator (LO) are generated from the same laser and propagate through
the insecure quantum channel. This arrangement may open security loopholes and
also limit the potential applications of CV-QKD. In this paper, we propose and
demonstrate a pilot-aided feedforward data recovery scheme which enables
reliable coherent detection using a "locally" generated LO. Using two
independent commercial laser sources and a spool of 25 km optical fiber, we
construct a coherent communication system. The variance of the phase noise
introduced by the proposed scheme is measured to be 0.04 (rad^2), which is
small enough to enable secure key distribution. This technology also opens the
door for other quantum communication protocols, such as the recently proposed
measurement-device-independent (MDI) CV-QKD where independent light sources are
employed by different users.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figure
Novel Cascaded Ultra Bright Pulsed Source of Polarization Entangled Photons
A new ultra bright pulsed source of polarization entangled photons has been
realized using type-II phase matching in spontaneous parametric down conversion
process in two cascaded crystals. The optical axes of the crystals are aligned
in such a way that the extraordinarily (ordinarily) polarized cone from one
crystal overlaps with the ordinarily (extraordinarily) polarized cone from the
second crystal. This spatial overlapping removes the association between the
polarization and the output angle of the photons that exist in a single type-II
down conversion process. Hence, entanglement of photons originating from any
point on the output cones is possible if a suitable optical delay line is used.
This delay line is particularly simple and easy to implement.Comment: 8 pages 8 figure
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