541 research outputs found
Adoption of terraces in the Peruvian Andes
Soil erosion is a serious constraint for agriculture and rural development in developing countries. Many efforts are made to promote soil and water conservation (SWC) among farm households. However, adoption of SWC practices is often disappointing. This thesis analyses the benefits of terraces and the adoption behaviour of farm households in the Peruvian Andes. The main beneficial effect of terraces is the increased water availability in the soils. However, terraces will only result in increased production if it is combined with intensified crop management or with crops of high market value. Whether terraces are financially attractive for farmers depends mainly on their personal opportunity cost of labour. Incentives though only slightly increase the profitability of terraces. The decision to participate in a SWC-oriented programme plays a key role in the adoption process. Programmes with a top-down approach have a strong influence on the adoption decision. Participants of these programmes installed SWC practices on the rainfed and degraded fields with steep slopes that are used for extensive agriculture or pasture. Participants of a participatory programme have more individual control on the adoption decision, and they installed terraces on the less degraded fields in order to intensify agricultural production. Production functions revealed that terraces do not result in a significant increase of agricultural output at household level, but labour productivity did increase. Terraces have the potential to increase agricultural production and factor productivity, but whether this is of interest of a farm household, depends on the existing markets. Therefore, programmes have to take into account the scarcity of production factors and the opportunities at local markets. As conditions differ per region, SWC interventions should be decentralised
Dissociation spectrum of H from a short, intense infrared laser pulse: vibration structure and focal volume effects
The dissociation spectrum of the hydrogen molecular ion by short intense
pulses of infrared light is calculated. The time-dependent Schr\"odinger
equation is discretized and integrated in position and momentum space. For
few-cycle pulses one can resolve vibrational structure that commonly arises in
the experimental preparation of the molecular ion from the neutral molecule. We
calculate the corresponding energy spectrum and analyze the dependence on the
pulse time-delay, pulse length, and intensity of the laser for nm. We conclude that the proton spectrum is a both a sensitive probe of the
vibrational dynamics and the laser pulse. Finally we compare our results with
recent measurements of the proton spectrum for 55 fs pulses using a Ti:Sapphire
laser (nm). Integrating over the laser focal volume, for the
intensity W cm, we find our results are in
excellent agreement with these experiments.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figures, preprin
Dissociation and ionization of small molecules steered by external noise
We show that ionization and dissociation can be influenced separately in a
molecule with appropriate external noise. Specifically we investigate the
hydrogen molecular ion under a stochastic force quantum mechanically beyond the
Born-Oppenheimer approximation. We find that up to 30% of dissociation without
ionization can be achieved by suitably tuning the forcing parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure
Semiclassical ionization dynamics of the hydrogen molecular ion in an electric field of arbitrary orientation
Quasi-static models of barrier suppression have played a major role in our
understanding of the ionization of atoms and molecules in strong laser fields.
Despite their success, in the case of diatomic molecules these studies have so
far been restricted to fields aligned with the molecular axis. In this paper we
investigate the locations and heights of the potential barriers in the hydrogen
molecular ion in an electric field of arbitrary orientation. We find that the
barriers undergo bifurcations as the external field strength and direction are
varied. This phenomenon represents an unexpected level of intricacy even on
this most elementary level of the dynamics. We describe the dynamics of
tunnelling ionization through the barriers semiclassically and use our results
to shed new light on the success of a recent theory of molecular tunnelling
ionization as well as earlier theories that restrict the electric field to be
aligned with the molecular axis
The propensity of molecules to spatially align in intense light fields
The propensity of molecules to spatially align along the polarization vector
of intense, pulsed light fields is related to readily-accessible parameters
(molecular polarizabilities, moment of inertia, peak intensity of the light and
its pulse duration). Predictions can now be made of which molecules can be
spatially aligned, and under what circumstances, upon irradiation by intense
light. Accounting for both enhanced ionization and hyperpolarizability, it is
shown that {\it all} molecules can be aligned, even those with the smallest
static polarizability, when subjected to the shortest available laser pulses
(of sufficient intensity).Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, to be submitted to PR
Knowledge Extraction for Art History: the Case of Vasari's The Lives of The Artists (1568)
Knowledge Extraction (KE) techniques are used to convert unstructured information present in texts to Knowledge Graphs (KGs) which can be queried and explored. Despite their potential for cultural heritage domains, such as Art History, these techniques often encounter limitations if applied to domain-specific data. In this paper we present the main challenges that KE has to face on art-historical texts, by using as case study Giorgio Vasari's The Lives of The Artists. This paper discusses the following NLP tasks for art-historical texts, namely entity recognition and linking, coreference resolution, time extraction, motif extraction and artwork extraction. Several strategies to annotate art-historical data for these tasks and evaluate NLP models are also proposed
Multimodal Search on Iconclass Using Vision-Language Pre-Trained Models
Terminology sources, such as controlled vocabularies, thesauri and classification systems, play a key role in digitizing cultural heritage. However, Information Retrieval (IR) systems that allow to query and explore these lexical resources often lack an adequate representation of the semantics behind the user's search, which can be conveyed through multiple expression modalities (e.g., images, keywords or textual descriptions). This paper presents the implementation of a new search engine for one of the most widely used iconography classification system, Iconclass. The novelty of this system is the use of a pre-trained vision-language model, namely CLIP, to retrieve and explore Iconclass concepts using visual or textual queries
Landbouwverkenning provincie FryslĂąn tot 2020
In deze toekomstverkenning voor de Friese landbouw, in opdracht van de provincie FryslĂąn, wordt naast inzicht in de huidige kracht van de agrarische sector, vooral een beeld gegeven van de mogelijke kansen en bedreigingen die relevante beleids- en marktontwikkelingen met zich mee zullen brengen. Op basis van de SWOT wordt een verwacht beeld geschetst van hoe de Friese landbouw zich richting 2020 ontwikkelt. De toekomstverkenning richt zich vooral op de sectoren melkveehouderij, akkerbouw, glastuinbouw en biologische landbouw. De verkenning levert bouwstenen op voor een verdere invulling van het toekomstig provinciaal beleid voor de agrarische secto
Improving interprofessional coordination in Dutch midwifery and obstetrics: A qualitative study
Background: Coordination between the autonomous professional groups in midwifery and obstetrics is a key debate in the Netherlands. At the same time, it remains unclear what the current coordination challenges are. Methods: To examine coordination challenges that might present a barrie
- âŠ