75 research outputs found

    Bulletin No. 57 - By-Products of the Dairy

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    Soon after becoming connected with the Station, the writer, from observations made in various parts of the State, was impressed with the necessity for investigation looking to the profitable disposal of the by-products of the dairy, both at the factory and on the farm. The common method at the factories seemed to be to feed hogs on milk or whey alone, and where grain was fed, it was only given to finish the hog for market. This method of management did not appear to be successful, for it generally took the whole season to get one crop of hogs ready for the market; besides, in many instances , it resulted in too high a death rate among the hogs to be at all profitable

    Terahertz master-oscillator power-amplifier quantum cascade lasers

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    We report on the realization of a monolithically integrated master-oscillator power-amplifier architecture in a terahertz quantum cascade laser (THz-QCL) with a metal-metal waveguide. The master-oscillator section is a first-order distributed feedback (DFB) laser. Instead of using a thick anti-reflection coating, we exploit a diffraction grating together with an absorbing boundary in the power-amplifier section to efficiently extract the laser radiation and suppress the self-lasing in it. The devices demonstrate a stable generation and power amplification of single-mode emission. The amplification factor is about 5, and the output power is approximately twice that of the standard second-order DFB lasers fabricated from the same material. Emission beam pattern with a divergence angle of ∼18 × 40° is achieved. Our work provides an avenue for the realization of single-mode THz-QCLs with high output power and good beam quality

    Tunneling Between Parallel Two-Dimensional Electron Gases

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    The tunneling between two parallel two-dimensional electron gases has been investigated as a function of temperature TT, carrier density nn, and the applied perpendicular magnetic field BB. In zero magnetic field the equilibrium resonant lineshape is Lorentzian, reflecting the Lorentzian form of the spectral functions within each layer. From the width of the tunneling resonance the lifetime of the electrons within a 2DEG has been measured as a function of nn and TT, giving information about the density dependence of the electron-impurity scattering and the temperature dependence of the electron-electron scattering. In a magnetic field there is a general suppression of equilibrium tunneling for fields above B=0.6B=0.6 T. A gap in the tunneling density of states has been measured over a wide range of magnetic fields and filling factors, and various theoretical predictions have been examined. In a strong magnetic field, when there is only one partially filled Landau level in each layer, the temperature dependence of the conductance characteristics has been modeled with a double-Gaussian spectral density.Comment: LaTeX requires REVTeX macros. Eighteen pages. Fourteen postscript figures are included. (All figures have been bitmapped to save space. The original can be requested by email from [email protected]). Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Astrometry and geodesy with radio interferometry: experiments, models, results

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    Summarizes current status of radio interferometry at radio frequencies between Earth-based receivers, for astrometric and geodetic applications. Emphasizes theoretical models of VLBI observables that are required to extract results at the present accuracy levels of 1 cm and 1 nanoradian. Highlights the achievements of VLBI during the past two decades in reference frames, Earth orientation, atmospheric effects on microwave propagation, and relativity.Comment: 83 pages, 19 Postscript figures. To be published in Rev. Mod. Phys., Vol. 70, Oct. 199

    Strategies to Control a Common Carp Population by Pulsed Commercial Harvest

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    Commercial fisheries are commonly used to manage nuisance fishes in freshwater systems, but such efforts are often unsuccessful. Strategies for successfully controlling a nuisance population of common carpCyprinus carpio by pulsed commercial harvest were evaluated with a combination of (1) field sampling, (2) population estimation and CPUE indexing, and (3) simulation using an exponential semidiscrete biomass dynamics model (SDBDM). The range of annual fishing mortalities (F) that resulted in successful control (F= 0.244–0.265) was narrow. Common carp biomass dynamics were sensitive to unintentional underharvest due to high rates of surplus production and a biomass doubling time of 2.7 years. Simulations indicated that biomanipulation never achieved successful control unless supplemental fishing mortality was imposed. Harvest of a majority of annual production was required to achieve successful control, as indicated by the ecotrophic coefficient (EC). Readily available biomass data and tools such as SDBDMs and ECs can be used in an adaptive management framework to successfully control common carp and other nuisance fishes by pulsed commercial fishing

    On-chip picosecond pulse detection and generation using graphene photoconductive switches

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    We report on the use of graphene for room temperature on-chip detection and generation of pulsed terahertz (THz) frequency radiation, exploiting the fast carrier dynamics of light-generated hot carriers, and compare our results with conventional low-temperature-grown gallium arsenide (LT-GaAs) photoconductive (PC) switches. Coupling of picosecond-duration pulses from a biased graphene PC switch into Goubau line waveguides is also demonstrated. A Drude transport model based on the transient photoconductance of graphene is used to describe the mechanism for both detection and generation of THz radiation

    Non-universality of scaling exponents in quantum Hall transitions

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    We have investigated experimentally the scaling behaviour of quantum Hall transitions in GaAs/AlGaAs heterostructures of a range of mobility, carrier concentration, and spacer layer width. All three critical scaling exponents γ, κ and p were determined independently for each sample. We measure the localization length exponent to be γ ≈ 2.3, in good agreement with expected predictions from scaling theory, but κ and p are found to possess non-universal values. Results obtained for κ range from κ = 0.16 ± 0.02 to κ = 0.67 ± 0.02, and are found to be Landau level (LL) dependent, whereas p is found to decrease with increasing sample mobility. Our results demonstrate the existence of two transport regimes in the LL conductivity peak; universality is found within the quantum coherent transport regime present in the tails of the conductivity peak, but is absent within the classical transport regime found close to the critical point at the centre of the conductivity peak. We explain these results using a percolation model and show that the critical scaling exponent depends on certain important length scales that correspond to the microscopic description of electron transport in the bulk of a two-dimensional electron system
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