2,931 research outputs found
Effect of daily restriction and age at initiation of a skip-a-day program for young broiler breeders.
Two experiments were conducted with Cobb feather sex broiler breeders comparing skip-a-day (SAD) feeding programs which began at either 2, 4, 6 or 8 wk of age. A fifth program, daily restriction started at 2 wk of age, was also compared. Chicks hatched in December and July, respectively, in Experiments 1 and 2 were exposed to natural daylight until 20 wk of age. All birds were fed ad libitum until the respective restriction programs began. All grower programs terminated at 20 wk of age. A breeder diet was given daily after 20 wk. Males and females were grown together. Sexual maturity was reached earlier in the 2-wk restriction groups (2-wi SAD in Experiment 1 and the 2-wk daily restriction in both experiments) than in the 8-wk SAD group. Egg production in Experiment 1 was also improved by the early restriction. Fertility and hatchability were not significantly affected by treatment. Based on the results of these experiments a SAD program beginning at 2 wk of age was as good as or better than one initiated at later ages. The 2-wk daily restriction program was equivalent to the 2-wk SAD program
Lighting of end of lay broiler breeders: fluorescent versus incandescent.
An 18-week experiment was conducted to investigate the effects of changing from incandescent to fluorescent lighting on egg production, egg weight, fertility, and hatchability of end of lay broiler breeders housed in an open-sided house. Forty-eight-week-old Cobb feather-sexed broiler breeders were housed, 30 females and 3 males per pen, in a total of 28 pens. Incandescent lights had been used previously, so pens were randomly assigned to either fluorescent or incandescent lights giving 20 lx of light at bird level. Lights used were 60 W incandescent and 22 W fluorescent cool-white circular. Body weight and egg production were measured weekly, and fertility, hatchability, and egg weight were determined monthly from 48 to 65 weeks of age. No significant treatment effects were observed on body weight, fertility, hatchability, or egg weight. A significant reduction in egg production was observed with fluorescent lighting from Weeks 58 to 65. The reduced egg production indicated it was detrimental to change from incandescent to cool-white fluorescent lighting
The impact of multifactorial factors on the Quality of Life of Behçet's patients over 10 years.
OBJECTIVE: This study analyses the 2020 survey and reviews the 2009, 2014 surveys to ascertain which Behçet's symptoms, personal and family status, patients' lifestyle, and work-related outcomes impacted on Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQoL). METHODS: Four hundred and fifty-nine Behçet's patients submitted an online survey/questionnaire. Patients provided information on socio-demographic characteristics, disease duration, historical and current symptoms, systemic and topical medication, health related lifestyle, work-related outcomes regarding employment status and claiming benefits and Quality of Life (QoL) measured by EQ-5D index. RESULTS: Four hundred and nineteen patients met the inclusion criteria, and 371 who had full data (Males: Females: Others = 84:285:2, mean-age = 41.1 ± 23.3:38 ± 13.2:40 ± 5). The main symptoms associated with patients seeking medical care were mouth ulcers 30% and genital ulcers 23%, joint 14%, and eye problems 9%. The EQ-5D index for 2009, 2014, 2020 was (mean ± SD); 0.47 ± 0.38, 0.42 ± 0.37, 0.34 ± 0.40, respectively, p < 0.05. 2020 patients had the worst values of the five domains compared to 2014 and 2009. Interestingly, mobility value was the same over the 10 years of monitoring patients. Behçet's syndrome (BS) symptoms that had significant negative impact on QoL were; 2009 (arthropathy, neurological problems, pathergy reaction, and stomach/bowel symptoms), 2014 (arthropathy, headache, neurological problems, pathergy reaction, and skin lesions), 2020 (arthropathy, neurological problems, and stomach/bowel symptoms). The 2014 and 2020 surveys reported the QoL is significantly better in patients on immunosuppressant, who did sport, continued in employment and not receiving benefits. CONCLUSION: Joints and neurological symptoms are the main symptoms which had negative impact on BS patients over the 10 years, sociodemographic (gender, age, marital, and education status), lifestyle (medication, cannabis, drinking wine, and regular exercise), employment status (employee and no career change), and accessing benefits (never claim benefit) had significant influence on patients' HRQoL
The Spectrum of the CMB Anisotropy from the Combined COBE FIRAS and DMR Observations
We analyze the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) anisotropy data from the
independent COBE FIRAS and DMR observations. We extract the frequency spectrum
of the FIRAS signal that has the spatial distribution seen by DMR and show that
it is consistent with CMB temperature fluctuations in the radiation well into
the Wien region of the spectrum. Conversely, we form a map of the Planckian
component of the sky temperature from FIRAS and show that it correlates with
the DMR anisotropy map. The rms fluctuations at angular scales of 7 degrees are
48 \pm 14 uK for the FIRAS data compared with 35 \pm 2 uK for the DMR data and
31 \pm 6 uK for the correlated combination (1 sigma uncertainties). The
consistency of these data, from very different instruments with very different
observing strategies, provide compelling support for the interpretation that
the signal seen by DMR is, in fact, temperature anisotropy of cosmological
origin. The data also limit rms fluctuations in the Compton y parameter,
observable via the Sunyaev- Zel'dovich effect, to Delta_y < 3 x 10^{-6} (95%
CL) on 7 degree angular scales.Comment: 15 pages, Latex (AASv4 macro) including 3 Postscript figures, to
appear in ApJ, vol. 486, Sept 10, 199
Planary Symmetric Static Worlds with Massless Scalar Sources
Motivated by the recent wave of investigations on plane domain wall
spacetimes with nontrivial topologies, the present paper deals with (probably)
the most simple source field configuration which can generate a spatially
planary symmetric static spacetime, namely a minimally coupled massless scalar
field that depends only upon a spacelike coordinate, . It is shown that the
corresponding exact solutions are
algebraically special, type , and represent globally
pathologic spacetimes with a - group of motion acting on orbits. In spite of the model simplicity, these
- generated worlds possess naked timelike singularities (reached within
a finite universal time by normal non-spacelike geodesics), are completely free
of Cauchy surfaces and contain into the - leveled sections points which can
not be jointed by - trajectories images of oblique non-spacelike
geodesics. Finally, we comment on the possibility of deriving from two other physically interesting ^^ ^^ -
generated'' spacetimes, by appropiate jonction conditions in the -
plane.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX format, figures not include
Constraints on radiative decay of the 17-keV neutrino from COBE Measurements
It is shown that, for a nontrivial radiative decay channel of the 17-keV
neutrino, the photons would distort the microwave background radiation through
ionization of the universe. The constraint on the branching ratio of such
decays from COBE measurements is found to be more stringent than that from
other considerations. The limit on the branching ratio in terms of the Compton
parameter is for an
universe.Comment: 7 pages. (figures will be sent on request) (To appear in Phys. Rev.
D.
Scaling law in the Standard Map critical function. Interpolating hamiltonian and frequency map analysis
We study the behaviour of the Standard map critical function in a
neighbourhood of a fixed resonance, that is the scaling law at the fixed
resonance. We prove that for the fundamental resonance the scaling law is
linear. We show numerical evidence that for the other resonances , , and and relatively prime, the scaling law follows a
power--law with exponent .Comment: AMS-LaTeX2e, 29 pages with 8 figures, submitted to Nonlinearit
Automated Classification of Airborne Laser Scanning Point Clouds
Making sense of the physical world has always been at the core of mapping. Up
until recently, this has always dependent on using the human eye. Using
airborne lasers, it has become possible to quickly "see" more of the world in
many more dimensions. The resulting enormous point clouds serve as data sources
for applications far beyond the original mapping purposes ranging from flooding
protection and forestry to threat mitigation. In order to process these large
quantities of data, novel methods are required. In this contribution, we
develop models to automatically classify ground cover and soil types. Using the
logic of machine learning, we critically review the advantages of supervised
and unsupervised methods. Focusing on decision trees, we improve accuracy by
including beam vector components and using a genetic algorithm. We find that
our approach delivers consistently high quality classifications, surpassing
classical methods
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