4,232 research outputs found
Extended Water Quality Monitoring of the Lincoln Lake Watershed
For seven years, the Lincoln Lake (Moores Creek and Beatty Branch) watershed was monitored for improvements in water quality resulting from agricultural best management practices (BMP) implemented to reduce nutrient transport. During the first three years of monitoring (1991 to 1994), nitrogen transport declined significantly (Edwards et al., 1994, 1996, and 1997) under both base and storm flow conditions. This decline in nitrogen transport was again observed in the three-year period following 1994 (Vendrell et al. 1998). This monitoring effort has demonstrated that water quality bas improved in the Lincoln Lake watershed. However, since the nitrogen transport continued to decline and there was some indication that phosphorus may begin to decline, monitoring was extended for another year (1998)
A radiological assessment of nuclear power and propulsion operations near Space Station Freedom
Scenarios were identified which involve the use of nuclear power systems in the vicinity of Space Station Freedom (SSF) and their radiological impact on the SSF crew was quantified. Several of the developed scenarios relate to the use of SSF as an evolutionary transportation node for lunar and Mars missions. In particular, radiation doses delivered to SSF crew were calculated for both the launch and subsequent return of a Nuclear Electric Propulsion (NEP) cargo vehicle and a Nuclear Thermal Rocket (NTR) personnel vehicle to low earth orbit. The use of nuclear power on co-orbiting platforms and the storage and handling issues associated with radioisotope power systems were also explored as they relate to SSF. A central philosophy in these analyses was the utilization of a radiation dose budget, defined as the difference between recommended dose limits from all radiation sources and estimated doses received by crew members from natural space radiations. Consequently, for each scenario examined, the dose budget concept was used to identify and quantify constraints on operational parameters such as launch separation distances, returned vehicle parking distances, and reactor shutdown times prior to vehicle approach. The results indicate that realistic scenarios do not exist which would preclude the use of nuclear power sources in the vicinity of SSF. The radiation dose to the SSF crew can be maintained at safe levels solely by implementing proper and reasonable operating procedures
Goldstone-type fluctuations and their implications for the amorphous solid state
In sufficiently high spatial dimensions, the formation of the amorphous (i.e.
random) solid state of matter, e.g., upon sufficent crosslinking of a
macromolecular fluid, involves particle localization and, concommitantly, the
spontaneous breakdown of the (global, continuous) symmetry of translations.
Correspondingly, the state supports Goldstone-type low energy, long wave-length
fluctuations, the structure and implications of which are identified and
explored from the perspective of an appropriate replica field theory. In terms
of this replica perspective, the lost symmetry is that of relative translations
of the replicas; common translations remain as intact symmetries, reflecting
the statistical homogeneity of the amorphous solid state. What emerges is a
picture of the Goldstone-type fluctuations of the amorphous solid state as
shear deformations of an elastic medium, along with a derivation of the shear
modulus and the elastic free energy of the state. The consequences of these
fluctuations -- which dominate deep inside the amorphous solid state -- for the
order parameter of the amorphous solid state are ascertained and interpreted in
terms of their impact on the statistical distribution of localization lengths,
a central diagnostic of the the state. The correlations of these order
parameter fluctuations are also determined, and are shown to contain
information concerning further diagnostics of the amorphous solid state, such
as spatial correlations in the statistics of the localization characteristics.
Special attention is paid to the properties of the amorphous solid state in two
spatial dimensions, for which it is shown that Goldstone-type fluctuations
destroy particle localization, the order parameter is driven to zero, and
power-law order-parameter correlations hold.Comment: 20 pages, 3 figure
Assessment of the impacts of farmer participation in farmer research groups in the highlands of Kabale, Uganda
The African Highlands Initiative (AHI) is promoting community-based participatory research approaches using farmer research groups (FRG) to catalyse farmer participation in research, and to widen the impact of participatory research. However, there is dearth of systematic empirical studies that evaluates the quality of participation in FRGs, and their impacts. This report summarises the results of an empirical study that investigated the types of participatory research that occurred at the different stages of the research process, how farmer participation occurred, who participates in FRG, what are the factors that determined farmers' participation in FRG, and what criteria to use in monitoring and evaluating the performance of FRG. Results showed that the types of participation were more of functional consultative and collaborative types, but varied in the different stages of the research process as farmers were increasingly taking on more roles and responsibilities. Farmer participation in FRG tend to follow a "U" shaped curve, with high participation at the initial stages of the process, followed by dramatic decrease as many farmers drop out from the groups, and slow increases towards the end of the first seasons. Similarly, there was a significantly higher participation of male farmers at the beginning of the process, compared to women. However, as FRGs progressed, the proportion of men decreased while the relative proportion of women increased dramatically to reach about 67% of farmers in mixed groups, and 24% of the FRGs were women only. These results suggest that FRG proved to be a more effective mechanism to involve women and the resource-poor farmers in research who would otherwise be bypassed by conventional approaches. The results of the Logit regression model confirmed that the probability of participating in FRG was higher for women compared to men, and that there were no significant differences in wealth circumstances between FRG members and the rest of the community. We argue that FRG as an approach has a great potential for catalyzing the participation of farmers as partners in research and development activities. However, this requires significant support and personal commitment of researchers to broaden the scope of FRGs from a functional consultative type to a more collegial empowering type, and from variety evaluation to broader natural resources management research and other developmental issues
Upper White River BMP Implementation Project (NPS Final Report)
The project objective was to monitor agricultural best management practices implemented to minimize sediment, nutrient, and bacterial impact on water quality of the Upper White River watershed. The project targeted the primary agricultural causes of non-point source nutrient and bacterial pollution in three sub-basins of the White River in the Beaver Lake Watershed. Areas with high animal densities targeted high source areas. High source areas were treated with best management practices (BMP) in an effort to reduce the impact to the White River and Beaver Lake. The predominant BMP implemented was waste management, a component of the farm nutrient management plan
Transitions of tethered polymer chains: A simulation study with the bond fluctuation lattice model
A polymer chain tethered to a surface may be compact or extended, adsorbed or
desorbed, depending on interactions with the surface and the surrounding
solvent. This leads to a rich phase diagram with a variety of transitions. To
investigate these transitions we have performed Monte Carlo simulations of a
bond-fluctuation model with Wang-Landau and umbrella sampling algorithms in a
two-dimensional state space. The simulations' density of states results have
been evaluated for interaction parameters spanning the range from good to poor
solvent conditions and from repulsive to strongly attractive surfaces. In this
work, we describe the simulation method and present results for the overall
phase behavior and for some of the transitions. For adsorption in good solvent,
we compare with Metropolis Monte Carlo data for the same model and find good
agreement between the results. For the collapse transition, which occurs when
the solvent quality changes from good to poor, we consider two situations
corresponding to three-dimensional (hard surface) and two-dimensional (very
attractive surface) chain conformations, respectively. For the hard surface, we
compare tethered chains with free chains and find very similar behavior for
both types of chains. For the very attractive surface, we find the
two-dimensional chain collapse to be a two-step transition with the same
sequence of transitions that is observed for three-dimensional chains: a
coil-globule transition that changes the overall chain size is followed by a
local rearrangement of chain segments.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, to appear in J. Chem. Phy
Synthetic Galaxy Images and Spectra from the Illustris Simulation
We present our methods for generating a catalog of 7,000 synthetic images and
40,000 integrated spectra of redshift z = 0 galaxies from the Illustris
Simulation. The mock data products are produced by using stellar population
synthesis models to assign spectral energy distributions (SED) to each star
particle in the galaxies. The resulting synthetic images and integrated SEDs
therefore properly reflect the spatial distribution, stellar metallicity
distribution, and star formation history of the galaxies. From the synthetic
data products it is possible to produce monochromatic or color-composite
images, perform SED fitting, classify morphology, determine galaxy structural
properties, and evaluate the impacts of galaxy viewing angle. The main
contribution of this paper is to describe the production, format, and
composition of the image catalog that makes up the Illustris Simulation
Obsevatory. As a demonstration of this resource, we derive galactic stellar
mass estimates by applying the SED fitting code FAST to the synthetic galaxy
products, and compare the derived stellar masses against the true stellar
masses from the simulation. We find from this idealized experiment that
systematic biases exist in the photometrically derived stellar mass values that
can be reduced by using a fixed metallicity in conjunction with a minimum
galaxy age restriction.Comment: 21 pages, 17 figures, submitted to MNRAS. Comments welcom
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