1,139 research outputs found
Seasonal Occurrence and Distribution on Grapevine Roots of Eurhizococcus brasiliensis (Wille) (Hemiptera: Margarodidae) in Brazil
The ground pearl, Eurhizococcus brasiliensis (Wille) (Hemiptera: Margarodidae), is the most importantgrapevine pest in Brazil. Its seasonal occurrence and distribution on the roots of the different developmentstages were determined to allow better monitoring of this insect and better targeting of its vulnerable lifestages. Yellow cysts (after the first nymphal moult) showed the lowest density in October, followed by agradual increase towards August. White cysts (cysts with enclosed pre-pupal males or females) occurredfrom August to December, with a peak in November. Mobile females (adult females emerging from thewhite cysts) were found from August to December, with a peak in August. Parthenogenetic females thatremain in the ruptured white cysts for egg laying were present from August to April, with a peak inNovember. Mobile nymphs (first instar) were also found from August to April, with a peak in December.Yellow cysts were most abundant at depths of 0 to 25 cm. The horizontal survey showed that cysts occurredmostly on the trunk below the ground (trunk of the rootstock), and that almost all occurred in an area of20 cm width around the trunk. These results provide important information for better monitoring of thispest and to develop better methods for and timing of chemical control
Resolving infeasibilities in railway timetabling instances
One of the key assumptions of timetabling algorithms is that a solution exists that meets the pre-specified constraints, like driving times, transfer constraints and headway constraints.
If this assumption is satisfied, in most cases a timetable can be found rapidly.
Nowadays, railways are being used more intensively, which leads to a higher utilization of the network.
Due to this increased utilisation, capacity conflicts occur, so that no feasible solution to the timetabling models can be found, without making subtle but non-trivial changes to the initial input.
Resolving these conflicts is essential for railway companies with high utilization of infrastructure.
In this paper, we consider infeasible timetabling instances together with a list of allowed modifications of the constraints.
We iteratively identify local conflicts in these instances and resolve them by adapting some of the constraints, until there are no more conflicts.
The adaptations of the constraints are changes in the right-hand sides that we try to make as small as possible but that resolve the infeasibility.
We empirically show that our method can be improved by enriching the initial minimal conflicts found with more constraints.
In order to keep the problems tractable, an iterative procedure is used to find solutions to subproblems corresponding to conflicts in the complete timetabling instance.
In a case study on instances from the Dutch railway network, we show that these instances can be made feasible within a few minutes
Deformation of geometry and bifurcation of vortex rings
We construct a smooth family of Hamiltonian systems, together with a family
of group symmetries and momentum maps, for the dynamics of point vortices on
surfaces parametrized by the curvature of the surface. Equivariant bifurcations
in this family are characterized, whence the stability of the Thomson heptagon
is deduced without recourse to the Birkhoff normal form, which has hitherto
been a necessary tool.Comment: 26 page
Scaling Laws and Transient Times in 3He Induced Nuclear Fission
Fission excitation functions of compound nuclei in a mass region where shell
effects are expected to be very strong are shown to scale exactly according to
the transition state prediction once these shell effects are accounted for. The
fact that no deviations from the transition state method have been observed
within the experimentally investigated excitation energy regime allows one to
assign an upper limit for the transient time of 10 zs.Comment: 7 pages, TeX type, psfig, submitted to Phys. Rev. C, also available
at http://csa5.lbl.gov/moretto/ps/he3_paper.p
Critical scaling of the a.c. conductivity for a superconductor above Tc
We consider the effects of critical superconducting fluctuations on the
scaling of the linear a.c. conductivity, \sigma(\omega), of a bulk
superconductor slightly above Tc in zero applied magnetic field. The dynamic
renormalization- group method is applied to the relaxational time-dependent
Ginzburg-Landau model of superconductivity, with \sigma(\omega) calculated via
the Kubo formula to O(\epsilon^{2}) in the \epsilon = 4 - d expansion. The
critical dynamics are governed by the relaxational XY-model
renormalization-group fixed point. The scaling hypothesis \sigma(\omega) \sim
\xi^{2-d+z} S(\omega \xi^{z}) proposed by Fisher, Fisher and Huse is explicitly
verified, with the dynamic exponent z \approx 2.015, the value expected for the
d=3 relaxational XY-model. The universal scaling function S(y) is computed and
shown to deviate only slightly from its Gaussian form, calculated earlier. The
present theory is compared with experimental measurements of the a.c.
conductivity of YBCO near Tc, and the implications of this theory for such
experiments is discussed.Comment: 16 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev.
Non linear excess conductivity of BiSrCaCuO (n = 1,2), thin films
The suppression of excess conductivity with electric field is studied for
BiSrCaCuO ( = 1, 2) thin films. A pulse-probe
technique is used, which allows for an estimate of the sample temperature. The
characteristic electric field for fluctuations suppression is found well below
the expected value for all samples. For the material, a scaling of the
excess conductivity with electric field and temperature is obtained, similar to
the scaling under strong magnetic field
High-resolution velocity measurements on fully identified light nuclides produced in 56Fe + hydrogen and 56Fe + titanium systems
New experimental results on the kinematics and the residue production are
obtained for the interactions of 56Fe projectiles with protons and (nat)Ti
target nuclei, respectively, at theincident energy of 1 A GeV. The
titanium-induced reaction serves as a reference case for multifragmentation.
Already in the proton-induced reaction, the characteristics of the isotopic
cross sections and the shapes of the velocity spectra of light residues
indicate that high thermal energy is deposited in the system during the
collision. In the 56Fe+p system the high excitation seems to favour the onset
of fast break-up decays dominated by very asymmetric partitions of the
disassembling system. This configuration leads to the simultaneous formation of
one or more light fragments together with one heavy residue.Comment: 24 pages, 21 figures, 1 table, this work forms part of the PhD thesis
of P.Napolitani, background information on http://www-w2k.gsi.de/kschmidt
A versatile method for simulating pp -> ppe+e- and dp -> pne+e-p_spec reactions
We have developed a versatile software package for the simulation of
di-electron production in and collisions at SIS energies. Particular
attention has been paid to incorporate different descriptions of the Dalitz
decay via a common interface. In addition, suitable
parameterizations for the virtual bremsstrahlung process
based on one-boson exchange models have been implemented. Such simulation tools
with high flexibility of the framework are important for the interpretation of
the di-electron data taken with the HADES spectrometer and the design of
forthcoming experiments
The reporting of studies conducted using observational routinely collected health data statement for pharmacoepidemiology (RECORD-PE).
In pharmacoepidemiology, routinely
collected data from electronic health
records (including primary care
databases, registries, and
administrative healthcare claims) are a
resource for research evaluating the
real world effectiveness and safety of
medicines. Currently available
guidelines for the reporting of research
using non-randomised, routinely
collected data—specifically the
REporting of studies Conducted using
Observational Routinely collected
health Data (RECORD) and the
Strengthening the Reporting of
OBservational studies in Epidemiology
(STROBE) statements—do not
capture the complexity of
pharmacoepidemiological research.
We have therefore extended the
RECORD statement to include
reporting guidelines specific to
pharmacoepidemiological research
(RECORD-PE). This article includes the
RECORD-PE checklist (also available on
www.record-statement.org) and
explains each checklist item with
examples of good reporting. We
anticipate that increasing use of the
RECORD-PE guidelines by researchers
and endorsement and adherence by
journal editors will improve the
standards of reporting of
pharmacoepidemiological research
undertaken using routinely collected
data. This improved transparency will
benefit the research community,
patient care, and ultimately improve
public health
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