4,412 research outputs found
Success Strategies Being Implemented in Fresh Milk Supply Chains
Deregulation of the Australian dairy industry, and ensuing supermarket strategies are transforming the fresh milk supply chains. Factors such as increasing consumer awareness, concerns about food safety and environment, innovation, supply chain integration and rationalisation of supply base are adding momentum to this transformation. Milk processors in response to changing market expectations are getting proactive in their relationship with retailers across all aspects of business, innovating to generate sufficient returns from proprietary brands and strategically orienting themselves to develop a mixed customer portfolio and appropriate management structures to service that portfolio. Milk producers are expanding businesses to achieve production and cost efficiencies and strengthening contractual relationships on input and output side for a greater security.Livestock Production/Industries,
Single-cycle gap soliton in a subwavelength structure
We demonstrate that a single sub-cycle optical pulse can be generated when a
pulse with a few optical cycles penetrates through resonant two-level dense
media with a subwavelength structure. The single-cycle gap soliton phenomenon
in the full Maxwell-Bloch equations without the frame of slowly varying
envelope and rotating wave approximations is observed. Our study shows that the
subwavelength structure can be used to suppress the frequency shift caused by
intrapulse four-wave mixing in continuous media and supports the formation of
single-cycle gap solitons even in the case when the structure period breaks the
Bragg condition. This suggests a way toward shortening high-intensity laser
fields to few- and even single-cycle pulse durations.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figure
Trends In Australian Fresh Milk Supply Chains
The completion of the dairy industry deregulation process in June 2000 is transforming the fresh milk and fresh milk products supply chains in Australia. This transformation is set in an environment where markets are getting more complex and competitive, consumers more discerning and conscious about food safety and public policy is more focused on environment related issues. Supply chains are becoming more integrated, and innovation in product, process and supply chains is revolutionising the way products are being produced, distributed and marketed (Fearne & David 1999). This paper is based on research which, following supply chain management literature, identifies the success strategies in the dairy industry supply chains in Australia. The enquiry seeks to understand the nature and shape of supply chains and the exchange relationship between supply and value chains. The fieldwork for the research involved semi-structured interviews at middle to senior management level in the retail, processing, production and input market of the dairy industry supply chains. The data was managed and analysed using software NVivo ver. 2.0, which assists in identifying major themes and relationships between concepts in data
Student experiences of virtual reality - a case study in learning special relativity
We present a study of student learning through the use of virtual reality. A
software package is used to introduce concepts of special relativity to
students in a game-like environment where users experience the effects of
travelling at near light speeds. From this new perspective, space and time are
significantly different to that experienced in everyday life. The study
explores how students have worked with this environment and how these students
have used this experience in their study of special relativity. A mixed method
approach has been taken to evaluate the outcomes of separate implementations of
the package at two universities. Students found the simulation to be a positive
learning experience and described the subject area as being less abstract after
its use. Also, students were more capable of correctly answering concept
questions relating to special relativity, and a small but measurable
improvement was observed in the final exam
Success Strategies Being Implemented In Fresh Milk Supply Chains
Deregulation of the Australian dairy industry, and ensuing supermarket strategies are transforming the fresh milk supply chains. Factors such as increasing consumer awareness, concerns about food safety and environment, innovation, supply chain integration and rationalisation of supply base are adding momentum to this transformation. Milk processors in response to changing market expectations are getting proactive in their relationship with retailers across all aspects of business, innovating to generate sufficient returns from proprietary brands and strategically orienting themselves to develop a mixed customer portfolio and appropriate management structures to service that portfolio. Milk producers are expanding businesses to achieve production and cost efficiencies and strengthening contractual relationships on input and output side for a greater security
Phonon band structures of three-dimensional pentamode metamaterials
Three-dimensional pentamode metamaterials are artificial solids that
approximately behave like liquids, which have vanishing shear modulus.
Pentamodes have recently become experimental reality. Here, we calculate their
phonon band structures for various parameters. Consistent with static continuum
mechanics, we find that compression and shear waves exhibit phase velocities
that can realistically be different by more than one order of magnitude.
Interestingly, we also find frequency intervals with more than two octaves
bandwidth in which pure single-mode behavior is obtained. Herein, exclusively
compression waves exist due to a complete three-dimensional band gap for shear
waves and, hence, no coupling to shear modes is possible. Such single-mode
behavior might, e.g., be interesting for transformation-elastodynamics
architectures.Comment: 5 figure
Numerical calculations of effective elastic properties of two cellular structures
Young's moduli of regular two-dimensional truss-like and eye-shape-like
structures are simulated by using the finite element method. The structures are
the idealizations of soft polymeric materials used in the electret
applications. In the simulations size of the representative smallest units are
varied, which changes the dimensions of the cell-walls in the structures. A
power-law expression with a quadratic as the exponential term is proposed for
the effective Young's moduli of the systems as a function of the solid volume
fraction. The data is divided into three regions with respect to the volume
fraction; low, intermediate and high concentrations. The parameters of the
proposed power-law expression in each region are later represented as a
function of the structural parameters, unit-cell dimensions. The presented
expression can be used to predict structure/property relationship in materials
with similar cellular structures. It is observed that the structures with
volume fractions of solid higher than 0.15 exhibit the importance of the
cell-wall thickness contribution in the elastic properties. The cell-wall
thickness is the most significant factor to predict the effective Young's
modulus of regular cellular structures at high volume fractions of solid. At
lower concentrations of solid, eye-like structure yields lower Young's modulus
than the truss-like structure with the similar anisotropy. Comparison of the
numerical results with those of experimental data of poly(propylene) show good
aggreement regarding the influence of cell-wall thickness on elastic properties
of thin cellular films.Comment: 7 figures and 2 table
Magnetic polarons and magnetoresistance in EuB6
EuB6 is a low carrier density ferromagnet which exhibits large
magnetoresistance, positive or negative depending on temperature. The formation
of magnetic polarons just above the magnetic critical temperature has been
suggested by spin-flip Raman scattering experiments. We find that the fact that
EuB6 is a semimetal has to be taken into account to explain its electronic
properties, including magnetic polarons and magnetoresistance.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figur
Understanding the dynamics of photoionization-induced solitons in gas-filled hollow-core photonic crystal fibers
We present in detail our developed model [Saleh et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 107]
that governs pulse propagation in hollow-core photonic crystal fibers filled by
an ionizing gas. By using perturbative methods, we find that the
photoionization process induces the opposite phenomenon of the well-known Raman
self-frequency red-shift of solitons in solid-core glass fibers, as was
recently experimentally demonstrated [Hoelzer et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 107].
This process is only limited by ionization losses, and leads to a constant
acceleration of solitons in the time domain with a continuous blue-shift in the
frequency domain. By applying the Gagnon-B\'{e}langer gauge transformation,
multi-peak `inverted gravity-like' solitary waves are predicted. We also
demonstrate that the pulse dynamics shows the ejection of solitons during
propagation in such fibers, analogous to what happens in conventional
solid-core fibers. Moreover, unconventional long-range non-local interactions
between temporally distant solitons, unique of gas plasma systems, are
predicted and studied. Finally, the effects of higher-order dispersion
coefficients and the shock operator on the pulse dynamics are investigated,
showing that the resonant radiation in the UV [Joly et al., Phys. Rev. Lett.
106] can be improved via plasma formation.Comment: 9 pages, 10 figure
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