12,318 research outputs found
The potential for slug control with ferric phosphate
Slug and snail damage, especially on young plants can mean serious economic loss for growers. Organic growers have in the past had few, if any, effective products to use for their control. Now ferric phosphate has recently gained organic status from the Organic Farmers and Growers organisation. Its unique mode of action, environmental profile and effectiveness against a range of slug and snail species will make this a first choice for all organic growers. The eventual breakdown components iron and phosphate, will contribute to the crop’s nutrient supply
A child rights impact assessment of the impact of welfare reform on children in Northern Ireland
Labour Market Status and the Wage Position of the Low-Skilled: The Role of Institutions and of Demand and Supply. Evidence from the Adult Literacy Survey.
Weak non-linear surface charging effects in electrolytic films
A simple model of soap films with nonionic surfactants stabilized by added
electrolyte is studied. The model exhibits charge regularization due to the
incorporation of a physical mechanism responsible for the formation of a
surface charge. We use a Gaussian field theory in the film but the full
non-linear surface terms which are then treated at a one-loop level by
calculating the mean-field Poisson-Boltzmann solution and then the fluctuations
about this solution. We carefully analyze the renormalization of the theory and
apply it to a triple layer model for a thin film with Stern layer of thickness
. For this model we give expressions for the surface charge and
the disjoining pressure and show their dependence on the parameters.
The influence of image charges naturally arise in the formalism and we show
that predictions depend strongly on because of their effects. In
particular, we show that the surface charge vanishes as the film thickness . The fluctuation terms about this class of theories exhibit a
Casimir-like attraction across the film and although this attraction is well
known to be negligible compared with the mean-field component for thick films
in the presence of electrolyte, in the model studied here these fluctuations
also affect the surface charge regulation leading to a fluctuation component in
the disjoining pressure which has the same behavior as the mean-field component
even for large film thickness.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, latex sourc
The development and potential of the biological insecticide granulovirus on codling moth
Cydia pomonella granulovirus is being developed for the UK market and offers opportunities for orchard growers to develop reduced pesticide residue programmes when targeting codling moth control
The extra-curricular activities in the program of a high school
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
Boundary Effects in the One Dimensional Coulomb Gas
We use the functional integral technique of Edwards and Lenard to solve the
statistical mechanics of a one dimensional Coulomb gas with boundary
interactions leading to surface charging. The theory examined is a one
dimensional model for a soap film. Finite size effects and the phenomenon of
charge regulation are studied. We also discuss the pressure of disjunction for
such a film. Even in the absence of boundary potentials we find that the
presence of a surface affects the physics in finite systems. In general we find
that in the presence of a boundary potential the long distance disjoining
pressure is positive but may become negative at closer interplane separations.
This is in accordance with the attractive forces seen at close separations in
colloidal and soap film experiments and with three dimensional calculations
beyond mean field. Finally our exact results are compared with the predictions
of the corresponding Poisson-Boltzmann theory which is often used in the
context of colloidal and thin liquid film systems.Comment: 28 pages, LATEX2e, 11 figures, uses styles[12pt] resubmission because
of minor corrections to tex
The pros and comms of gene sequencing
Full-gene sequencing undoubtedly comes with its pluses and its minuses. In this article, the authors aim to weigh up the pros and cons not only from the point of view of the patient but also in view of the doctor's possible perspective. Either party may be for or against it for a variety of reasons - for example, a fear of knowing too much on the part of the patient, and concerns about possible over-treatment on the part of the healthcare professional. One thing is certain: the possibility of full-gene sequencing is here and here to stay. At the very least, doctors need to make patients aware of their options, while offering balanced advice
A comparison of limited-stretch models of rubber elasticity
In this paper we describe various limited-stretch models of non-linear rubber elasticity, each dependent on only the first invariant of the left Cauchy-Green strain tensor and having only two independent material constants. The models are described as limited-stretch, or restricted elastic, because the strain energy and stress response become infinite at a finite value of the first invariant. These models describe well the limited stretch of the polymer chains of which rubber is composed. We discuss Gent's model which is the simplest limited-stretch model and agrees well with experiment. Various statistical models are then described: the one-chain, three-chain, four-chain and Arruda-Boyce eight-chain models, all of which involve the inverse Langevin function. A numerical comparison between the three-chain and eight-chain models is provided. Next, we compare various models which involve approximations to the inverse Langevin function with the exact inverse Langevin function of the eight-chain model. A new approximate model is proposed that is as simple as Cohen's original model but significantly more accurate. We show that effectively the eight-chain model may be regarded as a linear combination of the neo-Hookean and Gent models. Treloar's model is shown to have about half the percentage error of our new model but it is much more complicated. For completeness a modified Treloar model is introduced but this is only slightly more accurate than Treloar's original model. For the deformations of uniaxial tension, biaxial tension, pure shear and simple shear we compare the accuracy of these models, and that of Puso, with the eight-chain model by means of graphs and a table. Our approximations compare extremely well with models frequently used and described in the literature, having the smallest mean percentage error over most of the range of the argument
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