5,194 research outputs found
RESEARCH PRODUCTIVITY AND SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS RESEARCH AND TEACHING FACULTY IN THE SOUTHERN REGION
Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
ASSESSMENT OF JOURNALS USED BY AGRICULTURAL ECONOMISTS AT LAND-GRANT UNIVERSITIES
Agricultural economists at land-grant universities were surveyed to evaluate the use and assessment of professional journals. Faculty rankings of journals are reported along with faculty perceptions of changes in the quality of selected journals. Of 25 journals used by agricultural economics faculties, the Southern Journal of Agricultural Economics ranked first among regional agricultural economics journals in personal usefulness, subscriptions held, papers submitted, papers published, and participation in the editorial and review processes. The SJAE was also ranked as the second most improved journal among all journals evaluated.Teaching/Communication/Extension/Profession,
Scattering of a Baseball by a Bat
A ball can be hit faster if it is projected without spin but it can be hit
farther if it is projected with backspin. Measurements are presented in this
paper of the tradeoff between speed and spin for a baseball impacting a
baseball bat. The results are inconsistent with a collision model in which the
ball rolls off the bat and instead imply tangential compliance in the ball, the
bat, or both. If the results are extrapolated to the higher speeds that are
typical of the game of baseball, they suggest that a curveball can be hit with
greater backspin than a fastball, but by an amount that is less than would be
the case in the absence of tangential compliance.Comment: Accepted for publication in American Journal of Physic
Weeds, as ancillary hosts, pose disproportionate risk for virulent pathogen transfer to crops
BACKGROUND:
The outcome of the arms race between hosts and pathogens depends heavily on the interactions between their genetic diversity, population size and transmission ability. Theory predicts that genetically diverse hosts will select for higher virulence and more diverse pathogens than hosts with low genetic diversity. Cultivated hosts typically have lower genetic diversity and thus small effective population sizes, but can potentially harbour large pathogen population sizes. On the other hand, hosts, such as weeds, which are genetically more diverse and thus have larger effective population sizes, usually harbour smaller pathogen population sizes. Large pathogen population sizes may lead to more opportunities for mutation and hence more diverse pathogens. Here we test the predictions that pathogen neutral genetic diversity will increase with large pathogen population sizes and host diversity, whereas diversity under selection will increase with host diversity. We assessed and compared the diversity of a fungal pathogen, Rhynchosporium commune, on weedy barley grass (which have a large effective population size) and cultivated barley (low genetic diversity) using microsatellites, effector locus nip1 diversity and pathogen aggressiveness in order to assess the importance of weeds in the evolution of the neutral and selected diversity of pathogens.
RESULTS:
The findings indicated that the large barley acreage and low host diversity maintains higher pathogen neutral genetic diversity and lower linkage disequilibrium, while the weed maintains more pathotypes and higher virulence diversity at nip1. Strong evidence for more pathogen migration from barley grass to barley suggests transmission of virulence from barley grass to barley is common.
CONCLUSIONS:
Pathogen census population size is a better predictor for neutral genetic diversity than host diversity. Despite maintaining a smaller pathogen census population size, barley grass acts as an important ancillary host to R. commune, harbouring highly virulent pathogen types capable of transmission to barley. Management of disease on crops must therefore include management of weedy ancillary hosts, which may harbour disproportionate supplies of virulent pathogen strains.CCL was funded by the Grains Research Development Council (GRDC)
(ANU00012 and DAQ00187). The authors thank Hugh Wallwork (SARDI) for
assisting in some isolate collections and Megan Head (ANU) for statistical advice
Prolongations of Geometric Overdetermined Systems
We show that a wide class of geometrically defined overdetermined semilinear
partial differential equations may be explicitly prolonged to obtain closed
systems. As a consequence, in the case of linear equations we extract sharp
bounds on the dimension of the solution space.Comment: 22 pages. In the second version, a comparison with the classical
theory of prolongations was added. In this third version more details were
added concerning our construction and especially the use of Kostant's
computation of Lie algebra cohomolog
All-optical technique for modulation format conversion from on-off-keying to alternate-mark-inversion
We propose and numerically investigate for the first time a novel all-optical on-off-keying to alternate-mark-inversion modulation format converter operating at 40 Gbps employing a semiconductor optical amplifier (SOA)-based Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI). Wedemonstrate that this SOA-MZI operates as a pulse subtractor, and in the absence of patterning will produce perfectly phase inverted pulses regardless of the individual SOA phase excursions. We use a comprehensive computer model to illustrate the impact of patterning on the output phase modulation which is quantified through the definition of the phase compression factor
One-dimensional particle-in-cell simulation of a current-free double layer in an expanding plasma
A one-dimensional particle-in-cell code using Monte Carlo collision techniques (MCC/PIC) for both ions and electrons is used to simulate our earlier experimental results which showed that a current-free electric double layer (DL) can form in a plasma expanding along a diverging magnetic field. These results differ from previous experimental or simulation systems where the double layers are driven by a current or by imposed potential differences. Both experiment and simulation show accelerated ions with energies up to about 60 eV on the low potential side of the plasma. A new numerical method is added to the conventional PIC scheme to simulate inductive electron heating, as distinct from the more common capacitively driven simulations. A loss process is introduced along the axis of the simulation to mimic the density decrease along the axis of an expanding plasma in a diverging magnetic field. The results from the MCC/PIC presented here suggest that the expansion rate compared to the ionization frequency is a critical parameter for the existence of the DL. For the DL to be absolutely current free, the source wall has to be allowed to charge: having both ends of the simulation at the same potential always resulted in a current flow. Also, the effect of the neutral pressure and of the size of the diffusion chamber are investigated. Finally we show that this particular type of DL has electrons in Boltzmann equilibrium and that it creates a supersonic ion beam
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