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A field house for Kansas State CollegeBrooks, Raymond Usher January 1932 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy).
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Geological Data Assessment for Reservoir Characterization and Modeling in Siloam field, Clay County, Mississippi USAWahidi, Mahnaz 10 August 2018 (has links)
This study is focused on determination of the significant reservoir rocks in the Siloam field, Clay County, in the Black Warrior Basin of northeastern Mississippi. The southwestern margin of the Black Warrior Basin has not been studied in great detail. The productive units of the Siloam field were identified as the Mississippian Rea and Carter sands. Thickness was determined using cross sections and isopach maps of Millerella, Carter, Sanders, and Abernathy sands. Isopach maps show thickness varied, which may indicate shifting deposition. Surface contour maps show that units dip consistently to the west or south. Thin sections and SEM images show very fine-grained sandstone, siltstone, shale, with common illite clay. Elemental maps show he field of view broken down by single elements and confirm the presence of quartz, clay minerals, pyrite, and calcite. The data generated by this study are significant Cbecause they can be used for reservoir modeling for Enhanced Oil Recovery (EOR).
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Model of Eutectic CrystallizationDrolet, François January 1995 (has links)
Note:
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Methods of checking and competition in relation to comparative crop tests.Cunningham, Howe S. January 1924 (has links)
No description available.
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The relation of plot yields in one year with those of succeeding years.Liebenberg, Louis C. January 1925 (has links)
No description available.
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Methods of experimentation with field crops with special reference to the duration of the experiments.Tinney, Benjamin F. January 1924 (has links)
No description available.
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Effects of vine architecture on water use, microclimate, fruit composition, and yield of Vitis vinifera L. 'Petite Sirah' grapevines.Morsi, Taher Hussein. January 1991 (has links)
Effects of trellising on water use, absorption of photosynthetically active radiation (PAR, 400 to 700 nm wavelength) by foliage and potentially by fruit, fruit composition, and yield were studied in 1988 under semi-arid conditions on field-grown Vitis vinifera L. 'Petite Sirah' grapevines in a mature vineyard. The positioning of shoots on trellises resulted in canopies that were (1) positioned vertically (vertical canopy), (2) positioned in a "V" pattern with sides inclined 60° from horizontal (inclined canopy), and (3) inclined toward the vineyard floor (standard canopy). Seasonal water use values determined from neutron scattering data were 393 ± 61, 554 ± 73, and 455 ± 57 mm for the standard, vertical and inclined canopies, respectively. On average, about 50% of seasonal water consumption occurred between fruit set and filling stages for each type of canopy. Average crop factors (ratio of actual to reference crop evapotranspiration) of 0.383, 0.540 and 0.444 were for the period bud burst to harvest for standard, vertical and inclined canopy systems, respectively. The diurnal water use patterns of the three trellising canopies were very similar when measured by either the heat pulse technique or by porometer. The average daily heat pulse velocity (HPV) for selected vertical, inclined and standard canopies for 6 days were 8.77, 7.58 and 6.85 cm h⁻¹, respectively. The HPV technique indicated that the average daily water use of the whole plant was 0.227, 0.192 and 0.137 kg/m² leaf area/d for standard, vertical and inclined canopies, respectively. The daily average transpiration rates as measured by the HPV technique were 32, 31, and 25% higher than the average transpiration rates estimated from porometer data for standard, vertical and inclined canopies, respectively. Stomatal conductances of the vertical and inclined canopies were 20 and 40%, respectively, below that of standard canopy. PAR absorption by foliage during mid-day was highest in the standard trellis, and lowest in the inclined trellis. PAR potentially available for absorption by fruits was lowest in the standard trellis, and highest in the inclined trellis. In both inclined and vertical canopies, the average sunfleck values were 26%, but was only 2% in the standard canopy. Analysis of fruit composition at harvest revealed that total dissolved solids (°Brix) was significantly higher in the inclined trellis than for the vertical trellis or the standard trellis. The inclined trellis resulted in the highest alcohol content of wine. Per vine yields did not differ significantly among the three trellis systems. Overall, the standard trellis was optimum because grapevines consumed less water and produced a shading which protected the fruit from direct solar radiation.
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Anomalous dimensions for scalar operators in ABJM theoryKreyfelt, Rocky 22 January 2016 (has links)
A dissertation presented
to
The Faculty of Science
University of the Witwatersrand
Johannesburg
in ful lment of the requirements
for the degree of
Master of Science
June 2015 / At nite N, the number of restricted Schur polynomials is greater than, or equal to the
number of generalized restricted Schur polynomials. In this dissertation we study this dis-
crepancy and explain its origin. We conclude that, for quiver gauge theories, in general, the
generalized restricted Shur polynomials correctly account for the complete set of nite N
constraints and they provide a basis, while the restricted Schur polynomials only account
for a subset of the nite N constraints and are thus overcomplete. We identify several
situations in which the restricted Schur polynomials do in fact account for the complete set
of nite N constraints. In these situations the restricted Schur polynomials and the gen-
eralized restricted Schur polynomials both provide good bases for the quiver gauge theory.
Further, we demonstrate situations in which the generalized restricted Schur polynomials
reduce to the restricted Schur polynomials and use these results to study the anomalous
dimensions for scalar operators in ABJM theory in the SU(2) sector. The operators we
consider have a classical dimension that grows as N in the large N limit. Consequently,
the large N limit is not captured by summing planar diagrams { non-planar contributions
have to be included. We nd that the mixing matrix at two-loop order is diagonalized
using a double coset ansatz, reducing it to the Hamiltonian of a set of decoupled oscilla-
tors. The spectrum of anomalous dimensions, when interpreted in the dual gravity theory,
shows that the energy of the
uctuations of the corresponding giant graviton is dependent
on the size of the giant. The rst subleading corrections to the large N limit are also
considered. These subleading corrections to the dilatation operator do not commute with
the leading terms, indicating that integrability probably does not survive beyond the large
N limit.
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Effect of thickness of epilayer of GaN on nature of band bending by contactless electroreflectance and photoreflectanceChiang, Lieh-Kuan 29 June 2007 (has links)
The wurtzite GaN has either Ga or N polarity. The direction of polarization, hence it¡¦s associated polarization-induced electric fields (Fp), is determined by the polarity of the sample. In the present work, we prepared both N-face polarity and n-type doping of GaN with thicknesses are 1.1£gm and 70nm. Photoreflectacne (PR) and contactless electroreflectance (CER) were used in combination to study the nature of the surface band bending which was found to be determined by the type of doping for the thick sample and by the polarity for the polarity for the thin sample. This is in agreement with a theoretical calculation by Poisson-Schrödinger solver. Hence, CER can determine the polarity of GaN film as long as the sample is thin enough of the Fp to become dominant in the surface region.
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Investigation of the effects of process variables on the properties of europium-doped yttrium oxide phosphorCooper, Joseph Andrew 05 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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