Objective: To assess the effects of electromagnetic (EM) field modification by use of Nufield EM field modification (NEFM) units on egg-laying hens in commercial flocks as indicated by production measures, including hen-day mortality rate (HDMR) and eggs per hen housed (EHH).
Animals: 16 commercial flocks of egg-laying hens.
Procedure: 5 caged commercial table egg layer flocks (Single Comb White Leghorns) successively housed at the same location during a 6-year period were exposed to NEFM.
Rev Palaeobot Palynol
October 2000
A restudy of the Ordovician (Arenig-Llanvirn) acritarch taxa Tranvikium polygonale Tynni, 1982, and Ampullula suetica Righi, 1991, indicates that they represent extremes in a single morphological plexus. At one extreme are forms with a polar 'excystment' aperture (closed by an operculum or two opercular pieces) and a smaller opening (plugged or open) at the opposite pole; at the other are forms lacking a polar aperture but having, at the opposite pole, a tube open distally and plugged or open basally. New morphological terms for these structures are proposed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn analytical method is described for obtaining the precise location of an absorption line and the pressure broadening coefficients due to self-broadening or foreign gas broadening from experimental measurements using a laser operating on a single line near the absorption line. These absorption line characteristics are obtained from the pressure dependence of the transmittance of the laser radiation for the gas of interest, the analysis involving a least squares fit to a family of Lorentz curves. The method includes a computer search for the region of best fit to the Lorentz profile and provides both the values of and errors in the above coefficients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis paper presents an experimental study of time-resolved gain in H(2)O, H(2)O-He, and H(2)O-H(2) mixtures as a function of gas composition and excitation current. Utilizing the fast rising (~70 nsec) pulse from H(2)O-He laser as a probe, the amplifier gain was measured with a time resolution of about 100 nsec. The gain was observed to follow the excitation current pulse rather closely indicating that population inversion was established in times less than 100 nsec.
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