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University of Arkansas, Fayetteville

1995

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Articles 1 - 25 of 25

Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics

Survival Of Fecal Contamination Indicator Organisms In Soil, K. A. Teague, D. C. Wolf, P. F. Vendrell Sep 1995

Survival Of Fecal Contamination Indicator Organisms In Soil, K. A. Teague, D. C. Wolf, P. F. Vendrell

Technical Reports

Soils amended with human or animal waste may result in pathogen contamination of ground and surface water. Because temperature has been shown to affect pathogen survival, two laboratory studies were conducted to evaluate the impact of extremes in temperature on bacterial and viral pathogen indicator die-off in soil. A Captina silt loam was amended with broiler litter (0.1 g/g dry soil), septic tank effluent, or Escherichia coli (ATCC 13706) culture (both at 0.04 and 0.1 mL/g dry soil in the two respective studies), incubated at 5 and 35°C, and analyzed over time to determine the number of fecal coliform, E. …


Animal Waste And The Land-Water Interface, H. Don Scott, Kenneth Steele Jul 1995

Animal Waste And The Land-Water Interface, H. Don Scott, Kenneth Steele

Technical Reports

This book presents abstracts of research studies conducted on animal wastes and the interface between application of animal waste to land. The abstracts were divided into sections which tend to organize summaries of research studies conducted on similar topics. These topics range from characteristics of animal waste to the effects of animal wastes on streams, lakes, wetlands, and watersheds, development of best management practices, nutrient management, edge of field losses and alternative uses. The posters will be available for viewing from 10:00 a.m. Monday, July 17, until 12:00 noon on Wednesday, July 19, 1995.


Spatial Distribution Of The Surface Geology And 1992 Land Use Of The Buffalo River Watershed, Kimberly R. Hofer, H. Don Scott, James M. Mckimmey Jul 1995

Spatial Distribution Of The Surface Geology And 1992 Land Use Of The Buffalo River Watershed, Kimberly R. Hofer, H. Don Scott, James M. Mckimmey

Technical Reports

The Buffalo River was established by Congress in 1972 as the first National River in the United States and is one of the few remaining free-flowing streams in Arkansas . The Buffalo River flows through the three major physiographic provinces of northern Arkansas, originating in the higher elevations of the Boston Mountains, and flowing generally northeastward to cut through the Springfield and Salem Plateaus. It drops from approximately 2000 feet in the headwaters to around 500 feet above sea level at its confluence with the White River in Marion County. The Buffalo River is considered to be one of Arkansas' …


Spatial And Temporal Analysis Of The Morphological And Land Use Characteristics Of The Buffalo River Watershed, H. Don Scott, Kimberly R. Hofer Jul 1995

Spatial And Temporal Analysis Of The Morphological And Land Use Characteristics Of The Buffalo River Watershed, H. Don Scott, Kimberly R. Hofer

Technical Reports

The Buffalo River was established by Congress iQ. 1972 as the first National River in the United States. The Buffalo River, which originates in the higher elevations of the Boston Mountains in Newton County, is one of the few remaining free-flowing streams in Arkansas. It is considered to be one of Arkansas' greatest natural treasures, and thus, there is strong interest in protecting it from anthropogenic influences. An initial characterization of the soil taxonomic units, watershed boundaries, topography and physiographic units in the Buffalo River Watershed was presented by Scott and Smith (1994). The spatial distribution of the geologic units …


Spatial And Temporal Analyses Of The Morphological And Land Use Characteristics Of The Buffalo River Watershed, H. Don Scott, Kimberly R. Hofer Jul 1995

Spatial And Temporal Analyses Of The Morphological And Land Use Characteristics Of The Buffalo River Watershed, H. Don Scott, Kimberly R. Hofer

Technical Reports

The Buffalo River was established by Congress it11972 as the first National River in the United States. The Buffalo River, which originates in the higher elevations of the Boston Mountains in Newton County, is one of the few remaining free-flowing streams in Arkansas. It is considered to be one of Arkansas' greatest natural treasures, and thus, there is strong interest in protecting it from anthropogenic influences. An initial characterization of the soil taxonomic units, watershed boundaries, topography and physiographic units in the Buffalo River Watershed was presented by Scott and Smith (1994). The spatial distribution of the geologic units in …


Arkansas Rice Research Studies 1994, B. R. Wells Jul 1995

Arkansas Rice Research Studies 1994, B. R. Wells

Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series

The research reports in this publication represent one year of results; therefore, these results should not be used as a basis for longterm recommendations. Several research reports in this publication dealing with soil fertility also appear in Arkansas Soil Fertility Studies 1994, Arkansas Agricultural Experiment Station Research Series 443. This duplication is the result of the overlap in research coverage between the two series and our effort to inform Arkansas rice producers of all the research being conducted with funds from the rice check-off.


Assessment Of Effectiveness Of Buffer Zones In Removing Impurities In Runoff From Areas Treated With Poultry Litter. Part Ii: Source Areas To Buffer Areas Ratio Effects, P. Srivastava, D. R. Edards, T. C. Daniel Jun 1995

Assessment Of Effectiveness Of Buffer Zones In Removing Impurities In Runoff From Areas Treated With Poultry Litter. Part Ii: Source Areas To Buffer Areas Ratio Effects, P. Srivastava, D. R. Edards, T. C. Daniel

Technical Reports

Vegetative filter strips (VFS) are known to reduce runoff losses of nutrients. solids. and other materials from land areas treated with fertilizers . Although VFS effectiveness is known to depend partially on the relative lengths of filter and pollutant source areas. there is little experimental evidence available to quantify this dependence. This is particularly the case when VFS are implemented down-slope of pasture areas treated with animal manures such as poultry litter. This study assessed the influences of pollutant source area (treated with poultry litter) and VFS lengths on VFS removal of total Kjeldahl nitrogen (TKN). ammonia nitrogen (NH3 -N …


Effects Of Zebra Mussel, Dreissena Polymorpha, Infestation On Lake Dardanelle Water Quality, Charles J. Gagen, Joseph N. Stoeckel Jun 1995

Effects Of Zebra Mussel, Dreissena Polymorpha, Infestation On Lake Dardanelle Water Quality, Charles J. Gagen, Joseph N. Stoeckel

Technical Reports

Zebra mussels recently invaded southern waterways including the Arkansas River. Exponential population growth and high filtration capacity of dense populations could alter reservoir ecosystem function. Furthermore, they attach to hard surfaces; thus, threatening normal operations of many artificial structures. We designed this study to provide baseline data prior to high population levels of zebra mussels in Lake Dardanelle. The characterization of spatial and temporal variability in water quality, zooplankton, phytoplankton, and macrophytes will allow testing of several hypotheses. We sampled zebra mussel density and zooplankton at four fixed sites and the other key variables at three of these sites biweekly …


Water Resources Studies Along The Arkansas-Oklahoma Border, Kenneth F. Steele Feb 1995

Water Resources Studies Along The Arkansas-Oklahoma Border, Kenneth F. Steele

Technical Reports

The watershed approach to water resource issues recently has been re-discovered. Scientists and managers recognize the need to consider the entire watershed when delineating and solving today's water resource problems. A simple example is the effect that streams have on the ultimate "health" of a reservoir. Although technically the term watershed should be used only in reference to surface water, the importance of ground water is included in the watershed approach to problems. In recognition that we all "live upstream and downstream," the Arkansas Water Resources Center and the Oklahoma Water Resources Institute sponsored a conference titled "Water Resource Studies …


Recreational And Angler Survey Of The Buffalo National River, Arkansas, James E. Johnson Jan 1995

Recreational And Angler Survey Of The Buffalo National River, Arkansas, James E. Johnson

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

The Buffalo River in northern Arkansas was surveyed for recreator and angler use in 1991 and 1992. The river was divided into three reaches and numbers of boats, recreators, anglers, and catches were compiled by creel clerks at nine selected take-out points. Outfitter rental receipts were used to estimate rental boats, and the proportion of rental to private boats creeled was used to correct for private boats not counted on the rental receipts. A total of 1,656 boats containing 3,071 recreators was contracted by the creel clerks during 1991 and 1992; 9.2% of the recreators were anglers. Expansion of the …


Completion Report: Arkansas State Pesticides In Ground Water Monitoring Project Phase Iv: Eastern Arkansas (Pulaski, Lee And Jackson Counties), T. Nichols, P. Vendrell, K. Steele, H. D. Scott, C. Armstrong Jan 1995

Completion Report: Arkansas State Pesticides In Ground Water Monitoring Project Phase Iv: Eastern Arkansas (Pulaski, Lee And Jackson Counties), T. Nichols, P. Vendrell, K. Steele, H. D. Scott, C. Armstrong

Technical Reports

In 1995, fifty-two water samples were drawn from 49 new wells and 2 wells that had been previously sampled during earlier phases. These included twenty samples from 19 wells in eastern Pulaski County, thirteen wells in Lee County, 16 wells in Jackson County, two wells in Lonoke County, one well in Crittenden County and resamples of two wells in Woodruff County. Figure 1 shows the locations of the 3 counties where the majority of the samples were taken and Figures 2-4 show the monitoring locations withing these counties. The wells were tested for nitrate and 13 pesticides listed in Table …


Conceptual Basis For An Index Of Forest Integrity For Upland Coastal Plain Ecosystems, Nicholas R. Brown, Brian Roy Lockhart, Philip A. Tappe, Lynne C. Thompson, Robert C. Weih Jr., Richard A. Williams Jan 1995

Conceptual Basis For An Index Of Forest Integrity For Upland Coastal Plain Ecosystems, Nicholas R. Brown, Brian Roy Lockhart, Philip A. Tappe, Lynne C. Thompson, Robert C. Weih Jr., Richard A. Williams

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Following the recent trend to manage natural resources for "sustainability," ecologists, resource managers and policymakers are beginning to think of the management of forest ecosystems in terms of "ecosystem health" or "ecosystem integrity." Biologists are increasingly recognizing that use of chemical assays in assessing the condition of an ecosystem has limited value, and that biological factors, e.g., species diversity and composition, can be useful characters in the analysis of "biotic integrity." An index of biotic integrity (IBI) has been developed for riverine ecosystems in the Midwest U.S., using fish species diversity, indicator population analysis, trophic structure assessment, and physiological abnormalities …


Energy-Loss Particle Identification In 2-D Silicon Drift Detectors, G. Douglas Maudlin, A. A. Rollefson, Wilfred J. Braithwaite Jan 1995

Energy-Loss Particle Identification In 2-D Silicon Drift Detectors, G. Douglas Maudlin, A. A. Rollefson, Wilfred J. Braithwaite

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

A relatively new type of transducer known as the Silicon Drift Detector (SDD) has been fabricated onto thin silicon wafers. SDD operates like a miniature, high-resolution, 2-D Time-projection chamber. One of these devices can detect two dimensions of an ionizing particle's position, and its integrated electrical charge output level isproportional to the particle's energy loss through the silicon. An array ofSDD's, arranged in three coaxial cylinders, is being considered as part of an instrument surrounding the beam pipe of highly-relativistic colliding beam facility, where it would be used to simultaneously track individual paths of thousands of charged particles emerging from …


Arkansas' Wellhead Protection Program, With Discussion Of Delineation Methodology, Robert Cordova, Bobby Makin Jan 1995

Arkansas' Wellhead Protection Program, With Discussion Of Delineation Methodology, Robert Cordova, Bobby Makin

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

The Wellhead Protection (WHP) program was authorized by the 1986 Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act. The Arkansas Department of Health in July, 1986, was designated by Governor Clinton to be the lead agency in carrying out the WHP program. The program is designed to protect the ground-water resource tapped by public water-supply wells from contaminants which are injurious to the public health. It is the first formal attempt by the federal government in its environmental protection role to prevent contamination from taking place, in contrast to costly clean-up or remediation programs. Among its several requirements, the program includes: …


Hammett Correlations Of Carbonyl 13c Chemical Shifts In A Series Of N-(4-Substituted Phenyl)-6-Chloro-5-Fluoronicotinamides, Frank L. Setliff, John W. Hawley, Alan D. Toland Jan 1995

Hammett Correlations Of Carbonyl 13c Chemical Shifts In A Series Of N-(4-Substituted Phenyl)-6-Chloro-5-Fluoronicotinamides, Frank L. Setliff, John W. Hawley, Alan D. Toland

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

A series of nine N-(4-substituted phenyl)-6-chloro-5- fluoronicotinamides exhibited excellent correlations of their carbonyl 13C shifts (5CO,ppm as measured in DMSO) with the standard Hammett substituent constants (c?R) of the substituent inthe 4-position. The linear relationship was defined by the equation 8CO ¦ 1.22


Creation And Implementation Of A Tracking Module For A Small-Geometry, Vertex Time Projection Chamber, Christine A. Byrd, Wilson H. Howe, Amber D. Climer, Wilfred J. Braithwaite Jan 1995

Creation And Implementation Of A Tracking Module For A Small-Geometry, Vertex Time Projection Chamber, Christine A. Byrd, Wilson H. Howe, Amber D. Climer, Wilfred J. Braithwaite

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

A charged-particle tracking module was written and tested using pixel data generated from CERN's Monte Carlo detector-modeling program GEANT. This tracking module was customized for testing the design of a micro-strip gas time project chamber, designed by Drs. Margetis and Wieman of the Relativistic Nuclear Collisions Group at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory. This low-mass, high-resolution, small-geometry vertex time projection chamber was designed for possible use with a larger instrument in an experiment using the relativistic heavy ion collider, RHIC, under construction at Brookhaven National Laboratory in New York. Implementing this tracking module involved generating tables and source code in a manner …


Scf-Mo Conformational Analysis Of Polycroconaine, T. E. Ezell, Jerry A. Darsey Jan 1995

Scf-Mo Conformational Analysis Of Polycroconaine, T. E. Ezell, Jerry A. Darsey

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Abinitio calculations at the STO-3G basis set level using GAUSSIAN 92 were conducted on the monomer unit of polycroconaine, a conducting polymer with conductive properties similar to several metals, in order to determine the most probable conformation of the monomer. We also compared the energy difference between the highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals. Successive calculations were performed at dihedral angle intervals of 30° around the central bond of the monomer. Minimum energy was observed at 0° bond rotation, consistent with a theory that the polymer owes many of its conductive properties to a planar configuration in combination with …


Proforce Waves: The Effect Of Current Behind The Shock Front On Wave Structure, Mostafa Hemmati, Steven Young Jan 1995

Proforce Waves: The Effect Of Current Behind The Shock Front On Wave Structure, Mostafa Hemmati, Steven Young

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Recently, the initial boundary conditions for proforce waves with a substantial current behind the shock front have been derived. Computer solutions of the Electron Fluid Dynamical equations meet the expected boundary conditions at the end of the sheath region. This paper will compare the wave structure for proforce waves with and without current behind the shock front.


Critical Energy Of Torus Knots, Fred Hickling, Wesley Davis, Heather Woolverton Jan 1995

Critical Energy Of Torus Knots, Fred Hickling, Wesley Davis, Heather Woolverton

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

The energy of a smoothly parameterized knot y(t) is defined as rr\ i i lp7 \\dn dsdt Jo Jo \||7M-7(0f (D(t(s),T(t))) 2 j\\ds \\dt where D(y (s), y(t)) is the arc length between the two points y (s) and y(t) on the curve. Simple calculus based arguments are used to locate critical values of the energy functional for torus knots. Explicitly the curves given parametrically by °(«*)W = (V2°iSri).JSSBe V2 C s7nS are CriticalP ° intS ° fthe energy functional whenever a and b are relatively prime.


Optimizing Tracking Software For A Time Projection Chamber, Wilson H. Howe, Christine A. Byrd, Amber D. Climer, Wilfred J. Braithwaite, Jeffrey T. Mitchell Jan 1995

Optimizing Tracking Software For A Time Projection Chamber, Wilson H. Howe, Christine A. Byrd, Amber D. Climer, Wilfred J. Braithwaite, Jeffrey T. Mitchell

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

International research collaborations will be using accelerators in the U.S. and Europe to produce and detect t5 phase transition in high-density nuclear matter called the Quark-Gluon Plasma, formed in collisions between pairs of A=200 nuclei, for projectiles with kinetic energies large compared to their rest mass energies. Each collaboration will use time projection chambers (TPC) to track thousands ofsecondary charged particles formed in the aftermath ofeach central primary collision. Creating and optimizing TPC tracking software is difficultinsuch a high multiplicity environment, particularly for particles with a low momentum (below 300 MeV/C). A thigh momenta, energy loss is low enough for …


Introduction To Monte Carlo Methods, Sue Ellen Mccloskey, Wilfred J. Braithwaite Jan 1995

Introduction To Monte Carlo Methods, Sue Ellen Mccloskey, Wilfred J. Braithwaite

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Monte Carlo computer programming is becoming increasingly popular to those who use it, due to the ease with which complex problems may be formulated and solved. However, the growth of MC programming for small projects is inhibited by a frequent misconception of difficulty, inferred from the high level of complexity of problems solved in High Energy and Nuclear Physics using MC methods. In addition, few students of science and engineering are receiving exposure to the basic issues involved in the Monte Carlo process despite the ease with which MC can be used to solve classical physics problems, especially those problems …


Spectroscopic Temperature Measurements For A Direct Current Arcjet Diamond Chemical Vapor Deposition Reactor, Scott W. Reeve, Wayne A. Weimer Jan 1995

Spectroscopic Temperature Measurements For A Direct Current Arcjet Diamond Chemical Vapor Deposition Reactor, Scott W. Reeve, Wayne A. Weimer

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

The diamond thin filmcommercial market isprojected to exceed one billion dollars by the year 2000. Potential applications of diamond thin films range from cutting tools to electronics tomedical devices. The explosion ofinterest in this fieldresults from the extreme properties diamond possesses: itis the hardest material known toman and yet, has a coefficient of friction similar to Teflon;its ability to conduct heat is five times that of copper; and diamond is completely inert. However, despite the tremendous economic incentive, there are still several technological barriers preventing diamond filmscale-up to commercial production. Included among these are a fundamental understanding of the gas …


Drift Chamber Utilizing Microstrip Readout For Testing A New Micro Tpc Concept, H. Weiman, W. G. Gong, S. Margetis, M. T. Burks, Wilfred J. Braithwaite, A. A. Rollefson Jan 1995

Drift Chamber Utilizing Microstrip Readout For Testing A New Micro Tpc Concept, H. Weiman, W. G. Gong, S. Margetis, M. T. Burks, Wilfred J. Braithwaite, A. A. Rollefson

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

A drift chamber type radiation detector is being used to examine design criteria for a new type of detector called a micro Time Projection Chamber (micro TPC) which is being proposed for use in high energy nuclear physics experiments. The main advantage of the micro TPC detector is its very low radiation thickness compared to its silicon counterpart. The micro TPC is a charged-particle detector which willbe optimized for good two track resolution which is needed inahigh track density environment. Such performance requires low electron diffusion and high resolution readout. The diffusion willbe reduced bylimiting the drift distance to 15 …


Using Geant To Model Calrimeter Response For Electromagnetic Cascades From Nucleus-Nucleus Interactions In A Cosmic Ray Detector, Kazuhiko Murai, Carlos A. Sanchez, Donald C. Wold Jan 1995

Using Geant To Model Calrimeter Response For Electromagnetic Cascades From Nucleus-Nucleus Interactions In A Cosmic Ray Detector, Kazuhiko Murai, Carlos A. Sanchez, Donald C. Wold

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Ascintillating optical fiber calorimeter (SOFCAL) is being developed by NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center for use in balloon-borne experiments to study the spectrum of high-energy cosmic rays and gamma rays. SOFCAL will not saturate for long exposures and the calorimeter willbe useful in emulsion chambers to study primary cosmic-ray nuclei with energies from 100 GeV to 1,000 TeV. The event generator FRITIOF was used to model the collision of a cosmic-ray projectile with a target nucleus inan emulsion chamber. The measurements of charged particles from the interaction in the emulsions are related to the energy of the primary cosmic ray nucleus-nucleus …


Using Fritiof To Model Nucleus-Nucleus Interactions In A Cosmic Ray Detector, Carlos A. Sanchez, Kazuhiko Murai, Donald C. Wold Jan 1995

Using Fritiof To Model Nucleus-Nucleus Interactions In A Cosmic Ray Detector, Carlos A. Sanchez, Kazuhiko Murai, Donald C. Wold

Journal of the Arkansas Academy of Science

Ascintillating optical fiber calorimeter (SOFCAL) isbeing developed by NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center for use in experiments to study the spectrum of high-energy cosmic rays and gamma rays from 100 GeV to 1,000 TeV. SOFCAL willnot saturate for long exposures and this calorimeter inthese balloon-borne emulsion chambers willbe helpful for the study of the composition of primary cosmic-ray nuclei. For primary nuclei with energies much greater than 1014 eV, nucleus-nucleus interactions are likely to exhibit characteristics of a quark-gluon plasma (QGP). Aparticle event generator was used tomodel the collision of a cosmic-ray nucleus with a target nucleus inan emulsion chamber. FRITIOF …