5,857 research outputs found
Field day on cactus pear in Village Sakrar (MP), Jhansi India
Report on Field day on cactus pear in Village Sakrar (MP), Jhansi Indi
FIGURE 6. Maximum likelihood tree from a in Morphology and phylogeny of a new species, Pseudocercospora haldinae (Mycosphaerellaceae) on Haldina cordifolia from India
FIGURE 6. Maximum likelihood tree from a concatenated dataset including ribosomal gene regions nuLSU and ITS. Numbers on the branches are percent bootstrap values for MEGA5-maximum likelihood (ML), MEGA5-maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian posterior probabilities (PP) indicated in order ML/MP/PP. New sequence data of P. haldinae is represented in red.Published as part of Yadav, Sanjay, Verma, Sanjeet Kumar, Singh, Vinay Kumar, Singh, Raghvendra, Singh, Archana & Kumar, Shambhu, 2021, Morphology and phylogeny of a new species, Pseudocercospora haldinae (Mycosphaerellaceae) on Haldina cordifolia from India, pp. 281-292 in Phytotaxa 501 (2) on page 290, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.501.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/542485
FIGURE 5 in Morphology and phylogeny of a new species, Pseudocercospora haldinae (Mycosphaerellaceae) on Haldina cordifolia from India
FIGURE 5. Maximum Likelihood tree showing the phylogenetic relationships based on the LSU alignment. Sequences of other species were form Crous et al. (2013). Numbers on the branches are percent bootstrap values for MEGA5-maximum likelihood (ML), MEGA5- maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian posterior probabilities (PP) indicated in order ML/MP/PP. New sequence data of P. haldinae is represented in red.Published as part of Yadav, Sanjay, Verma, Sanjeet Kumar, Singh, Vinay Kumar, Singh, Raghvendra, Singh, Archana & Kumar, Shambhu, 2021, Morphology and phylogeny of a new species, Pseudocercospora haldinae (Mycosphaerellaceae) on Haldina cordifolia from India, pp. 281-292 in Phytotaxa 501 (2) on page 289, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.501.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/542485
Application of the IS-MP-IA model to the German economy and policy implications
Extending the IS-MP-IA model developed by Romer (2000) and applying the GARCH (Engle, 1982, 2001) methodology, the author finds that equilibrium GDP in Germany is positively affected by stock market performance and real exchange rate appreciation, and negatively influenced by the expected inflation rate, the government deficit/GDP ratio, and the U.S. federal funds rate. The relatively low deficit/GDP ratio of 1.83% in 2003 indicates that its fiscal condition was healthy. However, some other EU members may need to exercise fiscal discipline. Because real appreciation has a positive impact on output, a stronger euro may not be a concern for Germany but may be worried by those EU member nations which depend upon exports to stimulate their economies.
SMAP soil moisture assimilated Noah-MP model output
The Noah-MP land surface model was run on an equidistant cylindrical grid at a spatial resolution of 0.05 degree x 0.05 degree from 2015 to 2020. Open loop and data assimilation (with and without CDF-matching) runs were executed based on the methodology described in Ahmad et al. (2021) using MERRA2 and IMERG precipitation boundary conditions. The NetCDF files archived here were reprocessed to include the model output states discussed in the paper only. These include: 1) surface soil moisture, 2) rootzone soil moisture, 3) evapotranspiration, and 4) gross primary production.
References:
Ahmad, J. A., Forman, B. A., and Kumar, S. V. (2021), SMAP retrieval assimilation improves soil moisture estimation across irrigated areas in South Asia, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci. Discuss. [preprint], https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-2021-460.The data archived here includes the NASA Noah-MP (version 4.0.1) land surface model output used in the investigation of the impact of passive microwave-based soil moisture retrieval assimilation on soil moisture estimation in South Asia (Ahmad et al., 2021). SMAP soil moisture retrievals are assimilated into the Noah-MP land surface model to improve the estimation of soil moisture and other related states. The open loop (OL) represents Noah-MP’s modeling capabilities using MERRA2 and IMERG precipitation. Two different types of data assimilation runs were executed using the MERRA2 and IMERG precipitation boundary conditions, i.e., with CDF-matching (DA-CDF) and without CDF matching (DA-NoCDF). The key findings in this paper include: 1) assimilation results without any CDF-matching yielded the lowest error in estimated soil moisture, 2) the best goodness-of-fit statistics were achieved for the IMERG-forced DA-NoCDF soil moisture experiment, 3) biases associated with unmodeled hydrologic processes such as irrigation were corrected via assimilation, and 4) the highest influence of assimilation was observed across croplands.NASA Understanding Changes in High Mountain Asia (Contract# 80NSSC2OK1531)https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-2021-46
Winning redefined, a new brand positioning for MP Motorsport
MP Motorsport is a talent educating race team participating in the classes below the Formula 1. The problem with the lower classes and therefore MP Motorsport as well is that these classes don’t get much attention and exposure. As a company run by people with passion the branding and positioning is more something that naturally emerged from this passion rather than a series of conscious decisions. This makes it fragile. A more conscious strategy and vision on how MP Motorsport needs to be branded and positioned against their competition that is more than “look how cool racing is” is needed to become more attractive for sponsoring. This report describes the process from analysis to finding the right positioning and an advise for a new brand identity and an implementation plan to help becoming more attractive for sponsoring goals. The analysis done with employees showed a unique characteristic that will help the team to position themselves against the competition; the family atmosphere. This atmosphere is what also characterises their contradictory personality. This personality is on one hand leading and ambitious and on the other hand modest and involved. Competition and stakeholder analysis have been performed to find the right combination of being unique to the competition, desirable for the stakeholders (the fans and sponsors) and builds upon the core strengths of the company. Then using the brand key model, a positioning is made with the essence: Be your best self. The belief, “in everyone hides a talent” and values like “everyone is equal” and “together we succeed” combined with the essence and the positioning resulted in a brand story that describes the feeling MP Motorsport wants to communicate. To manifestate the brand, an advise has been set up for a tone of voice and tone of image. Wrapped in a concept called “winning redefined” this advise is part of the whole implementation plan that should lead the way for the team to implement the newly created brand in short and long term actions. In 3 phases MP Motorsport is advised to start with a clear brand introduction to the target groups Gen Z and potential sponsors. The next phase revolves around creating a community to attract both Gen Z talents and subsequently sponsors to interact with the team and each other. Finally the last phase is long term focused and aims for sustainable growth. In this phase the community is established and can expect various opportunities to discover and develop a whole range of talents, sponsors and gen z are connected to each other via MP Motorsport and the team is able to finance the lower classes without the pressure of the money drivers bring along.Strategic Product Desig
Derivations (MP) and Evaluations (OT)
The main claim of this paper is that the minimalist framework and optimality theory adopt more or less the same architecture of grammar: both assume that a generator defines a set S of potentially well-formed expressions that can be generated on the basis of a given input, and that there is an evaluator that selects the expressions from S that are actually grammatical in a given language L. The paper therefore proposes a model of grammar in which the strengths of the two frameworks are combined: more specifically, it is argued that the computational system of human language CHL from MP creates a set S of potentially well-formed expressions, and that these are subsequently evaluated in an optimality theoretic fashion.The definitive version of this paper is published in Linguistics in Potsdam 25 (2006).Broekhuis, H. (2006). Derivations (MP) and Evaluations (OT)*. In H. Broekhuis & R. Vogel (Eds), Linguistics in Potsdam 25. Optimality Theory and Minimalism: A possible Convergence? Potsdam : Universitätsverlag PotsdamISBN: 9783939469544 (published book)This research is supported by the Netherlands Organisation of Scientific Research (NWO), grant 276-70-00
Stroom- en sedimentmeting Roompot-Veerse Dam (mp.8), 15 en 22 januari 1996
Stroom- en sedimentmeting Roompot-Veerse Dam (mp.8) 15 en 22 januari 1996.Deltawerken, Oosterscheld
A novel approach to MP-PIC: Continuum particle model for dense particle flows in fluidized beds
A novel approach to Multiphase-Particle-in-Cell (MP-PIC), called Continuum Particle Model (CPM), is developed for dense gas-particle flows. CPM has high computational speed, comparable to that of MP-PIC, but a robustness and accuracy closer to that of a Discrete Element Model (DEM). The gas phase is treated as a continuum phase and particles are tracked discretely, but particle collisions are modelled by considering the divergence of the continuum particle stress tensor. Details on efficient solution to the model are presented. For comparison, a parametric study is performed for quasi-2D fluidized beds. Comparison of CFD-CPM is made with MP-PIC and CFD-DEM. The particle stress models by Harris and Crighton, and by Srivastava and Sundaresan are tested in our CFD-CPM. Results from CFD-CPM based on the Srivastava and Sundaresan particle stress model show good agreement with CFD-DEM results. We validate our model by comparison with experimental benchmark results from Gopalan et. al. (2016).Complex Fluid Processin
FIGURE 1 in Neokamalomyces indicus gen. nov., sp. nov. (Mycosphaerellaceae)-a Septoria-like genus from India
FIGURE 1. Consensus phylogram (50% majority rule) resulting from a maximum likelihood of the combined three-genes (LSU, RPB2 and ITS) sequence alignment. The Bayesian posterior probabilities (≥ 0.50; BI-PP), maximum likelihood bootstrap support values (≥ 50%; ML-BS) and maximum parsimony bootstrap support values (≥ 50%; MP-BS) are given at the nodes (BI-PP/ML-BS/MP-BS). Red names indicate Neokamalomyces indicus. A vertical bar is used to the right of the coloured boxes and encompasses all genera within their respective families. The family name Mycosphaerellaceae is unabbreviated while the rest are abbreviated as follows: D = Dissoconiaceae, P = Phaeothecoidiellaceae, S = Schizothyriaceae, T = Teratosphaeriaceae, C = Cladosporiaceae. The tree is rooted to Cylindroseptoria ceratoniae (CBS 477.69).Published as part of Yadav, Sanjay, Verma, Sanjeet Kumar, Singh, Raghvendra, Singh, Vinay Kumar, Chaurasia, Balmukund, Singh, Paras Nath & Kumar, Shambhu, 2022, Neokamalomyces indicus gen. nov., sp. nov. (Mycosphaerellaceae)-a Septoria-like genus from India, pp. 141-168 in Phytotaxa 571 (2) on page 154, DOI: 10.11646/phytotaxa.571.2.3, http://zenodo.org/record/728430
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