Institution
Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
Government•Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia•
About: Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation is a government organization based out in Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Soil water. The organization has 33765 authors who have published 79910 publications receiving 3356114 citations.
Topics: Population, Soil water, Climate change, Gene, Context (language use)
Papers published on a yearly basis
Papers
More filters
••
TL;DR: In this paper, a unified conceptual framework based on the control of production, transport, and self-organization of precursor species is introduced and a variety of plasma-specific non-equilibrium and kinetics-driven phenomena across the many temporal and spatial scales is explained.
Abstract: The unique plasma-specific features and physical phenomena in the organization of nanoscale solid-state systems in a broad range of elemental composition, structure, and dimensionality are critically reviewed. These effects lead to the possibility to localize and control energy and matter at nanoscales and to produce self-organized nano-solids with highly unusual and superior properties. A unifying conceptual framework based on the control of production, transport, and self-organization of precursor species is introduced and a variety of plasma-specific non-equilibrium and kinetics-driven phenomena across the many temporal and spatial scales is explained. When the plasma is localized to micrometer and nanometer dimensions, new emergent phenomena arise. The examples range from semiconducting quantum dots and nanowires, chirality control of single-walled carbon nanotubes, ultra-fine manipulation of graphenes, nano-diamond, and organic matter, to nano-plasma effects and nano-plasmas of different states of matter.
422 citations
••
TL;DR: In this article, a model of phosphate reaction is constructed and its output compared with observations for the sorption and desorption of phosphate by soil, which suggests that phosphate that has reacted with soil for a long period is not ‘fixed’ but has mostly penetrated into the soil particles.
Abstract: Summary
A model of phosphate reaction is constructed and its output compared with observations for the sorption and desorption of phosphate by soil. The model has three components: first, the reaction between divalent phosphate ions and a variable-charge surface; second, the assumption that there is a range of values of surface properties and that these are normally distributed; third, the assumption that the initial adsorption induces a diffusion gradient towards the interior of the particle which begins a solid-state diffusion process.
The model closely describes the effects on sorption of phosphate of: concentration of phosphate, pH, temperature, and time of contact. It also reproduces the effects on desorption of phosphate of: period of prior contact, period and temperature of desorption, and soil: solution ratio. The model is general and should apply to other specifically adsorbed anions and cations. It suggests that phosphate that has reacted with soil for a long period is not ‘fixed’ but has mostly penetrated into the soil particles. The phosphorus can be recovered slowly if a low enough surface activity is induced.
421 citations
••
TL;DR: This review summarises the current knowledge of the carotenoid content of non-green plastids and discusses what is known about the regulation of their biosynthesis in roots, fruits, flowers, tubers and seeds.
Abstract: Carotenoids are plant pigments that function as antioxidants, hormone precursors, colourants and essential components of the photosynthetic apparatus. Carotenoids accumulate in nearly all types of plastids, not just the chloroplast, and are thus found in most plant organs and tissues, albeit at trace levels in some tissues. In this review we summarise the current knowledge of the carotenoid content of non-green plastids and discuss what is known about the regulation of their biosynthesis in roots, fruits, flowers, tubers and seeds. The emphasis is on food crops as carotenoids are essential components of human diets, primarily as some are precursors of vitamin A. The low carotenoid content of many staple foods, such as cereals, can exacerbate dietary deficiencies. The World Health Organisation has estimated that more than 100 million children are vitamin A-deficient and up to 500,000 of these children become blind each year. Many of these children die within 12 months of going blind. Thus, understanding the regulation of carotenoid accumulation in food crops, especially tubers and cereals, should facilitate improvements to nutritional value with potentially significant health benefits.
421 citations
••
TL;DR: The Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA) as mentioned in this paper is an implementation of the PTA concept based on observations with the Parkes 64m radio telescope, which allows investigation of 'global' phenomena such as a background of gravitational waves or instabilities in atomic timescales that produce correlated timing residuals in the pulsars of the array.
Abstract: A 'pulsar timing array' (PTA), in which observations of a large sample of pulsars spread across the celestial sphere are combined, allows investigation of 'global' phenomena such as a background of gravitational waves or instabilities in atomic timescales that produce correlated timing residuals in the pulsars of the array. The Parkes Pulsar Timing Array (PPTA) is an implementation of the PTA concept based on observations with the Parkes 64-m radio telescope. A sample of 20 ms pulsars is being observed at three radio-frequency bands, 50 cm (similar to 700MHz), 20 cm (similar to 1400 MHz), and 10 cm (similar to 3100 MHz), with observations at intervals of two to three weeks. Regular observations commenced in early 2005. This paper describes the systems used for the PPTA observations and data processing, including calibration and timing analysis. The strategy behind the choice of pulsars, observing parameters, and analysis methods is discussed. Results are presented for PPTA data in the three bands taken between 2005 March and 2011 March. For 10 of the 20 pulsars, rms timing residuals are less than 1 mu s for the best band after fitting for pulse frequency and its first time derivative. Significant 'red' timing noise is detected in about half of the sample. We discuss the implications of these results on future projects including the International Pulsar Timing Array and a PTA based on the Square Kilometre Array. We also present an 'extended PPTA' data set that combines PPTA data with earlier Parkes timing data for these pulsars.
421 citations
••
University of Florida1, Oregon State University2, Michigan State University3, Colorado State University4, University of Chicago5, University of Oxford6, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation7, University of California, Davis8, Wageningen University and Research Centre9, Columbia University10, University of Reading11
TL;DR: The history of agricultural systems modeling is summarized and lessons learned are identified that can help guide the design and development of next generation of agricultural system tools and methods.
421 citations
Authors
Showing all 33864 results
Name | H-index | Papers | Citations |
---|---|---|---|
David R. Williams | 178 | 2034 | 138789 |
Mark E. Cooper | 158 | 1463 | 124887 |
Kevin J. Gaston | 150 | 750 | 85635 |
Liming Dai | 141 | 781 | 82937 |
John D. Potter | 137 | 795 | 75310 |
Lei Zhang | 135 | 2240 | 99365 |
Harold A. Mooney | 135 | 450 | 100404 |
Frederick M. Ausubel | 133 | 389 | 60365 |
Rajkumar Buyya | 133 | 1066 | 95164 |
Robert B. Jackson | 132 | 458 | 91332 |
Peter Hall | 132 | 1640 | 85019 |
Frank Caruso | 131 | 641 | 61748 |
Paul J. Crutzen | 130 | 461 | 80651 |
Andrew Y. Ng | 130 | 345 | 164995 |
Lei Zhang | 130 | 2312 | 86950 |