Automation for the Citrus Industry

Author(s):  
Jack Barker

With the ever-increasing necessity of economy of processing and uniformity of product, automation becomes more and more vital to the citrus industry. Our present purpose is to define the subject, briefly describe its functions, and discuss, as time will allow, its pertinent applications. Paper published with permission.

Author(s):  
Peter Gray

We have now to give some examples of compound benefits, which are those consisting of two or more simple benefits; but the combinations which may be formed of these being obviously very numerous, it would be beside our present purpose to attempt giving a complete list of them. Our object will be, in selecting a few of them for illustration, to indicate the method of dealing with the more complicated cases, and also to prepare the way for the most general application of the Commutation Tables, which application will form the subject of the concluding portion of this paper. A very complete list of the formulae for the more elementary of these benefits is contained in Professor De Morgan's first paper on the subject; and as it is hoped that little difficulty will be experienced with these, after the illustrations to which our space limits us, we shall not scruple, as we have occasion, in the solution of any of the problems with which the present paper will be occupied, to refer to any of the learned gentleman's formulæ which we may not have deduced for ourselves. Our references will be made in the following manner, which is rendered necessary in consequence of the formulae not forming one consecutive series. Formula 10, on page 16, for example, will be denoted thus, [16,10]; formula 72, on page 18, thus, [18, 72]; and so on.


Development ◽  
1967 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-541
Author(s):  
M. S. Deol

Although the origin of the acoustic ganglion has been the subject of numerous studies there is no unanimity of opinion about it. Most of the earlier investigators (Bartelmez, 1922; Adelman, 1925), using mammalian embryos, believed that it arose from the neural crest, but the experiments of Campenhout (1935) and Yntema (1937) on amphibian embryos led them to the view that it was largely, if not wholly, of placodal origin. This view was supported by Halley (1955), who worked on the cat, and later by Batten (1958), who worked on the sheep. In fact Batten stated categorically that the otic placode was the sole source of the acoustic ganglion. It was thought that an entirely new approach to the problem, namely the use of mutant genes, might help to resolve the difference of opinion. The most suitable mutant for the present purpose seemed to be piebald-lethal (symbol s1; Lane, 1966).


1833 ◽  
Vol 123 ◽  
pp. 95-142 ◽  

Mr. Faraday's highly interesting papers, entitled “Experimental Researches in Electricity,” having been referred to me, to report on, by the President and Council of this Society, I necessarily entered minutely into all the experiments and conclusions of the author, and the more so that I had had the advantage of witnessing many of the most important of these experiments. It is foreign to my present purpose to descant upon the value of Mr. Faraday’s discovery, or the merits of his communication ; the President and Council have marked their opinion of these by the award of the Copley Medal: but I may be permitted to state, that no one can concur more cordially than I do in the propriety of that award. Agreeing as I did generally with the author, both in the views which he took of the subject, and in the conclusions which he drew from his experiments, there was one, however, which I felt great difficulty in adopting, viz. “That when metals of different kinds are equally subject, in every circumstance, to magneto-electric induction, they exhibit exactly equal powers with respect to the currents which either are formed, or tend to form, in them :" and that “the same is probably the case in all other substances.” Although the experiments might appear to indicate that this was possibly the case, I did not consider them to be conclusive. The most conclusive experiment, that of two spirals, one of copper and the other of iron, transmitting opposite currents, was quite consistent with the absolute equality of the currents excited in copper and iron; but, at the same time, the apparent equality of the currents might be due to their inequality being counteracted by a corresponding inequality in the facility of transmission.


1884 ◽  
Vol 1 (4) ◽  
pp. 364-375
Author(s):  
Cornelius Walford

It will be seen by the above title that my present purpose is not to attempt a history of Bridges. That indeed would be an herculean task: for the materials lie scattered through the histories of nations, and no serious attempt has been made to bring them into a manageable compass. Still I assume it will be expected that I shall present such an historical review as may serve to make the subject intelligible to those who have not heretofore turned their attention to it.


1864 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 520-531

The constitution, properties, and derivatives of the so-called conjugated sulphurous and sulphuric acids have been made the subject of numerous searches, and have led, in the hands of Gerhardt and others, to very interesting results. I have examined at different times several members of the methylsulphuric, phenylsulphurous, nitrophenvlsulphous and other series, but have lately turned my attention to the analogous compounds of the phosphoric series. Some remarkable substances have been thus made, their constitution seeming to have a direct bearing upon the important question of the atomicity and equivalency of certain of the metallic elements. Several substances might have served as starting-points for these new inquiries. A curious compound, phenylphosphoric acid, C 6 H 5 H 2 PO 4 , was prepared; but its instability, and the oxidation to which it and its salts are liable, rendered it unsuited for the present purpose. I intend to describe in the present paper but one series of salts, formed from Pelouze’s ethylphosphoric acid, C 2 H 5 H 2 PO 4 . This compound, containing two atoms of easily replaceable hydrogen, appeared admirably adapted for the purpose in view. It is readily prepared by digesting (for 48 hours) finely crushed glacial phosphoric acid with alcohol of 90 percent.:— C 2 H 5 H } O + H PO 3 = C 2 H 3 H H } PO 4 .


Author(s):  
L. R. St. Onge

To a citrus engineering group, refrigeration is a common-place item. However, except to those directly concerned with the subject, immediate reference to specific terms might be somewhat confusing. Since our subject is “Booster Compressors For The Citrus Industry”, it might be well to define a booster compressor. Paper published with permission.


1966 ◽  
Vol 32 ◽  
pp. 262-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. D. Cowen

In the present study it is proposed to set out, in somewhat greater detail than has yet been attempted, the case for an independent and wholly indigenous development of the flange-hilted sword of bronze in extra-Aegean Europe. That these were not the first tanged or even flange-hilted swords to be made goes without saying. At a time which on any view must be earlier by a clear margin the Mycenaeans were enjoying the use of splendid rapiers of which the hilts were furnished with highly developed flanges. And in Anatolia swords with substantial tangs are known from towards the end of the 3rd millennium. The argument, accordingly, is for independent invention of the same device in more than one period and place—a concept which some prehistorians seem to find unpalatable to the point of disbelief, however simple and natural the device.In the circumstances it is not altogether surprising that the subject has been long debated, and our main conclusion warmly contested, not so much in point of detail (on which in the ultimate the verdict must stand or fall) as on the broader ground of general resemblances, or even of preconceived ideas on probability. To analyse the ebb and flow of conflicting views is no part of the present purpose. It will suffice to observe that we have yet to see demonstrated a coherent chain of development by which the swords of central Europe can be derived from those of the Aegean, much less from Anatolia.


1880 ◽  
Vol 30 (200-205) ◽  
pp. 373-383 ◽  

In a previous paper (“Proceedings,” vol. xxvii, p. 410) we communicated experimental results relating to the phenomena which present themselves in the ventricle of the heart of the frog, when mechanically or electrically excited. Our present purpose is to report what has been done during the past w inter towards the further elucidation of the subject. By the term “excitatory state” we mean, as in our former communication, nothing more than the condition which is produced in any excitable structure (whether in plants or animals) by excitation. So far as it has been as yet investigated, this state is characterised (1) by the appearance of electromotive properties in the excited part, which did not exist before excitation, and cease to exist as soon as its effect is over; (2) by diminished excitability (showing itself in the suspension or diminution of the power which the structure before possessed of responding to a second excitation); (3) by the fact that it is propagated from the part first excitei to contiguous parts at a rate which is different in different structures and in the same structure at different temperatures. Hitherto the relations of these three facts have been chiefly studied in the excitable tissues of the higher animals. Our investigations lead us to conclud that they are equally characteristic of the excitatory state in plants We attach great importance to them, as being the only outward and visible signs by which the hidden process of excitation constantly reveals itself. For those more obvious changes which, in the contractile structures, follow excitation, are wanting in those which art merely excitable, and thereby lose their value as characteristics.


The Meteorological Council have lately published a volume entitled ‘Harmonic Analysis of Hourly Observations of Air Temperature and Pressure at British Obser­vatories.’ It was thought preferable that this publication should be limited to the series of Tables giving the computed values of the harmonic constants, with a brief introduction explaining how the calculations had been carried out, and that the discussion of the results should be embodied in a separate memoir, which I hoped to communicate to the Royal Society, an intention which I now realize. I have annexed to the present communication a selection of such of the Tables given in the volume referred to as appear necessary for my present purpose, and I have added a series of graphical representations of some of the results of the computations, which will facilitate the study of the subject.


Author(s):  
James Terry

The system pursued by each Office in the distribution of surplus may be divided into three parts, namely—1. The class of members amongst which surplus is distributed;2. The actual distribution of it amongst that class; and3. The interval which elapses between successive distributions.It is impossible to obtain a comprehensive view of the subject without considering separately these three distinct parts; and, since it forms no part of the present purpose to estimate the relative advantages of different Offices, no attempt will be made to follow the numerous combinations or systems of distribution produced by differences in practice under each of the above heads.


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