The Determination of Direction and Length Of Hydraulically Induced Fractures In Petroleum Reservoirs: A Field Experiment

1974 ◽  
Author(s):  
L.Z. Shuck
2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (4) ◽  
pp. 268-272
Author(s):  
Mazen Bufaur ◽  
◽  
Safwat Al-Gkhami ◽  
Rami Bou Hamdan ◽  
Waed Ghanem ◽  
...  

Bufaur, M., S. Al-Gkhami, R. Bohamdan, W. Ghanem and M. Dawara. 2021. Determination of the Maximum Appearance Period of Capnodis tendebrionisin Al-Sweida-Syria Governorate and Testing the Efficacy of Some Pesticides on the Pest Adults. Arab Journal of Plant Protection, 39(4): 268-272. https://doi.org/10.22268/AJPP-39.4.268272 A weekly adults collection of Capnodis tendebrionis L. (Buprestidae; Coleoptera) was conducted for two seasons (2018, 2019) to determine the maximum insect adults appearance period. Early adult appearance was recorded in the first year in warm-dry months as compared to the second year in cold-wet months. Maximum insect adults appearance was recorded at the end of April during the first season and at the end of May in the second season. A field experiment was carried out to test the efficacy of some pesticides on controlling pest adults: Deltamethrin, 100g/l, Chlorpyriphos-ethyl 48% and Acetamiprid 20% as a foliar spray, and Deltamethrin 0.25% as dusting powder around the stem, in addition to the control. Results obtained showed that Chlorpyriphos-ethyl and the two Deltamethrin treatments were the best on adults and with significant differences compared with Acetamiprid treatment following the first and the second week after spraying in 2018, and the Deltamethrin as dusting powder and Chlorpyriphos-ethyl treatments were the best and with significant differences compared to other treatments were observed. Using Deltamethrin as dusting powder around the stem was highly efficient during three weeks after spraying as compared with other treatments in the two years. Keywords: Capnodis tendebrionis L., Maximum adult appearance period, Deltamethrin, Chlorpyriphos- ethyl and Acetamiprid


2002 ◽  
Vol 105 (1) ◽  
pp. 63-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. M. L. Meijninger ◽  
A. E. Green ◽  
O. K. Hartogensis ◽  
W. Kohsiek ◽  
J. C. B. Hoedjes ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 73 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-75
Author(s):  
Mikołaj Knaflewski ◽  
Włodzimierz Krzesiński ◽  
Monika Gąsecka ◽  
Jerzy Stachowiak

Yielding of Asparagus Depending on Harvest Ending DateThe field experiment focused on the determination of yielding of asparagus cv. ‘Thielim’ in relation to harvest duration: traditional (until June 20th), shortened (June 10th) and prolonged (30thJune) harvests. The variation in harvest ending dates did not have a significant influence on the total, marketable and non-marketable yields as well as on the crown weight and the number of storage roots. However, the extension of harvest time until June 30thresulted in an increase in the number of spears in the total and marketable yields, accompanied by a decrease in their diameter. Also prolonging harvest affected negatively the summer stalk size. During harvest until June 10thasparagus plants probably did not use their full yielding potential, because of too short harvest time. It resulted in increased height, weight, light absorption of summer stalks, leaf area index (LAI) and the total of cross-section areas of summer stalks (PPPA) with no significant differences in yield.


2000 ◽  
Vol 78 (5) ◽  
pp. 660-667 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patricia E Crane ◽  
Yasuyuki Hiratsuka

Chrysomyxa pirolata Wint., the cause of inland spruce cone rust, is a serious pathogen in natural spruce forests and seed orchards. Cone infection is caused by basidiospores produced by telia on alternate hosts in the genera Pyrola, Moneses, and Orthilia. The disease cycle of this rust and the influence of moisture on the differentiation of telia on Pyrola asarifolia Michx. were studied over two growing seasons at a wet site adjacent to a spruce seed orchard and a drier site adjacent to another orchard at Smoky Lake, Alberta, and at Edmonton and Hinton, Alberta. The proportion of uredinia to telia varied with microsite conditions, with more frequent production of telia in moist sites. The effect of moisture on formation of telia was tested by subjecting infected plants with immature sori to 90-100% relative humidity under various temperature and light conditions. Plants under high humidity, regardless of other conditions, formed mainly telia from immature sori, even if uredinia had already formed on parts of the leaves before the experiments. Telia formation, however, was much slower at 4-6°C than at 22°C. Cross-sections of sori showed that young uredinia could sometimes convert to telia. Results of a field experiment also suggested that increasing moisture increases the percentage of telia produced on plants. The production of undifferentiated sori that can become either uredinia or telia in response to environmental conditions may allow the fungus to maximize vegetative proliferation when conditions are unfavorable for sexual reproduction. It might also explain the large variation in cone rust levels from year to year in a given location.Key words: Picea, Pyrola, telia induction, seed orchard, Uredinales.


2017 ◽  
pp. 43-47
Author(s):  
D. V. Balin ◽  
T. V. Semenova

On the basis of flow modeling the impact of injectioninduced fracturing on the cumulative oil production value is examined in dependence of the oil and water mobility ratio under conditions of homogeneous and heterogeneous permeability of reservoir. It is established that the presence of injection-induced fracture in the near-wellbore area of the injection well can have a positive influenceon the dynamics of production fluid. Complex approach to estimation of probability of injection-induced fractures presence and algorithm of determination of their geometric parameters areal so proposed.


1990 ◽  
Vol 73 (3) ◽  
pp. 435-437
Author(s):  
George E Miliadis ◽  
Panayotis A Siskos ◽  
George S Vasilikiotis

Abstract A simple and efficient method Is presented for the extraction, cleanup, and liquid chromatographic (LC) determination of linuron and 3 of Its metabolites, 3-(3,4-dlchlorophenyl)-1- methyl urea (DCPMU), 3-(3,4-dlchlorophenyl) urea (DCPU), and 3,4-dlchloroanillne (DCA), in potatoes. Samples are extracted with acetone, partitioned into dlchloromethanehexane (1 + 1), and cleaned up using disposable silica cartridges. LC determination Is performed using a LIChrosorb NH2 5 pm column, with an Isopropanol-lsooctane gradient mobile phase and UV detection at 248 nm. Recoveries of linuron and 2 of the metabolites from untreated samples fortified at 0.02-2 jtg/g ranged from 80 to 102%, while recoveries for the metabolite DCA ranged from 60 to 78%. The detection limit was 0.015 jtg/g for linuron and each metabolite; the minimum quantitation level was 0.5 fig/g. The developed method was applied to potato samples from a field experiment


2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 1347-1365 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. E. Haaland ◽  
B. U. Ö. Sonnerup ◽  
M. W. Dunlop ◽  
A. Balogh ◽  
E. Georgescu ◽  
...  

Abstract. In this paper, we use Cluster data from one magnetopause event on 5 July 2001 to compare predictions from various methods for determination of the velocity, orientation, and thickness of the magnetopause current layer. We employ established as well as new multi-spacecraft techniques, in which time differences between the crossings by the four spacecraft, along with the duration of each crossing, are used to calculate magnetopause speed, normal vector, and width. The timing is based on data from either the Cluster Magnetic Field Experiment (FGM) or the Electric Field Experiment (EFW) instruments. The multi-spacecraft results are compared with those derived from various single-spacecraft techniques, including minimum-variance analysis of the magnetic field and deHoffmann-Teller, as well as Minimum-Faraday-Residue analysis of plasma velocities and magnetic fields measured during the crossings. In order to improve the overall consistency between multi- and single-spacecraft results, we have also explored the use of hybrid techniques, in which timing information from the four spacecraft is combined with certain limited results from single-spacecraft methods, the remaining results being left for consistency checks. The results show good agreement between magnetopause orientations derived from appropriately chosen single-spacecraft techniques and those obtained from multi-spacecraft timing. The agreement between magnetopause speeds derived from single- and multi-spacecraft methods is quantitatively somewhat less good but it is evident that the speed can change substantially from one crossing to the next within an event. The magnetopause thickness varied substantially from one crossing to the next, within an event. It ranged from 5 to 10 ion gyroradii. The density profile was sharper than the magnetic profile: most of the density change occured in the earthward half of the magnetopause. Key words. Magnetospheric physics (magnetopause, cusp and boundary layers; instruments and techniques) – Space plasma physics (discontinuities)


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