15 results on '"George W. Fraser"'
Search Results
2. Fraser's tested dahlias are grown the world over /
- Author
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Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
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Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Nursery stock ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1936
3. Fraser's tested dahlias are grown the world over, 1934 /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Nurseries (Horticulture) ,Nursery stock ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1934
4. Fraser's tested dahlias, 1932 /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Nurseries (Horticulture) ,Nursery stock ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1932
5. Fraser's tested dahlias, 1931 /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Nurseries (Horticulture) ,Nursery stock ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1931
6. Fraser's tested dahlias : gladiolus, delphiniums, 1930 /
- Author
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Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Delphinium ,Gladiolus ,Nurseries (Horticulture) ,Nursery stock ,Roots ,Seedlings ,Willimantic - Published
- 1930
7. Fraser's tested dahlias : gladiolus, delphiniums : 1929 [catalog] /
- Author
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Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Fraser, George W., George W. Fraser (Firm), and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Delphinium ,Gladiolus ,Nurseries (Horticulture) ,Nursery stock ,Roots ,Seedlings ,Willimantic - Published
- 1929
8. Fraser's tested dahlias : gladiolus, delphiniums : 1928 [catalog] /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Delphinium ,Gladiolus ,Nursery stock ,Roots ,Seedlings ,Willimantic - Published
- 1928
9. Fraser's tested dahlias : 1927 [catalog] /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Fraser's Dahlia Gardens, and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Bulbs (Plants) ,Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Gladiolus ,Nursery stock ,Roots ,Willimantic - Published
- 1927
10. Fraser's tested dahlias : 1926 /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Gladiolus ,Nursery stock ,Plants, Ornamental ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1926
11. Fraser's tested dahlias : 1925 /
- Author
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George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection, U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Agricultural Library, George W. Fraser (Firm), Fraser, George W., and Henry G. Gilbert Nursery and Seed Trade Catalog Collection
- Subjects
Catalogs ,Connecticut ,Dahlias ,Gladiolus ,Nursery stock ,Plants, Ornamental ,Varieties ,Willimantic - Published
- 1925
12. Performance characteristics of the PAW instrumentation on Beagle 2 (The astrobiology lander on ESA's Mars express mission)
- Author
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Mark Leese, B. Bernhardt, L. Richter, L. Ratke, Kai Leung Yung, P. van Duijn, D. Ross, Colin Wilson, Gillian Butcher, H. Kochan, Nicolas Thomas, Stubbe F. Hviid, B. Favill, Martin C. Towner, Mark R. Sims, N. Phillips, Alan A. Wells, John W. Holt, G. Klingelhoefer, D. Pullan, Christopher Bicknell, Andrew J. Coates, John C. Zarnecki, H. Hamacher, A. Senior, George W. Fraser, Andrew David Griffiths, J. Dowson, J. Sykes, N. Nelms, G. Sims, Manish R. Patel, S. Whitehead, M. Crocker, and Jean-Luc Josset
- Subjects
In situ analysis ,Mars express ,Statistical analysis ,Instrumentation (computer programming) ,Mars Exploration Program ,Exploration of Mars ,Geology ,Isotopic composition ,Remote sensing ,Astrobiology - Abstract
The performance of the PAW instrumentation on the 60kg Beagle 2 lander for ESA’s 2003 Mars Express mission will be described. Beagle 2 will search for organic material on and below the surface of Mars in addition to a study of the inorganic chemistry and mineralogy of the landing site. The lander will utilize acquisition and preparation tools to obtain samples from below the surface, and both under and inside rocks. In situ analysis will include examination of samples with an optical microscope, Mossbauer and fluorescent X-ray spectrometers. Extracted samples will be returned to the lander for analysis, in particular a search for organics and a measurement of their isotopic composition. The PAW experiment performance data will be described along with the status of the project.
- Published
- 2016
13. Effects of capillary reflection in the performance of the collimator of the Large Area Detector on board LOFT
- Author
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Adrian Martindale, Giancarlo Cusumano, Riccardo Campana, Marco Feroci, C. Feldman, Teresa Mineo, and George W. Fraser
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Physics ,Cosmic Vision ,business.industry ,Detector ,Antenna aperture ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Collimator ,Field of view ,Collimated light ,law.invention ,Optics ,Space and Planetary Science ,law ,Observatory ,Microchannel plate detector ,business ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) - Abstract
The Large Observatory For X-ray Timing (LOFT) is one of the candidate missions selected by the European Space Agency for an initial assessment phase in the Cosmic Vision programme. It is proposed for the M3 launch slot and has broad scientific goals related to fast timing of astrophysical X-ray sources. LOFT will carry the Large Area Detector (LAD), as one of the two core science instruments, necessary to achieve the challenging objectives of the project. LAD is a collimated detector working in the energy range 2-50 keV with an effective area of approximately 10 m^2 at 8 keV. The instrument comprises an array of modules located on deployable panels. Lead-glass microchannel plate (MCP) collimators are located in front of the large-area Silicon Drift Detectors (SDD) to reduce the background contamination from off-axis resolved point sources and from the diffuse X-ray background. The inner walls of the microchannel plate pores reflect grazing incidence X-ray photons with a probability that depends on energy. In this paper, we present a study performed with an ad-hoc simulator of the effects of this capillary reflectivity on the overall instrument performance. The reflectivity is derived from a limited set of laboratory measurements, used to constrain the model. The measurements were taken using a prototype collimator whose thickness is similar to that adopted in the current baseline design proposed for the LAD. We find that the experimentally measured level of reflectivity of the pore inner walls enhances the off-axis transmission at low energies, producing an almost flat-top response. The resulting background increase due to the diffuse cosmic X-ray emission and sources within the field of view does not degrade the instrument sensitivity., accepted for publication in Experimental Astronomy
- Published
- 2014
14. Accelerator experiments with soft protons and hyper-velocity dust particles: Application to ongoing projects of future X-ray missions
- Author
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Marco Feroci, E. Del Monte, N. Zampa, Lothar Strüder, A. Vacchi, J. Jochum, Silvia Zane, Alda Rubini, Margarita Hernanz, Søren Brandt, Caroline A. Kilbourne, Norbert Meidinger, George W. Fraser, Ralf Srama, D. Gotz, Maurice A. Leutenegger, J. P. Osborne, P. Azzarello, Michael Freyberg, R. L. Kelley, A. Rachevski, S. Bugiel, I. Rashevskaya, Emanuele Perinati, J. W. den Herder, C. Tenzer, Sebastian Diebold, Eckhard Kendziorra, Peter Friedrich, Konrad Dennerl, Gianluigi Zampa, Andrea Santangelo, B. Cordier, and Enrico Bozzo
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Proton ,Instrumentation ,Nuclear engineering ,Hyper-velocity impacts ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Context (language use) ,Radiation ,law.invention ,Radiation damage ,law ,X-ray instrumentation ,Van de Graaff generator ,Electronic ,Particle accelerators ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Computer Science Applications1707 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Applied Mathematics ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics (astro-ph.IM) ,Physics ,Scattering ,Detector ,X-ray ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on our activities, currently in progress, aimed at performing accelerator experiments with soft protons and hyper-velocity dust particles. They include tests of different types of X-ray detectors and related components (such as filters) and measurements of scattering of soft protons and hyper-velocity dust particles off X-ray mirror shells. These activities have been identified as a goal in the context of a number of ongoing space projects in order to assess the risk posed by environmental radiation and dust and qualify the adopted instrumentation with respect to possible damage or performance degradation. In this paper we focus on tests for the Silicon Drift Detectors (SDDs) used aboard the LOFT space mission. We use the Van de Graaff accelerators at the University of T\"ubingen and at the Max Planck Institute for Nuclear Physics (MPIK) in Heidelberg, for soft proton and hyper-velocity dust tests respectively. We present the experimental set-up adopted to perform the tests, status of the activities and some very preliminary results achieved at present time., Comment: Proceedings of SPIE, Vol. 8443, Paper No. 8443-24, 2012
- Published
- 2012
15. Tularemia in a Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
- Author
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Caroline C. Johnson, George W. Fraser, Alisa L. Newton, Patrina Ross, Julie R. Sinclair, Nancy Warren, Esther Chernak, and Keith Hinshaw
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Microbiology (medical) ,Veterinary medicine ,Epidemiology ,letter ,lcsh:Medicine ,Tick ,biological weapon ,lcsh:Infectious and parasitic diseases ,Tularemia ,Eastern cottontail ,medicine ,Animals ,lcsh:RC109-216 ,Letters to the Editor ,Dermacentor variabilis ,Francisella tularensis ,Wildlife rehabilitation ,Philadelphia ,biology ,lcsh:R ,zoonosis ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,tularemia ,Infectious Diseases ,Ixodes scapularis ,Coccobacillus ,Marmota ,biomonitoring ,Rabbits - Abstract
To the Editor: Tularemia is a bacterial zoonosis caused by the gram-negative, nonmotile coccobacillus Francisella tularensis, which is endemic in lagomorphs in North America (1,2). Tularemia is considered a possible biological weapon of terrorism (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC] category A) because of its high infectivity, ease of dissemination, and considerable ability to cause illness and death in humans (3). The BioWatch Program monitors the environment in urban areas throughout the United States for F. tularensis and other potential bioterrorism agents. The epidemiology of many of these pathogens in urban ecosystems is not well understood; reservoirs may not be known or suspected, which leads to an inability to differentiate natural infection from a bioterrorism event. We describe a cluster of tularemia infections (in the absence of identified human illness or environmental detection) in feral rabbits found in a 0.5-km2 area of a large city park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. During the spring and summer of 2006, a total of 14 eastern cottontail rabbits (Sylvilagus floridanus) and 2 woodchucks (Marmota monax) were found dead or trapped and euthanized (2 rabbits only) at a zoological park. The animals were necropsied, and specimens of liver and spleen were sent to the Pennsylvania Bureau of Laboratories (BOL) for F. tularensis culture and PCR. Two years earlier, in the spring of 2004, a single rabbit found dead at this same location had tested positive for F. tularensis; PCR and culture identified the organism in liver and spleen. Of the 14 rabbits submitted in 2006 for F. tularensis testing, 6 were positive (collection dates ranged from March through August). Five of these were positive by PCR and culture, and 1 was positive by PCR alone; F. tularensis was identified only in animals found dead. The 2 woodchucks tested negative by PCR and culture. The 2004 isolate and 2006 isolates were identified by CDC as type A F. tularensis and were found genetically identical by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis. These additional 2006 positive findings triggered efforts to use available resources to identify other tularemia sources: the Philadelphia Department of Public Health (PDPH) heightened surveillance for tularemia by requesting that other city agencies and wildlife rehabilitation centers report and submit for testing any mammals found dead from unknown causes. (City agencies reported a few larger mammals, e.g., groundhogs and raccoons, dead from trauma; these animals were not tested.) The zoological park continued routine illness monitoring of collection animals, animals on grounds, and staff. In addition, during October 2006 and March 2007, the PDPH collected ticks on the outskirts of a heavily wooded area with frequent foot traffic ≈1.5 miles from the site where the rabbits were found dead. (The specific tick collection method involved dragging a white cotton bath towel along the edge of a wooded area; this activity took place during the hours of 10:00 AM–2:00 PM Other tick-dragging attempts during August 2007, on the outskirts of a heavily wooded area ≈0.5 miles away that was accessible to foot traffic but across the river from the zoological park, yielded no results.) A total of ≈30 deer ticks (Ixodes scapularis, which are not a known vector for tularemia) were collected each month; no other species were identified. These tick specimens were submitted to BOL for F. tularensis testing by PCR and culture. During November and December 2006, 5 crayfish (Procambarus acutus acutus, cited as a possible reservoir for type B tularemia by Anda et al.) (4), were trapped from a pond near the site where the rabbits were found dead and submitted to BOL for F. tularensis testing by PCR and culture. None of these readily available surveillance activities resulted in identifying tularemia except in the rabbits found dead in the zoological park. Additionally, no cases of human tularemia were reported to PDPH during this period, despite distribution of a health alert to medical providers to heighten clinical suspicion for the disease. Furthermore, the organism was not detected by routine environmental monitoring of air samples by the city’s BioWatch sensors. Even though this limited investigation failed to identify additional F. tularensis infections in humans and in any of the animals and ticks tested, the cluster of infections in rabbits in Philadelphia indicates that F. tularensis is present in the environment in sufficient numbers to cause a noteworthy die-off of animals (i.e., 6 rabbits in a 0.5-square-mile area over a 5-month period). Environmental biomonitors in other metropolitan areas have been triggered by reported detection of tularemia on at least 2 occasions in the past 5 years—Houston in 2003 and the Washington, DC, National Mall in 2005 (5). This investigation underscores that F. tularensis identification in the environment requires a systematic approach beyond environmental biomonitoring, random convenience sampling, and increased passive surveillance for human cases. Standard methods such as serologic studies of wildlife may not be available to resource-limited urban institutions. Possible strategies such as the collection of ticks, specifically the American dog tick, Dermacentor variabilis (a known vector for tularemia), from animals upon entry into urban animal shelters and mapping of areas where the animals were found need to be considered if resources are limited. Additional research is necessary to understand the occurrence of disease caused by F. tularensis in humans and animals, especially in urban environments (6).
- Published
- 2008
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