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Q: Elder root rot (?) outside ground around concrete slab? I'm newly trying to learn some gardening skills, so I decided to start a garden in a yard that's pretty much a snowy wasteland. I dug a 2 inch hole around the perimeter of the beds, put down some growing medium, then laid down some mulch. The soil has stuff in it, like what looks like a variety of ferns, but it doesn't look like rabbit or deer droppings. It's wet in winter and dry in summer. There's lots of dead leaves around the area to compost. The first thing I noticed about my garden was that I'd pulled up some roots from a plant in shallow water and noticed a large hole in the ground. It looks like the plant was trying to grow somewhere else. The plant was so waterlogged, I pulled up the roots rather than get them wet. I'm still not sure if this plant was growing as a weed or in a native plant bed. But the video on YouTube and from GFS does indicate it's not a pomegranate or anything. When I brought the roots of plant closer to the edge of the bed, there was another root nearby... about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch long. It had the mottled red-brown and black that you see in an elder root. I'm not 100% sure but it looks like this root might be from a tree root, like an english elm (Ulmus minor). Again, the video on YouTube and from GFS does show it's not a pomegranate.
The magnetic scalar potential is set to be discontinuous along the thin cuts, thereby imposing a current inside the domain surrounded by the cut equal to the jump in phi. The first model calculates the AC losses in a 2D-axisymmetric pancake coil consisting of 40 turns of superconducting tapes. The second model calculates the AC losses in two twisted superconducting filaments in 3D. A modified periodic condition is introduced to properly consider the periodicity of the field. The equation view must be enabled in order to see the periodic boundary condition used in the phi physics. d2c66b5586