7,563 research outputs found
Evidence of spin disorder at the surface–core interface of oxygen passivated Fe nanoparticles
Hysteresis, thermal dependence of magnetization, and coercivity of oxide coated ultrafine Fe
particles prepared by inert gas condensation and oxygen passivation have been studied in the 5–300
K range. The results are found to be consistent with a spin-glasslike state of the oxide layer
inducing, through exchange interaction with the ferromagnetic core, a shift of the field cooled
hysteresis loops at temperatures below the freezing at approximately 50 K.Dirección General de Investigación y Desarrollo. Gobierno de España-CICYT MAT95- 1042-C02-02Dirección General de Investigación y Desarrollo. Gobierno de España-PB96-0863-C02-02.Comisión Europea-ERBFMBI-CT95-0534
Greenbelt Homes Pilot Energy Efficiency Program Phase 1 Summary: Existing Conditions and Baseline Energy Use
A multi-year pilot energy efficiency retrofit project has been undertaken by Greenbelt Homes, Inc, (GHI) a 1,566 co-operative of circa 1930 and '40 homes. The three predominate construction methods of the townhomes in the community are materials common to the area and climate zone including 8" CMU block, wood frame with brick veneer and wood frame with vinyl siding. GHI has established a pilot project that will serve as a basis for decision making for the roll out of a decade-long community upgrade program that will incorporate energy efficiency to the building envelope and equipment with the modernization of other systems like plumbing, mechanical equipment, and cladding
2nd CapHaz-Net Regional Hazard Workshop: Social capacity building for Alpine hazards
The Alpine Space is a trans-national territory inhabited by 13 million people and comprising the territory of 8 countries, 83 regions and about 6,200 communities. It is characterised by a great variety in terms of natural hazard exposure. Floods, avalanches, debris flows, landslides, forest fires threaten the entire Alpine Space and are triggered by both natural and anthropogenic factors. The work described in this report focuses on this space and aims at bringing together and confronting different perspectives on the theme of social capacity building. It summarises the results of one of the work packages (WP8) of the CapHaz-Net project, which aims at identifying social capacities that contribute to making European societies more resilient to the impacts of natural hazards.
More precisely the work presented here links previous project findings (related both to central topics and specific social capacities) to the practice of alpine hazards management in Europe, underlining potentials for enhancement of resilience both in this region and in Europe as a whole.
This report is based on the preparatory work and the results of the Alpine Regional Hazard Workshop that took place in Gorizia (North Eastern Italy) on 4th and 5th April 2011. The main objectives were to provide an overview of existing institutional frames and the respective policy context at the regional scale, to better understand how social capacity building and preparedness strategies for Alpine hazards work in practice and to foster interdisciplinary and cross country dialogue between scientists and practitioners. This was done by taking into account strengths and weaknesses of existing tools and approaches and by analysing the potential for transferring best practices to different regional and hazard contexts.
To bridge the gap between research and practice both theoretical knowledge and practical experiences were taken into account. The workshop started from a description of the main characteristics of alpine hazards. Then the focus shifted on operational risk management in four different countries of the alpine arch (Austria, Switzerland, Slovenia and Italy) and finally on practices for risk mitigation in two Italian case studies (Vipiteno/Sterzing in the Trentino Alto Adige region and Malborghetto-Valbruna in the Friuli Venezia Giulia region). The SWOT methodology was used as a heuristic tool for organizing the available insights and the participants' discussion.
Natural sciences, historical perspectives as well as legal analysis have contributed to broadening and detailing the social capacity concept and more precisely to characterising and further specifying each particular capacity. Practitioners in the field of alpine hazards in different countries and residents of the two case study area also contributed by presenting and discussing their views and perspectives about prevention, mitigation, emergency management and recovery from natural disasters
‘‘Different" bodies: hybridisations and transformations in the biographical storylines of people with disabilities
This article, moving within the conceptual framework of Embodied Cognition (Merleau-Ponty, 1945/2005), aims at investigating the embodied representations of the bodies of people with
physical disabilities in identity construction processes. In this way,
the article helps to shape a culture that embraces differences and
values body diversity.
As described by existing literature on the subject (Clandinin &
Connelly, 2004; Giaconi, Del Bianco, D’Angelo, Taddei, Caldarelli & Capellini, 2021; Giaconi, Del Bianco, D’Angelo, Taddei &
Rodrigues, 2020), the life stories of people with disabilities, including athletes, represent a privileged way to access the processes of signification of corporeity, interpretation of diversity and
overcoming of binary logics (male/female, natural/artificial). Indeed, when the hybridisations and transformations of “different”
bodies emerge directly from the words of people with disabilities,
one can gauge their profound distance from media representations of disability, awash with ableist narrative styles (Bocci, De
Castro & Zona, 2020; Giaconi & Capellini, 2019). Following this direction, this article will highlight the possibilities of a pedagogical work intentionally focused on the narratives of athletes with
disabilities
Seismic Q estimates in Umbria-Marche (central Italy): hints for the retrieval of a new attenuation law for seismic risk
In the Umbria Marche (Central Italy) region an important earthquake sequence occurred in 1997,
characterized by nine earthquakes with magnitudes in the range between 5 and 6, that caused
important damages and causalities. In the present paper we separately estimate intrinsic- and
scattering- Q
−1
parameters, using the classical MLTWA approach in the assumption of a half space
model. The results clearly show that the attenuation parameters Qi
−1
and Qs
−1
are frequency
dependent. This estimate is compared with other attenuation studies carried out in the same area, and
with all the other MLTWA estimates obtained till now in other tectonic environments in the Earth.
The bias introduced by the half space assumption is investigated through numerical solutions of the
Energy Transport equation in the more realistic assumption of a heterogeneous crust overlying a
transparent mantle, with a Moho located at a depth ranging between 35 and 45 km below the surface.
The bias introduced by the half space assumption is significant only at high frequency. We finally
show how the attenuation estimates, calculated with different techniques, lead to different PGA decay
with distance relationships, using the well known and well proven Boore’s method. This last result
indicates that care must be used in selecting the correct estimate of the attenuation parameters for
seismic risk purposes. We also discuss the reason why MLTWA may be chosen among all the other
available techniques, due to its intrinsic stability, to obtain the right attenuation parameters
Inclusive University didactics and technological devices: a case study
This paper provides a review of projects related to new technologies used to favour the teaching-learning processes and the inclusive practices in the University context for students with disabilities and with Specific Learning Disorders. Authors present a review of strategies, trajectories and perspectives activated in the national and international scene, aiming to guarantee a significant pedagogical framework of reference. Furthermore, the paper focuses on a meaningful path activated at the University of Macerata, the project Inclusion 3.0, a relevant example of new technologies in support of teaching- learning processes and inclusion practices among all students
Differences in telomere length between sporadic and familial cutaneous melanoma
BACKGROUND:
Several pieces of evidence indicate that a complex relationship exists between constitutional telomere length (TL) and the risk of cutaneous melanoma. Although the general perception is that longer telomeres increase melanoma risk, some studies do not support this association. We hypothesise that discordant data are due to the characteristics of the studied populations.
OBJECTIVES:
To evaluate the association of telomere length with familial and sporadic melanoma.
METHODS:
TL was measured by multiplex quantitative PCR in leukocytes from 310 melanoma patients according to familial/sporadic and single/multiple cancers and 216 age-matched controls.
RESULTS:
Patients with sporadic melanoma were found to have shorter telomeres as compared to those with familial melanoma. In addition, shorter telomeres, while tending to reduce the risk of familial melanoma regardless of single or multiple tumors, nearly trebled the risk of single sporadic melanoma.
CONCLUSIONS:
This is the first time that TL has been correlated to opposite effects on melanoma risk according to the presence or absence of familial predisposition. Individual susceptibility to melanoma should be taken into account when assessing the role of TL as a risk factor. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved
Multiple resolution seismic attenuation imaging at Mt. Vesuvius
A three-dimensional S wave attenuation tomography of Mt. Vesuvius has been ob-
tained with multiple measurements of coda-normalized S-wave spectra of local small
magnitude earthquakes. We used 6609 waveforms, relative to 826 volcano-tectonic
earthquakes, located close to the crater axis in a depth range between 1 and 4 km
(below the sea level), recorded at seven 3-component digital seismic stations. We
adopted a two-point ray-tracing; rays were traced in an high resolution 3-D velocity
model. The spatial resolution achieved in the attenuation tomography is comparable
with that of the velocity tomography (we resolve 300 m side cubic cells). We statisti-
cally tested that the results are almost independent from the radiation pattern. We
also applied an improvement of the ordinary spectral-slope method to both P- and
S-waves, assuming that the di¤erences between the theoretical and the experimental
high frequency spectral-slope are only due to the attenuation e¤ects.We could check
the coda-normalization method comparing the S attenuation image obtained with
the two methods. The images were obtained with a multiple resolution approach.
Results show the general coincidence of low attenuation with high velocity zones.
The joint interpretation of velocity and attenuation images allows us to interpret
the low attenuation zone intruding toward the surface until a depth of 500 meters
below the sea level as related to the residual part of solidi ed magma from the last
eruption. In the depth range between -700 and -2300 meters above sea level, the
images are consistent with the presence of multiple acquifer layers. No evidence of
magma patches greater than the minimum cell dimension (300m) has been found.
A shallow P wave attenuation anomaly (beneath the southern ank of the volcano)
is consitent with the presence of gas saturated rocks. The zone characterized by
the maximum seismic energy release cohincides with a high attenuation and low
velocity volume, interpreted as a cracked medium
End-to-end approach to flexible and sustainable commercial spaceflight initiatives: Evaluation of operational scenarios, safety aspects, spaceports and associated economic elements
Multiple initiatives are going on today, aimed at developing new technologies for commercial exploitation of space. The potential benefits of widening up the access to space to a broader users community affect different applications ranging from space tourism to microgravity experimentation to astronauts and pilots training; moreover, in the new space economy users communities may include parties that do not traditionally operate in the space business but can take advantage of microgravity exploitation as an opportunity to carry out experimental activities with potential more significant outcome. The present paper initially approaches commercial access to space by evaluating different mission concepts, technologies and platforms such as suborbital spaceflight, orbital spaceflight, air launch and deployment of small satellites. In order to select the most promising alternative, trade off methodologies, making use of safety, cost and complexity as figures of merit are suggested for the specific case of the suborbital flight. Moreover, the paper describes the outcome of simplified mission simulations, encompassing both suborbital vehicle as well as satellite air launch trajectories predictions. The trajectories simulations can also provide useful inputs to the vehicle design and performance analysis and are instrumental to planning air space operations after lift off from the launch site, as well as to assess logistics and operational aspects. Thus, simulations of really operating environment provide the link to the Spaceport selection process aiming at defining an adequate operating base and a set of proper ground infrastructures that efficiently support in integrated fashion the execution of the planned activities with the selected platforms. An integrated end-to-end approach is also described, that basing upon the specific users' needs identifies the appropriate platform and delivers the associated service matching the relevant goals. The paper finally discusses some economic and organizational aspects for developing a sustainable commercial spaceflight initiative. Ideas for next activities are drawn too, mainly focusing on trajectory validation simulation with real data coming from the initial test campaigns
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