603 research outputs found
Mine waste characterization, management and remediation
Mining is a vital part of the Global economy, but the extraction of metals, metalloids, and other mineral products generates vast quantities of liquid and solid waste. Currently the volume is estimated at several thousand million tons per annum, but is increasing exponentially as demand and exploitation of lower-grade deposits increases. The high concentrations of potentially toxic elements in these wastes can pose risks to ecosystems and humans, but these risks can be mitigated by implementing appropriate management or remediation schemes. Although there are a large number of such schemes available, there is still a need to research the processes, products, and effectiveness of implementation, as well as the nature of the mine wastes themselves. This Special Issue is aimed at bringing together studies in the areas of mine waste characterization, management, and remediation, to review the current state of knowledge and to develop improvements in current schemes. Fourteen manuscripts are published for this Special Issue, and these are summarized below.[...
Making precise predictions of the Casimir force between metallic plates via a weighted Kramers-Kronig transform
The possibility of making precise predictions for the Casimir force is
essential for the theoretical interpretation of current precision experiments
on the thermal Casimir effect with metallic plates, especially for sub-micron
separations. For this purpose it is necessary to estimate very accurately the
dielectric function of a conductor along the imaginary frequency axis. This
task is complicated in the case of ohmic conductors, because optical data do
not usually extend to sufficiently low frequencies to permit an accurate
evaluation of the standard Kramers-Kronig integral used to compute . By making important improvements in the results of a previous paper by
the author, it is shown that this difficulty can be resolved by considering
suitable weighted dispersions relations, which strongly suppress the
contribution of low frequencies. The weighted dispersion formulae presented in
this paper permit to estimate accurately the dielectric function of ohmic
conductors for imaginary frequencies, on the basis of optical data extending
from the IR to the UV, with no need of uncontrolled data extrapolations towards
zero frequency that are instead necessary with standard Kramers-Kronig
relations. Applications to several sets of data for gold films are presented to
demonstrate viability of the new dispersion formulae.Comment: 18 pages, 15 encapsulated figures. In the revised version important
improvements have been made, which affect the main conclusions of the pape
The identity of Albuca caudata Jacq. (Hyacinthaceae) and a description of a new related species : A. bakeri
The name Albuca caudata Jacq. has been widely misunderstood or even ignored since its description in 1791. After studying herbarium specimens and living populations in South Africa, plants fitting Jacquin´s concept of that species are found to be widely distributed in the Eastern Cape, mainly in the Albany centre of Endemism. Furthermore, some divergent specimens matching Baker´s concept of Albuca caudata are described as a new related species: Albuca bakeri. Data on typification, morphology, ecology, and distribution are reported for both taxa. Affinities and divergences with other close allies are also discussed
Pollination biology of Bergeranthus multiceps (Aizoaceae) with preliminary observations of repeated flower opening and closure
Little is known about pollination of the Aizoaceae (Mesembryanthemaceae). There are sparse reports of generalist pollination in the family by a variety of insects (predominantly bees). Furthermore, most species are self-incompatible in cultivation. In this study, observations were made on two populations of Bergeranthus multiceps (Salm-Dyck) Schwantes growing in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. Insects visiting the flowers were collected and examined for pollen. While 79 individual insects (in 24 genera representing 14 families and four orders) were collected visiting the flowers, the majority (43 individuals) were female Allodapula variegata bees (Apidae, subfamily Xylocopinae, tribe Allodapini)collecting pollen. All other bee visitors were also female, suggesting pollen collection as the primary activity at the flowers. The protandrous flowers were found to be self-incompatible, pointing to the importance of bee-mediated xenogamy in this species. The flowers of B. multiceps are bright yellow in the human visual spectrum. In addition, the petals of this species reflect ultraviolet light. In contrast, the yellow anthers absorb UV. Flower opening and closing is common in the Aizoaceae. Interestingly, in B. multiceps flowers open at about 15:30 and remain open for approximately three hours before closing again in the late afternoon. These afternoon flower opening events were found to be closely correlated to ambient temperatures above 23°C, relative humidity lower than 50% and vapour pressure deficit below 1.05 kPa measured from as early as 09:00 on the days when flowers opened
Nicipe rosulata (Ornithogaloideae, Hyacinthaceae), a New Species from the Little Karoo in South Africa, with a New Combination in the Genus
A new species of Nicipe from the Little Karoo in South Africa is here described. Nicipe rosulata sp. nov. is characterized by its (3‐)5‐8 short and broad, somewhat leathery leaves disposed in a basal rosette, its narrowly ovate, acute-apiculate capsules, and its long papillate-echinulate seeds. This species is at first sight related to Nicipe britteniae and Ornithogalum lithopsoides based on their short leaves with ciliate to fimbriate margins, but it differs in floral and vegetative characters that clearly support its recognition as a distinct species. Nicipe britteniae differs from N. rosulata by the hard, distichous, ensiform, conduplicate, and densely fimbriate leaves and the rugose seeds. Ornithogalum lithopsoides clearly differs by the more numerous and much thinner leaves, and the rugose seeds, among other characters. Here we provide a detailed morphological description for Nicipe rosulata, including ecological and chorological data, and discuss relationships with its close allies. Finally, the recently described Ornithogalum lithopsoides, also from the Little Karoo, clearly belongs to Nicipe based on the leathery rosulate leaves all arising nearly at the same level, the relatively small flowers, the tepals with a dark longitudinal band mostly visible on the abaxial side, and the small capsules and seeds. This new combination in the latter genus is also presented here.This work was partly supported by the Fundación Ramón Areces (Spain) and Universidad de Alicante (Spain)
Shadows and traces in bicategories
Traces in symmetric monoidal categories are well-known and have many
applications; for instance, their functoriality directly implies the Lefschetz
fixed point theorem. However, for some applications, such as generalizations of
the Lefschetz theorem, one needs "noncommutative" traces, such as the
Hattori-Stallings trace for modules over noncommutative rings. In this paper we
study a generalization of the symmetric monoidal trace which applies to
noncommutative situations; its context is a bicategory equipped with an extra
structure called a "shadow." In particular, we prove its functoriality and
2-functoriality, which are essential to its applications in fixed-point theory.
Throughout we make use of an appropriate "cylindrical" type of string diagram,
which we justify formally in an appendix.Comment: 46 pages; v2: reorganized and shortened, added proof for cylindrical
string diagrams; v3: final version, to appear in JHR
Linear stability of planar premixed flames: reactive Navier-Stokes equations with finite activation energy and arbitrary Lewis number
A numerical shooting method for performing linear stability analyses of travelling waves is described and applied to the problem of freely propagating planar premixed flames. Previous linear stability analyses of premixed flames either employ high activation temperature asymptotics or have been performed numerically with finite activation temperature, but either for unit Lewis numbers (which ignores thermal-diffusive effects) or in the limit of small heat release (which ignores hydrodynamic effects). In this paper the full reactive Navier-Stokes equations are used with arbitrary values of the parameters (activation temperature, Lewis number, heat of reaction, Prandtl number), for which both thermal-diffusive and hydrodynamic effects on the instability, and their interactions, are taken into account. Comparisons are made with previous asymptotic and numerical results. For Lewis numbers very close to or above unity, for which hydrodynamic effects caused by thermal expansion are the dominant destablizing mechanism, it is shown that slowly varying flame analyses give qualitatively good but quantitatively poor predictions, and also that the stability is insensitive to the activation temperature. However, for Lewis numbers sufficiently below unity for which thermal-diffusive effects play a major role, the stability of the flame becomes very sensitive to the activation temperature. Indeed, unphysically high activation temperatures are required for the high activation temperature analysis to give quantitatively good predictions at such low Lewis numbers. It is also shown that state-insensitive viscosity has a small destabilizing effect on the cellular instability at low Lewis numbers
Higher topological complexity and its symmetrization
We develop the properties of the -th sequential topological complexity
, a homotopy invariant introduced by the third author as an extension of
Farber's topological model for studying the complexity of motion planning
algorithms in robotics. We exhibit close connections of to the
Lusternik-Schnirelmann category of cartesian powers of , to the cup-length
of the diagonal embedding , and to the ratio between
homotopy dimension and connectivity of . We fully compute the numerical
value of for products of spheres, closed 1-connected symplectic
manifolds, and quaternionic projective spaces. Our study includes two
symmetrized versions of . The first one, unlike Farber-Grant's
symmetric topological complexity, turns out to be a homotopy invariant of ;
the second one is closely tied to the homotopical properties of the
configuration space of cardinality- subsets of . Special attention is
given to the case of spheres.Comment: The ideas about cellular stratified spaces and its application to the
homotopy dimension of configuration spaces on spheres have been removed from
this version. The title has changed accordingly. 19 pages. Submitted for
publicatio
Drimia trichophylla (Hyacinthaceae, Urgineoideae), a New Species from the Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Within the framework of a taxonomic revision of Drimia sensu lato we here describe a new species from the Eastern Cape Province in South Africa. Drimia trichophylla sp. nov. is at first sight related to D. vermiformis, but it can be clearly differentiated by the flower and leaf morphology and distribution. A complete description is presented for this species, and data on morphology, ecology, and distribution are reported. Affinities and divergences with other close allies are also discussed.This work was partly supported by Fundación Ramón Areces (Spain), H2020 Research and Innovation Staff Exchange Programme of the European Commission, project 645636: 'Insect-plant relationships: insights into biodiversity and new applications' (FlyHigh), University of Alicante (Spain), Rhodes University (Dept. of Botany) and the Selmar Schonland Herbarium (GRA) (Eastern Cape, South Africa)
From double Lie groupoids to local Lie 2-groupoids
We apply the bar construction to the nerve of a double Lie groupoid to obtain
a local Lie 2-groupoid. As an application, we recover Haefliger's fundamental
groupoid from the fundamental double groupoid of a Lie groupoid. In the case of
a symplectic double groupoid, we study the induced closed 2-form on the
associated local Lie 2-groupoid, which leads us to propose a definition of a
symplectic 2-groupoid.Comment: 23 pages, a few minor changes, including a correction to Lemma 6.
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