181 research outputs found

    Manufacturing solar water heaters in South Africa : the benefits and costs.

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    MBA University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban 2013.There is potential to use solar energy instead of electricity as an energy efficient method of heating water. This study investigated the costs and benefits of solar water heater manufacture in South Africa and aimed to provide a better understanding of the industry in order to promote a better life for all. Local manufacturers have already recognised the costs and benefits of solar water heaters. This study drew on the findings of international practices and applied these to the South African context. The costs and benefits include the high price of solar water heaters, lack of awareness of the technology, the absence of legislation, a tedious process for rebates, nonmandatory standards, insufficient training facilities leading to a shortage of skills and the low price of electricity. The research methodology was qualitative in nature and the study was supported by current relevant theory and the results of six open-ended questionnaires completed by local manufacturers. The information gathered from the questionnaires was analysed and compared with the theory and international current best practice. The benefits of solar water heating can be enhanced by more government involvement in the development of policies to promote local manufacture and educate the public on alternative energy sources. Poor public awareness of the technology can be improved through awareness programmes at schools and frequent broadcasts on all media. There is a dire need for the development of cost effective financing mechanisms as the high costs of production directly influence the price of solar water heaters. Financial incentive models such as rebates could be used more effectively to assist low and middle-income groups with partial funding for the purchase of a solar water heater

    Out of home care in Norway and Sweden - similar and different

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    An overview of the current situation in the out-of-home care in Norway and Sweden is presented in this article; also the development in later years is described and discussed. Socially, politically and culturally there are few differences between Norway and Sweden. Child protection and out-of-home placement of children and young people are integrated parts in the welfare state that are shared by the Nordic countries. It is a model that builds on principles of universalism and decommodification of social rights. The welfare model presupposes high public legitimacy for a high level of social expenditure. However the idea of marketization and privatization has also affected the welfare model in Sweden and Norway. Although there are more similarities than differences between the two countries’ child protection systems, the article discusses some differences, for example the after care services, new groups of children and young people in the out-of-home care, like young unaccompanied asylum seekers. There are also some differences when it comes to privatization, the introduction of evidence-based methods in the child protection system and the tension between general and residual services for children and young people in the child protection syste

    X-ray emission from a crystal undulator—Experimental results at channeling of electrons

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    Experiments have been performed at the Mainz Microtron MAMI to explore the radiation emission from a 4-period epitaxially grown strained layer Si1−xGex undulator with a period length λu = 9.9 μm. Electron energies of 270 and 855MeV have been chosen. In comparison with a flat silicon reference crystal, a broad excess yield around the theoretically expected photon energies of 0.069 and 0.637 MeV, respectively, has been observed for channeling at the undulating (110) planes. The results are discussed within the framework of the classical undulator theory

    Nemesis: A Concept of Retribution in Ancient Greek Thought and Cult

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    This thesis is a study of the phenomenon of the abstract concept of nemesis together with its later personification, the goddess Nemesis, in the Archaic and Classical periods of ancient Greece. It seeks to ascertain how and why it was that an abstract concept of 'righteous indignation', later becoming 'divine retribution', would ever have been thought of as an appropriate concept to personify and worship as a deity

    Phosphodiesterases in non-neoplastic appearing colonic mucosa from patients with colorectal neoplasia

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    BACKGROUND: Intracellular signaling through cyclic nucleotides, both cyclic AMP and cyclic GMP, is altered in colorectal cancer. Accordingly, it is hypothesized that an underlying mechanism for colorectal neoplasia involves altered function of phosphodiesterases (PDEs), which affects cyclic nucleotide degradation. Here we present an approach to evaluate the function of selected cyclic nucleotide-PDEs in colonic endoscopic biopsies from non-neoplastic appearing mucosa. METHODS: Biopsies were obtained from patients with and without colorectal neoplasia. Activities of PDEs were characterized functionally by measurements of transepithelial ion transport and their expression and localization by employing real-time qPCR and immunohistochemistry. RESULTS: In functional studies PDE subtype-4 displayed lower activity in colorectal neoplasia patients (p = 0.006). Furthermore, real-time qPCR analysis showed overexpression of subtype PDE4B (p = 0.002) and subtype PDE5A (p = 0.02) in colorectal neoplasia patients. Finally, immunohistochemistry for 7 PDE isozymes demonstrated the presence of all 7 isozymes, albeit with weak reactions, and with no differences in localization between colorectal neoplasia and control patients. Of note, quantification of PDE subtype immunostaining revealed a lower amount of PDE3A (p = 0.04) and a higher amount of PDE4B (p = 0.02) in samples from colorectal neoplasia patients. CONCLUSION: In conclusion, functional data indicated lower activity of PDE4 subtypes while expressional and abundance data indicated a higher expression of PDE4B in patients with colorectal neoplasia. We suggest that cyclic nucleotide-PDE4B is overexpressed as a malfunctioning protein in non-neoplastic appearing colonic mucosa from patients with colorectal neoplasia. If a predisposition of reduced PDE4B activity in colonic mucosa from colorectal neoplasia patients is substantiated further, this subtype could be a potential novel early diagnostic risk marker and may even be a target for future medical preventive treatment of colorectal cancer. ELECTRONIC SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL: The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12885-016-2980-z) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users

    Future aspects of X-ray emission from crystal undulators at channeling of positrons

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    In connection with ideas to produce undulator-like radiation in the hundreds of keV up to the MeV region by means of positron and electron channeling, there is renewed interest to study various channeling phenomena also experimentally. With electrons experiments have been performed at the Mainz Microtron MAMI to explore channeling-radiation emission by a 4-period epitaxially grown strained layer Si1−xGex undulator with a period length of λu = 9.9 μm. Unfortunately, high-quality positron beams of sufficient intensity are not easily accessible. The only serious candidate in Europe seems to be the Beam Test Facility (BTF) at INFN/LNF, Frascati, Italy. Some requirements to extent BTF in a facility which is also well suited for positron channeling-radiation experiments will be outlined

    Pathways to permanence in England and Norway: A critical analysis of documents and data

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    The English language term ‘permanence’ is increasingly used in high income countries as a ‘short-hand’ translation for a complex set of aims around providing stability and family membership for children who need child welfare services and out-of-home care. From a scrutiny of legislative provisions, court judgments, government documents and a public opinion survey on child placement options, the paper draws out similarities and differences in understandings of the place of ‘permanence’ within the child welfare discourse in Norway and England. The main differences are that in England the components of permanence are explicitly set out in legislation, statutory guidance and advisory documents whilst in Norway the terms ‘stability’ and ‘continuity’ are used in a more limited number of policy documents in the context of a wide array of services available for children and families. The paper then draws on these sources, and on administrative data on children in care, to tease out possible explanations for the similarities and differences identified. We hypothesise that both long-standing policies and recent changes can be explained by differences in public and political understandings of child welfare and the balance between universal services and those targeted on parents and children identified as vulnerable and in need of specialist services
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