899 research outputs found
...eine Soziologie, als ob Natur nicht zählen würde?
Die Differenz von Natur und Gesellschaft ist für die Soziologie von fundamentaler Bedeutung: Konstituiert sie doch von Anbeginn an Soziologie als Fach mit einem anderen Gegenstand als Naturwissenschaften und erzeugt diese Differenz durch weitere Differenzen der Erfahrung und des gesellschaftlichen Umgangs mit der Natur. Angesichts des Verlustes der gesicherten Grenzen zischen Natürlichem und Sozialem, zwischen Technischem und Sozialem, muss jedoch das sichere Terrain der vertrauten Soziologie verlassen werden. Der Beitrag führt ein in die Plenarveranstaltung des 28. Kongresses der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Soziologie "Soziologie der Natur". Die Diskussionen dort zeigen, dass die Mehrheit sich nicht dazu verleiten lassen will, der Natur und den Objekten Tür und Tor zur Soziologie zu öffnen. Jedoch wollen auch, vor allem die Jüngeren, sich mit einer Soziologie, in der Natur nicht zählt, nicht abfinden. (ICB2
Das "Konzept der Bestände": Passende Heuristik für eine Politik der Nachhaltigkeit? B. Klauer, R. Manstetten, T. Petersen, J. Schiller (unter Mitarbeit von B. Fischer, F. Jöst, M.-Y. Lee und K. Ott): Die Kunst langfristig zu denken. Wege zur Nachhaltigkeit. Baden- Baden: Nomos, 2013,
Kulturelle Krisenphasen und Mobilisierungszyklen des "middle class radicalism": zyklische Aspekte neuer sozialer Bewegungen
Comprehensive inter-laboratory calibration of reference materials for δ18O versus VSMOW using various on-line high-temperature conversion techniques
Internationally distributed organic and inorganic oxygen isotopic reference materials have been calibrated by six laboratories carrying out more than 5300 measurements using a variety of high-temperature conversion techniques (HTC) in an evaluation sponsored by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC). To aid in the calibration of these reference materials, which span more than 125‰, an artificially enriched reference water (δ18O of +78.91‰) and two barium sulfates (one depleted and one enriched in 18O) were prepared and calibrated relative to VSMOW2 and SLAP reference waters. These materials were used to calibrate the other isotopic reference materials in this study.
The seemingly large estimated combined uncertainties arise from differences in instrumentation and methodology and difficulty in accounting for all measurement bias. They are composed of the 3-fold standard errors directly calculated from the measurements and provision for systematic errors discussed in this paper. A primary conclusion of this study is that nitrate samples analyzed for δ18O should be analyzed with internationally distributed isotopic nitrates, and likewise for sulfates and organics. Authors reporting relative differences of oxygen-isotope ratios (δ18O) of nitrates, sulfates, or organic material should explicitly state in their reports the δ18O values of two or more internationally distributed nitrates (USGS34, IAEA-NO-3, and USGS35), sulfates (IAEA-SO-5, IAEA-SO-6, and NBS 127), or organic material (IAEA-601 benzoic acid, IAEA-602 benzoic acid, and IAEA-600 caffeine), as appropriate to the material being analyzed, had these reference materials been analyzed with unknowns. This procedure ensures that readers will be able to normalize the δ18O values at a later time should it become necessary.
The high-temperature reduction technique for analyzing δ18O and δ2H is not as widely applicable as the well-established combustion technique for carbon and nitrogen stable isotope determination. To obtain the most reliable stable isotope data, materials should be treated in an identical fashion; within the same sequence of analyses, samples should be compared with working reference materials that are as similar in nature and in isotopic composition as feasible.
Einleitung in die Arbeitsgruppe: Soziologie und Ökologie: Wie beeinflusst die ökologische Krise gesellschaftliche Beziehungsmuster?
Constructing consistent multiscale scenarios by transdisciplinary processes : the case of mountain regions facing global change
Alpine regions in Europe, in particular, face demanding local challenges, e.g., the decline in the agriculture and timber industries, and are also prone to global changes, such as in climate, with potentially severe impacts on tourism. We focus on the Visp region in the Upper Valais, Switzerland, and ask how the process of stakeholder involvement in research practice can contribute to a better understanding of the specific challenges and future development of mountainous regions under global change. Based on a coupled human-environment system (HES) perspective, we carried out a formative scenario analysis to develop a set of scenarios for the future directions of the Visp region. In addition, we linked these regional scenarios to context scenarios developed at the global and Swiss levels via an external consistency analysis. This method allows the coupling of both the scenario building process and the scenarios as such. We used a functional-dynamic approach to theory-practice cooperation, i.e., the involvement of key stakeholders from, for example, tourism, forestry, and administration, differed in type and intensity during the steps of the research process. In our study, we experienced strong problem awareness among the stakeholders concerning the impacts of global change and local challenges. The guiding research question was commonly defined and problem ownership was more or less balanced. We arrived at six multiscale scenarios that open up future trajectories for the Visp region, and present generic strategies to cope with global and local challenges. The results show that local identity, spatial planning, community budget, and demographic development are important steering elements in the region’s future development. We suggest that method-guided transdisciplinary processes result in a richer picture and a more systemic understanding, which enable a discussion of critical and surprising issues
Magnetic impurity in a one-dimensional few-fermion system
We present a numerical analysis of spin- fermions in a
one-dimensional harmonic potential in the presence of a magnetic point-like
impurity at the center of the trap. The model represents a few-body analogue of
a magnetic impurity in the vicinity of an -wave superconductor. Already for
a few particles we find a ground-state level crossing between sectors with
different fermion parities. We interpret this crossing as a few-body precursor
of a quantum phase transition, which occurs when the impurity `breaks' a Cooper
pair. This picture is further corroborated by analyzing density-density
correlations in momentum space. Finally, we discuss how the system may be
realized with existing cold-atoms platforms.Comment: SciPost Submissio
Morphologies of High Redshift, Dust Obscured Galaxies from Keck Laser Guide Star Adaptive Optics
Spitzer MIPS images in the Bootes field of the NOAO Deep Wide-Field Survey
have revealed a class of extremely dust obscured galaxy (DOG) at z~2. The DOGs
are defined by very red optical to mid-IR (observed-frame) colors, R - [24 um]
> 14 mag, i.e. f_v (24 um) / f_v (R) > 1000. They are Ultra-Luminous Infrared
Galaxies with L_8-1000 um > 10^12 -10^14 L_sun, but typically have very faint
optical (rest-frame UV) fluxes. We imaged three DOGs with the Keck Laser Guide
Star Adaptive Optics (LGSAO) system, obtaining ~0.06'' resolution in the
K'-band. One system was dominated by a point source, while the other two were
clearly resolved. Of the resolved sources, one can be modeled as a exponential
disk system. The other is consistent with a de Vaucouleurs profile typical of
elliptical galaxies. The non-parametric measures of their concentration and
asymmetry, show the DOGs to be both compact and smooth. The AO images rule out
double nuclei with separations of greater than 0.1'' (< 1 kpc at z=2), making
it unlikely that ongoing major mergers (mass ratios of 1/3 and greater) are
triggering the high IR luminosities. By contrast, high resolution images of z~2
SCUBA sources tend to show multiple components and a higher degree of
asymmetry. We compare near-IR morphologies of the DOGs with a set of z=1
luminous infrared galaxies (LIRGs; L_IR ~ 10^11 L_sun) imaged with Keck LGSAO
by the Center for Adaptive Optics Treasury Survey. The DOGs in our sample have
significantly smaller effective radii, ~1/4 the size of the z=1 LIRGs, and tend
towards higher concentrations. The small sizes and high concentrations may help
explain the globally obscured rest-frame blue-to-UV emission of the DOGs.Comment: 9 pages, 7 figures, 2 tables, accepted for publication in the
Astronomical Journa
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