396 research outputs found
Un défi des gestionnaires du territoire : comment composer avec les différentes définitions des risques?
Dans les pays en dĂ©veloppement, oĂč les territoires prĂ©sentent de multiples facteurs de vulnĂ©rabilitĂ© et oĂč l'exposition Ă des dangers divers et nombreux sont des phĂ©nomĂšnes quotidiens, la mise en place de mesures visant Ă contrebalancer ces phĂ©nomĂšnes devient un enjeu difficile Ă rĂ©aliser. Dans cette perspective, il s'agit d'Ă©tudier, Ă travers les pratiques des acteurs, quels sont les Ă©lĂ©ments qui permettent de dĂ©finir les risques et les actions Ă entreprendre. Les acteurs doivent nĂ©gocier ou mĂȘme imposer la lĂ©gitimitĂ© de leurs vulnĂ©rabilitĂ©s dans un jeu de nĂ©gociations, d'arbitrages et de conflits. Le cas d'Ă©tude Ă San CristĂłbal, Guatemala, permet d'analyser les diffĂ©rentes solutions proposĂ©es sous l'angle des vulnĂ©rabilitĂ©s en jeu. Nous montrons que la prise en compte des vulnĂ©rabilitĂ©s influence la lecture de l'Ă©quation du risque des acteurs concernĂ©s et conditionne le champ des solutions possibles. Les rĂ©sultats de cette recherche indiquent que le risque n'est pas univoque mais qu'il est le rĂ©sultat d'un choix et des calculs faits par les acteurs. Pour cette raison, les mesures Ă entreprendre dĂ©pendent des compromis Ă©laborĂ©s entre les acteurs
Line Surge Arresters Applications On The Compact Transmission Lines
This paper presents application of line surge arresters on the compact transmission lines.
Single and double circuit compact transmission lines are considered. Line lightning performance is
computed using sigma slp simulation software.
Different line surge arrester installation configurations are considered. Line lightning
performance is computed for different tower footing resistance. Line performance before and after line
surge arrester installation are compared.
Line lightning performance of the unshielded line with line surge arresters is compared with
the performance of the shielded line without line surge arresters.
For double circuit shielded compact lines, double circuit outage rate is computed. Influence of
the tower footing resistance on the double circuit outage rate is presented.
KEYWORD
Norovirus infection results in eIF2α independent host translation shut-off and remodels the G3BP1 interactome evading stress granule formation.
Viral infections impose major stress on the host cell. In response, stress pathways can rapidly deploy defence mechanisms by shutting off the protein synthesis machinery and triggering the accumulation of mRNAs into stress granules to limit the use of energy and nutrients. Because this threatens viral gene expression, viruses need to evade these pathways to propagate. Human norovirus is responsible for gastroenteritis outbreaks worldwide. Here we examined how norovirus interacts with the eIF2α signaling axis controlling translation and stress granules. While norovirus infection represses host cell translation, our mechanistic analyses revealed that eIF2α signaling mediated by the stress kinase GCN2 is uncoupled from translational stalling. Moreover, infection results in a redistribution of the RNA-binding protein G3BP1 to replication complexes and remodelling of its interacting partners, allowing the avoidance from canonical stress granules. These results define novel strategies by which norovirus undergo efficient replication whilst avoiding the host stress response and manipulating the G3BP1 interactome
Dusty core disease (DuCD): expanding morphological spectrum of RYR1 recessive myopathies
Several morphological phenotypes have been associated to RYR1-recessive myopathies. We recharacterized the RYR1-recessive morphological spectrum by a large monocentric study performed on 54 muscle biopsies from a large cohort of 48 genetically confirmed patients, using histoenzymology, immunohistochemistry, and ultrastructural studies. We also analysed the level of RyR1 expression in patients' muscle biopsies. We defined "dusty cores" the irregular areas of myofibrillar disorganisation characterised by a reddish-purple granular material deposition with uneven oxidative stain and devoid of ATPase activity, which represent the characteristic lesion in muscle biopsy in 54% of patients. We named Dusty Core Disease (DuCD) the corresponding entity of congenital myopathy. Dusty cores had peculiar histological and ultrastructural characteristics compared to the other core diseases. DuCD muscle biopsies also showed nuclear centralization and type1 fibre predominance. Dusty cores were not observed in other core myopathies and centronuclear myopathies. The other morphological groups in our cohort of patients were: Central Core (CCD: 21%), Core-Rod (C&R:15%) and Type1 predominance "plus" (T1P+:10%). DuCD group was associated to an earlier disease onset, a more severe clinical phenotype and a lowest level of RyR1 expression in muscle, compared to the other groups. Variants located in the bridge solenoid and the pore domains were more frequent in DuCD patients. In conclusion, DuCD is the most frequent histopathological presentation of RYR1-recessive myopathies. Dusty cores represent the unifying morphological lesion among the DuCD pathology spectrum and are the morphological hallmark for the recessive form of disease
Testing fluvial erosion models using the transient response of bedrock rivers to tectonic forcing in the Apennines, Italy
The transient response of bedrock rivers to a drop in base level can be used to
discriminate between competing fluvial erosion models. However, some recent studies of
bedrock erosion conclude that transient river long profiles can be approximately
characterized by a transportâlimited erosion model, while other authors suggest that a
detachmentâlimited model best explains their field data. The difference is thought to be
due to the relative volume of sediment being fluxed through the fluvial system. Using a
pragmatic approach, we address this debate by testing the ability of endâmember fluvial
erosion models to reproduce the wellâdocumented evolution of three catchments in the
central Apennines (Italy) which have been perturbed to various extents by an
independently constrained increase in relative uplift rate. The transportâlimited model is
unable to account for the catchmentsâresponse to the increase in uplift rate, consistent with
the observed low rates of sediment supply to the channels. Instead, a detachmentâlimited
model with a threshold corresponding to the fieldâderived median grain size of the
sediment plus a slopeâdependent channel width satisfactorily reproduces the overall
convex long profiles along the studied rivers. Importantly, we find that the prefactor in the
hydraulic scaling relationship is uplift dependent, leading to landscapes responding faster
the higher the uplift rate, consistent with field observations. We conclude that a slopeâ
dependent channel width and an entrainment/erosion threshold are necessary ingredients
when modeling landscape evolution or mapping the distribution of fluvial erosion rates in
areas where the rate of sediment supply to channels is low
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Spatial variability of African dust in soils in a montane tropical landscape in Puerto Rico
Dust deposition provides rock-derived nutrients such as phosphorus (P) to terrestrial ecosystems. Over pedogenic timescales, as bedrock sources of P are depleted, dust sources of P may support productivity in certain ecosystems, but controls on the spatial variability of dust in montane forested systems are largely unknown. Here, we use neodymium (Nd) isotope ratios in 31 ridgetop surface soils to evaluate the spatial variability of dust contributions to soil across ~ 100 kmÂČ in the Luquillo Mountains, Puerto Rico. Dust from the SaharaâSahel region of Africa carries a distinct isotopic signature of â 12 Δ[Subscript Nd]. Local bedrock, in contrast, has a Δ[Subscript Nd] value of ~+ 7. End-member mixing calculations based on ΔNd reveal a wide range in dust influence on surface soils, with between 0% and 92% of the top 20 cm of ridgetop soil Nd derived from African dust. Using Δ[Subscript Nd] paired with both dust and soil Nd content, the current soil dust content was calculated, ranging from 0 to 8%. There were no correlations between current dust content of soil and Âčâ°Be-based denudation rate, elevation, rainfall, longitude, or forest type. Current soil dust content in the Luquillo Mountains is significantly higher in soils developed on volcaniclastic sandstone, breccia and mudstone than in soils developed on quartz diorite bedrock, which we attribute to greater retention capacity in the volcaniclastic soils. Current soil dust content also increases with increasing ridge-width, implying that small-scale topographic effects and other factors such as wind speed and turbulence influence local dust deposition rates. Higher current dust content of soil is also positively correlated with biologically cycled fractions of soil P on quartz diorite bedrock (rÂČ = 0.24 and p = 0.002 for sum of extractable NaHCOâ-P + NaOH-P), suggesting that atmospheric dust inputs contribute to the fertility of Luquillo Mountain ecosystems on the relatively P-poor quartz diorite bedrock.Keywords: Luquillo Mountains, African dust, Atmospheric deposition, Beryllium-10, Soil, Phosphorus, Nd isotope
Gravity Currents in Aquatic Canopies
A lock exchange experiment is used to investigate the propagation of gravity currents through a random array of rigid, emergent cylinders which represents a canopy of aquatic plants. As canopy drag increases, the propagating front varies from the classic profile of an unobstructed gravity current to a triangular profile. Unlike the unobstructed lock exchange, the gravity current in the canopy decelerates with time as the front lengthens. Two drag-dominated regimes associated with linear and nonlinear drag laws are identified. The theoretical expression for toe velocity is supported by observed values. Empirical criteria are developed to predict the current regime from the cylinder Reynolds number and the array density.National Science Foundation (U.S.) (grant EAR0309188)National Science Foundation (U.S.) (grant EAR0509658)Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Presidential Graduate Fellowship
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