4,232 research outputs found

    Experimental Realization of the Fuse Model of Crack Formation

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    In this work, we present an experimental investigation of the fuse model. Our main goal was to study the influence of the disorder on the fracture process. The experimental apparatus used consisted of an L×LL\times L square lattice with fuses placed on each bond of the lattice. Two types of materials were used as fuses: copper and steel wool wires. The lattice composed only by copper wires varied from a weakly disordered system to a strongly disordered one. The lattice formed only by steel wool wires corresponded to a strongly disordered one. The experimental procedure consisted of applying a potential difference V to the lattice and measuring the respective current I. The characteristic function I(V)I(V) obtained was investigated in order to find the scaling law dependence of the voltage and the current on the system size LL when the disorder was changed. Our results show that the scaling laws are only verified for the disordered regime.Comment: 4 pages, 8 figures.ep

    Requerimento de água das culturas.

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    bitstream/CNPMS/16172/1/Circ_20.pd

    Características físico-hídricas e disponibilidade de água no solo.

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    bitstream/CNPMS/15588/1/Circ_21.pd

    How many green jobs are there in electricity generation? A replicable quantification method for developing countries under data constraints

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    Assessing the scale of green jobs and the socioeconomic effects of the energy transition is relevant and timely, while clear, comparable methodologies are still scarce. The discussion around just transitions, and the extent to which renewable energy creates more positive socioeconomic impacts than fossil fuels, increasingly attracts policymakers' and researchers' attention. However, data constraints, particularly in developing economies, expose a relevant gap in providing quantitative evidence for such discussions. This is especially relevant in countries with outstanding potential for renewable deployments, such as the case of Brazil. Existing data usually is considerably aggregated into activities irrespectively of technology or Greenhouse gas emission profile, and general international frameworks for such quantification may prove inadequate. In this paper, we propose a replicable data triangulation approach to disaggregate electricity jobs and wages into renewable and non-renewable electricity generation sources applied to the case of Brazil, using national accounts data, energy generation statistics and electricity-source specific employment coefficients from where data is available. One can use the resulting dataset either purely as the current scale of renewable and non-renewable electricity jobs and income or as the database for further modelling projections, particularly macroeconomic, multisectoral models, namely input-output and computable general equilibrium models
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