11,161 research outputs found
Développement durable de l'agriculture urbaine en Afrique francophone : enjeux, concepts et méthodes
Les pays en développement vont connaître dans les années à venir une explosion démographique, qui sera particulièrement sensible dans les villes. La production alimentaire devra doubler dans les trente prochaines années et, parallèlement, la production de déchets et d'effluents sera multipliée par quatre. L'agriculture urbaine, qui utilise les ressources de la ville et approvisionne ses marchés, peut apporter des réponses à ces défis alimentaires et écologiques. Mais elle est souvent négligée par les chercheurs comme par les responsables locaux, qui se trouvent démunis face à son caractère dynamique et informe. C'est sur la base de ce constat que cet ouvrage a été conçu. Il vise à diffuser auprès des chercheurs et des praticiens du développement des méthodes et des outils adaptés aux problèmes de l'agriculture urbaine en Afrique de l'Ouest et du Centre. Après une présentation des caractéristiques de l'agriculture urbaine et de la pluralité des approches qui s'y rapportent, l'ouvrage analyse ses fonctions, ses impacts et ses facteurs d'évolution. Puis il s'intéresse à sa place dans la planification urbaine en préconisant des méthodes participatives mieux à même d'intégrer cette agriculture dans la stratégie de développement socioéconomique local. Il traite ensuite des filières maraîchères et animales, les mieux représentées dans ce type d'agriculture, pour lesquelles il propose des démarches de diagnostic et d'intervention spécifiques. Enfin, il examine les modalités et les techniques de recyclage des déchets et effluents des villes dans l'agriculture urbaine. (Résumé d'auteur
Effective Criminal Defence in Europe. Executive Summary and Recommendations.
Summarizes findings on effective defense rights and access to justice in the EU, including issues in domestic legislation, adherence to European Convention on Human Rights standards, and systems ensuring the rights can be exercised. Makes recommendations
Scaling Approach to the Phase Diagram of Quantum Hall Systems
We present a simple classification of the different liquid and solid phases
of quantum Hall systems in the limit where the Coulomb interaction between the
electrons is significant, i.e. away from integral filling factors. This
classification, and a criterion for the validity of the mean-field
approximation in the charge-density-wave phase, is based on scaling arguments
concerning the effective interaction potential of electrons restricted to an
arbitrary Landau level. Finite-temperature effects are investigated within the
same formalism, and a good agreement with recent experiments is obtained.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; to be published in Europhys. Lett.; new version
contains more detailed description of finite-temperature effect
Age Constraints for an M31 Globular Cluster from Main Sequence Photometry
We present a color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of the globular cluster SKHB-312
in the Andromeda galaxy (M31), obtained with the Advanced Camera for Surveys on
the Hubble Space Telescope. The cluster was included in deep observations taken
to measure the star formation history of the M31 halo. Overcoming a very
crowded field, our photometry of SKHB-312 reaches V ~ 30.5 mag, more than 1 mag
below the main sequence turnoff. These are the first observations to allow a
direct age estimate from the turnoff in an old M31 cluster. We analyze its CMD
and luminosity function using a finely-spaced grid of isochrones that have been
calibrated using observations of Galactic clusters taken with the same camera
and filters. The luminosity difference between the subgiant and horizontal
branches is ~0.2 mag smaller in SKHB-312 than in the Galactic clusters 47 Tuc
and NGC 5927, implying SKHB-312 is 2-3 Gyr younger. A quantitative comparison
to isochrones yields an age of 10 +2.5/-1 Gyr
RHESSI Spectral Fits of Swift GRBs
One of the challenges of the Swift era has been accurately determining Epeak
for the prompt GRB emission. RHESSI, which is sensitive from 30 keV to 17 MeV,
can extend spectral coverage above the Swift-BAT bandpass. Using the public
Swift data, we present results of joint spectral fits for 26 bursts co-observed
by RHESSI and Swift-BAT through May 2007. We compare these fits to estimates of
Epeak which rely on BAT data alone. A Bayesian Epeak estimator gives better
correspondence with our measured results than an estimator relying on
correlations with the Swift power law indices.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure. To appear in the proceedings of Gamma Ray Bursts
2007, Santa Fe, New Mexico, November 5-9 200
Far-Ultraviolet Emission from Elliptical Galaxies at z=0.33
We present far-ultraviolet (far-UV) images of the rich galaxy cluster
ZwCl1358.1+6245, taken with the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on board
the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). When combined with archival HST observations,
our data provide a measurement of the UV-to-optical flux ratio in 8 early-type
galaxies at z=0.33. Because the UV flux originates in a population of evolved,
hot, horizontal branch (HB) stars, this ratio is potentially one of the most
sensitive tracers of age in old populations -- it is expected to fade rapidly
with lookback time. We find that the UV emission in these galaxies, at a
lookback time of 3.9 Gyr, is significantly weaker than it is in the current
epoch, yet similar to that in galaxies at a lookback time of 5.6 Gyr. Taken at
face value, these measurements imply different formation epochs for the massive
ellipticals in these clusters, but an alternative explanation is a "floor" in
the UV emission due to a dispersion in the parameters that govern HB
morphology.Comment: 4 pages, Latex. 2 figures. Uses corrected version of emulateapj.sty
and apjfonts.sty (included). Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Preliminary design studies of an advanced general aviation aircraft
The preliminary design results are presented of the advanced aircraft design project. The goal was to take a revolutionary look into the design of a general aviation aircraft. Phase 1 of the project included the preliminary design of two configurations, a pusher, and a tractor. Phase 2 included the selection of only one configuration for further study. The pusher configuration was selected on the basis of performance characteristics, cabin noise, natural laminar flow, and system layouts. The design was then iterated to achieve higher levels of performance
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The interpretation and use of biases in decadal climate predictions
Decadal climate predictions exhibit large biases, which are often subtracted and forgotten. However, understanding the causes of bias is essential to guide efforts to improve prediction systems, and may offer additional benefits. Here the origins of biases in decadal predictions are investigated, including whether analysis of these biases might provide useful information. The focus is especially on the lead-time-dependent bias tendency. A “toy” model of a prediction system is initially developed and used to show that there are several distinct contributions to bias tendency. Contributions from sampling of internal variability and a start-time-dependent forcing bias can be estimated and removed to obtain a much improved estimate of the true bias tendency, which can provide information about errors in the underlying model and/or errors in the specification of forcings. It is argued that the true bias tendency, not the total bias tendency, should be used to adjust decadal forecasts.
The methods developed are applied to decadal hindcasts of global mean temperature made using the Hadley Centre Coupled Model, version 3 (HadCM3), climate model, and it is found that this model exhibits a small positive bias tendency in the ensemble mean. When considering different model versions, it is shown that the true bias tendency is very highly correlated with both the transient climate response (TCR) and non–greenhouse gas forcing trends, and can therefore be used to obtain observationally constrained estimates of these relevant physical quantities
Ariel - Volume 12(13) Number 4
Co-Editors
Gary Fishbein
Lynn Solomon
Business Manager
Rich Davis
Assistant Business Manager
Jeff Lavanier
Layout Editors
Paul J. Berlin
Tracy A. Glauser
Photography Editor
Ben Alma
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