529 research outputs found
User guide for 'BGS Civils' : a suite of engineering properties datasets
This report is the user’s guide for the national assessment of a suite of seven Engineering Properties datasets. These complimentary datasets provide information and advice on Excavatability, Strength, Discontinuities, Bulking of soils and rocks, Sulfate and sulfide potential, Corrosivity (ferrous) and Use for fill.
The purpose of this user guide is to provide the background, overview of the methodology developed by the British Geological Survey, and the potential applications and limitations of this GIS information
The relationships between effective porosity, uniaxial compressive strength and sonic velocity of intact Borrowdale Volcanic Group Core samples from Sellafield
The effective porosity, saturated sonic velocity and saturated uniaxial compressive strength were determined on a large number of Borrowdale Volcanic Group volcaniclastic core samples from three boreholes at Sellafield, Cumbria. The work formed part of the UK Nirex Limited site investigation into whether the Sellafield area could be suitable as a repository for intermediate and low level radioactive waste. Most of the intact samples were of low to very low effective porosity, had a high sonic velocity and were very strong to extremely strong. However, a proportion of values deviated significantly from this. Bivariate analysis showed a negative relationship exists between sonic velocity and effective porosity. The cross plots of these two parameters with uniaxial compressive strength showed a wide range of strength values for samples of low effective porosity and high sonic velocity. Six failure types were identified during the uniaxial compressive strength tests. The strongest samples tended to fail through the matrix and the weakest rock samples tended to fail through haematized material or along haematized veins. Effective porosity and sonic velocity measurements could not distinguish between those samples that failed through the matrix and those that failed along discrete narrow veins. The presence of narrow haematized veins has a major effect on the intact rock strength
User guide for the British Geological Survey GeoClimateUKCP09 : clay shrink-swell dataset
This report is the guide for users of the British Geological Survey (BGS)
GeoClimateUKCP09 clay shrink-swell dataset. This is a national scale assessment of
variations in clay shrink swell susceptibility due to climate change.
GeoClimateUKCP09 clay shrink-swell provides information on the potential for clay
shrink swell to occur at a given location, during a given future time period, based on a
combination of geological, hydrological and climate projection data
Environmental factors influencing pipe failures
This report details work carried out under NERC grants NE/M008339/1 and NE/NO13026/1
which were collaborations between the British Geological Survey and Yorkshire Water, with an
additional knowledge transfer component involving Scottish Water and Dŵr Cymru Welsh
Water. The work examines whether models developed using environmental, topographical and
geohazard information could complement existing management tools, and increase the
understanding as to how pipe networks of different materials interact with their broader
environment. This can be seen as a first step in identifying ways in which greater resilience could
be built into pipe networks
Quantitative analysis of high-resolution computed tomography scans in severe asthma subphenotypes
BACKGROUND: Severe asthma is a heterogeneous condition. Airway remodelling is a feature of severe asthma and can be determined by the assessment of high-resolution computed tomography (HRCT) scans. The aim of this study was to assess whether airway remodelling is restricted to specific subphenotypes of severe asthma. METHODS: A retrospective analysis was performed of HRCT scans from subjects who had attended a single-centre severe asthma clinic between 2003 and 2008. The right upper lobe apical segmental bronchus (RB1) dimensions were measured and the clinical and sputum inflammatory characteristics associated with RB1 geometry were assessed by univariate and multivariate regression analyses. Longitudinal sputum data were available and were described as area under the time curve (AUC). Comparisons were made in RB1 geometry across subjects in four subphenotypes determined by cluster analysis, smokers and non-smokers, and subjects with and without persistent airflow obstruction. RESULTS: Ninety-nine subjects with severe asthma and 16 healthy controls were recruited. In the subjects with severe asthma the RB1 percentage wall area (%WA) was increased (p=0.009) and lumen area (LA)/body surface area (BSA) was decreased (p=0.008) compared with controls but was not different across the four subphenotypes. Airway geometry was not different between smokers and non-smokers and RB1 %WA was increased in those with persistent airflow obstruction. RB1 %WA in severe asthma was best associated with airflow limitation and persistent neutrophilic airway inflammation (model R(2)=0.27, p=0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Airway remodelling of proximal airways occurs in severe asthma and is associated with impaired lung function and neutrophilic airway inflammation
The merger of vertically offset quasi-geostrophic vortices
We examine the critical merging distance between two equal-volume, equal-potential-vorticity quasi-geostrophic vortices. We focus on how this distance depends on the vertical offset between the two vortices, each having a unit mean height-to-width aspect ratio. The vertical direction is special in the quasi-geostrophic model (used to capture the leading-order dynamical features of stably stratified and rapidly rotating geophysical flows) since vertical advection is absent. Nevertheless vortex merger may still occur by horizontal advection. In this paper, we first investigate the equilibrium states for the two vortices as a function of their vertical and horizontal separation. We examine their basic properties together with their linear stability. These findings are next compared to numerical simulations of the nonlinear evolution of two spheres of potential vorticity. Three different regimes of interaction are identified, depending on the vertical offset. For a small offset, the interaction differs little from the case when the two vortices are horizontally aligned. On the other hand, when the vertical offset is comparable to the mean vortex radius, strong interaction occurs for greater horizontal gaps than in the horizontally aligned case, and therefore at significantly greater full separation distances. This perhaps surprising result is consistent with the linear stability analysis and appears to be a consequence of the anisotropy of the quasi-geostrophic equations. Finally, for large vertical offsets, vortex merger results in the formation of a metastable tilted dumbbell vortex.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
UKGEOS: Glasgow Geothermal Energy Research Field Site (GGERFS): initial summary of the geological platform
The preferred second UKGEOS site is at Clyde Gateway, in the east end of Glasgow, Scotland. The focus of this, the Glasgow Geothermal Energy Research Field Site (GGERFS), is on characterising and monitoring the subsurface for minewater and hot sedimentary aquifer geothermal energy, and for cooling and heat storage.
This report details BGS data and knowledge at late 2016, to define initial characterisation of the ‘geological platform’ relevant for the planning of a geothermal research facility and associated environmental baseline monitoring. The report covers knowledge of the bedrock and superficial deposits geology, abandoned coal mines, hydrogeology, geothermal datasets, geochemistry, remote sensed data, seismicity, stress fields, engineering geology and rock property datasets.
BGS holds a great deal of legacy borehole, mining and geochemistry data and has updated existing bedrock and superficial deposits models of the area. However, deep borehole and seismic data are lacking to define the geology and structure of the area below a few hundred metres. Hydrogeological and temperature data are also lacking for the bedrock strata. Regional datasets and knowledge have (and can be further) used to reduce uncertainty and risk in these aspects of the geological characterisation
Emergence of good conduct, scaling and Zipf laws in human behavioral sequences in an online world
We study behavioral action sequences of players in a massive multiplayer
online game. In their virtual life players use eight basic actions which allow
them to interact with each other. These actions are communication, trade,
establishing or breaking friendships and enmities, attack, and punishment. We
measure the probabilities for these actions conditional on previous taken and
received actions and find a dramatic increase of negative behavior immediately
after receiving negative actions. Similarly, positive behavior is intensified
by receiving positive actions. We observe a tendency towards anti-persistence
in communication sequences. Classifying actions as positive (good) and negative
(bad) allows us to define binary 'world lines' of lives of individuals.
Positive and negative actions are persistent and occur in clusters, indicated
by large scaling exponents alpha~0.87 of the mean square displacement of the
world lines. For all eight action types we find strong signs for high levels of
repetitiveness, especially for negative actions. We partition behavioral
sequences into segments of length n (behavioral `words' and 'motifs') and study
their statistical properties. We find two approximate power laws in the word
ranking distribution, one with an exponent of kappa-1 for the ranks up to 100,
and another with a lower exponent for higher ranks. The Shannon n-tuple
redundancy yields large values and increases in terms of word length, further
underscoring the non-trivial statistical properties of behavioral sequences. On
the collective, societal level the timeseries of particular actions per day can
be understood by a simple mean-reverting log-normal model.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
A coupled food security and refugee movement model for the south Sudan conflict
VECMA; HiDALGO projects; European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programm
Change of nuclear configurations in the neutrinoless double- decay of Te Xe and Xe Ba
The change in the configuration of valence protons between the initial and
final states in the neutrinoless double- decay of Te
Xe and of Xe Ba has been
determined by measuring the cross sections of the (,He) reaction with
101-MeV deuterons. Together with our recent determination of the relevant
neutron configurations involved in the process, a quantitative comparison with
the latest shell-model and interacting-boson-model calculations reveals
significant discrepancies. These are the same calculations used to determine
the nuclear matrix elements governing the rate of neutrinoless double-
decay in these systems.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, 9 table
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