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Holdsworth Retrofit and Renovation
The University of Massachusetts has a rapidly evolving commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and improving the environmental sustainability of its operations. According to the most recent IPCC report, the buildings sector has more potential to contribute to climate change mitigation than any other sector.1 The energy efficient designs of the current spate of building projects are indicative of the Universityâs commitment to green buildingâreducing the energy intensity of the university relative to building area and activities. However, these efforts cannot reduce the total energy use or greenhouse gas emissions from current levels. Among the Universityâs assets with the greatest potential to achieve these goals are its existing buildings.
Most of these are good buildings that have not reached the end of their useful life. Forty-two buildings, encompassing more than half of the general administration and educational space fall into the categories of âcatch up and keep upâ or âkeep and renewâ according to the universityâs Building Disposition Report.2 Many of the existing buildings have great historical, aesthetic, and emotional value and have stood the test of time as the site of the academic, scientific, and cultural work that is their primary purpose. Can these buildings be updated to dramatically reduce their energy consumption and allow them to continue to function as valuable assets for the long term? What levels of energy savings are possible and reasonable? This report is designed to answer these questions for one representative building: Holdsworth Hall.
The recommendations in this report are the product of a detailed and careful examination and exploration of the building and its operations. The investigations and proposed solutions are motivated by two principles: First, the architectural intention should be respected. The building as designed works well on many levels, and no recommendation should undermine currently effective systems and designs or compromise the aesthetic intention of its designers. Second, the building is a complex system, and no change can be considered in isolation. Single measures may achieve savings, but cannot maximize savings or performance without complementary changes in related systems. A final package of recommended measures will define a new building system with emergent properties that make for a qualitatively different and better building beyond simple energy consumption metrics. 1
Disc-Jet coupling in the LMXB 4U1636-53 from INTEGRAL
We report on the spectral analysis results of the neutron star, atoll type,
low mass X-ray Binary 4U1636-53 observed by INTEGRAL and BeppoSAX satellites.
Spectral behavior in three different epochs corresponding to three different
spectral states has been deeply investigated. Two data set spectra show a
continuum well described by one or two soft blackbody plus a Comptonized
components with changes in the Comptonizing electrons and black body
temperature and the accretion rates, which are typical of the spectral
transitions from high to low state. In one occasion INTEGRAL spectrum shows,
for first time in this source, a hard tail dominating the emission above 30
keV. The total spectrum is fitted as the sum of a Comptonized component similar
to soft state and a power-law component (Gamma=2.76), indicating the presence
of a non thermal electron distribution of velocities. In this case, a
comparison with hard tails detected in soft states from neutron stars systems
and some black hole binaries suggests that a similar mechanism could originate
these components in both cases.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables. accepted Ap
Precautionary labelling of foods for allergen content: are we ready for a global framework?
© 2014 Allen et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.Food allergy appears to be on the rise with the current mainstay of treatment centred on allergen avoidance. Mandatory allergen labelling has improved the safety of food for allergic consumers. However an additional form of voluntary labelling (termed precautionary allergen labelling) has evolved on a wide range of packaged goods, in a bid by manufacturers to minimise risk to customers, and the negative impact on business that might result from exposure to trace amounts of food allergen present during cross-contamination during production. This has resulted in near ubiquitous utilisation of a multitude of different precautionary allergen labels with subsequent confusion amongst many consumers as to their significance. The global nature of food production and manufacturing makes harmonisation of allergen labelling regulations across the world a matter of increasing importance. Addressing inconsistencies across countries with regards to labelling legislation, as well as improvement or even banning of precautionary allergy labelling are both likely to be significant steps forward in improved food safety for allergic families. This article outlines the current status of allergen labelling legislation around the world and reviews the value of current existing precautionary allergen labelling for the allergic consumer. We strongly urge for an international framework to be considered to help roadmap a solution to the weaknesses of the current systems, and discuss the role of legislation in facilitating this
Effect of Nedocromil Sodium on Aspecific Bronchial Hyper-Reactivity in Asthmatic Children
The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether
nedocromil sodium benefits urban asthmatic children
showing seasonal bronchial hyper-reactivity to ultrasonic
nebulization of distilled water (UNDW). A prospective,
randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group,
double-blind study was carried out at the outpatient
pulmonology service at a tertiary-care teaching hospital.
Twelve children living in Milan, who were 7â17 years of
age, who were SPT and RAST-negative to perennial allergens,
who were suffering from episodic asthma, and
showing seasonal bronchial hyper-reactivity to UNDW
during winter, participated in this study. All the children
received either placebo or nedocromil sodium, 4 mg
every 6 h for 6 weeks. Spirometry and UNDW challenge
were done at the following times: dayâ7; day 0; day 1; day
7; day 14; day 28; day 42. No differences were found in
the basal spirometric parameters, which were normal in
both nedocromil and placebo groups. Bronchial reactivity
to UNDW was found to be significantly decreased in
the group treated with nedocromtl starting from day 7. It
is therefore concluded that nedocromil sodium can reverse
bronchial hyper-reactivity caused by seasonal factors
such as cold, viral infections and atmospheric pollutants
in children suffering from asthma
Effect of laser welding on the mechanical and degradation behaviour of Fe-20Mn-0.6C bioabsorbable alloy
Abstract The present work aims at exploring the influence of laser welding on the functional behaviour of a Fe-20Mn-0.6C (wt.%) bioabsorbable alloy. At first, the selection of the most suitable process speed (40âŻmm/s) was done in order to obtain a full penetration joint with limited taper. Then, microstructural and mechanical analyses of welded sheets confirmed suitable performance of the joint, without porosity, thus preserving chemical composition, mechanical resistance and ductility even after welding. In particular, the base material comprised both Îł austenite and e martensite, while the welded samples showed a further type of martensite, namely α'. Moreover, ultimate tensile strength (1095âŻMPa and 1104âŻMPa in base and welded material, respectively) and elongation to failure (61.3% and 60.9%, respectively) were almost not influenced by the welding process. Considering the absorbable nature of these alloys, static immersion degradation tests were carried out, and confirmed that the surface of the welded bead did not exhibit a significant variation of the material degradation rate after 14 days in modified Hanks' solution. Finally, a significant accumulation of degradation products, mainly (Fe,Mn)CO3, was observed along the joining line
Swift-XRT observation of 34 new INTEGRAL/IBIS AGNs: discovery of Compton thick and other peculiar sources
For a significant number of the sources detected at high energies (>10 keV)
by the INTEGRAL/IBIS and Swift/BAT instruments there is either a lack
information about them in the 2-10 keV range or they are totally unidentified.
Herein, we report on a sample of 34 IBIS AGN or AGN candidate objects for which
there is X-ray data in the Swift/XRT archive. Thanks to these X-ray follow up
observations, the identification of the gamma ray emitters has been possible
and the spectral shape in terms of photon index and absorption has been
evaluated for the first time for the majority of our sample sources. The
sample, enlarged to include 4 more AGN already discussed in the literature, has
been used to provide photon index and column density distribution. We obtain a
mean value of 1.88 with a dispersion of 0.12, i.e. typical of an AGN sample.
Sixteen objects (47%) have column densities in excess of 10^{22} cm^{-2} and,
as expected, a large fraction of the absorbed sources are within the Sey 2
sample. We have provided a new diagnostic tool (NH versus
F(2-10)keV/F(20-100)keV softness ratio) to isolate peculiar objects; we find at
least one absorbed Sey 1 galaxy, 3 Compton thick AGN candidates; and one secure
example of a "true" type 2 AGN. Within the sample of 10 still unidentified
objects, 3 are almost certainly AGN of type 2; 3 to 4 have spectral slopes
typical of AGN; and two are located high on the galactic plane and are strong
enough radio emitters so that can be considered good AGN candidates.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figures, ApJ accepte
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