5,140 research outputs found

    The value of fault analysis for field development planning

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    Faults play an important role in reservoir compartmentalization and can have a significant impact on recoverable volumes. A recent petroleum discovery in the Norwegian offshore sector, with an Upper Jurassic reservoir, is currently in the development planning phase. The reservoir is divided into several compartments by syn-depositional faults that have not been reactivated and do not offset the petroleum-bearing sandstones completely. A comprehensive fault analysis has been conducted from core to seismic scale to assess the likely influence of faults on the production performance and recoverable volumes. The permeability of the small-scale faults from the core were analyzed at high confining pressures using formation compatible brines. These permeability measurements provide important calibration points for the fault property assessment, which was used to calculate transmissibility multipliers (TM) that were incorporated into the dynamic reservoir simulation model to account for the impact of faults on fluid flow. Dynamic simulation results reveal a range of more than 20% for recoverable volumes depending on the fault property case applied and for a base case producer/injector well pattern. The fault properties are one of the key parameters that influence the range of cumulative recoverable oil volumes and the recovery efficiency

    Phenylalanine as a hydroxyl radical-specific probe in pyrite slurries

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    The abundant iron sulfide mineral pyrite has been shown to catalytically produce hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) and hydroxyl radical (.OH) in slurries of oxygenated water. Understanding the formation and fate of these reactive oxygen species is important to biological and ecological systems as exposure can lead to deleterious health effects, but also environmental engineering during the optimization of remediation approaches for possible treatment of contaminated waste streams. This study presents the use of the amino acid phenylalanine (Phe) to monitor the kinetics of pyrite-induced .OH formation through rates of hydroxylation forming three isomers of tyrosine (Tyr) - ortho-, meta-, and para-Tyr. Results indicate that about 50% of the Phe loss results in Tyr formation, and that these products further react with .OH at rates comparable to Phe. The overall loss of Phe appeared to be pseudo first-order in [Phe] as a function of time, but for the first time it is shown that initial rates were much less than first-order as a function of initial substrate concentration, [Phe]o. These results can be rationalized by considering that the effective concentration of .OH in solution is lower at a higher level of reactant and that an increasing fraction of .OH is consumed by Phe-degradation products as a function of time. A simplified first-order model was created to describe Phe loss in pyrite slurries which incorporates the [Phe]o, a first-order dependence on pyrite surface area, the assumption that all Phe degradation products compete equally for the limited supply of highly reactive .OH, and a flux that is related to the release of H2O2 from the pyrite surface (a result of the incomplete reduction of oxygen at the pyrite surface). An empirically derived rate constant, Kpyr, was introduced to describe a variable .OH-reactivity for different batches of pyrite. Both the simplified first-order kinetic model, and a more detailed numerical simulation, yielded results that compare well to the observed kinetic data describing the effects of variations in concentrations of both initial Phe and pyrite. This work supports the use of Phe as a useful probe to assess the formation of .OH in the presence of pyrite, and its possible utility for similar applications with other minerals

    NAIL COSMETICS

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66131/1/j.1365-4362.1992.tb01368.x.pd

    Phototesting and photoprotection in LE

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    Photosensitivity and induction of skin lesions following UV radiation is a common problem of patients with cutaneous and systemic forms of lupus erythematosus. The detrimental effect of UV radiation to patients with lupus erythematosus was already recognized in the last century. Skin lesions can now be provoked under standardized conditions allowing the diagnosis and classification of patients with photosensitive disorders. The aim of this review is to give an overview on the history, test procedure and test results in patients with lupus erythematosus

    Mitigating amphibian chytridiomycoses in nature

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    Amphibians across the planet face the threat of population decline and extirpation caused by the disease chytridiomycosis. Despite consensus that the fungal pathogens responsible for the disease are conservation issues, strategies to mitigate their impacts in the natural world are, at best, nascent. Reducing risk associated with the movement of amphibians, non-amphibian vectors and other sources of infection remains the first line of defence and a primary objective when mitigating the threat of disease in wildlife. Amphibian-associated chytridiomycete fungi and chytridiomycosis are already widespread, though, and we therefore focus on discussing options for mitigating the threats once disease emergence has occurred in wild amphibian populations. All strategies have shortcomings that need to be overcome before implementation, including stronger efforts towards understanding and addressing ethical and legal considerations. Even if these issues can be dealt with, all currently available approaches, or those under discussion, are unlikely to yield the desired conservation outcome of disease mitigation. The decision process for establishing mitigation strategies requires integrated thinking that assesses disease mitigation options critically and embeds them within more comprehensive strategies for the conservation of amphibian populations, communities and ecosystems

    Toward High-Precision Measures of Large-Scale Structure

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    I review some results of estimation of the power spectrum of density fluctuations from galaxy redshift surveys and discuss advances that may be possible with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. I then examine the realities of power spectrum estimation in the presence of Galactic extinction, photometric errors, galaxy evolution, clustering evolution, and uncertainty about the background cosmology.Comment: 24 pages, including 11 postscript figures. Uses crckapb.sty (included in submission). To appear in ``Ringberg Workshop on Large-Scale Structure,'' ed D. Hamilton (Kluwer, Amsterdam), p. 39

    Chytridiomycosis outbreak in a Chilean giant frog (Calyptocephalella gayi) captive breeding program: genomic characterization and pathological findings

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    Emerging infectious diseases in wildlife are increasingly associated with animal mortality and species declines, but their source and genetic characterization often remains elusive. Amphibian chytridiomycosis, caused by the fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis (Bd), has been associated with catastrophic and well-documented amphibian population declines and extinctions at the global scale. We used histology and whole-genome sequencing to describe the lesions caused by, and the genetic variability of, two Bd isolates obtained from a mass mortality event in a captive population of the threatened Chilean giant frog (Calyptocephalella gayi). This was the first time an association between Bd and high mortality had been detected in this charismatic and declining frog species. Pathological examinations revealed that 30 dead metamorphosed frogs presented agnathia or brachygnathia, a condition that is reported for the first time in association with chytridiomycosis. Phylogenomic analyses revealed that Bd isolates (PA1 and PA2) from captive C. gayi group with other Bd isolates (AVS2, AVS4, and AVS7) forming a single highly supported Chilean Bd clade within the global panzootic lineage of Bd (BdGPL). These findings are important to inform the strengthening of biosecurity measures to prevent the impacts of chytridiomycosis in captive breeding programs elsewhere

    Single and two-particle energy gaps across the disorder-driven superconductor-insulator transition

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    The competition between superconductivity and localization raises profound questions in condensed matter physics. In spite of decades of research, the mechanism of the superconductor-insulator transition (SIT) and the nature of the insulator are not understood. We use quantum Monte Carlo simulations that treat, on an equal footing, inhomogeneous amplitude variations and phase fluctuations, a major advance over previous theories. We gain new microscopic insights and make testable predictions for local spectroscopic probes. The energy gap in the density of states survives across the transition, but coherence peaks exist only in the superconductor. A characteristic pseudogap persists above the critical disorder and critical temperature, in contrast to conventional theories. Surprisingly, the insulator has a two-particle gap scale that vanishes at the SIT, despite a robust single-particle gap.Comment: 7 pages, 5 figures (plus supplement with 4 pages, 5 figures

    Lifshitz-like space-time from intersecting branes in string/M theory

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    We construct 1/4 BPS, threshold F-Dpp bound states (with 0≀p≀50\leq p \leq 5) of type II string theories by applying S- and T-dualities to the D1-D5 system of type IIB string theory. These are different from the known 1/2 BPS, non-threshold F-Dpp bound states. The near horizon limits of these solutions yield Lifshitz-like space-times with varying dynamical critical exponent z=2(5−p)/(4−p)z=2(5-p)/(4-p), for p≠4p\neq 4, along with the hyperscaling violation exponent Ξ=p−(p−2)/(4−p)\theta = p - (p-2)/(4-p), showing how Lifshitz-like space-time can be obtained from string theory. The dilatons are in general non-constant (except for p=1p=1). We discuss the holographic RG flows and the phase structures of these solutions. For p=4p=4, we do not get a Lifshitz-like space-time, but the near horizon limit in this case leads to an AdS2_2 space.Comment: 20 pages, no figure, v2: proper identification of hyperscaling violation exponent has been made, abstract and the text has been changed accordingly, note added, v3: minor changes, refs added, version to appear in JHE

    Association between atrial high rate episode burden and autonomic and vascular function in patients with implanted cardiac device

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    Abstract Background Patients who experience frequent atrial high rate episodes (AHREs), recorded on implantable cardiac devices, are at an increased risk of stroke and systemic embolism. Increased duration of AHRE is related to higher risk of thromboembolic event. The underlying pathophysiology is unclear; however, autonomic and/or endothelial dysfunction may contribute. Purpose We tested the hypothesis that patients with high AHRE burden have worse autonomic and vascular function compared to patients with low AHRE burden. Design We studied 44 patients split in two groups: high AHRE burden (longest AHRE ≄24 hours; n=22) and low AHRE burden (longest AHRE &amp;lt;24 hours; n=22). Resting time- and frequency-domain measures of HRV were determined to index cardiac autonomic function. High-resolution ultrasound was used to measure brachial artery diameter at rest and during reactive hyperaemia (endothelium-dependent flow mediated dilation (FMD)). Results FMD was higher in the low AHRE burden group compared to high AHRE group (5.5% [95% confidence interval (CI):3.4–7.6] vs 3.1% [95% CI: 1.9–6.2]; p=0.04) (table 1). Mean heart rate (p&amp;lt;0.001) and AHRE burden (p=0.02) were independent predictors of FMD on multivariate analysis. Time-domain, frequency-domain and non-linear indices of HRV were not significantly different between the groups. A slower heart rate (Spearman's rho 0.369; p=0.01) and high AHRE burden (Spearman's rho −0.315; p=0.04) were independently associated with changes seen on FMD following adjustment for multiple variables (p=0.001 and p=0.03 respectively). Conclusion Endothelium-dependent FMD is impaired in patients with high AHRE burden, while HRV derived indices of autonomic function were not affected by AHRE burden. Endothelial dysfunction may play an important role in the adverse outcomes seen in patients who experience frequent AHRE. Funding Acknowledgement Type of funding sources: None. </jats:sec
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