1,109 research outputs found

    MonALISA : A Distributed Monitoring Service Architecture

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    The MonALISA (Monitoring Agents in A Large Integrated Services Architecture) system provides a distributed monitoring service. MonALISA is based on a scalable Dynamic Distributed Services Architecture which is designed to meet the needs of physics collaborations for monitoring global Grid systems, and is implemented using JINI/JAVA and WSDL/SOAP technologies. The scalability of the system derives from the use of multithreaded Station Servers to host a variety of loosely coupled self-describing dynamic services, the ability of each service to register itself and then to be discovered and used by any other services, or clients that require such information, and the ability of all services and clients subscribing to a set of events (state changes) in the system to be notified automatically. The framework integrates several existing monitoring tools and procedures to collect parameters describing computational nodes, applications and network performance. It has built-in SNMP support and network-performance monitoring algorithms that enable it to monitor end-to-end network performance as well as the performance and state of site facilities in a Grid. MonALISA is currently running around the clock on the US CMS test Grid as well as an increasing number of other sites. It is also being used to monitor the performance and optimize the interconnections among the reflectors in the VRVS system.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 8 pages, pdf. PSN MOET00

    Mise au point de techniques analytiques pour la spéciation du sélénium dans les boues de stations d'épuration d'eaux résiduaires urbaines

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    Les stations d'épuration d'eaux résiduaires sont une des étapes du cycle du sélénium dans l'environnement et contribuent à sa redistribution dans le milieu naturel. Très peu étudié jusqu'à présent dans ces milieux, le sélénium n'en est pas moins un élément très important du point de vue écotoxicologique, sa teneur dans les boues de stations d'épuration destinées à l'épandage agricole faisant par ailleurs l'objet d'une norme.Nous avons mis au point des techniques permettant la détermination spécifique de l'élément total dans ce type d'échantillon, par minéralisation classique ou assistée par micro-ondes et dosage par Voltamétrie de Redissolution Cathodique Différentielle Pulsée (DPCSV) et Spectrométrie d'Absorption Atomique ElectroThermique (ETAAS). Le contrôle qualité a été effectué sur deux échantillons certifiés fournis par le Bureau Communautaire de Référence (BCR) : la boue CRM 145 R et la boue CRM 007.Cependant, lorsqu'on parle de risque toxicologique, il est important de s'intéresser à la détermination des différentes formes sous lesquelles cet élément peut être présent. Nous avons pour cela réalisé des extractions parallèles (spéciation de phases) du sélénium contenu dans les boues afin de déterminer quel pourcentage du sélénium total est réellement et potentiellement disponible pour les végétaux lors d'un épandage sur sol agricole. La spéciation d'espèces a été brièvement abordée dans le but de déterminer les teneurs en Se(IV) et Se(VI), espèces les plus toxiques.The great effort undertaken for about twenty years to improve the quality of surface waters has led to the construction of numerous waste water treatment plants, generating an increasing amount of sludge. Waste water and sludge treatment processes represent an important point in the hydrological cycle at which the disposal of substantial quantities of trace elements to the environment may be regulated. From the law on waste recovery and disposal in 1975 to the European guideline about wastes in 1991, the priority has been given to waste recovery and recycling. With increasing pressure to ban all sludge dumping at sea, and considering the prohibitive costs of land-filling and incineration, there is a great tendency to dispose of sludge on land (40% in 1988 to 60% in 1992).Although numerous studies have demonstrated the intrinsic value of sludge for soil amendment, given its nitrogen, phosphorus and homogeneous organic matter content, evidence has accumulated in recent years that numerous environmental problems can arise because of the presence in sludges of high amounts of certain trace elements (potentially toxic to plants and to human beings and liable to be concentrated along the food chain), among which selenium is particularly interesting.Selenium presents a complex case, as it is also an essential element for living organisms (including humans). The amendment with sewage sludge is sometimes used to increase the selenium content in crops, and afterwards in cattle, when there is a proven lack of this element in a given place. Nevertheless the boundary between essentiality and toxicity is relatively narrow and is expressed at trace levels. It is thus particularly important to survey the selenium concentrations encountered in sewage sludge, especially as guidelines and regulations concerning these data will probably be strengthened. Presently, in France, sludge must not contain more than 200 mg Se·kg-1 dry weight and must not be used on soils containing more than 10 mg Se·kg-1 dry weight (AFNOR U 44-041 norm). This norm concerns only the total amount of selenium contained in sludge and does not take into account the different species (organic and inorganic Se(-II), Se(0), Se(IV) and Se(VI)) that could be present.First of all we had to develop methods for the classical and microwave-assisted wet digestion of sewage sludge, and the determination of their total selenium concentration by Differential Pulse Cathodic Stripping Voltammetry (DPCSV) and ElectroThermal Atomic Absorption Spectrometry (ETAAS). Quality assurance involved the analysis of two BCR (Community Bureau of Reference) certified sewage sludge reference materials (CRM 145 R and CRM 007) and the different techniques were then applied to natural samples from a representative French sewage treatment plant located in the city of Tarbes (South-West of France). The mixture HNO3-H2O2-H2O led to the best results for the digestion and analysis of certified samples, caused few problems for the analysis by DPCSV and ETAAS, and was therefore retained. The decrease of the digestion duration obtained by the use of microwaves was particularly interesting (from one to three days on a hot plate to less than one hour by the Microdigest 301 (PROLABO, France)), and reproducibility was also acceptable (between 3 and 10%). Concentrations obtained for the sewage sludge from the Tarbes treatment plant were very much lower than those for NF U 44-041: 1.08±0.11 mg Se·kg-1 dry weight.However knowledge of speciation, that is to say the determination of the different physicochemical forms of selenium present in a given medium, is necessary when speaking of the toxicological risk represented by an element. The mobility of selenium and its toxicity to the biosphere are related to its association with various sludge or soil constituents as well as to its total concentration. "Soft" or partial extraction techniques are necessary when the aim of the study to determine trace element speciation. The extractants used must separate selenium from the matrix without inducing any loss or change in the partitioning of individual chemical species. In parallel extractions the mechanisms involved for each extractant must correspond to processes occurring in nature and are then associated with special fractions of selenium: soluble, exchangeable, "oxidizable", and "mineral" fractions .Parallel extractions with three types of extractants were chosen for this study and applied first to CRM 007: warm water (soluble fraction), ammonium phosphate-citric acid (soluble + exchangeable fraction) and sodium hydroxide (soluble + exchangeable + "oxidizable" fraction). The soluble, exchangeable, "oxidizable" and "mineral" fractions represent respectively : 11%, 14%, 39% and 36%. The same procedure was then applied to natural samples from Tarbes giving the following results: 36% soluble, 22% exchangeable, 42% "oxidizable". The sodium hydroxide extraction procedure allowed us to extract the entire Se content of this sludge (1.07±0.03 mg Se·kg-1 dry weight), showing that all the selenium present is potentially available after agricultural land application. It was then possible in this fraction to deal with the species speciation of selenium by the mean of a separation of inorganic and organic species on an Amberlite CG-400 resin and a specific analysis by DPCSV. Se(IV) and Se(VI) represent respectively between 30 and 40% and between 2 and 20% of total selenium in the sludges from Tarbes

    Materials and pathways of the organic carbon cycle through time

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    The cycle of organic carbon through the atmosphere, oceans, continents and mantle reservoirs is a hallmark of Earth. Over geological time, chemical exchanges between those reservoirs have produced a diversity of reduced carbon materials that differ in their molecular structures and reactivity. This reactive complexity challenges the canonical dichotomy between the surface and deep, short-term and long-term organic carbon cycle. Old and refractory carbon materials are not confined to the lithosphere but are ubiquitous in the surface environment, and the lithosphere hosts various forms of reduced carbon that can be very reactive. The biological and geological pathways that drive the organic carbon cycle have changed through time; from a synthesis of these changes, it emerges that although a biosphere is required to produce organic carbon, mortality is required to ensure its export to the lithosphere, and graphitization is essential for its long-term stabilization in the solid Earth. Among the by-products of the organic carbon cycle are the accumulation of a massive lithospheric reservoir of organic carbon, the accumulation of dioxygen in the atmosphere and the rise of a terrestrial biosphere. Besides driving surface weathering reactions, free dioxygen has allowed the evolution of new metabolic pathways to produce and respire organic carbon. From the evolution of photosynthesis until the expansion of biomineralization in the Phanerozoic, inorganic controls on the organic carbon cycle have diversified, tightening the connection between the biosphere and geosphere

    Assessment of GNC Impacts of Chemical Plume Impingement in the Case of Prisma Irides Experiment

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    This paper presents the preliminary analysis of an in-orbit demonstration opportunity to test plume impingement as a viable means to change the attitude state of a space debris based on the Prisma and Picard missions. This technique has been proposed as part of the COBRA concept studied by ESA in collaboration with GMV, Politecnico di Milano and Thales-Alenia Space, as an active debris removal concept relying on the exhaust plume of a monopropellant chemical propulsion system as a means to impart momentum and ultimately modify the orbit of a space debris object in a contactless manner. The feasibility of the experiment is presented as well as its critical areas, no showstoppers are identified

    Management of diabetic macular edema patients in clinical practice in Spain

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    Purpose: Diabetic macular edema is the main cause of blindness in diabetic patients. Vascular endothelial growth factor is involved in diabetic macular edema pathogenesis. Vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitors are an important option in diabetic macular edema therapy. This survey investigates actual clinical practice in diabetic macular edema in Spain. Methods: An expert advisory panel of 17 Spanish ophthalmologists developed a 30-item anonymous questionnaire about diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up in diabetic macular edema. A total of 137 ophthalmologists from 10 Spanish regions completed the questionnaire online. Results: Almost all of the respondents (99.3%) record the measured visual acuity and perform biomicroscopic anterior (94.9%) and posterior (91.2%) segment examinations. Similarly, 100% of responding ophthalmologists always/almost always or frequently perform optical coherence tomography. Most respondents (65%) always/almost always or frequently perform a retinography. More than 50% rarely perform fluorescein angiography. Nearly, all (96.4%) of the specialists responded that, in center-involved diabetic macular edema, the first treatment is an anti–vascular endothelial growth factor drug. For corticosteroids, the first choice of most respondents (91.2%) was the dexamethasone implant. In the follow-up, almost all (96.4%) specialists record the measured visual acuity and most also perform biomicroscopic anterior (82.5%) and posterior (83.2%) segment examination. Conclusion: This survey shows the actual clinical practice in diabetic macular edema in Spain, finding that anti–vascular endothelial growth factor therapy is frequently used, and that diagnosis, treatments, and follow-up examinations used by specialists are homogeneous and according to diabetic macular edema guidelines

    Labour market flows: accounting for the public sector

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    For the period between 2003 and 2018, we document a number of facts about worker gross flows in France, the United Kingdom, Spain and the United States, focussing on the role of the public sector. Using the French, Spanish and UK Labour Force Survey and the US Current Population Survey data, we examine the size and cyclicality of the flows and transition probabilities between private and public employment, unemployment and inactivity. We examine the stocks and flows by gender, age and education. We decompose contributions of private and public job-finding and job-separation rates to fluctuations in the unemployment rate. Public- sector employment contributes 20 percent to fluctuations in the unemployment rate in the UK, 15 percent in France and 10 percent in Spain and the US. Private-sector workers would forgo 0.5 to 2.9 percent of their wage to have the same job security as public-sector workers
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