341 research outputs found

    Suppression of rice methane emission by sulfate deposition in simulated acid rain

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    Sulfate in acid rain is known to suppress methane (CH4) emissions from natural freshwater wetlands. Here we examine the possibility that CH4 emissions from rice agriculture may be similarly affected by acid rain, a major and increasing pollution problem in Asia. Our findings suggest that acid rain rates of SO2-4 deposition may help to reduce CH4 emissions from rice agriculture. Emissions from rice plants treated with simulated acid rain at levels of SO2-4 consistent with the range of deposition in Asia were reduced by 24% during the grain filling and ripening stage of the rice season which accounts for 50% of the overall CH4 that is normally emitted in a rice season. A single application of SO2-4 at a comparable level reduced CH4 emission by 43%. We hypothesize that the reduction in CH4 emission may be due to a combination of effects. The first mechanism is that the low rates of SO2-4 may be sufficient to boost yields of rice and, in so doing, may cause a reduction in root exudates to the rhizosphere, a key substrate source for methanogenesis. Decreasing a major substrate source for methanogens is also likely to intensify competition with sulfate-reducing microorganisms for whom prior SO2-4 limitation had been lifted by the simulated acid rain S deposition

    Towards goal-oriented mesh adaptation for fluid-structure interaction

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    In order to address fluid-structure interaction, we present an a priori analysis for an ALE compressible flow model. This analysis is the key for an anisotropic metricbased mesh adaptation

    Genetic optimization for radio interferometer configurations

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    The large bandwidth and resolution specifications of today’s telescopes require the use of different types of collectors positioned over long baselines. Innovative feeds and detectors must be designed and introduced in the initial phases of development. The required level of resolution can only be achieved through a ground-breaking configuration of dishes and antennas. This work investigates the possibility of the genetic optimization of radio interferometer layouts given constraints on cable length, required UV density distribution and point-spread function. Owing to the large collecting area and the frequency range required for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) to deliver the promised science, the configuration of the dishes within each station is an important issue. As a proof of concept, the Phase 1 specifications of this telescope are used to test the proposed framework.peer-reviewe

    Influenza vaccination survey in Maltese healthcare workers in the COVID-19 era

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    Introduction: Seasonal influenza globally infects 5%-15% annually, with a total of 3-5 million cases of severe illness and ≀500,000 deaths. Hospital-acquired influenza has a particularly high mortality, and healthcare workers are frequently the source of these infections. This study was carried out to ascertain last year’s influenza vaccination uptake in Malta’s government sector healthcare workers, and estimate the likely vaccine uptake rate in the coming winter season when COVID-19 is expected to be prevalent. --- Methods: A short, anonymous questionnaire was sent via the sector’s standard email services (open 30/06-17/072020). --- Results: There were a total of 735 (7.6%) responses from a total workforce of 9,681. The proportion of Maltese healthcare workers who did not take the vaccine last year but who are likely to take the vaccine this winter halved from 41% to 21%. Doctors had the highest baseline uptake (23% refused vaccination in 2019) and the highest likely uptake next winter (6% likely to refuse vaccination in 2020). Analysis by age showed a likely increase in vaccine uptake with increasing age across almost all age brackets. --- Discussion: Influenza vaccination is advantageous and incurs a trivial burden. Clinicians, legislators and ethicists are increasingly aware of this aspect of healthcare, and increasingly mandate compulsory seasonal influenza vaccination for healthcare workers, where vaccine refusal can be taken to equate to maleficent practice. Education with regard to the low risk of side effects may increase voluntary uptake. Institutions are also responsible for ensuring employee vaccination, and this is even more the case for next winter in the setting of the potential co-circulation of novel COVID-19 with influenza.peer-reviewe

    Smart hexagonal truss systems exhibiting negative compressibility through constrained angle stretching

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    The support of the Malta Council of Science and Technology through their national R&I programme as well as the support of the University of Malta is gratefully acknowledged.Negative compressibility is the ability to expand in at least one dimension rather than shrinking upon the application of an externally applied hydrostatic pressure. It is shown that, contrary to current perception, negative linear compressibility may be obtained from re-entrant hexagonal truss systems of specific geometric features which deform through non-equal changes in the lengths of the cell walls when deforming through a constrained angle stretching rather than other modes of deformation (such as flexure or hinging, modes of deformation that also lead to auxetic behaviour in honeycombs). Negative compressibility is predicted in the vertical direction for particular re-entrant geometries of this smart hexagonal truss system when the vertical ribs are much stiffer than the inclined ribs.peer-reviewe

    The Power of Action Plots: Unveiling Reaction Selectivity of Light‐Stabilized Dynamic Covalent Chemistry

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    Exploiting the optimum wavelength of reactivity for efficient photochemical reactions has been well-established based on the development of photochemical action plots. We herein demonstrate the power of such action plots by a remarkable example of the wavelength-resolved photochemistry of two triazolinedione (TAD) substrates, i.e., aliphatic and aromatic substituted, that exhibit near identical absorption spectra yet possess vastly disparate photoreactivity. We present our findings in carefully recorded action plots, from which reaction selectivity is identified. The profound difference in photoreactivity is exploited by designing a ‘hybrid’ bisfunctional TAD molecule, enabling the formation of a dual-gated reaction manifold that demonstrates the exceptional and site-selective (photo)chemical behavior of both TAD substrates within a single small molecule

    Quantifying tropical peatland dissolved organic carbon (DOC) using UV-visible spectroscopy

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    UV–visible spectroscopy has been shown to be a useful technique for determining dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations. However, at present we are unaware of any studies in the literature that have investigated the suitability of this approach for tropical DOC water samples from any tropical peatlands, although some work has been performed in other tropical environments. We used water samples from two oil palm estates in Sarawak, Malaysia to: i) investigate the suitability of both single and two-wavelength proxies for tropical DOC determination; ii) develop a calibration dataset and set of parameters to calculate DOC concentrations indirectly; iii) provide tropical researchers with guidance on the best spectrophotometric approaches to use in future analyses of DOC. Both single and two-wavelength model approaches performed well with no one model significantly outperforming the other. The predictive ability of the models suggests that UV–visible spectroscopy is both a viable and low cost method for rapidly analyzing DOC in water samples immediately post-collection, which can be important when working at remote field sites with access to only basic laboratory facilities

    Self-reported access to health care, communicable diseases, violence and perception of legal status among online transgender identifying sex workers in the UK.

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    OBJECTIVES: Transgender-identifying sex workers (TGISWs) are among the most vulnerable groups but are rarely the focus of health research. Here we evaluated perceived barriers to healthcare access, risky sexual behaviours and exposure to violence in the United Kingdom (UK), based on a survey of all workers on BirchPlace, the main transgender sex commerce website in the UK. STUDY DESIGN: The study design used in the study is an opt-in text-message 12-item questionnaire. METHODS: Telephone contacts were harvested from BirchPlace's website (n = 592 unique and active numbers). The questionnaire was distributed with Qualtrics software, resulting in 53 responses. RESULTS: Our survey revealed significant reported barriers to healthcare access, exposure to risky sexual behaviours and to physical violence. Many transgender sex workers reportedly did not receive a sexual screening, and 28% engaged in condomless penetrative sex within the preceding six months, and 68% engaged in condomless oral sex. 17% responded that they felt unable to access health care they believed medically necessary. Half of the participants suggested their quality of life would be improved by law reform. CONCLUSIONS: TGISWs report experiencing a high level of risky sexual behaviour, physical violence and inadequate healthcare access. Despite a National Health System, additional outreach may be needed to ensure access to services by this population.ECD
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