4,783 research outputs found
Citizen participation, quality of life and territorial trans-regional justice: A social basis for common good
For globalized local worlds undergoing transformation, territorial interventions are increasingly producing larger social and environmental impacts. Macro-interventions profoundly alter the functioning of ecosystems and human habitats or communities, becoming inclusive in extreme situations of exploitation or extraction, risking their very existence. Therefore it is necessary to develop a system or Social Baseline that clearly establishes the philosophical bases, restrictions and criteria that regulate and curb the negative impacts of such interventions. This implies defining methods for citizen participation. This article focuses on defining a basic framework with criteria and indicators that regulate the impact of macro-interventions - of different natures - on human territories and communities
Role and variations of supernatant compounds in submerged membrane bioreactor fouling
Many studies have been performed to analyze the influence of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) in membrane fouling. Most of these works deal with the impact of solid contents in the fouling, and some of them have studied the role ofsupematant compounds. The aim of this work was to clarify the role of the different sludge fractions in the context of membrane bioreactor fouling. The laboratory-scale reactor used for experiments consists of a submerged membrane bioreactor for the treatment of synthetic wastewater. For the same organic load (0.4 g COD/g MLSS.d), several samples of sludge were taken off and divided intohree fractions (solid contents, soluble and colloids). COD and extractable EPS were quantified (carbohydrates and proteins). Dead-end filtration tests for each fraction were also carried out. According to these experiments, no correlation between EPS concentration in the solid part of the sludge and filtration resistance was found. Instead, a change of the filtration resistance was explained as a function of COD in the supematant, and more especially as a function of proteins concentration. Indeed, when the value of proteins concentration in the supernatant changes from 30 to 100 mg/1, the value of specific resistance increased by a factor of 10. Finally, the characterization of the supematant was shown as a key parameter for the MBR operating control. When the COD and proteins concentration in the supematant remained low, the transmembrane pressure in the reactor remained even lower. Moreover, with the biomass growth rate analysis, our results suggest that the EPS production was linked to growth of microorganisms. The faster he growth, the less EPS production
On the critical end point in a two-flavor linear sigma model coupled to quarks
We use the linear sigma model coupled to quarks to explore the location of
the phase transition lines in the QCD phase diagram from the point of view of
chiral symmetry restoration at high temperature and baryon chemical potential.
We compute analytically the effective potential in the high- and
low-temperature approximations up to sixth order, including the contribution of
the ring diagrams to account for the plasma screening properties. We determine
the model parameters, namely, the couplings and mass-parameter, from conditions
valid at the first order phase transition at vanishing temperature and, using
the Hagedorn limiting temperature concept applied to finite baryon density, for
a critical baryochemical potential of order of the nucleon mass. We show that
when using the set of parameters thus determined, the second order phase
transition line (our proxy for the crossover transition) that starts at finite
temperature and zero baryon chemical potential converges to the line of first
order phase transitions that starts at zero temperature and finite baryon
chemical potential to determine the critical end point to lie in the region
5.02<\mu_B^{\mbox{CEP}}/T_c<5.18, 0.14, where
is the critical transition temperature at zero baryon chemical potential.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures, discussion extended, explicit calculations
included in appendices and version accepted for publication in EPJ
A indexação do conhecimento científico: a necessidade do conhecimento a serviço do desenvolvimento comunitário e da proteção da natureza
The pandemic, the economic crisis, and climate change impose new development models of scientific production, as we suggest in this perspective study. The authors propose “new ways of evaluating academic performance,” which means stopping exclusively rewarding researchers who publish in indexed journals and valuing work with communities and applied interdisciplinary research, aimed at understanding socioenvironmental problems and proposing possible solutions that improve academic performance, improve quality of life of the population, and protect nature.A pandemia, a crise econômica e as mudanças climáticas impõem novos modelos de desenvolvimento da produção científica. Propomos “novas formas de avaliar o desempenho acadêmico”, o que significa deixar de premiar exclusivamente pesquisadores que publicam em periódicos indexados, mas valorizar o trabalho com comunidades e a pesquisa interdisciplinar aplicada, visando compreender problemas socioambientais e sugerir possíveis soluções que melhorem o desempenho acadêmico, a qualidade de vida da população e a proteção da natureza
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