297 research outputs found

    Life cycle assessment of Swiss organic farming systems

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    The impacts of organic and integrated farming systems in Switzerland on the environment have been assessed in a comprehensive study by the life cycle assessment method. This paper reports a comparison of the treatments of the DOC experiment. Organic farming showed clear ecological advantages particularly for eco- and human toxicity, resource use and biodiversity. These ecological advantages only partly apply to nutrient losses and are not always found for single products. Per kg of organic product, higher impacts were often found for global warming potential, ozone formation, eutrophication and acidification compared to integrated production. In the same crop rotation with the same amount of organic fertilisers there were no systematic differences in soil quality of organic compared with integrated production. Further improvement of the environmental performance of organic farming should focus on achieving higher yields of good quality – especially in potatoes and cereals - by using inputs more efficiently and minimising nitrogen losses

    Space-qualified submillimeter radiometer

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    The purpose of this research was to develop a reliable submillimeter wave spectrometer for space-borne high frequency spectral line work. The emphasis was on improving the efficiency of frequency multipliers to limit the system components to rugged, low power consumption solid-state devices. This research has allowed Millitech to develop increased efficiency and performance in Millitech's existing line of submillimeter components and systems. Millitech has fabricated and tested a complete solid-state spectrometer front end for use at 560 GHz (the 1(sub 10) to 1(sub 01) transition of water vapor). The spectrometer was designed with the rigors of flight conditions in mind. The spectrometer uses a phase-locked, solid-state Gunn diode oscillator as the local oscillator, employing a tripler to produce about 3 mW of power at 285 GHz, and a low noise second harmonic waveguide mixer which requires less than 2 mW of LO power. The LO (and the signal) is injected into the mixer by means of a quasioptical diplexer. The measured system noise temperature is 2800 K (DSB) over 400 MHz. The whole spectrometer front end is compact (21 cm by 21 cm by 24 cm), light (7.4 kg), and has a power consumption of less than 8 W. Other topics explored in this work include compact frequency agile phase lock loops, optical filters, and InP Gunn oscillators for low noise applications. As a result of this research, the improvement in the design of multipliers and harmonic mixers will allow their use as the LO power for a variety of satellite-borne receivers operating in the 200 to 600 GHz frequency range

    Ground feasibility tests of unity-gain, high directivity antenna Final report

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    Four dipole, high directivity antenna for radio astronom

    The effects of water regime on phosphorus responses of rainfed lowland rice cultivars

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    Background and Aims Soil phosphorus (P) solubility declines sharply when a flooded soil drains, and an important component of rice (Oryza sativa) adaptation to rainfed lowland environments is the ability to absorb and utilize P under such conditions. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that rice cultivars differ in their P responses between water regimes because P uptake mechanisms differ. Methods Six lowland rice cultivars (three considered tolerant of low P soils, three sensitive) were grown in a factorial experiment with three water regimes (flooded, moist and flooded-then-moist) and four soil P levels, and growth and P uptake were measured. Small volumes of soil were used to maximize inter-root competition and uptake per unit root surface. The results were compared with the predictions of a model allowing for the effects of water regime on P solubility and diffusion. Key Results The plants were P stressed but not water stressed in all the water regimes at all P levels except the higher P additions in the flooded soil. The cultivar rankings scarcely differed between the water regimes and P additions. In all the treatments, the soil P concentrations required to explain the measured uptake were several times the concentration of freely available P in the soil. Conclusions The cultivar rankings were driven more by differences in growth habit than specific P uptake mechanisms, so the hypothesis cannot be corroborated with these data. Evidently all the plants could tap sparingly soluble forms of P by releasing a solubilizing agent or producing a greater root length than measured, or both. However, any cultivar differences in this were not apparent in greater net P uptake, possibly because the restricted rooting volume meant that additional P uptake could not be converted into new root growth to explore new soil volume

    IMRT using simultaneously integrated boost (SIB) in head and neck cancer patients

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    BACKGROUND: Preliminary very encouraging clinical results of intensity modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) in Head Neck Cancer (HNC) are available from several large centers. Tumor control rates seem to be kept at least at the level of conventional three-dimensional radiation therapy; the benefit of normal tissue preservation with IMRT is proven for salivary function. There is still only limited experience with IMRT using simultaneously integrated boost (SIB-IMRT) in the head and neck region in terms of normal tissue response. The aim of this work was (1) to establish tumor response in HNC patients treated with SIB-IMRT, and (2) to assess tissue tolerance following different SIB-IMRT schedules. RESULTS: Between 1/2002 and 12/2004, 115 HNC patients have been curatively treated with IMRT. 70% received definitive IMRT (dIMRT), 30% were postoperatively irradiated. In 78% concomitant chemotherapy was given. SIB radiation schedules with 5–6 × 2 Gy/week to 60–70 Gy, 5 × 2.2 Gy/week to 66–68.2 Gy (according to the RTOG protocol H-0022), or 5 × 2.11 Gy/week to 69.6 Gy were used. After mean 18 months (10–44), 77% of patients were alive with no disease. Actuarial 2-year local, nodal, and distant disease free survival was 77%, 87%, and 78%, respectively. 10% were alive with disease, 10% died of disease. 20/21 locoregional failures occurred inside the high dose area. Mean tumor volume was significantly larger in locally failed (63 cc) vs controlled tumors (32 cc, p <0.01), and in definitive (43 cc) vs postoperative IMRT (25 cc, p <0.05); the locoregional failure rate was twofold higher in definitively irradiated patients. Acute reactions were mild to moderate and limited to the boost area, the persisting grade 3/4 late toxicity rate was low with 6%. The two grade 4 reactions (dysphagia, laryngeal fibrosis) were observed following the SIB schedule with 2.2 Gy per session. CONCLUSION: SIB-IMRT in HNC using 2.0, 2.11 or 2.2 Gy per session is highly effective and safe with respect to tumor response and tolerance. SIB with 2.2 Gy is not recommended for large tumors involving laryngeal structures

    Evaluation de la sécurité du trafic par microsimulation

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    Actuellement, les analyses de sĂ©curitĂ© des rĂ©seaux routiers sont essentiellement « rĂ©actives », s’efforçant de localiser des points noirs Ă  partir de relevĂ©s d’accidents. La prĂ©sente Ă©tude propose de mener des analyses de sĂ©curitĂ© « actives » en dĂ©terminant un indicateur de sĂ©curitĂ© issu de la microsimulation des flux de circulation. LimitĂ©e Ă  la problĂ©matique des accidents en file, la prĂ©sente recherche propose un nouvel indicateur de sĂ©curitĂ© : la densitĂ© d’insĂ©curitĂ© UD (pour Unsafety Density). Dans la microsimulation, des modĂšles de comportement gouvernent la progression des vĂ©hicules, en interdisant toute collision. Le paramĂštre UD proposĂ© se base sur le concept d’une hypothĂ©tique collision survenant entre deux vĂ©hicules se suivant, en prenant en compte aussi bien la probabilitĂ© que la gravitĂ© de l’accident. Une Ă©tude de cas sur une portion autoroutiĂšre fournit des rĂ©sultats encourageants, dĂ©montrant les potentialitĂ©s de la microsimulation pour l’évaluation de la sĂ©curitĂ© routiĂšre. Des zones prĂ©sentant une dangerositĂ© plus importante que le reste du rĂ©seau peuvent ainsi ĂȘtre localisĂ©es en fonction des conditions de trafic. En complĂ©ment aux indicateurs classiques de performance, la densitĂ© d’insĂ©curitĂ© permet une analyse globale, fournissant une aide prĂ©cieuse lors de la gestion, mais aussi de la conception de rĂ©seaux routiers

    Orbital angular momentum exchange in an optical parametric oscillator

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    We present a study of orbital angular momentum transfer from pump to down-converted beams in a type-II Optical Parametric Oscillator. Cavity and anisotropy effects are investigated and demostrated to play a central role in the transverse mode dynamics. While the idler beam can oscillate in a Laguerre-Gauss mode, the crystal birefringence induces an astigmatic effect in the signal beam that prevents the resonance of such mode.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, regular articl

    Géométrie tridimensionnelle des voies de circulation

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    L’étude des projets routiers se dĂ©roule depuis toujours selon un dĂ©coupage parfaitement dĂ©fini qui donne lieu Ă  l’étude successive des trois aspects du tracĂ© que sont le plan de situation, le profil en long et le profil en travers. Pris indĂ©pendamment, ces trois espaces-plans Ă©troitement liĂ©s sont faciles d’accĂšs. Le problĂšme devient plus ardu si on les traite simultanĂ©ment. Pourtant, une vision globale en trois dimensions est nĂ©cessaire pour certains paramĂštres comme la visibilitĂ©, la lisibilitĂ© ou l’intĂ©gration dans le site, caractĂ©ristiques fondamentales dont dĂ©pendront la sĂ©curitĂ©, la viabilitĂ© et la qualitĂ© d’une route. La maĂźtrise de ces questions d’interaction d’espaces-plans est donc indispensable. L’avĂšnement et le dĂ©veloppement des logiciels de conception assistĂ©e par ordinateur (CAO) ont permis de rĂ©pondre en partie aux besoins de traitement tridimensionnel, notamment au niveau de la visualisation des projets, formidable outil de communication avec les professionnels et le public. NĂ©anmoins des lacunes subsistent. La prĂ©sente Ă©tude permet la prospection et l’étude thĂ©orique de mĂ©thodes et principes de base permettant une meilleure maĂźtrise spatiale du tracĂ©. Sans rĂ©volutionner totalement la conception routiĂšre, elle apporte un « cahier des charges » pour les logiciels routiers de CAO permettant de mieux apprĂ©hender la conception, mais aussi le contrĂŽle des voies de circulation, par exemple lors d’audits de sĂ©curitĂ©

    ORide: A Privacy-Preserving yet Accountable Ride-Hailing Service

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    In recent years, ride-hailing services (RHSs) have be- come increasingly popular, serving millions of users per day. Such systems, however, raise significant privacy concerns, because service providers are able to track the precise mobility patterns of all riders and drivers. In this paper, we propose ORide (Oblivious Ride), a privacy- preserving RHS based on somewhat-homomorphic en- cryption with optimizations such as ciphertext packing and transformed processing. With ORide, a service provider can match riders and drivers without learning their identities or location information. ORide offers rid- ers with fairly large anonymity sets (e.g., several thou- sands), even in sparsely populated areas. In addition, ORide supports key RHS features such as easy payment, reputation scores, accountability, and retrieval of lost items. Using real data-sets that consist of millions of rides, we show that the computational and network over- head introduced by ORide is acceptable. For example, ORide adds only several milliseconds to ride-hailing op- erations, and the extra driving distance for a driver is less than 0.5 km in more than 75% of the cases evaluated. In short, we show that a RHS can offer strong privacy guar- antees to both riders and drivers while maintaining the convenience of its services
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