3,333 research outputs found
Automatic identification and enumeration of algae
A good understanding of the population dynamics of algal communities is vital in many ecological and pollution studies of freshwater and oceanic systems. Present methods require manual counting and identification of algae and can take up to 90 min to obtain a statistically reliable count on a complex population. Several alternative techniques to accelerate the process have been tried on marine samples but none have been completely successful because insufficient effort has been put into verifying the technique before field trials. The objective of the present study has been to assess the potential of in vivo fluorescence of algal pigments as a means of automatically identifying algae. For this work total fluorescence spectroscopy was chosen as the observation technique
Communities in university mathematics
This paper concerns communities of learners and teachers that are formed, develop and interact in university mathematics environments through the theoretical lens of Communities of Practice. From this perspective, learning is described as a process of participation and reification in a community in which individuals belong and form their identity through engagement, imagination and alignment. In addition, when inquiry is considered as a fundamental mode of participation, through critical alignment, the community becomes a Community of Inquiry. We discuss these theoretical underpinnings with examples of their application in research in university mathematics education and, in more detail, in two Research Cases which focus on mathematics students' and teachers' perspectives on proof and on engineering students' conceptual understanding of mathematics. The paper concludes with a critical reflection on the theorising of the role of communities in university level teaching and learning and a consideration of ways forward for future research
Go West Young Man: Self-selection and Endogenous Property Rights
If, as Hume argues, property is a self-referring custom of a group of people, then property rights depend on how that group forms and orders itself. In this paper we investigate how people construct a convention for property in an experiment in which groups of self-selected individuals can migrate between three geographically separate regions. We find that the absence of property rights clearly decreases wealth in our environment and that interest in establishing property rights is a key determinant of the decision to migrate to a new region. Theft is nearly eliminated among migrants, resulting in strong growth, and non-migrants remain in poverty. Thus, self-selection, through the decision to migrate, to form more cooperative groups is essential for establishing property rights.experimental economics, property rights, migration and exit
Investigation into the Strouhal numbers associated with vortex shedding from parallel-plate thermoacoustic stacks in oscillatory flow conditions
This paper investigates vortex shedding processes occurring at the end of a stack of parallel plates, due to an oscillating
flow induced by an acoustic standing wave. Here the hot-wire anemometry measurement technique is applied to detect
the velocity fluctuations due to vortex shedding near the end of the stack. The hot-wire fast time response enables
obtaining detailed frequency spectra of the velocity signal, which can be used for identifying the dominant frequencies
associated with vortex shedding, and thus allow calculating the corresponding Strouhal numbers. By varying the stack
configuration (the plate thickness and spacing) and the acoustic excitation level (the so-called drive ratio), the impact ofthe stack blockage ratio and the Reynolds number on the Strouhal number has been studied in detail. Furthermore, in the range of the Reynolds numbers between 200 and 5,000 a correlation between the Strouhal number and Reynolds
number has been obtained and compared with analogous relationships in the steady flow. Particle Image Velocimetry
(PIV) is also used to visualize the vortex shedding processes within an acoustic cycle, phase-by-phase, in particular
during the part of the cycle when the fluid flows out of the stack â selected cases are shown for comparisons with hotwire
measurements
Selection and experimental evaluation of low-cost porous materials for regenerator applications in thermoacoustic engines
This paper aims at evaluating three selected low-cost porous materials from the point of view of their suitability as regenerator materials in the design of thermoacoustic travelling wave engines. The materials tested include: a cellular ceramic substrate with regular square channels; steel âscourersâ; and stainless steel âwoolâ. Comparisons are made against a widely used regenerator material: stainless
steel woven wire mesh screen. For meaningful comparisons, the materials are selected to have similar hydraulic radii. One set of regenerators was designed around the hydraulic radius of 200 ÎŒm. This included the ceramic substrate, steel âscourersâ, stainless steel âwoolâ and stacked wire screens (as a reference). This set was complemented by steel âscourersâ and stacked wire screens (as a reference) with
hydraulic radii of 120 ÎŒm. Therefore six regenerators were produced to carry out the testing. Initial tests were made in a steady air flow to estimate their relative pressure drop due to viscous dissipation. Subsequently, they were installed in a looped-tube travelling-wave thermoacoustic engine to test their relative performance. Testing included the onset temperature difference, the maximum pressure amplitude
generated and the acoustic power output as a function of mean pressure between 0 and 10 bar above atmospheric. It appears that the performance of regenerators made out of âscourersâ and steel âwoolâ is much worse than their mesh-screen counterparts of the same hydraulic radius. However cellular ceramics may offer an alternative to traditional regenerator materials to reduce the overall system costs. Detailed
discussions are provided
The Ecological and Civil Mainsprings of Property: An Experimental Economic History of Whalersâ Rules of Capture
This paper uses a laboratory experiment to probe the proposition that property emerges anarchically out of social custom. We test the hypothesis that whalers in the 18th and 19th century developed rules of conduct that minimized the sum of the transaction and production costs of capturing their prey, the primary implication being that different ecological conditions lead to different rules of capture. Holding everything else constant, we find that simply imposing two different types of prey is insufficient to observe two different rules of capture. Another factor is essential, namely that the members of the community are civil-minded.property rights, endogenous rules, whaling, experimental economics
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