680 research outputs found

    Review of the Marine Monitoring Program (MMP)

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    The Marine Monitoring Program (MMP) monitors the condition of inshore water quality and aims to link this to changes in the health of key inshore environments (coral reefs and seagrass). This report provides a review of each of the 5 programs based on the best available information that was provided by the MMP providers at the time of the review

    Solving One Dimensional Scalar Conservation Laws by Particle Management

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    We present a meshfree numerical solver for scalar conservation laws in one space dimension. Points representing the solution are moved according to their characteristic velocities. Particle interaction is resolved by purely local particle management. Since no global remeshing is required, shocks stay sharp and propagate at the correct speed, while rarefaction waves are created where appropriate. The method is TVD, entropy decreasing, exactly conservative, and has no numerical dissipation. Difficulties involving transonic points do not occur, however inflection points of the flux function pose a slight challenge, which can be overcome by a special treatment. Away from shocks the method is second order accurate, while shocks are resolved with first order accuracy. A postprocessing step can recover the second order accuracy. The method is compared to CLAWPACK in test cases and is found to yield an increase in accuracy for comparable resolutions.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. Submitted to proceedings of the Fourth International Workshop Meshfree Methods for Partial Differential Equation

    Functional changes induced by extrusion during cocoa alkalization

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    [EN] Polyphenols, a group of secondary metabolites, have well-known relevant effects on human health. During traditional alkalization, this content dramatically lowers. We aimed to evaluate an alternative alkalization method based on extrusion on cocoa functional characteristics. The results showed that the antioxidant capacity and total phenolic values increased as alkali concentration and temperature did, and these values doubled under less extreme conditions. Comparing the functional properties between extruded and traditionally produced powders revealed that catechin, epicatechin and dimers B1 and B2 contents were 43%, 33%, 54% and 34% lower in the extruded samples, respectively. However, this reduction was partially balanced by increased clovamide content up to 50%. Thus the total phenol content and antioxidant capacity of the extruded samples were statistically above those of the commercial one. Hence extrusion alkalization should be considered a new processing alternative to avoid markedly reducing functional properties.This work was funded by the Spanish Government and European Regional Development Fund (Project RTC-2016-5241-2).Valverde-Garcia, D.; Behrends, B.; Pérez-Esteve, É.; Kuhnert, N.; Barat Baviera, JM. (2020). Functional changes induced by extrusion during cocoa alkalization. Food Research International. 136:1-10. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2020.10946911013

    Whom do we trust - Booters and SSL/TLS certificates

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    SPRING 2016, 11th edition of the SPRING series, is a single-track event that was sponsored by the special interest group Security – Intrusion Detection and Response (SIDAR) of the German Informatics Society (GI). The purpose of SPRING is to provide young researchers the opportunity to discuss their work with other students and specialists in the research area of IT security. In particular, SPRING is a venue for presentation of early-stage research and solicits submission of scientific papers presenting novel research on malware analysis, intrusion detection, and related systems security topics. As per our tradition, SPRING encourages submissions from the following broad areas: Analysis of vulnerabilities, intrusion detection, malware, incident management and forensics. This year the SPRING 2016 graduate workshop was held in Darmstadt, Germany, and was hosted at the University of Applied Sciences. SPRING took place from the 2nd to the 3rd of June 2016 and was the eleventh edition of the graduate workshop on IT security. It followed the successful events in Neubiberg in 2015, Bochum in 2014, Munich in 2013, Berlin in 2012, Bochum in 2011, Bonn in 2010, Stuttgart in 2009, Mannheim in 2008, Dortmund in 2007 and Berlin in 2006. SPRING 2016 was organized in a 2-day program to encourage interactions between all participants. The program consists of a main track and opening research keynotes. The presented volume includes all extended abstracts presented at SPRING 2016 as defined within the overall final program

    Canadian Lutheran World Relief and the Lutheran Immigration Board of Canada

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    Webinar 3 of the For the Sake of the Gospel Series was a participant-engagement webinar, whereas previous webinars were teaching sessions. Webinar participants consented to having their engagements recorded and used for educational purposes; some interactions from the public CHAT are included

    Many-body localization and thermalization in the full probability distribution function of observables

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    We investigate the relation between thermalization following a quantum quench and many-body localization in quasiparticle space in terms of the long-time full distribution function of physical observables. In particular, expanding on our recent work [E. Canovi {\em et al.}, Phys. Rev. B {\bf 83}, 094431 (2011)], we focus on the long-time behavior of an integrable XXZ chain subject to an integrability-breaking perturbation. After a characterization of the breaking of integrability and the associated localization/delocalization transition using the level spacing statistics and the properties of the eigenstates, we study the effect of integrability-breaking on the asymptotic state after a quantum quench of the anisotropy parameter, looking at the behavior of the full probability distribution of the transverse and longitudinal magnetization of a subsystem. We compare the resulting distributions with those obtained in equilibrium at an effective temperature set by the initial energy. We find that, while the long time distribution functions appear to always agree {\it qualitatively} with the equilibrium ones, {\it quantitative} agreement is obtained only when integrability is fully broken and the relevant eigenstates are diffusive in quasi-particle space.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figure
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