13,616 research outputs found
Fate of the organophosphate herbicide glyphosate in arable soils and its relationship to soil phosphorus status
Glyphosate is one of the world's most widely used herbicides. This study was undertaken to unravel the factors affecting its movement, sorption, persistence and leachability in different Finnish soils to create a sound basis for risk assessment.
Field experiments indicated rather long persistence of glyphosate in Finnsih soils low in soil test P.
The key soil factors promoting the persistence and reducing the leaching of glyphosate and its metabolite aminomethylphosphonic acid appeared to be low P status and high Al and Fe oxide contents in soil, leading to low degree of P saturation and to reduced biodegradability as result of strong sorption
Strong Evaluations and Personal Identity
Charles Taylor draws
a distinction between weak and strong evaluations. They
are two kinds of evaluative attitudes persons can have
towards a variety of objects of evaluation. The possible
objects can vary from individual desires, emotions and acts
to whole ways of life. Strong evaluations are stable
preferences based on qualitative distinctions concerning
the worth of the options. Strong evaluations are responses
to the non-instrumental value of the options, and they can
be mistaken, because the value of the options is not based
on the response. By contrast, what Taylor calls "weak
evaluations" cannot be mistaken. Weak evaluations make
any of their objects weakly valued. This means that strong
evaluations are value-based, and weak evaluations desirebased
preferences. Taylor also says that strong
evaluations, unlike weak evaluations, are central to one's
identity. One's identity is constituted through a strong
adherence, a strong identification with and commitment to
the values. Thus strong evaluations are stable preferences
that are strongly adhered to, and which are based on
strong values
Kant and Hegel on Purposive Action
This essay discusses Kant and Hegel’s philosophies of action and the place of action within the general structure of their practical philosophy. We begin by briefly noting a few things that both unite and distinguish the two philosophers. In the sections that follow, we consider these and their corollaries in more detail. In so doing, we map their differences against those suggested by more standard readings that treat their accounts of action as less central to their practical philosophy. Section 2 discusses some central Kantian concepts (Freedom, Willkür, Wille, and Moral Law). In Section 3, we take a closer look at the distinction between internal and external action, as found in Kant’s philosophy of morality and legality. In Section 4, we turn to Hegel and his distinctions between abstract right (legality), morality, and ethical life, as well as the location of his account of action within his overall theory of morality. We discuss the distinction between Handlung and Tat, and non-imputable consequences. The overall aims of our essay are to shed light on some puzzles in Kant and Hegel’s conceptions and to examine where their exact disputes lie without taking a stand on which philosophy is ultimately the most satisfactory.Peer reviewe
Cross-Field Transport of Solar Energetic Particles in a Large-Scale Fluctuating Magnetic Field
The trajectories of Solar Energetic Particles (SEPs) in an Interplanetary
Magnetic Field (IMF) exhibiting large-scale fluctuations due to footpoint
motions originating in the photosphere, are simulated using a full-orbit
test-particle code. The cross-field transport experienced by the particles in
three propagation conditions (scatter-free, with scattering mean free path
lambda=0.3 AU and lambda=2 AU) is characterized in the Parker spiral geometry.
The role of expansion of the magnetic field with radial distance from the Sun
is taken into consideration in the calculation of particle displacements and
diffusion coefficients from the output of the simulations. It is found that
transport across the magnetic field is enhanced in the lambda=0.3 AU and
lambda=2 AU cases, compared to the scatter-free case. Values of the ratios of
perpendicular to parallel diffusion coefficients vary between 0.01 and 0.08.
The ratio of latitudinal to longitudinal diffusion coefficient perpendicular to
the magnetic field is typically 0.2, suggesting that transport in latitude may
be less efficient.Comment: 17 pages, 11 figure
Complex regional innovation networks and HEI engagement the case of Chicago
This article considers how HEIs engage within local complex development networks in order to develop the urban metropolis, using the case of Chicago as a specific example. It focuses on three main issues: how collaboration occurs amongst regional stakeholders; how goals are set and how shared goals have been created; and the extent to which there exist conflicting views amongst stakeholders, and their capability to create solutions where there are disagreements and clashing purposes. Chicago is in the middle of making a paradigm shift, with at its core an open system approach that includes a variety of ways to engage citizen-users as co-creators, including through user-driven innovation and digitalised services. In the metropolitan area there is a widely shared goal amongst stakeholders to develop and improve novel approaches for regional engagement to enhance innovativeness and competitiveness. The paradigm shift in regional engagement from building co-operation clusters to one of organisational betweenness and open systemic thinking requires new skills in management and leadership centred on interaction, co-creation and sharing of knowledge
Energetic Particle Diffusion In Structured Turbulence
In the full-orbit particle simulations of energetic particle transport in
plasmas, the plasma turbulence is typically described as a homogeneous
superposition of linear Fourier modes. The turbulence evolution is, however,
typically a nonlinear process, and, particularly in the heliospheric context,
the solar wind plasma is inhomogeneous due to the transient structures, as
observed by remote and in-situ measurements. In this work, we study the effects
of the inhomogeneities on energetic particle transport by using spatially
distributed, superposed turbulence envelopes. We find that the cross-field
transport is significantly reduced, when compared to the results obtained with
homogeneous turbulence. The reduction can reach an order of magnitude when the
enveloping breaks the wave phase coherence along the mean magnetic field
direction.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
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