27,819 research outputs found
The stewardship of things: Property and responsibility in the management of manufactured goods
In the context of broad-based concerns about the need to move towards a more sustainable materials economy, particularly as they are expressed in debates around ecological modernisation (EM), we argue that product stewardship has radical potential as a means to promote significant change in the relationship between society and the material world. We focus on two important dimensions that have been neglected in approaches to product stewardship to date. Firstly, we argue that immanent within the basic concept of stewardship is a problematisation of dominant understandings of property ownership in neoliberal market economies. In the space opened up by notions of stewardship, different ways of enacting both rights and responsibilities to products and materials emerge which have potential to advance the sustainability of material economies. Secondly, through exploration of existing expressions of product stewardship, we uncover a neglected scale of action. Both policy and dominant articulations of EM focus primarily on the efficiency of production processes; and secondarily, the attitudes and behaviours of individual consumers. Missing from this is the 'meso-scale' of social collectives including households, neighbourhoods, more distributed communities and small scale social enterprises. Based on a review of existing research from Australia and the UK, including our own, we argue that understanding of embedded practices of material responsibility at the household scale can both reinvigorate the concept of product stewardship as a potentially radical intervention, and reveal the potential of the meso-scale as a challenging but worthwhile realm of policy intervention
Explicit correlation and intermolecular interactions: Investigating carbon dioxide complexes with the CCSD(T)-F12 method
We have optimized the lowest energy structures and calculated interaction energies for the COââAr, COââNâ, COââCO, COââHâO, and COââNHâ dimers with the recently developed explicitly correlated coupled cluster singles doubles and perturbative triples [CCSD(T)]-F12 methods and the associated VXZ-F12 (where X = D,T,Q) basis sets. For a given cardinal number, we find that results obtained with the CCSD(T)-F12 methods are much closer to the CCSD(T) complete basis set limit than the conventional CCSD(T) results. The relatively modest increase in the computational cost between explicit and conventional CCSD(T) is more than compensated for by the impressive accuracy of the CCSD(T)-F12 method. We recommend use of the CCSD(T)-F12 methods in combination with the VXZ-F12 basis sets for the accurate determination of equilibrium geometries and interaction energies of weakly bound electron donor acceptor complexes
Quantifying cooperative intermolecular interactions for improved carbon dioxide capture materials
We have optimized the geometry and calculated interaction energies for over 100 different complexes of COâ with various combinations of electron accepting (Lewis acid) and electron donating (Lewis base) molecules. We have used the recently developed explicitly correlated coupled cluster singles doubles and perturbative triples [CCSD(T)-F12] methods and the associated VXZ-F12 (where X = D,T,Q) basis sets. We observe only modest changes in the geometric parameters of COâ upon complexation, which suggests that the geometry of COâ adsorbed in a nanoporous material should be similar to that of COâ in gas phase. When COâ forms a complex with two Lewis acids via the two electron rich terminal oxygen atoms, the interaction energy is less than twice what would be expected for the same complex involving a single Lewis acid. We consider a series of complexes that exhibit simultaneous COâ-Lewis acid and COâ-Lewis base intermolecular interactions, with total interaction energies spanning 14.1â105.9 kJ molâ»Âč. For these cooperative complexes, we find that the total interaction energy is greater than the sum of the interaction energies of the constituent complexes. Furthermore, the intermolecular distances of the cooperative complexes are contracted as compared to the constituent complexes. We suggest that metal-organic-framework or similar nanoporous materials could be designed with adsorption sites specifically tailored for COâ to allow cooperative intermolecular interactions, facilitating enhanced COâ adsorption
Streakline flow visualization of discrete hole film cooling with holes inclined 30 deg to surface
Film injection from three rows of discrete holes angled 30 deg to the surface in line with mainstream flow and spaced 5 diameters apart in a staggered array was visualized by using helium bubbles as tracer particles. Both the main stream and the film injectant were ambient air. Detailed streaklines showing the turbulent motion of the film mixing with the main stream were obtained by photographing small, neutrally buoyant helium-filled soap bubbles which followed the flow field. The ratio of boundary layer thickness to hole diameter and the Reynolds number were typical of gas turbine film cooling applications. The results showed the behavior of the film and its interaction with the main stream for a range of blowing rates and two initial boundary layer thicknesses
Twist-controlled Resonant Tunnelling between Monolayer and Bilayer Graphene
We investigate the current-voltage characteristics of a field-effect
tunnelling transistor comprised of both monolayer and bilayer graphene with
well-aligned crystallographic axes, separated by three layers of hexagonal
boron nitride. Using a self-consistent description of the device's
electrostatic configuration we relate the current to three distinct tunable
voltages across the system and hence produce a two-dimensional map of the I-V
characteristics in the low energy regime. We show that the use of gates either
side of the heterostructure offers a fine degree of control over the device's
rich array of characteristics, as does varying the twist between the graphene
electrodes.Comment: 5 pages including references and 3 figure
Evaluation of a planned program of word analysis in grade two
Thesis (Ed.M.)--Boston Universit
The curious case of the companion: evidence for cold accretion onto a dwarf satellite near the isolated elliptical NGC 7796
The isolated elliptical (IE) NGC 7796 is accompanied by an interesting
early-type dwarf galaxy, named NGC7796-DW1. It exhibits a tidal tail, very boxy
isophotes, and multiple nuclei or regions (A, B, and C) that are bluer than the
bulk population of the galaxy, indicating a younger age. These properties are
suggestive of a dwarf-dwarf merger remnant. We use the Multi-Unit Spectroscopic
Explorer (MUSE) at the VLT to investigate NGC 7796-DW1. We extract
characteristic spectra to which we apply the STARLIGHT population synthesis
software to obtain ages and metallicities of the various population components
of the galaxy. The galaxy's main body is old and metal-poor. A surprising
result is the extended line emission in the galaxy, forming a ring-like
structure with a projected diameter of 2.2 kpc. The line ratios fall into the
regime of HII-regions, although OB-stellar populations cannot be identified by
spectral signatures. Nucleus A is a relatively old (7 Gyr or older) and
metal-poor super star cluster, most probably the nucleus of the dwarf, now
displaced. The star-forming regions B and C show younger and distinctly more
metal-rich components. The emission line ratios of regions B and C indicate an
almost solar oxygen abundance, if compared with radiation models of HII
regions. NGC7796-DW1 occupies a particular role in the group of transition-type
galaxies with respect to its origin and current evolutionary state, being the
companion of an IE. The dwarf-dwarf merger scenario is excluded because of the
missing metal-rich merger component. A viable alternative is gas accretion from
a reservoir of cold, metal-rich gas. NGC7796 has to provide this gas within its
X-ray bright halo. As illustrated by NGC7796-DW1, cold accretion may be a
general solution to the problem of extended star formation histories in
transition dwarf galaxies. (abridged)Comment: comments: 13 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
Space Station Spartan study
The required extension, enhancement, and upgrading of the present Spartan concept are described to conduct operations from the space station using the station's unique facilities and operational features. The space station Spartan (3S), the free flyer will be deployed from and returned to the space station and will conduct scientific missions of much longer duration than possible with the current Spartan. The potential benefits of a space station Spartan are enumerated. The objectives of the study are: (1) to develop a credible concept for a space station Spartan; and (2) to determine the associated requirements and interfaces with the space station to help ensure that the 3S can be properly accommodated
AAOmega spectroscopy of 29 351 stars in fields centered on ten Galactic globular clusters
Galactic globular clusters have been pivotal in our understanding of many
astrophysical phenomena. Here we publish the extracted stellar parameters from
a recent large spectroscopic survey of ten globular clusters. A brief review of
the project is also presented. Stellar parameters have been extracted from
individual stellar spectra using both a modified version of the Radial Velocity
Experiment (RAVE) pipeline and a pipeline based on the parameter estimation
method of RAVE. We publish here all parameters extracted from both pipelines.
We calibrate the metallicity and convert this to [Fe/H] for each star and,
furthermore, we compare the velocities and velocity dispersions of the Galactic
stars in each field to the Besan\c{c}on Galaxy model. We find that the model
does not correspond well with the data, indicating that the model is probably
of little use for comparisons with pencil beam survey data such as this.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in A&A. Data
described in tables will be available on CDS (at
http://cdsweb.u-strasbg.fr/cgi-bin/qcat?J/A+A/530/A31) once publishe
Calibration of Computational Models with Categorical Parameters and Correlated Outputs via Bayesian Smoothing Spline ANOVA
It has become commonplace to use complex computer models to predict outcomes
in regions where data does not exist. Typically these models need to be
calibrated and validated using some experimental data, which often consists of
multiple correlated outcomes. In addition, some of the model parameters may be
categorical in nature, such as a pointer variable to alternate models (or
submodels) for some of the physics of the system. Here we present a general
approach for calibration in such situations where an emulator of the
computationally demanding models and a discrepancy term from the model to
reality are represented within a Bayesian Smoothing Spline (BSS) ANOVA
framework. The BSS-ANOVA framework has several advantages over the traditional
Gaussian Process, including ease of handling categorical inputs and correlated
outputs, and improved computational efficiency. Finally this framework is then
applied to the problem that motivated its design; a calibration of a
computational fluid dynamics model of a bubbling fluidized which is used as an
absorber in a CO2 capture system
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