288 research outputs found
Method for rating power cables buried in surface troughs
An alternative method is detailed by which the ambient temperature parameter as applied to the calculation of ratings of cables buried in surface trough installations can be determined. Improvement in the accuracy of cable rating calculations will allow greater utilisation of the cable asset and assist for example in the planning of system outages for maintenance work. The proposed model calculates the temperature at the cable burial depth based on measurements of solar radiation, windspeed and air temperature. The model is based on physical laws rather than empirical approaches that have been shown to be generally conservative in application. Results based on weather data monitored over a two-year period show that the ambient temperature of the soil at cable depth can be accurately determined and the model provides a significant improvement on existing methods
Young Massive Clusters in Non-Interacting Galaxies
Young star clusters with masses well in excess of 100.000 Msun have been
observed not only in merger galaxies and large-scale starbursts, but also in
fairly normal, undisturbed spiral and irregular galaxies. Here we present
virial mass estimates for a sample of 7 such clusters and show that the derived
mass-to-light ratios are consistent with "normal" Kroupa-type stellar mass
distributions.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in "Starbursts from 30 Doradus to Lyman
Break Galaxies'', eds. R. de Grijs, R. M. Gonzalez Delgad
âThere are more things in heaven and earth!â How knowledge about traditional healing affects clinical practice: interviews with conventional health personnel
People with Sami and Norwegian background are frequent users of traditional folk medicine (TM). Traditional healing, such as religious prayers of healing (reading) and the laying on of hands, are examples of commonly used modalities. The global aim of this study is to examine whether health personnelâs knowledge, attitudes and experiences of traditional healing affect their clinical practice. Semi-structured individual interviews (n=32) and focus group interviews (n=2) were conducted among health personnel in two communities in Northern Norway. The text data was transcribed verbatim and analysed based on the criteria for content analysis. Six themes were identified. The participants had acquired their knowledge of traditional healing through their childhood, adolescence and experience as health personnel in the communities. They all expressed that they were positive to the patientsâ use of traditional healing. They justified their attitudes, stating that âthere are more things in heaven and earthâ and they had faith in the placebo effects of traditional healing. The health personnel respected their patientsâ faith and many facilitated the use of traditional healing. In some cases, they also applied traditional healing tools if the patients asked them to do so. The health personnel were positive and open-minded towards traditional healing. They considered reading as a tool that could help the patients to handle illness in a good way. Health personnel were willing to perform traditional healing and include traditional tools in their professional toolkit, even though these tools were not documented as evidence-based treatment. In this way they could offer their patients integrated health services which were tailored to the patientsâ treatment philosophy
Non-Equilibrium Fractionation Factors for D/H and 18O/16O During Oceanic Evaporation in the North-West Atlantic Region
Ocean isotopic evaporation models, such as the Craig-Gordon model, rely on the description of nonequilibrium fractionation factors that are, in general, poorly constrained. To date, only a few gradient-diffusion type measurements have been performed in ocean settings to test the validity of the commonly used parametrization of nonequilibrium isotopic fractionation during ocean evaporation. In this work, we present 6 months of water vapor isotopic observations collected from a meteorological tower located in the northwest Atlantic Ocean (Bermuda) with the objective of estimating nonequilibrium fractionation factors (k, â°) for ocean evaporation and their wind speed dependency. The Keeling Plot method and Craig-Gordon model combination were sensitive enough to resolve nonequilibrium fractionation factors during evaporation resulting into mean values of k18 = 5.2 ± 0.6â° and k2 = 4.3 ± 3.4â°. Furthermore, we evaluate the relationship between k and 10-m wind speed over the ocean. Such a relationship is expected from current evaporation theory and from laboratory experiments made in the 1970s, but observational evidence is lacking. We show that (a) in the observed wind speed range [0â10 m sâ1], the sensitivity of k to wind speed is small, in the order of â0.2â° mâ1 s for k18, and (b) there is no empirical evidence for the presence of a discontinuity between smooth and rough wind speed regime during isotopic fractionation, as proposed in earlier studies. The water vapor d-excess variability predicted under the closure assumption using the k values estimated in this study is in agreement with observations over the Atlantic Ocean.publishedVersio
Comment on "Long-range electrostatic interactions between like-charged colloids: Steric and confinement effects"
In a recent study [Phys. Rev. E 60, 6530 (1999)], Trizac and Raimbault showed
that the effective pair interaction between like charged colloids immersed in a
cylindrically confined electrolyte remains repulsive even when the size of the
micro-ions or the finite longitudinal extension of the confining cylinder are
taken into account. Contrary to their claim, we argue that the case of finite
longitudinal confinement doesn't always generate repulsive interactions and to
illustrate this point we also provide a simple example.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. E 200
Row-switched states in two-dimensional underdamped Josephson junction arrays
When magnetic flux moves across layered or granular superconductor
structures, the passage of vortices can take place along channels which develop
finite voltage, while the rest of the material remains in the zero-voltage
state. We present analytical studies of an example of such mixed dynamics: the
row-switched (RS) states in underdamped two-dimensional Josephson arrays,
driven by a uniform DC current under external magnetic field but neglecting
self-fields. The governing equations are cast into a compact
differential-algebraic system which describes the dynamics of an assembly of
Josephson oscillators coupled through the mesh current. We carry out a formal
perturbation expansion, and obtain the DC and AC spatial distributions of the
junction phases and induced circulating currents. We also estimate the interval
of the driving current in which a given RS state is stable. All these
analytical predictions compare well with our numerics. We then combine these
results to deduce the parameter region (in the damping coefficient versus
magnetic field plane) where RS states can exist.Comment: latex, 48 pages, 15 figs using psfi
The Taming of Closed Time-like Curves
We consider a orbifold, where acts by time and space
reversal, also known as the embedding space of the elliptic de Sitter space.
The background has two potentially dangerous problems: time-nonorientability
and the existence of closed time-like curves. We first show that closed causal
curves disappear after a proper definition of the time function. We then
consider the one-loop vacuum expectation value of the stress tensor. A naive
QFT analysis yields a divergent result. We then analyze the stress tensor in
bosonic string theory, and find the same result as if the target space would be
just the Minkowski space , suggesting a zero result for the
superstring. This leads us to propose a proper reformulation of QFT, and
recalculate the stress tensor. We find almost the same result as in Minkowski
space, except for a potential divergence at the initial time slice of the
orbifold, analogous to a spacelike Big Bang singularity. Finally, we argue that
it is possible to define local S-matrices, even if the spacetime is globally
time-nonorientable.Comment: 37 pages, LaTeX2e, uses amssymb, amsmath and epsf macros, 8 eps and 3
ps figures; (v2): Two additional comments + one reference added; (v3):
corrections in discussion of CTCs + some clarification
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