4,300 research outputs found
Greenhouse gas emissions from laboratory-scale fires in wildland fuels depend on fire spread mode and phase of combustion
© Author(s) 2015. Free-burning experimental fires were conducted in a wind tunnel to explore the role of ignition type and thus fire spread mode on the resulting emissions profile from combustion of fine (2, CH4 and N2O) and CO were quantified using off-axis integrated-cavity-output spectroscopy. Emissions factors calculated using a carbon mass balance technique (along with statistical testing) showed that most of the carbon was emitted as CO2, with heading fires emitting 17% more CO2 than flanking and 9.5% more CO2 than backing fires, and about twice as much CO as flanking and backing fires. Heading fires had less than half as much carbon remaining in combustion residues. Statistically significant differences in CH4 and N2O emissions factors were not found with respect to fire spread mode. Emissions factors calculated per unit of dry fuel consumed showed that combustion phase (i.e. flaming or smouldering) had a statistically significant impact, with CO and N2O emissions increasing during smouldering combustion and CO2 emissions decreasing. Findings on the equivalence of different emissions factor reporting methods are discussed along with the impact of our results for emissions accounting and potential sampling biases associated with our work. The primary implication of this study is that prescribed fire practices could be modified to mitigate greenhouse gas emissions from forests by judicial use of ignition methods to induce flanking and backing fires over heading fires
The Caring School Leadership Questionnaire (CSLQ)
The purpose of this research was to develop the Caring School Leadership Questionnaire (CSLQ) as a valid and reliableinstrument to measure the extent of care being given by school leaders (principals) to teachers. The research involved 1,041teachers and 65 principals from 68 primary schools in the North-West Province of South Africa. The construct validity ofthe CSLQ was determined by means of a confirmatory factor analysis. The three main constructs regarding caring thatemerged from the factor analysis proved to be the same as those theoretically identified as the three main determinants ofcare. Cronbach’s Alpha coefficients furthermore proved the CSLQ to be reliable. The key finding flowing from theinvestigation was that the CSLQ may be applied with good effect in 180º-, 360º-, as well as self-evaluations of school leaders.Keywords: caring, caring school leadership, determinants of care, management, measuring instrument for caring schoolleadership, measuring care in leadershi
SU(3) lattice gauge theory with a mixed fundamental and adjoint plaquette action: Lattice artefacts
We study the four-dimensional SU(3) gauge model with a fundamental and an
adjoint plaquette term in the action. We investigate whether corrections to
scaling can be reduced by using a negative value of the adjoint coupling. To
this end, we have studied the finite temperature phase transition, the static
potential and the mass of the 0^{++} glueball. In order to compute these
quantities we have implemented variance reduced estimators that have been
proposed recently. Corrections to scaling are analysed in dimensionless
combinations such as T_c/\sqrt{\sigma} and m_{0^{++}}/T_c. We find that indeed
the lattice artefacts in e.g. m_{0^{++}}/T_c can be reduced considerably
compared with the pure Wilson (fundamental) gauge action at the same lattice
spacing.Comment: 36 pages, 12 figure
Conductivity and quasinormal modes in holographic theories
We show that in field theories with a holographic dual the retarded Green's
function of a conserved current can be represented as a convergent sum over the
quasinormal modes. We find that the zero-frequency conductivity is related to
the sum over quasinormal modes and their high-frequency asymptotics via a sum
rule. We derive the asymptotics of the quasinormal mode frequencies and their
residues using the phase-integral (WKB) approach and provide analytic insight
into the existing numerical observations concerning the asymptotic behavior of
the spectral densities.Comment: 24 pages, 3 figure
Sum Rules from an Extra Dimension
Using the gravity side of the AdS/CFT correspondence, we investigate the
analytic properties of thermal retarded Green's functions for scalars,
conserved currents, the stress tensor, and massless fermions. We provide some
results concerning their large and small frequency behavior and their pole
structure. From these results, it is straightforward to prove the validity of
various sum rules on the field theory side of the duality. We introduce a novel
contraction mapping we use to study the large frequency behavior of the Green's
functions.Comment: v2: 23 pages (plus appendix), revised presentation, discussion of
branch cuts moved to appendix, and some minor changes; v1: 24 pages (plus
appendix
Holographic non-relativistic fermionic fixed point by the charged dilatonic black hole
Driven by the landscape of garden-variety condensed matter systems, we have
investigated how the dual spectral function behaves at the non-relativistic as
well as relativistic fermionic fixed point by considering the probe Dirac
fermion in an extremal charged dilatonic black hole with zero entropy. Although
the pattern for both of the appearance of flat band and emergence of Fermi
surface is qualitatively similar to that given by the probe fermion in the
extremal Reissner-Nordstrom AdS black hole, we find a distinctly different low
energy behavior around the Fermi surface, which can be traced back to the
different near horizon geometry. In particular, with the peculiar near horizon
geometry of our extremal charged dilatonic black hole, the low energy behavior
exhibits the universal linear dispersion relation and scaling property, where
the former indicates that the dual liquid is a Fermi one while the latter
implies that the dual liquid is not exactly of Landau Fermi type
A holographic model for the fractional quantum Hall effect
Experimental data for fractional quantum Hall systems can to a large extent
be explained by assuming the existence of a modular symmetry group commuting
with the renormalization group flow and hence mapping different phases of
two-dimensional electron gases into each other. Based on this insight, we
construct a phenomenological holographic model which captures many features of
the fractional quantum Hall effect. Using an SL(2,Z)-invariant
Einstein-Maxwell-axio-dilaton theory capturing the important modular
transformation properties of quantum Hall physics, we find dyonic diatonic
black hole solutions which are gapped and have a Hall conductivity equal to the
filling fraction, as expected for quantum Hall states. We also provide several
technical results on the general behavior of the gauge field fluctuations
around these dyonic dilatonic black hole solutions: We specify a sufficient
criterion for IR normalizability of the fluctuations, demonstrate the
preservation of the gap under the SL(2,Z) action, and prove that the
singularity of the fluctuation problem in the presence of a magnetic field is
an accessory singularity. We finish with a preliminary investigation of the
possible IR scaling solutions of our model and some speculations on how they
could be important for the observed universality of quantum Hall transitions.Comment: 86 pages, 16 figures; v.2 references added, typos fixed, improved
discussion of ref. [39]; v.3 more references added and typos fixed, several
statements clarified, v.4 version accepted for publication in JHE
Prospects of micromass culture technology in tissue engineering
Tissue engineering of bone and cartilage tissue for subsequent implantation is of growing interest in cranio- and maxillofacial surgery. Commonly it is performed by using cells coaxed with scaffolds. Recently, there is a controversy concerning the use of artificial scaffolds compared to the use of a natural matrix. Therefore, new approaches called micromass technology have been invented to overcome these problems by avoiding the need for scaffolds. Technically, cells are dissociated and the dispersed cells are then reaggregated into cellular spheres. The micromass technology approach enables investigators to follow tissue formation from single cell sources to organised spheres in a controlled environment. Thus, the inherent fundamentals of tissue engineering are better revealed. Additionally, as the newly formed tissue is devoid of an artificial material, it resembles more closely the in vivo situation. The purpose of this review is to provide an insight into the fundamentals and the technique of micromass cell culture used to study bone tissue engineering
Therapeutic Surgical Management of Palpable Melanoma Groin Metastases: Superficial or Combined Superficial and Deep Groin Lymph Node Dissection
Item does not contain fulltextBACKGROUND: Management of patients with clinically detectable lymph node metastasis to the groin is by ilioinguinal or combined superficial and deep groin dissection (CGD) according to most literature, but in practice superficial groin dissection (SGD) only is still performed in some centers. The aim of this study is to evaluate the experience in CGD versus SGD patients in our center. METHODS: Between 1991 and 2009, 121 therapeutic CGD and 48 SGD were performed in 169 melanoma patients with palpable groin metastases at our institute. Median follow-up was 20 and, for survivors, 45 months. RESULTS: In this heterogeneous group of patients, overall (OS) and disease-free survival, local control rates, and morbidity rates were not significantly different between CGD and SGD patients. However, CGD patients had a trend towards more chronic lymphedema. Superficial lymph node ratio, the number of positive superficial lymph nodes, and the presence of deep nodes were prognostic factors for survival. CGD patients with involved deep lymph nodes (24.8%) had estimated 5-year OS of 12% compared with 40% with no involved deep lymph nodes (p = 0.001). Preoperative computed tomography (CT) scan had high negative predictive value of 91% for detection of pelvic nodal involvement. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated that survival and local control do not differ for patients with palpable groin metastases treated by CGD or SGD. Patients without pathological iliac nodes on CT might safely undergo SGD, while CGD might be reserved for patients with multiple positive nodes on SGD and/or positive deep nodes on CT scan
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