34 research outputs found
Preservacion, restauracion y emplazamiento de la fuente “Las Nereidas”, Tandil - Argentina
La obra, conocida en la ciudad de Tandil como: "LA FUENTE DE LOLA MORA" o:
"LAS NEREIDAS DE LOLA MORA", se trata de una obra típica de las escuelas europeas del siglo XIX principios del siglo XX, de autor anónimo.
Se encuentra emplazada en la intersección de las Avenidas Avellaneda y 14 de Julio. Por un accidente de tránsito fue destruida en 1993. Gracias al cuidado y recolección de todas las partes destruidas que realizó el Servicio de Mantenimiento de la Municipalidad de Tandil, el ensamblado de gran parte de piezas originales fue posible, mientras que el resto debió sustituirse.
En la fotografía que sigue, tomada el día del accidente que dio origen a su restauración, se ve el estado en la que fue encontrada la obra.
En el Anexo se adjunta la ficha de Pre-Inventario
The Science Case for an Extended Spitzer Mission
Although the final observations of the Spitzer Warm Mission are currently
scheduled for March 2019, it can continue operations through the end of the
decade with no loss of photometric precision. As we will show, there is a
strong science case for extending the current Warm Mission to December 2020.
Spitzer has already made major impacts in the fields of exoplanets (including
microlensing events), characterizing near Earth objects, enhancing our
knowledge of nearby stars and brown dwarfs, understanding the properties and
structure of our Milky Way galaxy, and deep wide-field extragalactic surveys to
study galaxy birth and evolution. By extending Spitzer through 2020, it can
continue to make ground-breaking discoveries in those fields, and provide
crucial support to the NASA flagship missions JWST and WFIRST, as well as the
upcoming TESS mission, and it will complement ground-based observations by LSST
and the new large telescopes of the next decade. This scientific program
addresses NASA's Science Mission Directive's objectives in astrophysics, which
include discovering how the universe works, exploring how it began and evolved,
and searching for life on planets around other stars.Comment: 75 pages. See page 3 for Table of Contents and page 4 for Executive
Summar
The Novel Object and Unusual Name (NOUN) database: a collection of novel images for use in experimental research
Many experimental research designs require images of novel objects. Here we introduce the Novel Object and Unusual Name (NOUN) Database. This database contains 64 primary novel object images and additional novel exemplars for ten basic- and nine global-level object categories. The objects’ novelty was confirmed by both self-report and a lack of consensus on questions that required participants to name and identify the objects. We also found that object novelty correlated with qualifying naming responses pertaining to the objects’ colors. Results from a similarity sorting task (and subsequent multidimensional scaling analysis on the similarity ratings) demonstrated that the objects are complex and distinct entities that vary along several featural dimensions beyond simply shape and color. A final experiment confirmed that additional item exemplars comprise both sub- and superordinate categories. These images may be useful in a variety of settings, particularly for developmental psychology and other research in language, categorization, perception, visual memory and related domains
The James Webb Space Telescope Mission
Twenty-six years ago a small committee report, building on earlier studies,
expounded a compelling and poetic vision for the future of astronomy, calling
for an infrared-optimized space telescope with an aperture of at least .
With the support of their governments in the US, Europe, and Canada, 20,000
people realized that vision as the James Webb Space Telescope. A
generation of astronomers will celebrate their accomplishments for the life of
the mission, potentially as long as 20 years, and beyond. This report and the
scientific discoveries that follow are extended thank-you notes to the 20,000
team members. The telescope is working perfectly, with much better image
quality than expected. In this and accompanying papers, we give a brief
history, describe the observatory, outline its objectives and current observing
program, and discuss the inventions and people who made it possible. We cite
detailed reports on the design and the measured performance on orbit.Comment: Accepted by PASP for the special issue on The James Webb Space
Telescope Overview, 29 pages, 4 figure
Post-dispersal predation of weed seeds in rice fields
Summary: Post-dispersal weed seed predation can cause a substantial reduction in the number of weed seeds entering the seed bank and, as a consequence, reduce the number of weeds growing in subsequent seasons. Investigations on seed predation on four tropical rice fields in the Philippines were conducted to determine (i) the magnitude of post-dispersal seed predation after rice harvest, (ii) whether vertebrates or invertebrates are the main seed predators, (iii) whether seed predation is affected by crop residue, (iv) whether seed predation is affected by proximity to the field edge, and (v) whether predation differs among seeds of the grasses Digitaria ciliaris, Echinochloa colona and Eleusine indica. Seed removal rate over a 14-day period ranged from 78% to 91% among fields, was slightly higher in the interior of the fields (89%) than in the field margins (85%) and slightly higher without residue cover (89%) than with (86%). Selective exclosures indicated that invertebrates, presumed to be mainly fire ants (Solenopsis geminata), were the main seed predators (96%) and vertebrates, presumed to be mainly rodents, secondary predators (38%). Seed removal of D. ciliaris was higher (93%) than of E. indica (88%) and E. colona (75%). Results suggest substantial seed predation could contribute to ecologically-based weed management in rice. Further studies are required to determine season-long seed predation rates and to confirm the identity of the predators involved. Ways to integrate these seed predators into prevailing cropping practices need to be developed. © 2010 International Rice Research Institute. Weed Researc