49 research outputs found

    Worst cases for a one-hop high frequency link

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    The characterisation of a HF channel by means of monthly electron density profiles can be complemented with a detailed study of radio propagation «worst cases» on situations with extremes conditions of radiopropagation for a given period. These «worst cases» correspond to conditions that can be identified by means of cumulative distributions of the key parameter f0F2. This paper analyses the main parameters of the HF channel: time delay, apogee, elevation angle and transmission frequency with mean and extreme conditions. The method used to characterise the ionospheric channel is based on ray-tracing techniques.National Institute of Aerospace Technology (INTA)Dr. Moorhead of Neptune Radar Ltd.Gloucester U.

    A Decade of GRB Follow-Up by BOOTES in Spain (2003–2013)

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    This article covers ten years of GRB follow-ups by the Spanish BOOTES stations: 71 follow-ups providing 23 detections. Follow-ups by BOOTES-1B from 2005 to 2008 were given in a previous article and are here reviewed and updated, and additional detection data points are included as the former articlemerely stated their existence. The all-sky cameras CASSANDRA have not yet detected any GRB optical afterglows, but limits are reported where available.The authors appreciate the auspices of INTA, IHSM-UMA/CSIC, and UMA as well as the financial support by the Junta de Andaluca and the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness through the Research Projects P07-TIC-03094, P12-TIC2839, AYA2009-14000-C03-01, AYA 2010-39727-C03-01, and AYA-2015-71718-R. Martin Jelinek was supported by the postdoctoral fellowship of the Czech Academy of Sciences. This study was carried out in the framework of the Unidad Asociada IAA-CSIC at the Group of Planetary Science of ETSI-UPV/EHU. This work was supported by the Ikerbasque Foundation for Science. The Czech CVUT FEL team acknowledges the support by GA CR Grant 13-33324S

    The Spanish Network on Environmental DMAs: introduction and main activities

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    Comunicación presentada en: V Reunión Española de Ciencia y Tecnología de Aerosoles – RECTA 2011 celebrada del 27 al 29 de junio de 2011 en CIEMAT, Madrid

    Molecular dissection of structural variations involved in antithrombin deficiency

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    Inherited antithrombin deficiency, the most severe form of thrombophilia, is predominantly caused by variants in SERPINC1. Few causal structural variants have been described, usually detected by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification or cytogenetic arrays, which only define the gain or loss and the approximate size and location. This study has done a complete dissection of the structural variants affecting SERPINC1 of 39 unrelated patients with antithrombin deficiency using multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification, comparative genome hybridization array, long-range PCR, and whole genome nanopore sequencing. Structural variants, in all cases only affecting one allele, were deleterious and caused a severe type I deficiency. Most defects were deletions affecting exons of SERPINC1 (82.1%), but the whole cohort was heterogeneous, as tandem duplications, deletion of introns, or retrotransposon insertions were also detected. Their size was also variable, ranging from 193 bp to 8 Mb, and in 54% of the cases involved neighboring genes. All but two structural variants had repetitive elements and/or microhomologies in their breakpoints, suggesting a common mechanism of formation. This study also suggested regions recurrently involved in structural variants causing antithrombin deficiency and found three structural variants with a founder effect: the insertion of a retrotransposon, duplication of exon 6, and a 20-gene deletion. Finally, nanopore sequencing was determined to be the most appropriate method to identify and characterize all structural variants at nucleotide level, independently of their size or type.Supported by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) for the NIHR BioResource project (grant numbers RG65966 and RG94028), by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III grant; Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER) grant PI18/00598; and Fundación Séneca 19873/GERM/15. M.E.d.l.M.-B. has a postdoctoral contract from University of Murcia, Murcia, Spain. C.B.-P. has a Río Hortega fellowship. B.d.l.M.-B. has a postdoctoral fellowship from Fundación Séneca. J.C.-G. has a predoctoral fellowship from the Ministry of Universities FPU19/03662

    La radiación solar: efectos en la salud y el medio ambiente

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    140 páginasEl incremento de cierto tipo de radiaciones ultravioletas procedentes del sol, perjudiciales para la salud y el medio ambiente es un tema de candente actualidad, a pesar de la aparente recuperación de la capa de ozono, filtro protector de la biosfera y de la calidad de vida de los seres que habitan el Planeta. La obra ha tratado de definir la situación actual de este gas a escala planetaria, analizando las causas físicas de su aparición y de su destrucción y las consecuencias que para el medio ambiente y la salud tiene el incremento de radiación ultravioleta

    Synergetic monitoring of Saharan dust plumes and potential impact on surface: a case study of dust transport from Canary Islands to Iberian Peninsula

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    The synergetic use of meteorological information, remote sensing both ground-based active (lidar) and passive (sun-photometry) techniques together with backtrajectory analysis and in-situ measurements is devoted to the characterization of dust intrusions. A case study of air masses advected from the Saharan region to the Canary Islands and the Iberian Peninsula, located relatively close and far away from the dust sources, respectively, was considered for this purpose. The observations were performed over three Spanish geographically strategic stations within the dust-influenced area along a common dust plume pathway monitored from 11 to 19 of March 2008. A 4-day long dust event (13–16 March) over the Santa Cruz de Tenerife Observatory (SCO), and a linked short 1-day dust episode (14 March) in the Southern Iberian Peninsula over the Atmospheric Sounding Station "El Arenosillo" (ARN) and the Granada station (GRA) were detected.This work has been supported by the Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation (MICINN) under the Complementary Actions CGL2008-01330-E (2009) in the frame of the Spanish and Portuguese Aerosol LIdar NETwork (SPALINET), and CGL2010-10012-E (Evaluation of lidar observations in the frame of CIEMAT/EARLINET intercomparison by airborne in-situ measurements of trace gases and aerosols, MISPA-LIDAR, 2010); projects CGL2008-05939-C03-03/CLI, CGL2007-66477-C02-01, CSD2007-00067 and CGL2010-18782 of the Spanish Ministry of Education; projects P08-RNM-3568 and P10-RNM-6299 of the Autonomous Government of Andalusia; and the EARLINET-ASOS project (EU Coordination Action, contract no. 025991 (RICA)). JLG-R thanks the Spanish Ministry of Education and the Portuguese Fundaçao para a Ciencia e a Tecnologia for supporting under grants EX2009-0700 and SFRH/BPD/63090/2009, respectively

    A decade of GRB follow-up by BOOTES in Spain (2003-2013)

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    This article covers ten years of GRB follow-ups by the Spanish BOOTES stations: 71 follow-ups providing 23 detections. Follow-ups by BOOTES-1B from 2005 to 2008 were given in the previous article, and are here reviewed, updated, and include additional detection data points as the former article merely stated their existence. The all-sky cameras CASSANDRA have not yet detected any GRB optical afterglows, but limits are reported where available

    Calibration and intercomparison results in the Spanish network on environmental DMAs

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    Comunicación presentada en: 2012 European Aerosol Conference (EAC-2012), B-WG01S2P30, celebrada del 2 al 7 de septiembre de 2012 en Granada.This network is financed by the Ministry of Science and Innovation (CGL2011-15008-E)

    The REDMAAS 2012 SMPS+UFP intercomparison campaign

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    Resumen de la comunicación oral presentada en: 1st Iberian Meeting on Aerosol Science and Technology – RICTA 2013, celebrado del 1 al 3 de julio de 2013 en Évora, Portugal.This network is financed by the Ministry of Science and Innovation (CGL2011-15008-E & CGL2011-27020)
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