10,913 research outputs found
Sequential evacuation strategy for multiple rooms toward the same means of egress
This paper examines different evacuation strategies for systems where several
rooms evacuate trough the same means of egress, using microscopic pedestrian
simulation.As a case study, a medium-rise office building is considered. It was
found that the standard strategy, whereby the simultaneous evacuation of all
levels is performed, can be improved by a sequential evacuation, beginning with
the lowest floor and continuing successively with each one of the upper floors
after a certain delay. The importance of the present research is that it
provides the basis for the design and implementation of new evacuation
strategies and alarm systems that could significantly improve the evacuation of
multiple rooms trough a common means of escape.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figure
Dual-use Molecules from Yeast
This year the OPCW, the implementing body for the Chemical Weapons Convention, celebrates the 20th anniversary of entry into forces. In 2014, this organization examined the impact of new technologies in the field of chemical and biological weapons, in particular the “Convergence” of Chemistry and Biology. An OPCW report of the Scientific Advisory Group highlighted the importance of monitoring developments in science and technology: “New production processes, combined with developments in drug discovery and delivery, could be exploited in the development of new toxic chemicals that could be used as weapons.” 1 Indeed, since 2008, Synthetic Biology is monitored also by other international organizations, such as the Nonproliferation Export Control Regimes Australia Group
Star formation in early-type galaxies: the role of stellar winds and kinematics
Early-type galaxies (ETGs) host a hot ISM produced mainly by stellar winds,
and heated by Type Ia supernovae and the thermalization of stellar motions.
High resolution 2D hydrodynamical simulations showed that ordered rotation in
the stellar component results in the formation of a centrifugally supported
cold equatorial disc. In a recent numerical investigation we found that
subsequent generations of stars are formed in this cold disc; this process
consumes most of the cold gas, leaving at the present epoch cold masses
comparable to those observed. Most of the new stellar mass formed a few Gyrs
ago, and resides in a disc.Comment: 2 pages, 1 figure, to appear in proceedings of IAU Symposium 315,
"From Interstellar Clouds to Star-Forming Galaxies: Universal Processes?", P.
Jablonka, F. Van der Tak & P. Andre', ed
The Effect of the AGN Feedback on the Interstellar Medium of Early-Type Galaxies: 2D Hydrodynamical Simulations of the Low-Rotation Case
We present 2D hydrodynamical simulations for the evolution of early-type
galaxies containing central massive black holes (MBHs), starting at age 2 Gyr.
The code contains accurate and physically consistent radiative and mechanical
AGN wind feedback, with parsec-scale central resolution. Mass input comes from
stellar evolution; energy input includes Type Ia and II supernova and stellar
heating; star-formation is included. Realistic, axisymmetric dynamical models
for the galaxies are built solving the Jeans' equations. The lowest mass models
(Mstar = 8 10^{10}Msun) develop global outflows sustained by SNIa's heating,
ending with a significantly lower amount of hot gas and new stars. In more
massive models, nuclear outbursts last to the present epoch, with large and
frequent fluctuations in nuclear emission and from the gas (Lx). Each burst
last ~ 10^{7.5} yr, during which (for r < 2-3 kpc) cold, inflowing, and hot,
outflowing gas phases coexist. The Lx-T relation for the gas matches that of
local galaxies. AGN activity causes positive feedback for star formation.
Roughly half of the total mass loss is recycled into new stars (DeltaMstar),
just ~ 3% of it is accreted on the MBH, the remainder being ejected from the
galaxy. The ratio between the mass of gas expelled to that in to new stars, the
load factor, is ~0.6. Rounder galaxies shapes lead to larger final MBH masses,
DeltaMstar, and Lx. Almost all the time is spent at very low nuclear
luminosities, yet one quarter of the total energy is emitted at an Eddington
ratio > 0.1. The duty-cycle of AGN activity approximates 4% (Abridged).Comment: 26 pages, 15 figure, submitted to ApJ. Comments welcom
Religious freedom and inviolable lines in pluralist societies : the case of cultural crimes
Pluralist societies pose new challenges to legal systems, having to find trade-offs between accommodating the necessities of minorities and security concerns. Religions often impose prescriptive rules on the behaviour of their believers, leading to moral internal conflicts when these lead to break State laws. In Italy, this subject was already discussed between legal scholars, before it received large public attention in 2017, where a judgement of the Cassation Court has upheld the conviction of a Sikh indian for withholding a kirpan, a ritual dagger central to his faith. This work provides an overview of the debate raised by the ruling, with particular emphasis on the challenges in devising policies that address security concerns without sacrificing religious freedom and pluralism. The Italian answer to cultural crimes will be analysed in depth, given the distinctive element of positive laicit\ue0 in 1948 Constitution that characterizes its context. In the conclusion, a possible solution focused on human dignity is suggested
The prevention of jihadist radicalisation in prison in Italy
Faith always constitutes an essential aspect of prison life and its relevance in the European scenario has been emphasised in recent times because of the religious pluralism that characterises the current prison population. In this context, the rise of jihadist terrorism has shed light on the problem of radicalisation in prison, already known and studied by the experts, which poses new challenges for policymakers, prison staff, and detainees. In Italy, Prison Administration has been focused on religious freedom, its boundaries and its relationship with religious extremism and has already adopted some measures to combat and monitor jihadist proselitism in Italian prisons. The lecture will provide an overview of these anti-radicalisation strategies in prisons, highlighting unresolved issues. In particular, these include the lack of an integrated plan with regards to prevention of radicalisation and de-radicalisation, not limited by the prison context. The lecture will further highlight the challenges in devising policies that address security concerns without sacrificing religious freedom and diversity, as provided for by the Italian Constitution
AOIPS 3 User's guide. Volume 1: Overview and software utilization
This is Volume I of the Atmospheric and Oceanographic Information Processing System (AOIPS) User's Guide. AOIPS 3 is the version of the AOIPS software as of April 1989. The AOIPS software was developed jointly by the Goddard Space Flight Center and General Sciences Corporation. Volume 1 is intended to provide the user with an overall guide to the AOIPS system. It introduces the user to AOIPS system concepts, explains how programs are related and the necessary order of program execution, and provides brief descriptions derived from on-line help for every AOIPS program. It is intended to serve as a reference for information such as: program function, inmput/output variable descriptions, program limitations, etc. AOIPS is an interactive meteorological processing system with capabilities to ingest and analyze the many types of meteorological data. AOIPS includes several applications in areas of relevance to meteorological research. AOIPS is partitioned into four applications components: satellite data analysis, radar data analysis, aircraft data analysis, and utilities
Rain estimation from satellites: An examination of the Griffith-Woodley technique
The Griffith-Woodley Technique (GWT) is an approach to estimating precipitation using infrared observations of clouds from geosynchronous satellites. It is examined in three ways: an analysis of the terms in the GWT equations; a case study of infrared imagery portraying convective development over Florida; and the comparison of a simplified equation set and resultant rain map to results using the GWT. The objective is to determine the dominant factors in the calculation of GWT rain estimates. Analysis of a single day's convection over Florida produced a number of significant insights into various terms in the GWT rainfall equations. Due to the definition of clouds by a threshold isotherm the majority of clouds on this day did not go through an idealized life cycle before losing their identity through merger, splitting, etc. As a result, 85% of the clouds had a defined life of 0.5 or 1 h. For these clouds the terms in the GWT which are dependent on cloud life history become essentially constant. The empirically derived ratio of radar echo area to cloud area is given a singular value (0.02) for 43% of the sample, while the rainrate term is 20.7 mmh-1 for 61% of the sample. For 55% of the sampled clouds the temperature weighting term is identically 1.0. Cloud area itself is highly correlated (r=0.88) with GWT computed rain volume. An important, discriminating parameter in the GWT is the temperature defining the coldest 10% cloud area. The analysis further shows that the two dominant parameters in rainfall estimation are the existence of cold cloud and the duration of cloud over a point
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