140 research outputs found
Mineralogical and geochemical characteristics of two bauxitic profiles, Fria, Guinea Republic
Bauxite deposits of the Fria district, Guinea, have been exploited since 1960. These lateritic bauxites, located on the upper parts of plateaus, result from weathering of paleozoic schists. The ores are composed of gibbsite associated with pyrophyllite, Al-substituted goethite, and kaolinite. Pyrophyllite and Al-substituted goethite may contain up to 9% of the total Al2O3 content of the bauxite ; this cannot be recovered through the Bayer process because these phases are insoluble in the leaching solutions. Kaolinite is soluble under Bayer leaching but this dissolution induces precipitation of sodium alumino-silicates, which apart from loss of further alumina results in decreasing efficiency of the process through scale formation. Detailed knowledge of the distribution of the different ore types and their mineralogical composition is necessary for efficient processing. (Résumé d'auteur
Navigating multilingual news collections using automatically extracted information
We are presenting a text analysis tool set that allows analysts in various
fields to sieve through large collections of multilingual news items quickly
and to find information that is of relevance to them. For a given document
collection, the tool set automatically clusters the texts into groups of
similar articles, extracts names of places, people and organisations, lists the
user-defined specialist terms found, links clusters and entities, and generates
hyperlinks. Through its daily news analysis operating on thousands of articles
per day, the tool also learns relationships between people and other entities.
The fully functional prototype system allows users to explore and navigate
multilingual document collections across languages and time.Comment: This paper describes the main functionality of the JRC's
fully-automatic news analysis system NewsExplorer, which is freely accessible
in currently thirteen languages at http://press.jrc.it/NewsExplorer/ . 8
page
A tool set for the quick and efficient exploration of large document collections
We are presenting a set of multilingual text analysis tools that can help
analysts in any field to explore large document collections quickly in order to
determine whether the documents contain information of interest, and to find
the relevant text passages. The automatic tool, which currently exists as a
fully functional prototype, is expected to be particularly useful when users
repeatedly have to sieve through large collections of documents such as those
downloaded automatically from the internet. The proposed system takes a whole
document collection as input. It first carries out some automatic analysis
tasks (named entity recognition, geo-coding, clustering, term extraction),
annotates the texts with the generated meta-information and stores the
meta-information in a database. The system then generates a zoomable and
hyperlinked geographic map enhanced with information on entities and terms
found. When the system is used on a regular basis, it builds up a historical
database that contains information on which names have been mentioned together
with which other names or places, and users can query this database to retrieve
information extracted in the past.Comment: 10 page
Inclination not force is sensed by plants during shoot gravitropism
International audienceGravity perception plays a key role in how plants develop and adapt to environmental changes. However, more than a century after the pioneering work of Darwin, little is known on the sensing mechanism. Using a centrifugal device combined with growth kinematics imaging, we show that shoot gravitropic responses to steady levels of gravity in four representative angiosperm species is independent of gravity intensity. All gravitropic responses tested are dependent only on the angle of inclination from the direction of gravity. We thus demonstrate that shoot gravitropism is stimulated by sensing inclination not gravitational force or acceleration as previously believed. This contrasts with the otolith system in the internal ear of vertebrates and explains the robustness of the control of growth direction by plants despite perturbations like wind shaking. Our results will help retarget the search for the molecular mechanism linking shifting statoliths to signal transduction
Aeolian sans ripples: experimental study of saturated states
We report an experimental investigation of aeolian sand ripples, performed
both in a wind tunnel and on stoss slopes of dunes. Starting from a flat bed,
we can identify three regimes: appearance of an initial wavelength, coarsening
of the pattern and finally saturation of the ripples. We show that both initial
and final wavelengths, as well as the propagative speed of the ripples, are
linear functions of the wind velocity. Investigating the evolution of an
initially corrugated bed, we exhibit non-linear stable solutions for a finite
range of wavelengths, which demonstrates the existence of a saturation in
amplitude. These results contradict most of the models.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett. Title changed,
figures corrected and simplified, more field data included, text clarifie
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