12,771 research outputs found

    Public Health England's recovery tools: potential teaching resources?

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    The file attached to this record is the author's final peer reviewed version.Training to combat chemical and radiation accidents, incidents or attacks is critical for health professionals due to recent events involving these hazards or their use as unconventional weapons, such as the use of the nerve agent novichok in Salisbury, UK. Health professionals need to have appropriate knowledge and skills to effectively respond to future events involving any of these substances, which requires a rapid and coordinated response from different professionals to protect the environment and minimise the number of people exposed and reduce morbidity and mortality. However, despite chemical and radiation incidents becoming increasingly prevalent, literature reviews have shown that there is a lack of teaching of appropriate competences to face future crises in Europe, particularly amongst clinicians and other health professionals that would be part of the initial response. Thus, De Montfort University (DMU, UK) in collaboration with different academics from the University of AlcalĆ” (Spain) and researchers from Public Health England (PHE) with comprehensive experience in environmental decontamination and restoration, have created a short training course for providing undergraduate/postgraduate students with basic skills to respond to chemical incidents, basic skills that are based on the major competences recently identified by the European Commission [1]. This novel training has been tested with students from different backgrounds in various European universities, recording high degrees of acquisition of the various basic competences that we developed to initially respond to chemical events [2]. To develop the practical part of this chemical training, we have incorporated the novel guidance and methodology developed by PHE to successfully tailor a protection and recovery response to any incident involving chemical substances, which is available in the ā€œUK Recovery Handbook for Chemical Incidentsā€ [3] and its web-based tools: ā€œChemical Recovery Navigation Toolā€ (CRNT, [4]) and ā€œChemical Recovery Record Formā€ (CRRF, [5]). These innovative resources aid the user to select effective protection, decontamination and restoration techniques or strategies from a pool of up-to-date options applicable to different environments according to the physicochemical properties of the chemical(s) involved and the area affected. The CRNT is accompanied by the CRRF, which facilitates collection and analysis of the necessary data to inform decisions, and an e-learning resource named ā€œChemical Recovery: Backgroundā€ (CRB, [6]), which could facilitate the learning of environmental decontamination and restoration. We are currently developing a short training course to cover minor radiation incidents; this radiation training will follow the same methods used to develop the chemical training, but with the specific PHE recovery tools to tackle such events, specifically the ā€œUK Recovery Handbooks for Radiation Incidentsā€ [7] and its associated web-based tools ā€œRadiation Recovery Navigation Toolā€ (Rad RNT, [8]), one for each environment: food production systems, inhabited areas and drinking water supplies. This communication will explore the use of the PHEā€™s Recovery Navigation Tools as potential resources to facilitate the acquisition of basic knowledge to tailor protection and recovery interventions for minor chemical and radiation incidents to protect the public

    Verification of the observer property in discrete event systems

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    The observer property is an important condition to be satisfied by abstractions of Discrete Event System (DES) models. This technical note presents a new algorithm that tests if an abstraction of a DES obtained through natural projection has the observer property. The procedure, called OP-Verifier, can be applied to (potentially nondeterministic) automata, with no restriction on the existence of cycles of 'non-relevant' events. This procedure has quadratic complexity in the number of states. The performance of the algorithm is illustrated by a set of experiments

    ObtenĆ§Ć£o da farinha de tapioca: parte 1 - avaliaĆ§Ć£o do processo.

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    Na primeira etapa deste estudo utilizou-se planejamento experimental para avaliar o efeito da temperatura de escaldamento e da umidade dos grĆ¢nulos de fĆ©cula comercial, apĆ³s o escaldamento, sobre propriedades importantes da farinha de tapioca, submetida Ć  espocagem a 240Ā°C. Na segunda etapa foram obtidas farinhas de fĆ©culas extraĆ­das das raĆ­zes de mandioca das variedades Pai AmbrĆ³sio, Pocu e Paulo Velho, utilizando-se escaldamento a 190Ā°C e espocagem a 240Ā°C, alĆ©m de espocagem a 190Ā°C sem escaldamento. O planejamento indicou que maiores temperaturas de escaldamento e menores umidades dos grĆ¢nulos, apĆ³s o escaldamento, proporcionam farinhas com menores densidades aparentes e, consequentemente, mais expandidas. As propriedades tecnolĆ³gicas das farinhas de tapioca produzidas com as fĆ©culas das raĆ­zes de mandioca variedades Pai AmbrĆ³sio, Pocu e Paulo Velho indicaram que as farinhas obtidas sem a etapa de escaldamento, com espocagem direta a 190Ā°C, sofreram maior expansĆ£o. A fĆ©cula da variedade Pocu proporcionou a farinha mais expandida e, consequentemente, com maior Ć­ndice de solubilidade em Ć”gua e maior higroscopicidade

    Direct observations of the Antarctic Slope Current transport at 113Ā°E

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    Author Posting. Ā© American Geophysical Union, 2016. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research: Oceans 121 (2016): 7390ā€“7407, doi:10.1002/2015JC011594.The Antarctic Slope Current (ASC), defined here as the region of westward flow along the continental slope off Antarctica, forms the southern limb of the subpolar gyres. It regulates the exchange of water across the shelf break and provides a path for interbasin westward transport. Despite its significance, the ASC remains largely unobserved around most of the Antarctic continent. Here we present direct velocity observations from a 17 month current meter moored array deployed across the continental slope between the 1000 and the 4200 m isobaths, in the southeastern Indian Ocean near 113Ā°E. The observed time-mean flow consists of a surface-intensified jet associated with the Antarctic Slope Front (ASF) and a broader bottom-intensified westward flow that extends out to approximately the 4000 m isobath and is strongest along the upper slope. The time-mean transport of the ASC is āˆ’29.2 Sv. Fluctuations in the transport are large, typically exceeding the mean by a factor of 2. They are mainly due to changes in the northward extent of the current over the lower slope. However, seasonal changes in the wind also drive variations in the transport of the ASF and the flow in the upper slope. Both mean and variability are largely barotropic, thus invisible to traditional geostrophic methodsM.S.M. and the current meter array were supported by the National Science Foundation grant 0727045 ā€˜ā€˜Measuring Westward Recirculation in the Subpolar Gyre of the Southeastern Indian Ocean.ā€™ā€™ B.P.M. and S.R.R. were supported by the Cooperative Research Centre program of the Australian Government, through the Antarctic Climate and Ecosystems Cooperative Research Centre. S.R.R. was also supported by the Australian Government Department of the Environment, the Bureau of Meteorology and CSIRO through the Australian Climate Change Science Program.2017-04-1

    Compositional nonblocking verification with always enabled events and selfloop-only events

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    This paper proposes to improve compositional nonblocking verification through the use of always enabled and selfloop-only events. Compositional verification involves abstraction to simplify parts of a system during verification. Normally, this abstraction is based on the set of events not used in the remainder of the system, i.e., in the part of the system not being simplified. Here, it is proposed to exploit more knowledge about the system and abstract events even though they are used in the remainder of the system. Abstraction rules from previous work are generalised, and experimental results demonstrate the applicability of the resulting algorithm to verify several industrial-scale discrete event system models, while achieving better state-space reduction than before

    A strategy for implementing non-perturbative renormalisation of heavy-light four-quark operators in the static approximation

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    We discuss the renormalisation properties of the complete set of Ī”B=2\Delta B = 2 four-quark operators with the heavy quark treated in the static approximation. We elucidate the role of heavy quark symmetry and other symmetry transformations in constraining their mixing under renormalisation. By employing the Schroedinger functional, a set of non-perturbative renormalisation conditions can be defined in terms of suitable correlation functions. As a first step in a fully non-perturbative determination of the scale-dependent renormalisation factors, we evaluate these conditions in lattice perturbation theory at one loop. Thereby we verify the expected mixing patterns and determine the anomalous dimensions of the operators at NLO in the Schroedinger functional scheme. Finally, by employing twisted-mass QCD it is shown how finite subtractions arising from explicit chiral symmetry breaking can be avoided completely.Comment: 41 pages, 6 figure

    VVV High Proper Motion Survey

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    Here we present survey of proper motion stars towards the Galactic Bulge and an adjacent plane region base on VISTA-VVV data. The searching method based on cross-matching photometric Ks-band CASU catalogs. The most interesting discoveries are shown.Peer reviewe
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