1,284 research outputs found
Trajectories for the 1976 - 1980 Grand Tour opportunities. Volume 3 - Trajectory data for alternate Grand Tour missions
Tabulating trajectory data for alternate Grand Tour missions from earth for period 1976 to 198
BCG treatment of malignant pleural effusions in the rat.
Intrapleurally injected cells of an ascitic rat tumour produced intrapleural effusions and solid pleural deposits. BCG, or its methanol extraction residue (MER) injected into the pleural space, suppressed tumour development and prolonged survival. Treatment was effective if given a few days before or after tumour injection. In contrast, active specific immunotherapy by repeated s.c. injection of viable or radiation-attenuated tumour cells in admixture with BCG was unsuccessful, and did not improve the response to intrapleural BCG treatment
Modelling the effects of low-cost large-scale energy storage in the UK electricity network
© 2019 IEEE. In this paper we present a framework for modelling the impacts of large-scale electricity storage in the Great Britain (GB) electricity network. Our framework consists of two principle components; firstly, a data-driven model of the GB powerplant dispatch, and secondly, an energy storage module. The storage module takes the powerplant dispatch and modifies it considering the specified energy storage characteristics (capacity, charging/discharging power and efficiency) in order to minimize an objective function. In particular, we consider two objective functions, minimizing the system running cost and minimizing the system emissions. We demonstrate our approach using data from the GB electricity system in 2015. Our model is primarily built in python and is entirely open-source in nature
Functional Integration of Ecological Networks through Pathway Proliferation
Large-scale structural patterns commonly occur in network models of complex
systems including a skewed node degree distribution and small-world topology.
These patterns suggest common organizational constraints and similar functional
consequences. Here, we investigate a structural pattern termed pathway
proliferation. Previous research enumerating pathways that link species
determined that as pathway length increases, the number of pathways tends to
increase without bound. We hypothesize that this pathway proliferation
influences the flow of energy, matter, and information in ecosystems. In this
paper, we clarify the pathway proliferation concept, introduce a measure of the
node--node proliferation rate, describe factors influencing the rate, and
characterize it in 17 large empirical food-webs. During this investigation, we
uncovered a modular organization within these systems. Over half of the
food-webs were composed of one or more subgroups that were strongly connected
internally, but weakly connected to the rest of the system. Further, these
modules had distinct proliferation rates. We conclude that pathway
proliferation in ecological networks reveals subgroups of species that will be
functionally integrated through cyclic indirect effects.Comment: 29 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables, Submitted to Journal of Theoretical
Biolog
Quantifying the connectivity of a network: The network correlation function method
Networks are useful for describing systems of interacting objects, where the
nodes represent the objects and the edges represent the interactions between
them. The applications include chemical and metabolic systems, food webs as
well as social networks. Lately, it was found that many of these networks
display some common topological features, such as high clustering, small
average path length (small world networks) and a power-law degree distribution
(scale free networks). The topological features of a network are commonly
related to the network's functionality. However, the topology alone does not
account for the nature of the interactions in the network and their strength.
Here we introduce a method for evaluating the correlations between pairs of
nodes in the network. These correlations depend both on the topology and on the
functionality of the network. A network with high connectivity displays strong
correlations between its interacting nodes and thus features small-world
functionality. We quantify the correlations between all pairs of nodes in the
network, and express them as matrix elements in the correlation matrix. From
this information one can plot the correlation function for the network and to
extract the correlation length. The connectivity of a network is then defined
as the ratio between this correlation length and the average path length of the
network. Using this method we distinguish between a topological small world and
a functional small world, where the latter is characterized by long range
correlations and high connectivity. Clearly, networks which share the same
topology, may have different connectivities, based on the nature and strength
of their interactions. The method is demonstrated on metabolic networks, but
can be readily generalized to other types of networks.Comment: 10 figure
Analytical solution of a model for complex food webs
We investigate numerically and analytically a recently proposed model for
food webs [Nature {\bf 404}, 180 (2000)] in the limit of large web sizes and
sparse interaction matrices. We obtain analytical expressions for several
quantities with ecological interest, in particular the probability
distributions for the number of prey and the number of predators. We find that
these distributions have fast-decaying exponential and Gaussian tails,
respectively. We also find that our analytical expressions are robust to
changes in the details of the model.Comment: 4 pages (RevTeX). Final versio
- …