1,110 research outputs found
A Bayesian method to estimate the depth and the range of phonating sperm whales using a single hydrophone
Some bioacousticians have used a single hydrophone to calculate the depth/range of phonating diving animals. The standard one-hydrophone localization method uses multipath transmissions (direct path, sea surface, and seafloor reflections) of the animal phonations as a substitute for a vertical hydrophone array. The standard method requires three multipath transmissions per phonation. Bioacousticians who study foraging sperm whales usually do not have the required amount of multipath transmissions. However, they usually detect accurately (using shallow hydrophones towed by research vessels) direct path transmissions and sea surface reflections of sperm whale phonations (clicks). Sperm whales emit a few thousand clicks per foraging dive, therefore researchers have this number of direct path transmissions and this number of sea surface reflections per dive. The author describes a Bayesian method to combine the information contained in those acoustic data plus visual observations. The authorâs tests using synthetic data show that the accurate estimation of the depth/range of sperm whales is possible using a single hydrophone and without using any seafloor reflections. This method could be used to study the behavior of sperm whales using a single hydrophone in any location no matter what the depth, the relief, or the constitution of the seafloor might be
Formation des ions bromate dans une colonne Ă bulles: Effets du peroxyde d'hydrogĂšne lors de l'ozonation
L'utilisation de l'ozone, aujourd'hui trĂšs rĂ©pandue dans les filiĂšres de potabilisation, n'est pas sans effet secondaire. De nombreux sous-produits peuvent se former comme notamment les ions bromates, sous produits finaux d'oxydation des bromures contenus dans les eaux. Malheureusement, le mĂ©canisme de production de cette espĂšce est complexe et dĂ©pend de nombreux paramĂštres difficiles Ă apprĂ©hender.Sur une installation pilote de type colonne Ă bulles fonctionnant Ă contre-courant, nous avons Ă©tudiĂ© l'influence de diffĂ©rents paramĂštres, comme le pH, le temps de contact, la dose d'ozone et la dose de peroxyde d'hydrogĂšne, sur la formation des bromates et la dĂ©gradation des pesticides, reprĂ©sentĂ©e par l'atrazine.Les rĂ©sultats de la littĂ©rature ont Ă©tĂ© confirmĂ©s lors de l'emploi unique de l'ozone. La formation des ions bromate est influencĂ©e par la prĂ©sence du peroxyde d'hydrogĂšne. Cet oxydant intervient de maniĂšre non nĂ©gligeable sur la consommation des entitĂ©s intermĂ©diaires. Le couple HOBr/OBr- peut ĂȘtre oxydĂ© par l'ozone molĂ©culaire et le radical OH° mais peut Ă©galement ĂȘtre rĂ©duit par l'ozone et par le peroxyde sous sa forme acide ou sa base conjuguĂ©e. En ce qui concerne la dĂ©gradation des pesticides, l'utilisation de peroxyde d'hydrogĂšne couplĂ© Ă l'ozone favorise l'oxydation de la molĂ©cule d'atrazine grĂące Ă la prĂ©sence plus importante de radicaux hydroxyles.Une pollution accidentelle en pesticides pourra ĂȘtre traitĂ©e par l'ajout ponctuel de peroxyde d'hydrogĂšne avec une augmentation de pH, la formation des bromates sera, dans ce cas, faible. La dĂ©sinfection sera alors assurĂ©e par l'Ă©tape de chloration.In drinking water treatment plants, ozonation is often used to disinfect, to remove micropollutants and to improve water taste and odour. Ozonation increases organic matter biodegradability before filtration through granular active carbon and reduces the concentration of haloform precursors that react in the final chlorination step. However, by-products that could be detrimental to human health could be formed. For example, bromates, which are classified as carcinogenic compounds by the I.A.R.C, are produced during the ozonation of bromide-containing water. The mechanism of bromate formation is complex, due to the participation of molecular ozone and radical (hydroxyl and carbonate) reactions. The optimisation of the process should allow for a good disinfection and a reduction in the levels of micropollutants, together with low by-product formation.Using a pilot-scale counter-current bubble column, we have measured the bromate concentration in relation to pesticide removal. Water spiked with bromide and atrazine was stored in a completely stirred-tank (2 m3) before being pumped to the top of the column. The inlet gaseous ozone was measured by an analyser using UV detection, the outlet gaseous ozone was monitored by the potassium iodide method, and the dissolved ozone concentration was determined by the indigo trisulfonate method. Bromides and bromates were quantified by ion chromatography with a conductimetric detector, with a sodium carbonate solution as the eluant. Samples for bromate analysis were pretreated by OnGuard-Ag and OnGuard-H cartridges in series before injection. Atrazine degradation was measured by high performance liquid chromatography with a diode array detector, with a CH3CN/H2O mixture as the eluant. The linearisation of atrazine removal allowed us to calculate the hydroxyl radical concentration in a series of a completely-stirred tank reactors and in a plug-flow reactor.We have studied the influence of several parameters on bromate formation, including pH, bromide concentration and hydrogen peroxide concentration. As bromate production is a function of bromide concentration, we have chosen to calculate the ratio between the real bromate concentration and the theoretical bromate concentration if all bromide were oxidised to bromate. The pH affects bromate formation: an increase in pH in the absence of hydrogen peroxide increases bromate production, but when this oxidant is applied bromate production decreases when the pH increases. If reaction progress is represented as a function of [O3]*TC, we note that the presence of hydrogen peroxide increases bromate formation because of the increase in hydroxyl radical concentration, which favours radical formation. Nevertheless, if we represent reaction progress as a function of [OHâ]*TC, hydrogen peroxide seems to be an initiator and a scavenger in the mechanism of bromate formation. If we calculate the rates of all the oxidation and reduction reactions for HOBr/OBr- species, the contribution to the reduction of HOBr/OBr- species by peroxide is very important in comparison to the oxidation reactions, which inhibits bromate production. Without the hydrogen peroxide, the contribution of oxidation is equal to that of the reduction reaction, and in this case bromate formation is effective. When, under the same initial operational conditions, we apply hydrogen peroxide with an increase in pH, we observe a decrease in bromate formation with a decrease of the dissolved ozone concentration, which hinders the desired disinfection. The main contribution to atrazine oxidation is from the free-radical reactions, which explains why removal is better when we apply hydrogen peroxide than when we use ozone alone. However, if we want to respect a low bromate level in drinking water, atrazine degradation should not be greater than 90% for the operational conditions on our pilot-scale.If an accidental high pesticide concentration is observed, an addition of hydrogen peroxide with a concurrent increase of pH, could treat the pollution. In this case, a subsequent chlorination step would then have to be used to assure the disinfection alone
Tracking marine mammals in 3D using electronic tag data
1. Information about at-depth behaviour of marine mammals is fundamental yet very hard to obtain from direct visual observation. Animal-borne multisensor electronic tags provide a unique window of observation into such behaviours. 2. Electronic tag sensors allow the estimation of the animal's 3-dimensional (3D) orientation, depth and speed. Using tag flow noise level to provide an estimate of animal speed, we extend existing approaches of 3D track reconstruction by allowing the direction of movement to differ from that of the animal's longitudinal axis. 3. Data are processed by a hierarchical Bayesian model that allows processing of multisource data, accounting for measurement errors and testing hypotheses about animal movement by comparing models. 4. We illustrate the approach by reconstructing the 3D track of a 52-min deep dive of a Blainville's beaked whale Mesoplodon densirostris adult male fit with a digital tag (DTAG) in the Bahamas. At depth, the whale alternated regular movements at large speed (>1·5 m s-1) and more complex movements at lower speed (<1·5 m s-1) with diïŹerences between movement and longitudinal axis directions of up to 28°. The reconstructed 3D track agrees closely with independent acoustic-based localizations. 5. The approach is potentially applicable to study the underwater behaviour (e.g. response to anthropogenic disturbances) of a wide variety of species of marine mammals ïŹtted with triaxial magnetometer and accelerometer tags.PostprintPeer reviewe
Simulations of atomic trajectories near a dielectric surface
We present a semiclassical model of an atom moving in the evanescent field of
a microtoroidal resonator. Atoms falling through whispering-gallery modes can
achieve strong, coherent coupling with the cavity at distances of approximately
100 nanometers from the surface; in this regime, surface-induced Casmir-Polder
level shifts become significant for atomic motion and detection. Atomic transit
events detected in recent experiments are analyzed with our simulation, which
is extended to consider atom trapping in the evanescent field of a microtoroid.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figure
Angular distribution studies on the two-photon ionization of hydrogen-like ions: Relativistic description
The angular distribution of the emitted electrons, following the two-photon
ionization of the hydrogen-like ions, is studied within the framework of second
order perturbation theory and the Dirac equation. Using a density matrix
approach, we have investigated the effects which arise from the polarization of
the incoming light as well as from the higher multipoles in the expansion of
the electron--photon interaction. For medium- and high-Z ions, in particular,
the non-dipole contributions give rise to a significant change in the angular
distribution of the emitted electrons, if compared with the electric-dipole
approximation. This includes a strong forward emission while, in dipole
approxmation, the electron emission always occurs symmetric with respect to the
plane which is perpendicular to the photon beam. Detailed computations for the
dependence of the photoelectron angular distributions on the polarization of
the incident light are carried out for the ionization of H, Xe, and
U (hydrogen-like) ions.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, published in J Phys
Relativistic and retardation effects in the two--photon ionization of hydrogen--like ions
The non-resonant two-photon ionization of hydrogen-like ions is studied in
second-order perturbation theory, based on the Dirac equation. To carry out the
summation over the complete Coulomb spectrum, a Green function approach has
been applied to the computation of the ionization cross sections. Exact
second-order relativistic cross sections are compared with data as obtained
from a relativistic long-wavelength approximation as well as from the scaling
of non-relativistic results. For high-Z ions, the relativistic wavefunction
contraction may lower the two-photon ionization cross sections by a factor of
two or more, while retardation effects appear less pronounced but still give
rise to non-negligible contributions.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figure
Is there still a place for the concept of therapeutic regression in psychoanalysis?
The author uses his own failure to find a place for the idea of therapeutic regression in his clinical thinking or practice as the basis for an investigation into its meaning and usefulness. He makes a distinction between three ways the term âregressionâ is used in psychoanalytic discourse: as a way of evoking a primitive level of experience; as a reminder in some clinical situations of the value of non-intervention on the part of the analyst; and as a description of a phase of an analytic treatment with some patients where the analyst needs to put aside normal analytic technique in order to foster a regression in the patient. It is this third meaning, which the author terms âtherapeutic regressionâ that this paper examines, principally by means of an extended discussion of two clinical examples of a patient making a so-called therapeutic regression, one given by Winnicott and the other by Masud Khan. The author argues that in these examples the introduction of the concept of therapeutic regression obscures rather than clarifies the clinical process. He concludes that, as a substantial clinical concept, the idea of therapeutic regression has outlived its usefulness. However he also notes that many psychoanalytic writers continue to find a use for the more generic concept of regression, and that the very engagement with the more particular idea of therapeutic regression has value in provoking questions as to what is truly therapeutic in psychoanalytic treatment
On waiting for something to happen
This paper seeks to examine two particular and peculiar practices in which the mediation of apparently direct encounters is made explicit and is systematically theorized: that of the psychoanalytic dialogue with its inward focus and private secluded setting, and that of theatre and live performance, with its public focus. Both these practices are concerned with ways in which âlive encountersâ impact on their participants, and hence with the conditions under which, and the processes whereby, the coming-together of human subjects results in recognizable personal or social change. Through the rudimentary analysis of two anecdotes, we aim to think these encounters together in a way that explores what each borrows from the other, the psychoanalytic in the theatrical, the theatrical in the psychoanalytic, figuring each practice as differently committed to what we call the âpublication of livenessâ. We argue that these âredundantâ forms of human contact continue to provide respite from group acceptance of narcissistic failure in the post-democratic era through their offer of a practice of waiting
Una lectura crĂtica del psicoanalis frances de grupos en relacion a la obra de RenĂ© KaĂ«s
Este trabajo busca plantear algunas observaciones expositivas y crĂticas en relaciĂłn a la obra de RenĂ© KaĂ«s, tratando de mostrar la importancia de sus desarrollos teĂłricos y clĂnicos. Se harĂĄn algunas comparaciones entres sus ideas de 1977 y las que comienza a desarrollar a partir de 1985. Se harĂĄ especial Ă©nfasis en los conceptos de narcisismo primario y secundario, isomorfia y homomorfia y el estudio del pacto denegativo y las tres modalidades de lo negativo
Psychoanalysis as the Patient: High in Feeling, Low in Energy
This paper examines the increasingly important role that affect is assuming in psychoanalytic research and practice. This rise in the centrality of affect has been at the expense of an independent role for motivation and a dismissal of any energy concept. Difficulties with this affect-first approach are identified and an alternative offered that accords motivation an independent role and accommodates a useful energy concept. Research on esophageal atresia, addiction, and infant suckling are cited in support of this position.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/66624/2/10.1177_00030651970450031101.pd
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