1,760 research outputs found
City Farm SLO Educational Pizza Oven
City Farm SLO is a nonprofit that educates the public about growing food, and they donate the produce to food banks and communities in need. Their mission is to promote healthy living through sustainable agriculture and farm-based education. This senior project is to build them an educational pizza oven for them to use in their classes. With it they will give lessons where they cook pizzas using ingredients that they grow on site. To do this, the builder had to make it lightweight and able to move around the property to different meeting places and outdoor classrooms. It is also a woodfired oven with areas to store wood, cooking tools and provide a butcher block workstation to make the pizzas on. Funding came solely from donors that the author reached out to because City Farm SLO didn’t have money budgeted to front the project. This project was a solo project, meaning that one person designed it, procured materials, planned, and constructed it on their own. The Areas of this project that proved to be most difficult were the acquisition of funds, and the construction of the oven dome, being that it was a new building method for hi
Recommended from our members
Systems thinkers think About systems education under the April 2010 (volcanic ash) clouds of Austria
The fragmented nature of systems education with multiple traditions expressed in very different ways at different institutions with ultimate confusing effects on the community of learners (students, managers, policy makers, etc), led to a group of Systems Thinkers to discuss and create generic curricula for education and learning about systems for the generalist and specialist tracks. An active network of systems educators and stakeholders who can benefit from enhanced systems education in having to deal with complex issues, was also explored. In this presentation some guidelines for designing introductory and advanced courses will be discussed. The Introduction to Systemic Thinking and Practice course is intended as an introductory course for students from all disciplines. The Advanced Systemic Thinking and Practice course is intended as a more advanced course for students who are faced with complex issues that require a trans-disciplinary and integrated approach. The designs contain a set of key systems concepts and frameworks relevant to the appropriate level, along with some indicative tools and methods which will enable students to explore the concepts. The value of a Global Network of Systems Educators will also be discussed and how this network could help to fulfil the needs of managers, policy makers and society in general. An example will be given of how the integration of this network with the UQ-UNESCO/MAB Global Learning Laboratories NET could lead to more people (decision-and policy makers in Governments, managers, businesses, etc.) having the ability to practice systems thinking – all of these contributing to Systems Thinking becoming a more mainstream part of a sustainable society
Adaptive grid methods for Q-tensor theory of liquid crystals : a one-dimensional feasibility study
This paper illustrates the use of moving mesh methods for solving partial differential equation (PDE) problems in Q-tensor theory of liquid crystals. We present the results of an initial study using a simple one-dimensional test problem which illustrates the feasibility of applying adaptive grid techniques in such situations. We describe how the grids are computed using an equidistribution principle, and investigate the comparative accuracy of adaptive and uniform grid strategies, both theoretically and via numerical examples
Abnormal oxygen homeostasis in the nucleus tractus solitarius of the spontaneously hypertensive rat
The effects of arterial hypertension on cerebral blood flow remain poorly understood. Hemodynamic responses within the somatosensory cortex have been shown to be impaired in the spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR) model. However, it is unknown whether arterial hypertension affects oxygen homeostasis in vital brainstem areas that control cardiovascular reflexes. In this study, we assessed vagus nerve stimulation-induced changes in local tissue PO2 (Pt O2 ) in the caudal nucleus tractus solitarius (cNTS) of SHRs and normotensive Wistar rats. Pt O2 measurements were performed using a novel application of fast cyclic voltammetry, which allows higher temporal resolution of O2 changes than traditional optical fluorescence techniques. Electrical stimulation of the central-cut end of the vagus nerve (ESVN) caused profound arterial blood pressure decreases along with biphasic Pt O2 changes in the cNTS, characterised by a rapid decrease in Pt O2 ("initial dip") followed by a post-stimulus overshoot above baseline. The initial dip was found to be significantly smaller in SHRs compared to normotensive Wistar rats even after ganglionic blockade. Post-ESVN overshoot was similar in both groups but was reduced in Wistar rats after ganglionic blockade. In conclusion, neural activity-dependent changes in tissue oxygen in brainstem cardiovascular autonomic centres are significantly impaired in animals with arterial hypertension
Landsat TM and ETM+ derived snowline altitudes in the Cordillera Huayhuash and Cordillera Raura, Peru, 1986–2005
The Cordilleras Huayhuash and Raura are remote glacierized ranges in the Andes Mountains of Peru. A robust assessment of modern glacier change is important for understanding how regional change affects Andean communities, and for placing paleo-glaciers in a context relative to modern glaciation and climate. Snowline altitudes (SLAs) derived from satellite imagery are used as a proxy for modern (1986–2005) local climate change in a key transition zone in the Andes. <br><br> Clear sky, dry season Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) and Enhanced Thematic Mapper (ETM+) satellite images from 1986–2005 were used to identify snowline positions, and their altitude ranges were extracted from an Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) digital elevation model (DEM). Based on satellite records from 31 glaciers, average snowline altitudes (SLAs), an approximation for the equilibrium line altitude (ELA), for the Cordillera Huayhuash (13 glaciers) and Cordillera Raura (18 glaciers) from 1986–2005 were 5051 m a.s.l. from 1986–2005 and 5006 m a.s.l. from 1986–2002, respectively. During the same time period, the Cordillera Huayhuash SLA experienced no significant change while the Cordillera Raura SLA rose significantly from 4947 m a.s.l. to 5044 m a.s.l
Recommended from our members
REFORM: Rotor Estimation From Object Resampling and Matching
Abstract: In this paper we tackle the problem of correspondence and rotor estimation between models composed of geometric primitives of different types. We frame this problem as searching for the rotor that takes a query model to a reference model. The situations that we consider are those in which our query model: contains additional primitives not present in the reference; is missing primitives that are present in the reference. We will also look at cases in which there are a large number of primitives per model. These are all common issues facing any SLAM-type (simultaneous localisation and mapping) systems. To overcome these problems we introduce an inter-object rotor magnitude-based matching function and a subsampled iterative rotor estimation and matching algorithm. We title the finished algorithm: Rotor Estimation From Object Resampling and Matching—REFORM. REFORM builds on ideas from the RANSAC (RAndom SAmple Consensus) [7] and ICP (Iterative Closest Point) [3, 11] algorithms and extends these to multivector correspondence. It is easily parallelisable and designed for good convergence performance with models of real objects
- …