1,344 research outputs found

    Moving from Aquifer Stress to Sustainable Management with Remote Sensing and Local Knowledge

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    doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.15447/sfews.v13iss3art3&lt;Abstracts are not associated with Essays. -The Editors of SFEWS.&gt;</p

    Automotive Stirling Engine Development Program

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    The background and history of the Stirling engine, the technology, materials, components, controls, and systems, and a technical assessment of automotive stirling engines are presented

    The Social Conscience of an Evangelical

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    A Christian Perspective in Political Science

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    Context Entities of Flickr Tags: Classes of Information Captured by Social Tagging

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    This study explores the content entities, or classes of information, captured by tags assigned to images posted to Flickr's The Commons site. Seven institutions participating in The Commons were examined: The New York Public Library, The Washington, D.C. Public Library, The University of Washington, Michigan State University, Cornell University, The Field Museum, and the George Eastman House. Tables that collected tags from these institutions and their subsequently assigned context entities revealed the kind of information expressed by users of Flickr's social tagging site. Through a review of the literature and by examining data from Web traffic sites, it is shown that tagging is a popular form of describing images and that professionals across information fields generally accept it as a supplement to access points created by controlled vocabularies. From an analysis of Flickr tags, it is shown that objects and places are the most common contextual entities captured by user-generated tags. By implication, it is suggested what gaps in contextual entities professionals should fill for users, and vice-versa. This paper concludes with suggested improvements for the study and areas where social tagging will continue to engage and empower users of image sites and other services compatible with tagging functionality

    Effect of Hormodin A, a growth substance, on the rooting of cuttings

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    Florists, nurserymen and gardeners are deeply interested in recent discoveries that certain chemical compounds, when absorbed into the appropriate living plant tissues, induce or stimulate the initiation of roots. Depending on species, point of application of the chemical and various environmental conditions, roots appear on stems or leaves at points where roots do not ordinarily arise. The chemicals used have been variously designated by different investigators as growth substances (6), hormones (3), phytohormones (28) and auxins (28). When applied to the rootage of cuttings, these substances may have a wide practical use. Some of the most effective growth substances are offered to the trade under proprietary names. This bulletin deals with a series of experiments designed to test, under Iowa conditions, the efficacy of Hormodin A, a widely distributed trade product known to contain an effective growth-promoting chemical, indolebutyric acid, for the rooting of cuttings of many species and varieties of horticultural plants. The project was sponsored by the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Research, located at Yonkers, N. Y., under a cooperative agreement with the Iowa Agricultural Experiment Station. The study covered a period of 2 years and included tests with approximately 50 species and varieties. The immediate objectives of the research were: 1. To discover the most effective concentration of Hormodin A for the rooting of each species or variety; ~. to determine the effect of the treatment on cuttings taken at different stages of maturity; 3. to determine the reaction of cuttings taken at different seasons of the year to the treatments

    Rapid Access to Conformationally-Constrained Oxatricycles via Ugi-Smiles Couplings

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    Use of allylamine and substituted 2-furaldehydes as components in Ugi-Smiles couplings of 2-nitrophenol provide ready access to N-aryl epoxyisoindolines. These adducts form via a dual event involving the Ugi-Smiles multicomponent reaction and an intramolecular Diels-Alder cycloaddition with the furan ring

    Manipulation of drugs to achieve the required dose is intrinsic to paediatric practice but is not supported by guidelines or evidence

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    Background: A lack of age-appropriate formulations can make it difficult to administer medicines to children. A manipulation of the dosage form may be required to achieve the required dose. This study aimed to describe medicines that are manipulated to achieve the required dose in paediatric practice.Method: A structured, undisguised observational study and postal survey. The observational study investigated drug manipulations occurring in clinical practice across three sites. The questionnaire, administered to a sample of paediatric nurses throughout the UK, surveyed manipulations conducted and nurses' experiences and views.Results: The observational study identified 310 manipulations, of which 62% involved tablets, 21% were intravenous drugs and 10% were sachets. Of the 54 observed manipulations 40 involved tablets with 65% of the tablets being cut and 30% dispersed to obtain a smaller dose. 188 manipulations were reported by questionnaire respondents, of these 46% involved tablets, 12% were intravenous drugs, and 12% were nebuliser solutions. Manipulations were predominantly, but not exclusively, identified in specialist clinical areas with more highly dependent patients. Questionnaire respondents were concerned about the accuracy of the dose achieved following manipulations and the lack of practice guidance.Conclusion: Manipulations to achieve the required dose occur throughout paediatric in-patient settings. The impact of manipulations on the efficacy of the drugs, the accuracy of the dose and any adverse effects on patients is not known. There is a need to develop evidence-based guidance for manipulations of medicines in children

    HAZMAT. V. The Ultraviolet and X-ray Evolution of K Stars

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    Knowing the high-energy radiation environment of a star over a planet's formation and evolutionary period is critical in determining if that planet is potentially habitable and if any biosignatures could be detected, as UV radiation can severely change or destroy a planet's atmosphere. Current efforts for finding a potentially habitable planet are focused on M stars, yet K stars may offer more habitable conditions due to decreased stellar activity and more distant and wider habitable zones (HZ). While M star activity evolution has been observed photometrically and spectroscopically, there has been no dedicated investigation of K-star UV evolution. We present the first comprehensive study of the near-UV, far-UV, and X-ray evolution of K stars. We used members of young moving groups and clusters ranging in age from 10 - 625 Myr combined with field stars and their archived GALEX UV and ROSAT X-ray data to determine how the UV and X-ray radiation evolve. We find that the UV and X-ray flux incident on a HZ planet is 5 - 50 times lower than that of HZ planets around early-M stars and 50 - 1000 times lower than those around late-M stars, due to both an intrinsic decrease in K dwarf stellar activity occurring earlier than for M dwarfs and the more distant location of the K dwarf HZ.Comment: 27 pages, 19 figure
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