2,663 research outputs found
Quartering the city in discourse and bricks: Articulating urban change in a South African enclave
Focusing on the urban enclave in Cape Town known as De Waterkant, this paper examines the product and process of ‘quartering’ urban space—shaping urban space as the locus for the symbolic framing of culture. This paper advances recent studies of De Waterkant by applying the concept of quartering to understand urban change in an African context. Complicating existing research on De Waterkant, the findings show that the area has witnessed four distinct quartered identities including: an ethnic quartering which was dismantled under apartheid; a Bohemian quartering that changed racial dynamics and improved housing stock; a ‘gay village’ quartering that engaged sexual identity performance as a strategy for place-making; and most recently a consumer lifestyle quartering that exhibited new notions of citizenship and consumption. This paper advances theorization of how quartering as a process is articulated through the application of discursive and material tropes to the urban fabric of the city.International Bibliography of Social Science
Que(e)rying Cape Town: touring Africa’s gay capital with the pink map
Since 1999, Cape Town’s Pink Map has attempted to provide local and international visitors alike with a cartographic representation of the city’s queer landscape. This paper engages with the archive provided by more than a decade of the Map to trace the outlines of this ‘pink’ discourse while contributing to debates on the promotion of ‘pink’ tourism and the nature of South African queer communities. This paper will demonstrate that, in addition to being a commercial publication that locates gay- and gay friendly leisure venues, services, and shopping, the Pink Map also engages particular tropes of the body and gender to inscribe sexual and consumer citizenship in the city of Cape Town with specific emphasis on the urban quarter known as De Waterkant. The analysis will show how the journey one takes while holding the Pink Map is illustrative of events taking place on the urban landscape that the Map depicts. In the final analysis, this paper reveals how the Pink Map serves as an archive of a limited notion of queer visibility, new modes of consumption, the queer tourist gaze and the embodied shaping of destination space
Community as utopia: Reflections on De Waterkant
This paper will reflect on research currently in progress in Cape Town's De Waterkant neighbourhood—an area also known as Cape Town's 'gay village'. This paper engages the literature of utopia as a framework of analysis for interrogating the performance of community—while at the same time problematising the terms "community" and "utopia" upon which much geographical description of the area is based. This research argues that both 'comforting' and 'unsettling' relational achievements amongst the human and non-human actors in De Waterkant function as building blocks of real or imagined community and further recognises multiple tensions that affect the formation of community and the pursuit of utopia in the South African urban context
Shape mode analysis exposes movement patterns in biology: flagella and flatworms as case studies
We illustrate shape mode analysis as a simple, yet powerful technique to
concisely describe complex biological shapes and their dynamics. We
characterize undulatory bending waves of beating flagella and reconstruct a
limit cycle of flagellar oscillations, paying particular attention to the
periodicity of angular data. As a second example, we analyze non-convex
boundary outlines of gliding flatworms, which allows us to expose stereotypic
body postures that can be related to two different locomotion mechanisms.
Further, shape mode analysis based on principal component analysis allows to
discriminate different flatworm species, despite large motion-associated shape
variability. Thus, complex shape dynamics is characterized by a small number of
shape scores that change in time. We present this method using descriptive
examples, explaining abstract mathematics in a graphic way.Comment: 20 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in PLoS On
Adsorption and desorption of hydrogen at nonpolar GaN(1-100) surfaces: Kinetics and impact on surface vibrational and electronic properties
The adsorption of hydrogen at nonpolar GaN(1-100) surfaces and its impact on
the electronic and vibrational properties is investigated using surface
electron spectroscopy in combination with density functional theory (DFT)
calculations. For the surface mediated dissociation of H2 and the subsequent
adsorption of H, an energy barrier of 0.55 eV has to be overcome. The
calculated kinetic surface phase diagram indicates that the reaction is
kinetically hindered at low pressures and low temperatures. At higher
temperatures ab-initio thermodynamics show, that the H-free surface is
energetically favored. To validate these theoretical predictions experiments at
room temperature and under ultrahigh vacuum conditions were performed. They
reveal that molecular hydrogen does not dissociatively adsorb at the GaN(1-100)
surface. Only activated atomic hydrogen atoms attach to the surface. At
temperatures above 820 K, the attached hydrogen gets desorbed. The adsorbed
hydrogen atoms saturate the dangling bonds of the gallium and nitrogen surface
atoms and result in an inversion of the Ga-N surface dimer buckling. The
signatures of the Ga-H and N-H vibrational modes on the H-covered surface have
experimentally been identified and are in good agreement with the DFT
calculations of the surface phonon modes. Both theory and experiment show that
H adsorption results in a removal of occupied and unoccupied intragap electron
states of the clean GaN(1-100) surface and a reduction of the surface upward
band bending by 0.4 eV. The latter mechanism largely reduces surface electron
depletion
Constraints on pseudo-Dirac neutrinos using high-energy neutrinos from NGC 1068
Neutrinos can be pseudo-Dirac in Nature - they can be Majorana fermions whilebehaving effectively as Dirac fermions. Such scenarios predict active-sterileneutrino oscillation driven by a tiny mass-squared difference ,which is an outcome of soft-lepton number violation. Oscillations due to tiny can take place only over astrophysical baselines and hence are notaccessible in terrestrial neutrino oscillation experiments. This implies thathigh-energy neutrinos coming from large distances can naturally be used to testthis scenario. We use the recent observation of high-energy neutrinos from theactive galactic nuclei NGC 1068 by the IceCube collaboration to constrain at more than confidence level - oneof the strongest limits to date on the values of .<br
Scaling and regeneration of self-organized patterns
Biological patterns generated during development and regeneration often scale
with organism size. Some organisms, e.g., flatworms, can regenerate a rescaled
body plan from tissue fragments of varying sizes. Inspired by these examples,
we introduce a generalization of Turing patterns that is self-organized and
self-scaling. A feedback loop involving diffusing expander molecules regulates
the reaction rates of a Turing system, thereby adjusting pattern length scales
proportional to system size. Our model captures essential features of body plan
regeneration in flatworms as observed in experiments.Comment: 5 pages, 3 color figure
Market Sampling of Landings of Commercial Fish Species in the Netherlands in 2002
This report contains information on the biological sampling for the market sampling program: which species are sampled, how they were caught, when and where the samples are taken (date and position), how many fish have been measured, how many fish have been aged, etc. The report gives an overview of all the biological sampling activities in 2002 by RIVO on the landings of the commercial important species of herring, mackerel, horse mackerel, blue whiting, greater argentine, sole, plaice, turbot, brill, dab, lemon sole, cod, whiting, Norway lobster and four different species of rays from all ICES areas. This biological sampling took place on landings by both the Dutch fleet as well as foreign fleets landing in the Netherlands. In addition this report contains information on the biological samples collected during research vessel surveys and discard trips both on commercial and non-commercial species
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