4,061 research outputs found
Heat in the Heartland: Climate Change and Economic Risk in the Midwest
This report offers a first step toward defining the range of potential economic consequences to the Midwest if we continue on our current greenhouse gas emissions pathway. The research combines state-of-the-art climate science projections through the year 2100 (and beyond in some cases) with empirically-derived estimates of the impact of projected changes in temperature and precipitation on the Midwest economy. The authors analyze not only those outcomes most likely to occur, but also lower-probability, higher-cost climate futures. These are the "tail risks," most often expressed here as the 1-in-20 chance something will occur. Unlike any other study to date, this report looks at climate impacts at a very geographically granular level, in some cases providing county-level results
Global Research Report – South and East Asia
Global Research Report – South and East Asia by Jonathan Adams, David Pendlebury, Gordon Rogers & Martin Szomszor. Published by Institute for Scientific Information, Web of Science Group
Experimental heat transfer coefficients for the cooling of oil in horizontal internal forced convective transitional flow
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Engineering,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg
for the Degree of Master of Science in Chemical Engineering.
Johannesburg, 198
From white elephant to Nobel Prize: Dennis Gabor’s wavefront reconstruction
Dennis Gabor devised a new concept for optical imaging in 1947 that went by a variety of names over the following decade: holoscopy, wavefront reconstruction, interference microscopy, diffraction microscopy and Gaboroscopy. A well-connected and creative research engineer, Gabor worked actively to publicize and exploit his concept, but the scheme failed to capture the interest of many researchers. Gabor’s theory was repeatedly deemed unintuitive and baffling; the technique was appraised by his contemporaries to be of dubious practicality and, at best, constrained to a narrow branch of science. By the late 1950s, Gabor’s subject had been assessed by its handful of practitioners to be a white elephant. Nevertheless, the concept was later rehabilitated by the research of Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks at the University of Michigan, and Yury Denisyuk at the Vavilov Institute in Leningrad. What had been judged a failure was recast as a success: evaluations of Gabor’s work were transformed during the 1960s, when it was represented as the foundation on which to construct the new and distinctly different subject of holography, a re-evaluation that gained the Nobel Prize for Physics for Gabor alone in 1971. This paper focuses on the difficulties experienced in constructing a meaningful subject, a practical application and a viable technical community from Gabor’s ideas during the decade 1947-1957
Effects of Plant Growth Promoting Rhizobacteria on Seed Germination Characteristics of Tomato and Lettuce
Plant growth promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) represent a wide genera of rhizospheric bacteria which, when introduced in association with the host plant in proper amount, can enhance plant growth and productivity. A series of experiments were conducted to determine the germination responses of tomato and lettuce to PGPR inoculation. Seeds were inoculated with different strains of Azospirillum brasilense Sp7, Sp7-S and Sp245, Herbaspirillum seropedicea and Burkholderia phytofirmans PsJNT. The results reveal that Sp7-S inoculation yielded better germination rate and total germination of tomato. PGPR inoculation, except Sp7, produced longer (28%) and heavier (37%) roots with superior vigor. In lettuce, PGPR strains, except B. phytofirmans PsJNT, and Sp7 and B. phytofirmans PsJNT, enhanced germination vigor and length of roots (26%), respectively. The results provide further evidence concerning their importance as PGPR and indicate the potential of exploiting some of these PGPR to improve seedling emergence and establishment of vegetables
Constraining volatile abundance in chondritic components
Accepted versio
Mapping the Kinematical Regimes of Semi-Inclusive Deep Inelastic Scattering
We construct a language for identifying kinematical regions of transversely
differential semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering cross sections with
particular underlying partonic pictures, especially in regions of moderate to
low where sensitivity to kinematical effects outside the usual very high
energy limit becomes non-trivial. The partonic pictures map to power law
expansions whose leading contributions ultimately lead to well-known QCD
factorization theorems. We propose methods for estimating the consistency of
any particular region of overall hadronic kinematics with the kinematics of a
given underlying partonic picture. The basic setup of kinematics of
semi-inclusive deep inelastic scattering is also reviewed in some detail.Comment: 37 pages, 11 Figure
Listening to the environment : hearing differences from an epigenetic effect in solitarious and gregarious locusts
Locusts display a striking form of phenotypic plasticity, developing into either a lone-living solitarious phase or a swarming gregarious phase depending on population density. The two phases differ extensively in appearance, behaviour, and physiology. We found that solitarious and gregarious locusts have clear differences in their hearing, both in their tympanal and neuronal responses. We identified significant differences in the shape of the tympana that may be responsible for the variations in hearing between locust phases. We measured the nanometre mechanical responses of the ear’s tympanal membrane to sound, finding that solitarious animals exhibit greater displacement. Finally, neural experiments signified that solitarious locusts have a relatively stronger response to high frequencies. The enhanced response to high frequency sounds in the nocturnally flying solitarious locusts suggests greater investment in detecting the ultrasonic echolocation calls of bats, to which they are more vulnerable than diurnally active gregarious locusts. This study highlights the importance of epigenetic effects set forth during development and begins to identify how animals are equipped to match their immediate environmental needs
全球研究报告——东南亚
Jonathan Adams, David Pendlebury, Gordon Rogers, Martin Szomszor. 全球研究报告——东南亚[J]. 科学观察, 2020, 15(3): 54-65
ICRA Roboethics Challenge 2023: Intelligent Disobedience in an Elderly Care Home
With the projected surge in the elderly population, service robots offer a
promising avenue to enhance their well-being in elderly care homes. Such robots
will encounter complex scenarios which will require them to perform decisions
with ethical consequences. In this report, we propose to leverage the
Intelligent Disobedience framework in order to give the robot the ability to
perform a deliberation process over decisions with potential ethical
implications. We list the issues that this framework can assist with, define it
formally in the context of the specific elderly care home scenario, and
delineate the requirements for implementing an intelligently disobeying robot.
We conclude this report with some critical analysis and suggestions for future
work.Comment: This report is part of ICRA roboethics competition :
https://competition.raiselab.ca/competition-details-2023_1/ethics-challenge/submitted-proposals/submission-
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