30,990 research outputs found
Institutional and environmental problems in geothermal resource development
A number of regulatory and institutional impediments to the development of geothermal energy exist. None of these seem likely to prevent the development of this energy source, but in the aggregate they will pace its growth as certainly as the technological issues. The issues are associated with the encouragement of exploration and development, assuring a market for geothermal steam or hot water, and accomplishing the required research and development in a timely manner. The development of geothermal energy in the United States at a high level is apt to cause both favorable and unfavorable, though manageable, impacts in eight major areas, which are discussed
Inflatable stretcher to transport patients
Inflatable plastic bag inside strong, inflexible outer bag facilitates emergency transport of seriously burned or disabled patients. When the bag is inflated the patient is completely immobilized and cushioned from external shock. Air for breathing, temperature controls and communications may be provided by appropriate plug-in connections
A comparative study of herbage intake, ingestive behaviour and diet selection, and effects of condensed tannins upon body and wool growth in lambs grazing Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus) and annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum) dominant swards
An experiment was carried out from August to early November 1994 to examine differences in diet selection, herbage intake, grazing behaviour and animal performance between weaned lambs rotationally grazing swards of annual ryegrass (Lolium multiflorum)/white clover (Trifolium repens) and Yorkshire fog (Holcus lanatus)/T. repens with or without Lotus corniculatus. There were four replicate groups of six lambs per treatment. The effects of condensed tannins (CT) on lamb production were assessed by twice-daily oral administration of 10g polyethylene glycol (PEG; molecular weight 4000) to half the lambs on each sward. The Lotus content of all swards was very low, and results are presented here for main sward comparisons meaned over lotus treatments. Overall mean estimates of pre-grazing herbage mass and sward surface height for the annual ryegrass and Yorkshire fog swards respectively, were 5820 v. 4360 +/- 190 kg DM/ha (P , P < 0.01) and liveweight gain (141 v. 120 +/- 4.3 g per lamb per day, P < 0.01), although differences in carcass weight (17.9 v. 18.2 +/- 0.3 kg) and FEC transformed values (9.6 v. 11.0 +/- 06 eggs/g fresh faeces) were not significant. The effects of CT on animal performance were greater in Yorkshire fog swards. CT had no significant effects on diet selection, herbage intake and grazing behaviour patterns
An investigation into the perspectives of providers and learners on MOOC accessibility
An effective open eLearning environment should consider the target learner’s abilities, learning goals, where learning takes place, and which specific device(s) the learner uses. MOOC platforms struggle to take these factors into account and typically are not accessible, inhibiting access to environments that are intended to be open to all. A series of research initiatives are described that are intended to benefit MOOC providers in achieving greater accessibility and disabled learners to improve their lifelong learning and re-skilling. In this paper, we first outline the rationale, the research questions, and the methodology. The research approach includes interviews, online surveys and a MOOC accessibility audit; we also include factors such the risk management of the research programme and ethical considerations when conducting research with vulnerable learners. Preliminary results are presented from interviews with providers and experts and from analysis of surveys of learners. Finally, we outline the future research opportunities. This paper is framed within the context of the Doctoral Consortium organised at the TEEM'17 conference
Two-gap superconductivity in single crystal LuFeSi from penetration depth measurements
Single crystal of LuFeSi was studied with the tunnel-diode
resonator technique in Meissner and mixed states. Temperature dependence of the
superfluid density provides strong evidence for the two-gap superconductivity
with almost equal contributions from each gap of magnitudes
and . In the vortex state, pinning
strength shows unusually strong temperature dependence and is non-monotonic
with the magnetic field (peak effect). The irreversibility line is sharply
defined and is quite distant from the , which hints on to enhanced
vortex fluctuations in this two-gap system. Altogether our findings provide
strong electromagnetic - measurements support to the two-gap superconductivity
in LuFeSi previously suggested from specific heat measurements
The Obscured Fraction of AGN in the XMM-COSMOS Survey: A Spectral Energy Distribution Perspective
The fraction of AGN luminosity obscured by dust and re-emitted in the mid-IR
is critical for understanding AGN evolution, unification, and parsec-scale AGN
physics. For unobscured (Type-1) AGN, where we have a direct view of the
accretion disk, the dust covering factor can be measured by computing the ratio
of re-processed mid-IR emission to intrinsic nuclear bolometric luminosity. We
use this technique to estimate the obscured AGN fraction as a function of
luminosity and redshift for 513 Type-1 AGN from the XMM-COSMOS survey. The
re-processed and intrinsic luminosities are computed by fitting the 18-band
COSMOS photometry with a custom SED-fitting code, which jointly models emission
from: hot-dust in the AGN torus, the accretion disk, and the host-galaxy. We
find a relatively shallow decrease of the luminosity ratio as a function of
Lbol, which we interpret as a corresponding decrease in the obscured fraction.
In the context of the receding torus model, where dust sublimation reduces the
covering factor of more luminous AGN, our measurements require a torus height
which increases with luminosity as h ~ Lbol^{0.3-0.4}. Our obscured
fraction-luminosity relation agrees with determinations from SDSS censuses of
Type-1 and Type-2 quasars, and favors a torus optically thin to mid-IR
radiation. We find a much weaker dependence of obscured fraction on 2-10 keV
luminosity than previous determinations from X-ray surveys, and argue that
X-ray surveys miss a significant population of highly obscured Compton-thick
AGN. Our analysis shows no clear evidence for evolution of obscured fraction
with redshift.Comment: 33 pages, 24 figures, ApJ accepte
A rigorous treatment of O(α 6mc 2) QED corrections to the fine structure splittings of helium
Relativistic formulae for the energy level shifts due to electron self-energy corrections are derived within the external potential Bethe-Salpeter formalism. A rigorous treatment of QED corrections to the fine structure splittings of helium is carried out. Although some individual self-energy diagrams give contributions of order α 6mc 2, they are shown to sum to zero. In addition, the α 6mc 2 correction from vertex modifications in the presence of Coulomb photons does not contribute. Therefore, a rigorous treatment of all QED corrections of order α 6mc 2 to the fine structure splittings of helium now appears to be complete. © 1994 IOP Publishing Ltd
Correcting CIV-Based Virial Black Hole Masses
The CIV broad emission line is visible in optical spectra to redshifts
exceeding z~5. CIV has long been known to exhibit significant displacements to
the blue and these `blueshifts' almost certainly signal the presence of strong
outflows. As a consequence, single-epoch virial black hole (BH) mass estimates
derived from CIV velocity-widths are known to be systematically biased compared
to masses from the hydrogen Balmer lines. Using a large sample of 230
high-luminosity (log = 45.5-48 erg/s), redshift 1.5<z<4.0 quasars
with both CIV and Balmer line spectra, we have quantified the bias in CIV BH
masses as a function of the CIV blueshift. CIV BH masses are shown to be a
factor of five larger than the corresponding Balmer-line masses at CIV
blueshifts of 3000 km/s and are over-estimated by almost an order of magnitude
at the most extreme blueshifts, >5000 km/s. Using the monotonically increasing
relationship between the CIV blueshift and the mass ratio BH(CIV)/BH(H)
we derive an empirical correction to all CIV BH-masses. The scatter between the
corrected CIV masses and the Balmer masses is 0.24 dex at low CIV blueshifts
(~0 km/s) and just 0.10 dex at high blueshifts (~3000 km/s), compared to 0.40
dex before the correction. The correction depends only on the CIV line
properties - i.e. full-width at half maximum and blueshift - and can therefore
be applied to all quasars where CIV emission line properties have been
measured, enabling the derivation of un-biased virial BH mass estimates for the
majority of high-luminosity, high-redshift, spectroscopically confirmed quasars
in the literature.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; fixed typo in CIV wavelengt
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