871 research outputs found
Co-production of synfuels and electricity from coal + biomass with zero net carbon emissions: An Illinois case study
Abstract Energy, carbon, and economic performance are estimated for facilities co-producing FischerâTropsch Liquid (FTL) fuels and electricity from a co-feed of biomass and coal in Illinois, with capture and storage of by-product CO 2 . The estimates include detailed models of supply systems for corn stover or mixed prairie grasses and of feedstock conversion facilities. The Illinois results are extrapolated to estimate the potential FTL production in 23 states
Personality, conventional Christian belief and unconventional paranormal belief : a study among teenagers
A sample of 10,851 pupils (5493 males and 5358 females) attending Year 9 classes (13- to 14-year-olds) and a sample of 9494 pupils (4787 males and 4707 females) attending Year 10 classes (14- to 15-year-olds) in non-denominational state-maintained secondary schools in England and Wales completed questions concerned with conventional Christian belief and unconventional paranormal belief, alongside the short-form Junior Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. The data demonstrated that conventional Christian belief and unconventional paranormal belief occupy different locations in relation to the Eysenckian model of personality in respect of the psychoticism scale and the lie scale. While conventional Christian belief is associated with lower psychoticism scores and higher lie scale scores (greater social conformity), unconventional paranormal belief is associated with higher psychoticism scores and lower lie scale scores (lower social conformity)
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New Constraints on Terrestrial and Oceanic Sources of Atmospheric Methanol
We use a global 3-D chemical transport model (GEOS-Chem) to interpret new aircraft, surface, and oceanic observations of methanol in terms of the constraints that they place on the atmospheric methanol budget. Recent measurements of methanol concentrations in the ocean mixed layer (OML) imply that in situ biological production must be the main methanol source in the OML, dominating over uptake from the atmosphere. It follows that oceanic emission and uptake must be viewed as independent terms in the atmospheric methanol budget. We deduce that the marine biosphere is a large primary source (85 Tg aâ1) of methanol to the atmosphere and is also a large sink (101 Tg aâ1), comparable in magnitude to atmospheric oxidation by OH (88 Tg aâ1). The resulting atmospheric lifetime of methanol in the model is 4.7 days. Aircraft measurements in the North American boundary layer imply that terrestrial plants are a much weaker source than presently thought, likely reflecting an overestimate of broadleaf tree emissions, and this is also generally consistent with surface measurements. We deduce a terrestrial plant source of 80 Tg aâ1, comparable in magnitude to the ocean source. The aircraft measurements show a strong correlation with CO (R2=0.51â0.61) over North America during summer. We reproduce this correlation and slope in the model with the reduced plant source, which also confirms that the anthropogenic source of methanol must be small. Our reduced plant source also provides a better simulation of methanol observations over tropical South America.Earth and Planetary SciencesEngineering and Applied Science
Financial toxicity in adults with cancer: Adverse outcomes and noncompliance
Purpose Because of the escalating cost of cancer care coupled with high insurance deductibles, premiums, and uninsured populations, patients with cancer are affected by treatmentrelated financial harm, known as financial toxicity. The purpose of this study was to describe individuals reporting financial toxicity and to identify rates of and reasons for affordability-related treatment noncompliance. Methods From May 2010 to November 2015, adult patients (age $ 18 years) with cancer were identified from a Health Registry/Cancer Survivorship Cohort. Financial toxicity was defined as agreement with the phrase"You have to pay for more medical care than you can afford" from the Patient Satisfaction Questionnaire-18. Logistic regression and Fisher exact tests were used to compare groups. Results Of 1,988 participants, 524 (26%) reported financial toxicity. Patients reporting financial toxicity were more likely age 65 years or younger, female, nonwhite, non-English speaking, not married, less educated, and to have received a diagnosis more recently (all P,.001). Participants with financial toxicity were more likely to report noncompliance with medication, owing to inability to afford prescription drugs (relative risk [RR], 3.55; 95% CI, 2.53 to 4.98), and reported forgoing mental health care (RR, 3.89; 95% CI, 2.04 to 7.45), doctor's visits (RR, 2.98; 95% CI, 1.97 to 4.51), and medical tests (RR, 2.54; 95% CI, 1.49 to 4.34). The most endorsed reasons for delayed care were not having insurance coverage and being unable to afford household expenses. Conclusion More than25%of adultswith cancer reportedfinancial toxicity thatwas associatedwith an increased riskfor medicalnoncompliance.Financial toxicity remains a major issue in cancer care, and efforts are needed to ensure patients experiencing high levels offinancial toxicity are able to access recommended care
Graviton Resonances in E+ E- -> MU+ MU- at Linear Colliders with Beamstrahlung and ISR Effects
Electromagnetic radiation emitted by the colliding beams is expected to play
an important role at the next generation of high energy e^+ e^- linear
collider(s). Focusing on the simplest process e+e- -> mu+ mu-, we show that
radiative effects like initial state radiation (ISR) and beamstrahlung can lead
to greatly-enhanced signals for resonant graviton modes of the Randall-Sundrum
model.Comment: 20 pages Latex, 7 eps figure
Multiwavelength Study of M8.9/3B Solar Flare from AR NOAA 10960
We present a multi-wavelength analysis of a long duration white-light solar
flare (M8.9/3B) event that occurred on 4 June 2007 from NOAA AR 10960. The
flare was observed by several spaceborne instruments, namely SOHO/MDI,
Hinode/SOT, TRACE and STEREO/SECCHI. The flare was initiated near a small,
positive-polarity, satellite sunspot at the centre of the AR, surrounded by
opposite-polarity field regions. MDI images of the AR show considerable amount
of changes in a small positive-polarity sunspot of delta configuration during
the flare event. SOT/G-band (4305 A) images of the sunspot also suggest the
rapid evolution of the positive-polarity sunspot with highly twisted penumbral
filaments before the flare event, which were oriented in the counterclockwise
direction. It shows the change in orientation and also remarkable disappearance
of twisted penumbral filaments (~35-40%) and enhancement in umbral area
(~45-50%) during the decay phase of the flare. TRACE and SECCHI observations
reveal the successive activations of two helical twisted structures associated
with this sunspot, and the corresponding brightening in the chromosphere as
observed by the time-sequence images of SOT/Ca II H line (3968 A). The
secondary-helical twisted structure is found to be associated with the M8.9
flare event. The brightening starts 6-7 min prior to the flare maximum with the
appearance of secondary helical-twisted structure. The flare intensity
maximizes as this structure moves away from the AR. This twisted flux-tube
associated with the flare triggering, is found to be failed in eruption. The
location of the flare is found to coincide with the activation site of the
helical twisted structures. We conclude that the activations of successive
helical twists in the magnetic flux tubes/ropes plays a crucial role in the
energy build-up process and triggering of M-class solar flare without a CME.Comment: 22 pages, 12 figures, Accepted for Publication in Solar Physic
Hybrid Monte Carlo with Fat Link Fermion Actions
The use of APE smearing or other blocking techniques in lattice fermion
actions can provide many advantages. There are many variants of these fat link
actions in lattice QCD currently, such as FLIC fermions. The FLIC fermion
formalism makes use of the APE blocking technique in combination with a
projection of the blocked links back into the special unitary group. This
reunitarisation is often performed using an iterative maximisation of a gauge
invariant measure. This technique is not differentiable with respect to the
gauge field and thus prevents the use of standard Hybrid Monte Carlo simulation
algorithms. The use of an alternative projection technique circumvents this
difficulty and allows the simulation of dynamical fat link fermions with
standard HMC and its variants. The necessary equations of motion for FLIC
fermions are derived, and some initial simulation results are presented. The
technique is more general however, and is straightforwardly applicable to other
smearing techniques or fat link actions
Ruthenocuprates RuSr2(Eu,Ce)2Cu2O10: Intrinsic magnetic multilayers
We report ac susceptibility data on RuSr_2(Eu,Ce)_2Cu_2O_(10-y) (Ru-1222, Ce
content x=0.5 and 1.0), RuSr_2GdCu_2O_8 (Ru-1212) and SrRuO_3. Both Ru-1222
(x=0.5, 1.0) sample types exhibit unexpected magnetic dynamics in low magnetic
fields: logarithmic time relaxation, switching behavior, and `inverted'
hysteresis loops. Neither Ru-1212 nor SrRuO_3 exhibit such magnetic dynamics.
The results are interpreted as evidence of the complex magnetic order in
Ru-1222. We propose a specific multilayer model to explain the data, and note
that superconductivity in the ruthenocuprate is compatible with both the
presence and absence of the magnetic dynamics.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, Revtex; submitted to Phys.Rev.
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