39 research outputs found

    Measuring the Asborption Coefficient of Aquatic Particles Retained on Filter Using a Photo-Oxidation Bleaching Technique

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    This report describes a method for the determination of the particulate absorption coefficient that aims to improve the T-R method of Ferrari and Tassan, (1995, 2002) giving an alternative to the visual deternination of the bleached state of the sample on the filter and introducing a photoxidation bleaching technique to optimize the depigmentation process.JRC.H.3-Global environement monitorin

    Stability criteria for a pyramidal shaped asperity ploughing through a plastically deforming substrate

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    In two body abrasion processes hard asperities plough through a soft surface. If the asperities can resist the forces that act on it, scratches will develop in the soft material. If the asperities cannot withstand these forces, they will break off and not cause direct abrasion damage. The same is the case for galling, where lumps develop on one of the surfaces because of material transfer. These lumps will abrade the counter surface, if the lumps are strong enough to withstand the forces that act on it. In order to describe these phenomena, simple criteria are desired to describe the mechanical stability of asperities and lumps.\ud \ud In this work, an analytical model is presented for the mechanical stability of asperities. In the analysis, a pyramidal asperity shape will be assumed. Given the pyramidal asperity shape, several cases will be studied: the load is carried by a pyramid with a triangular base, a pyramid with a triangular base and an extended backside and the case where a crack has developed. Based on these models stability criteria of ploughing pyramidal asperities will be developed. Important results of the model will be discussed in the context of abrasion and adhesive wear processes

    Regional Bio-optical Relationships and Algorithms for the Adriatic Sea, the Baltic Sea and the English Channel/North Sea Suitable for Ocean Colour Sensors

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    Regional bio-optical relationships and empirical algorithms were developed on the basis of measurements collected during the CoASTS 1995-2005 bio-optical time-series in the northern coastal Adriatic Sea as well as during ship campaigns performed in coastal regions of the Adriatic Sea, the Baltic Sea and the English Channel/North Sea between 2000 and 2005. The empirical algorithms aim at the retrieval from ocean colour data of the Chlorophyll a and Total Suspended Matter concentrations, of the absorption coefficient of the Coloured Dissolved Organic Matter, of the diffuse attenuation coefficient of downwelling irradiance and of the Secchi depth. Bio-optical relationships relating the marine optically significant components to their absorption or scattering properties are also presented for the investigated coastal areas.JRC.H.3-Global environement monitorin

    Signal Inhibitory Receptor on Leukocytes-1 is highly expressed on lung monocytes, but absent on mononuclear phagocytes in skin and colon

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    Signal Inhibitory Receptor on Leukocytes-1 (SIRL-1) is expressed on human blood monocytes and granulocytes and inhibits myeloid effector functions. On monocytes, but not granulocytes, SIRL-1 expression is low or absent in individuals with the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs612529C. The expression of SIRL-1 in tissue and the influence of rs612529 hereon is currently unknown. Here, we used flow cytometry to determine SIRL-1 expression on immune cells in human blood and three barrier tissues; skin, colon and lung. SIRL-1 was expressed by virtually all neutrophils and eosinophils in these tissues. In contrast, SIRL-1 was not expressed by monocytederived cells in skin and colon, whereas it was highly expressed by lung classical monocytes. Lung monocytes from individuals with a rs612529C allele had decreased SIRL-1 expression, consistent with the genotype association in blood. Within the different monocyte subsets in blood and lung, SIRL-1 expression was highest in classical monocytes and lowest in nonclassical monocytes. SIRL-1 was not expressed by dendritic cells in blood and barrier tissues. Together, these results indicate that SIRL-1 is differentially expressed on phagocyte subsets in blood and barrier tissues, and that its expression on monocytes is genotype- and tissue-specific. Immune regulation of monocytes by SIRL-1 may be of particular importance in the lun

    ATLAS Run 1 searches for direct pair production of third-generation squarks at the Large Hadron Collider

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    Measurement of the charge asymmetry in top-quark pair production in the lepton-plus-jets final state in pp collision data at s=8TeV\sqrt{s}=8\,\mathrm TeV{} with the ATLAS detector

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    De naam (Mr.) P.C. Hasselaer

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    Beschrijving van het huwelijk in 1757 van Mr. P.C. Hasselaer, Heer van de beide Eemnessen, met Geertruida Margaretha Mossel in Batavi

    The AAOT Deployment Systems. An Overview

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    Abstract not availableJRC.H-Institute for environment and sustainability (Ispra

    Phytoplankton Class Determination by Microscopic and HPLC-CHEMTAX Analyses in the Southern Baltic Sea

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    The contribution of phytoplankton groups to total chlorophyll a (chl a) was derived using CHEMTAX from pigment measurements by HPLC and compared with the carbon (C) biomass estimations obtained from microscopy in the southern Baltic Sea in April 2005. Five different matrices of pigment:chl a input ratios, derived from the literature, were tested. Successive runs of CHEMTAX showed peridinin:chl a for dinoflagellates and fucoxanthin:chl a for diatoms to converge at 0.452 ±0.02 (mean ± SD) and 0.489 ± 0.03, respectively, with initial ratios varying by a factor of 2 to 3 across matrices. The 2 techniques were in relatively good agreement for the dominant phytoplankton groups. Peridinin, diadinoxanthin, chlorophylls c1 and c2 (here grouped together as chl c1+c2), fucoxanthin and alloxanthin were the principal accessory pigments; dinoflagellates, diatoms and cryptophytes were the groups forming the majority of the C biomass. Diadinoxanthin and chl c1+c2 were mainly associated with the dominant dinoflagellates rather than with other phytoplankton classes. Excluding cyanophytes, the correlation between carbon biomass of other minor phytoplankton groups and their chl a was either poor or not significant due to uncertainties in either microscopic counts or CHEMTAX classification. There was a good correlation between carbon biomass of phytoplankton and chl a. The estimated C:chl a ratio of total phytoplankton varied between 8 and 40 (in average 20 ± 7), with a higher value for dinoflagellates (30 ± 17) than for diatoms (9 ± 7). Fucoxanthin- containing small flagellates might have led to the overestimation of the diatom contribution by CHEMTAX at a few stations.JRC.H.3-Global environement monitorin
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