137 research outputs found
Environmental impact of aquaculture on the marine benthos: exclusion - inclusion experiments
The present paper studies the impact of aquacultural organic wastes and wild fish on the macroinfauna assemblage and on the biogeochemical properties of marine sediments. Exclusion experiments were carried out on coarse and fine sands. Wild fish might reduce the organic material pool by eating feed, feces and infauna, as well as by facilitating the transport of organic materials to other areas. Granulometry stands out as the most important factor in the response of different sediments. We conclude that wild fish can reduce the impact of organic waste from aquaculture.Se ha examinado el impacto de una descarga de materiales orgánicos procedentes de una instalación de acuicultura y se estudia la influencia de la ictiofauna silvestre sobre el ensamblaje de la macroinfauna y las propiedades biogeoquímicas del sedimento. Se realizaron experimentos de exclusión sobre fondos de arenas gruesas y de arenas finas. La ictiofauna silvestre puede suavizar la acumulación de materia orgánica debajo de las jaulas flotantes consumiendo las heces, el pienso y la infauna, o bien facilitando la resuspensión y transporte de materia orgánica a otras zonas. La granulometría se ha destacado como la característica más importante que explica la diferenciación en la respuesta de los sedimentos. Se puede concluir que la ictiofauna silvestre suaviza los impactos derivados del excedente de materia orgánica de las granjas marinas.Instituto Español de Oceanografí
Active faulting within a megacity: the geometry and slip rate of the Pardisan thrust in central Tehran, Iran
Tehran, the capital city of Iran with a population of over 12 million, is one of the largest urban centres within the seismically active Alpine–Himalayan orogenic belt. Although several historic earthquakes have affected Tehran, their relation to individual faults is ambiguous for most. This ambiguity is partly due to a lack of knowledge about the locations, geometries and seismic potential of structures that have been obscured by dramatic urban growth over the past three decades, and which have covered most of the young geomorphic markers and natural exposures. Here we use aerial photographs from 1956, combined with an ~1 m DEM derived from stereo Pleiades satellite imagery to investigate the geomorphology of a growing anticline above a thrust fault—the Pardisan thrust—within central Tehran. The topography across the ridge is consistent with a steep ramp extending from close to the surface to a depth of ~2 km, where it presumably connects with a shallow-dipping detachment. No primary fault is visible at the surface, and it is possible that the faulting dissipates in the near surface as distributed shearing. We use optically stimulated luminescence to date remnants of uplifted and warped alluvial deposits that are offset vertically across the Pardisan fault, providing minimum uplift and slip-rates of at least 1 mm yr. Our study shows that the faults within the Tehran urban region have relatively rapid rates of slip, are important in the regional tectonics, and have a great impact on earthquake hazard assessment of the city and surrounding region.Geological Survey of Iran, Christ Church College Oxford, Natural Environment Research Council, Economic and Social Research Counci
Erasmus Language students in a British University – a case study
Students’ assessment of their academic experience is actively sought by Higher Education institutions, as evidenced in the National Student Survey introduced in 2005. Erasmus students, despite their growing numbers, tend to be excluded from these satisfaction surveys, even though they, too, are primary customers of a University. This study aims to present results from bespoke questionnaires and semi-structured interviews with a sample of Erasmus students studying languages in a British University. These methods allow us insight into the experience of these students and their assessment as a primary customer, with a focus on language learning and teaching, university facilities and student support. It investigates to what extent these factors influence their levels of satisfaction and what costs of adaptation if any, they encounter. Although excellent levels of satisfaction were found, some costs affect their experience. They relate to difficulties in adapting to a learning methodology based on a low number of hours and independent learning and to a guidance and support system seen as too stifling. The results portray this cohort’s British University as a well-equipped and well-meaning but ultimately overbearing institution, which may indicate that minimising costs can eliminate some sources of dissatisfaction
Ab initio Quantum and ab initio Molecular Dynamics of the Dissociative Adsorption of Hydrogen on Pd(100)
The dissociative adsorption of hydrogen on Pd(100) has been studied by ab
initio quantum dynamics and ab initio molecular dynamics calculations. Treating
all hydrogen degrees of freedom as dynamical coordinates implies a high
dimensionality and requires statistical averages over thousands of
trajectories. An efficient and accurate treatment of such extensive statistics
is achieved in two steps: In a first step we evaluate the ab initio potential
energy surface (PES) and determine an analytical representation. Then, in an
independent second step dynamical calculations are performed on the analytical
representation of the PES. Thus the dissociation dynamics is investigated
without any crucial assumption except for the Born-Oppenheimer approximation
which is anyhow employed when density-functional theory calculations are
performed. The ab initio molecular dynamics is compared to detailed quantum
dynamical calculations on exactly the same ab initio PES. The occurence of
quantum oscillations in the sticking probability as a function of kinetic
energy is addressed. They turn out to be very sensitive to the symmetry of the
initial conditions. At low kinetic energies sticking is dominated by the
steering effect which is illustrated using classical trajectories. The steering
effects depends on the kinetic energy, but not on the mass of the molecules.
Zero-point effects lead to strong differences between quantum and classical
calculations of the sticking probability. The dependence of the sticking
probability on the angle of incidence is analysed; it is found to be in good
agreement with experimental data. The results show that the determination of
the potential energy surface combined with high-dimensional dynamical
calculations, in which all relevant degrees of freedon are taken into account,
leads to a detailed understanding of the dissociation dynamics of hydrogen at a
transition metal surface.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, subm. to Phys. Rev.
Demonstration of a novel technique to measure two-photon exchange effects in elastic scattering
The discrepancy between proton electromagnetic form factors extracted using
unpolarized and polarized scattering data is believed to be a consequence of
two-photon exchange (TPE) effects. However, the calculations of TPE corrections
have significant model dependence, and there is limited direct experimental
evidence for such corrections. We present the results of a new experimental
technique for making direct comparisons, which has the potential to
make precise measurements over a broad range in and scattering angles. We
use the Jefferson Lab electron beam and the Hall B photon tagger to generate a
clean but untagged photon beam. The photon beam impinges on a converter foil to
generate a mixed beam of electrons, positrons, and photons. A chicane is used
to separate and recombine the electron and positron beams while the photon beam
is stopped by a photon blocker. This provides a combined electron and positron
beam, with energies from 0.5 to 3.2 GeV, which impinges on a liquid hydrogen
target. The large acceptance CLAS detector is used to identify and reconstruct
elastic scattering events, determining both the initial lepton energy and the
sign of the scattered lepton. The data were collected in two days with a
primary electron beam energy of only 3.3 GeV, limiting the data from this run
to smaller values of and scattering angle. Nonetheless, this measurement
yields a data sample for with statistics comparable to those of the
best previous measurements. We have shown that we can cleanly identify elastic
scattering events and correct for the difference in acceptance for electron and
positron scattering. The final ratio of positron to electron scattering:
for GeV and
The ANTARES Optical Beacon System
ANTARES is a neutrino telescope being deployed in the Mediterranean Sea. It
consists of a three dimensional array of photomultiplier tubes that can detect
the Cherenkov light induced by charged particles produced in the interactions
of neutrinos with the surrounding medium. High angular resolution can be
achieved, in particular when a muon is produced, provided that the Cherenkov
photons are detected with sufficient timing precision. Considerations of the
intrinsic time uncertainties stemming from the transit time spread in the
photomultiplier tubes and the mechanism of transmission of light in sea water
lead to the conclusion that a relative time accuracy of the order of 0.5 ns is
desirable. Accordingly, different time calibration systems have been developed
for the ANTARES telescope. In this article, a system based on Optical Beacons,
a set of external and well-controlled pulsed light sources located throughout
the detector, is described. This calibration system takes into account the
optical properties of sea water, which is used as the detection volume of the
ANTARES telescope. The design, tests, construction and first results of the two
types of beacons, LED and laser-based, are presented.Comment: 21 pages, 18 figures, submitted to Nucl. Instr. and Meth. Phys. Res.
Implications of unitarity and analyticity for the D\pi form factors
We consider the vector and scalar form factors of the charm-changing current
responsible for the semileptonic decay D\rightarrow \pi l \nu. Using as input
dispersion relations and unitarity for the moments of suitable heavy-light
correlators evaluated with Operator Product Expansions, including O(\alpha_s^2)
terms in perturbative QCD, we constrain the shape parameters of the form
factors and find exclusion regions for zeros on the real axis and in the
complex plane. For the scalar form factor, a low energy theorem and phase
information on the unitarity cut are also implemented to further constrain the
shape parameters. We finally propose new analytic expressions for the
form factors, derive constraints on the relevant coefficients from unitarity
and analyticity, and briefly discuss the usefulness of the new parametrizations
for describing semileptonic data.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, uses EPJ style files: expanded version of v1
with extended discussion, additional analysis, explanation, figure and
references; corresponds to EPJA versio
History of Stepped Channels and Spillways: a Rediscovery of the 'Wheel'
Recently, spillways with a stepped profile have regained interest and favor among design engineers to pass flood waters over the dams. The stepped geometry enhances the energy dissipation above the spillway and reduces the size of a downstream stilling basin. In this paper, the author shows that the technique of stepped channels has been developed since Antiquity. Spillways and irrigation channels with stepped profiles were developed by several civilisations around the Mediterranean sea and in America. The main characteristics of the stepped spillways along the ages suggest a regular evolution rather than a revolution. Present stepped spillways are designed to pass similar discharges as two hundred years ago
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