482 research outputs found
« RĂ©quisition » notariale et usage de lâacte notariĂ© Ă lâuniversitĂ© dâOrlĂ©ans
Dans un contexte heuristique caractĂ©risĂ© par lâextrĂȘme raretĂ© des documents originaux, il est prĂ©sentĂ© ici un petit dossier (huit/neuf items) de textes relatifs au recours par les autoritĂ©s du studium universitaire orlĂ©anais Ă la prĂ©sence et/ou Ă lâinstrumentation de notaires (notaires de lâuniversitĂ©, apostoliques ou du ChĂątelet). Un bref commentaire met en Ă©vidence les limites et les circonstances prĂ©fĂ©rentielles de ce « recours », prioritairement rĂ©servĂ© aux situations conflictuelles Ă lâintĂ©rieur de lâuniversitĂ© ou dans les relations de cette derniĂšre avec ses partenaires sociaux.In the context of the small number of surviving original documents related to the University of Orleans, this article presents a small dossier that shows the university studium appealing to notaries of various types, be they apostolic, university, or royal. Some eight or nine items document the institution requiring notariesâ presence and/or enjoining them to draw up formal documents. A brief discussion will point to the limits and the preferences expressed by these appeals, which generally took place in situations of conflict among university members or with their social partners
French developments for improving In Service Inspection of SFRs
International audienceIn Service Inspection (ISI) is a major issue to be taken into account for future Sodium Fast Reactors safety, thus, a large R&D work is performed since 2010 in France for the future SFRs. ISI requirements have been taken into account since the early pre-conceptual design phase (specific rules for design have been merged into RCC-MRx design rules until 2012), then consolidated through the basic design phase with more detailed specifications leading to increase the ISI tools ability for immersed sodium structures of SFRs, at about 200°C (shut down conditions). Inspection within the main vessel are planned with transducers immersed in sodium and also with transducers located out of sodium medium. Finally, the qualification of ISI ultrasonic transducers (for Non Destructive Examination, Telemetry and Imaging) is being performed with experimental water and sodium testing, to be compared to simulation with CIVA software platform results. A pluri-annual R&D program mainly deals with the reactor block structures, the primary components and circuit, and the Power Conversion System. Specific developments have been performed for NDE of thick austenitic steel welds, NDE using guided Lamb waves, telemetry from the outside of reactor vessel, imaging of immersed structures and components within the large primary vessel (in a pool type reactor concept) and associated in sodium robotics (with in-sodium tightness). Some results of testing and simulation are given for some ASTRID project applications
ANXIETY AND HOSPITALIZATION IN ADOLESCENCE: RELATIONS TO ATTACHMENT STYLE AND PARENTAL SUPPORT
This exploratory study examined attachment style and state/trait anxiety in adolescents - 30 recently hospitalized psychiatric
patients, and 49 school controls. All were aged 13-18, with the majority (67%) female. The attachment style interview (ASI, Bifulco
et al. 2002) was administered, together with the Recent Life Events questionnaire (Brugha & Cragg 1990) and the STAI anxiety
questionnaire (Spielberger et al. 1983). Results showed the hospitalised group to have significantly more negative interactions with
parents and poorer support than the comparison group. They had significantly more insecure attachment style (96% s 37%). Among
the hospitalized adolescents, both the Anxious and the Avoidant attachment style group had higher anxiety scores on the STAI-trait
scores than on the STAI-state scores assessed during the first days of hospitalisation. This suggests adolescents, even those with
Avoidant attachment feel less anxious after admission. Implications for assessing attachment style in adolescent patients to aid with
care planning is discussed
Attachmentâbased parentâadolescent interaction linked to visual attention and autonomic arousal to distress and comfort stimuli
In infancy and in the early years of life, emotion regulation and attachment relationships with parents are tightly intertwined. However, whether this link persists into adolescence has not yet been established and requires exploration. This pilot study utilizes an experimental design to assess the patterns of parentâadolescent interactions that are hypothesised to be related to two specific aspects of adolescentsâ emotion regulation, namely: visual attention and autonomic arousal to distress and comfort stimuli. Two innovative and ecologically valid methodologies were utilized to assess (a) patterns of attachment-based parentâadolescent interactions among 39 adolescentâparent dyads from the general population, using the Goal-corrected Partnership in Adolescence Coding System (Lyons-Ruth et al. Goal corrected partnership in adolescence coding system (GPACS), 2005) applied to a conflict discussion task; (b) the two aspects of adolescent emotion regulation were assessed with the Visual/Autonomic Regulation of Emotions Assessment (VAREA) (Vulliez-Coady et al. Visual/Autonomic Regulation of Emotions Assessment, VAREA) paradigm, an attachment-related, emotionally arousing experimental procedure, using a distress-then-comfort paradigm, in conjunction to an eye-tracker synchronized with a physiological device that measured gaze and skin conductance response, (SCR), or emotional reactivity. In line with research in infancy, as predicted, markers of secure parentâadolescent interaction were linked to higher amplitude of SCR for distress and comfort pictures, and with longer attention to comfort pictures. On the other hand, parental role-confusion was associated with less time spent on comfort pictures by the adolescent. Overall, this pilot study suggests that interventions supporting collaborative communication between adolescents and their parents, as well as working to reduce parental role-confusion, may improve adaptive adolescent emotion regulation as assessed via physiological measures
Design and Tests of 500kW RF Windows for the ITER LHCD System
In the frame of a R\&D effort conducted by CEA toward the design and the
qualification of a 5 GHz LHCD system for the ITER tokamak, two 5 GHz 500 kW/5 s
windows have been designed, manufactured and tested at high power in
collaboration with the National Fusion Research Institute (NFRI). The window
design rely on a symmetrical pill-box concept with a cylindrical beryllium
oxide ceramic brazed on an actively water cooled copper skirt. The ceramic RF
properties have been measured on a test sample to get realistic values for
guiding the design. Low power measurements of the manufactured windows show
return losses below-32 dB and insertion losses between-0.01 dB and-0.05 dB,
with an optimum frequency shifted toward lower frequencies. High power tests
conducted at NFRI show unexpected total power loss for both windows. The
ceramic temperature during RF pulses has been found to reach unexpected high
temperature, preventing these windows to be used under CW conditions. A
post-mortem RF analysis of samples taken from one window shows that the
dielectric properties of the ceramic were not the ones measured on the
manufacturer sample, which partly explain the differences with the reference
modelling
Design and RF measurements of a 5 GHz 500 kW window for the ITER LHCD system
International audienceCEA/IRFM is conducting R&D efforts in order to validate the critical RF components of the 5 GHz ITER LHCD system, which is expected to transmit 20 MW of RF power to the plasma. Two 5 GHz 500 kW BeO pill-box type window prototypes have been manufactured in 2012 by the PMB Company, in close collaboration with CEA/IRFM. Both windows have been validated at low power, showing good agreement between measured and modeling, with a return loss better than 32 dB and an insertion loss below 0.05 dB. This paper reports on the window RF design and the low power measurements. The high power tests up to 500kW have been carried out in March 2013 in collaboration with NFRI. Results of these tests are also reported. In the current ITER LHCD design, 20 MW Continuous Wave (CW) of Radio-Frequency power at 5 GHz are expected to be generated and transmitted to the plasma. In order to separate the vacuum vessel pressure from the cryostat waveguide pressure, forty eight 5 GHz 500kW CW windows are to be assembled on the waveguides at the equatorial port flange. For nuclear safety reasons, forty eight additional windows could be located in the cryostat section, to separate and monitor the cryostat waveguide pressure from the exterior transmission line pressure. These windows are identified as being one of the main critical components for the ITER LHCD system since first ITER LHCD studies [1] [2] [3] or more recently [4] [5] , and clearly require an important R&D effort. In this context and even if the LHCD system is not part of the construction baseline, the CEA/IRFM is conducting a R&D effort in order to validate a design and the performances of these RF windows. In order to begin the assessment of this need, two 5 GHz 500 kW/5 s pill-box type windows prototypes have been manufactured in 2012 by the PMB Company in close collaboration with the CEA/IRFM [6]. The section 2 of this paper reports the RF and mechanical design of a 5 GHz window. Some features of the mechanical design and the experimental RF measurements at low power are reported in section 3. High power results, made in collaboration with NFRI, are detailed in section 4. The development of CW windows is discussed in the conclusion. 2-RF AND MECHANICAL DESIGN The proposed 5 GHz RF window is based on a pill-box design [2] , i.e. a ceramic brazed in portion of a circular waveguide, connected on either side to a rectangular waveguide section. Typical design rules of thumb of such device are circular section diameter about the same size of the diagonal of the rectangular waveguide (cf. FIGURE 1). Without taking into account the ceramic, the circular section length is approximately half a guided wavelength of the circular TE 11 mode, in order for the device to act as a half-wave transformer. Once optimized, taking into account the ceramic, matching is correct only for a narrow band of frequency and is very sensitive to the device dimensions and the ceramic relative permittivity. The heat losses in the ceramic, which have to be extracted by an active water cooling, depends on the inside electric field topology and of ceramic dielectric loss (loss tangent). Undesirable modes due to parasitic resonances can be excited in the ceramic volume, raising the electric field an
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