1,838 research outputs found

    Coverage-dependent adsorption sites for K/Cu(001) and Cs/Cu(001) determined by surface X-ray diffraction

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    Surface X-ray diffraction has been used to analyze in situ the room-temperature adsorption behaviour and the structure of K and Cs on Cu(100) at submonolayer coverages. Adsorption of K takes place in fourfold hollow sites up to coverages of about 0.25 monolayers (ML), where 1 ML corresponds to 1.53 × 1015 atoms/cm2. At higher coverages the formation of a quasi-hexagonal incommensurate adlayer is observed. In contrast, for Cs adsorption we observe from the very beginning the formation of the quasi-hexagonal structure up to the completion of the adlayer at about 0.30 ML. For K adsorption in the hollow sites we determine an adsorption height, d = 2.25(15) Å, corresponding to an effective K radius of reff = 1.6(1) Å close to the ionic radius of 1.33 Å. We do not observe a change in the effective radius as a function of coverage. For the quasi-hexagonal Cs structure we find an (average) adsorption height d = 2.94 Å corresponding to an effective radius of reff = 2.18 and 1.93 Å, for the limiting ca hollow- and bridge-site adsorption, respectively. The analysis of the superlattice reflections corresponding to the quasi-hexagonal incommensurate structures indicated that the K adlayer is strongly modulated. The first Fourier component of the substrate-induced modulation was determined to u01 = 1.29(3) Å. In contrast, for Cs/Cu(001) static modulation is much less important (u01 0.2 Å). Variation of the Cs adlayer density by changing the substrate temperature allows continuous expansion and contraction of the adsorbate unit cell. No commensurate-incommensurate transition has been observed

    Effects of Grassland Management on Herbage Lipid Composition and Consequences for Fatty Acids in Milk

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    Herbage provides bulk feed and is the basis for ruminant nutrition. Herbage lipids, especially C18:3, are a major source of beneficial fatty acids (FA) in milk. These desired FA are unsaturated FA such as CLA (conjugated linoleic acid), especially the isomer rumenic acid, and also vaccenic acid, both trans omega-7 FA (Ellen & Elgersma, 2004). As information on lipids in forages is scarce, effects were studied of N application level and regrowth period on the lipid concentration and FA composition of perennial ryegrass (Lolium perenne L.), the most important forage in temperate climate zones. A linear relation had previously been found between C18:3 intake of cows stall-fed with fresh grass and the amount of omega-7 FA in milk (Elgersma et al., 2003)

    Extensive dissection of the pulmonary artery treated with combined heart–lung transplantation

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    The State-of-the-Art of Collaborative Technologies for Initial Vocational Education: A Systematic Literature Review

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    Future workplaces require collaboration skills in which members of different work communities use technologies to solve complex problems. Vocational education and training (VET) programs need to meet the challenge to prepare students to be part of a competent workforce. Particularly initial vocational education is under pressure to develop learners’ collaboration skills and abilities. To date, however, no attempt has been made to perform a comprehensive review of the use of computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) technologies across different vocational education settings to account for contextual factors of VET. In this systematic review, 26 published studies were analyzed with respect to their demographics, research methodology, use of technology, and measured outcomes. This review illuminates that research on CSCL still leaves the vocational learning context as an under-represented field of study. At the same time, technologies offer a range of new types of learning possibilities for vocational education. As the direct result of that development, vocational education is increasingly taking place in new technology-enhanced learning settings. Education can benefit from the opportunities of CSCL technologies, but on the other hand, such technologies create new challenges for facilitating vocational learning. Therefore, this review also identifies three topic areas specific to vocational learning (collaborative writing-to-learn, simulations and game-like solutions, and tangible objects) and enumerates desirable lines for future research

    Lateralization of facial emotion processing and facial paresis in Vestibular Schwannoma patients

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    This study investigates whether there exist differences in lateralization of facial emotion processing in patients suffering from Vestibular Schwannoma (VS) based on the presence of a facial paresis and their degree of facial functioning as measured by the House Brackmann Grading scale (HBG).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Quality of life, social function, emotion, and facial paresis in Dutch vestibular schwannoma patients

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    The present study aimed to replicate the finding that vestibular schwannoma (VS) patients with facial paresis experience lower health related quality of life (QoL) than those without facial paresis in a Dutch sample, and to extend these findings by measuring VS patients' overall satisfaction with life, social function, and emotion.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio

    Niche complementarity and facilitation drive positive diversity effects on biomass production in experimental benthic diatom biofilms

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    Up to now, relatively few diversity-production experiments have been performed using microorganisms. Benthic diatom communities from estuarine intertidal mudflats are especially interesting for this purpose as they are relatively species poor and are thus more easy to simulate in laboratory conditions. We studied the effect of diversity on biomass production during microcosm experiments with diatoms assembled in combinations of up to eight species. Our results demonstrate a highly positive effect of biodiversity on production, with transgressive overyielding occurring in more than half of the combinations. These strong positive diversity effects could largely be attributed to positive complementarity effects (covering both niche complementarity and facilitation), although negative selection effects effects at higher diversities. We found a significant positive relation between functional diversity and the net biodiversity effects, indicating niche complementarity. In addition, we provide one of the first mechanistic evidences for facilitation by which biodiversity can enhance ecosystem functioning. This was demonstrated by the improved growth of Cylindrotheca closterium after addition of spent medium obtained from other diatom species. The stimulated growth of C. closterium was explained by a shift to mixotrophic growth with a down-regulation of the photosynthetic apparatus

    Geoheritage, a National Inventory in France

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    International audienceGood protection measures for geological heritage should begin with an inventory of geosites. In France, for example, a law enacted in 2002 grants formal recognition to the notion of geological heritage. An inventory and evaluation were then established on a region-by-region basis. By April 2007, the French Ministry of Environment launched the inventory programme for the nation’s geological heritage and the data are now being collected at a regional scale. The data are being gathered and homogenised, and then transferred to the French National Museum of Natural History for examination.The ratified site data are stored and available for public use on a website (http://inpn.mnhn.fr) in a similar structure to natural data that are also processed and stored (flora, fauna, ecosystems, habitats). Today, protecting global heritage is understood as a dynamic process. Instead of placing objects beneath a display case, the conservation approach is now a more modern, active effort, which facilitates access for knowledge and researc

    Evolution of carbonated lacustrine environment with stromatolites : a paleoecological approach (quarry of Montaigu-le-Blin, Limagne graben, Allier, France)

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    La carriĂšre de Montaigu-le-Blin, situĂ©e en Limagne bourbonnaise permet d’analyser en dĂ©tail la sĂ©dimentation lacustre aquitanienne et de reconstituer les environnements de dĂ©pĂŽt. Les sĂ©diments marneux et calcaires renferment une faune d’eau douce et une flore particuliĂšrement dĂ©veloppĂ©es. Les dĂ©pĂŽts sĂ©dimentaires traduisent des variations pĂ©riodiques du niveau de la tranche d’eau qui provoquent aussi des variations pĂ©riodiques des conditions chimiques au sein du lac. Ils sont reprĂ©sentatifs de milieux alternativement anoxiques et oxygĂ©nĂ©s. Ces variations sont le rĂ©sultat d’alternances de pĂ©riodes d’humiditĂ© variable, et seraient donc d’origine climatique. Ces alternances ont provoquĂ© des variations pĂ©riodiques des assemblages floro-fauniques : des thanatocƓnoses surviennent durant les pĂ©riodes anoxiques, alors que le dĂ©veloppement majeur des algues encroĂ»tantes responsables de la formation de concrĂ©tions algaires, apparaĂźt lors des pĂ©riodes oxygĂ©nĂ©es. Ces pĂ©riodes sont Ă©galement marquĂ©es par une augmentation de l’hydrodynamisme, associĂ©e Ă  des apports dĂ©tritiques du bassin versant. Les stromatolithes prĂ©sents dans le milieu montrent des morphologies trĂšs variĂ©es, tributaires des associations de flore et de faune (algues, bactĂ©ries, fourreaux de larves de TrichoptĂšres) qui les composent, ainsi que de leur milieu de croissance. Les associations de stromatolithes forment des complexes plurimĂ©triques que l’on propose de situer par rapport Ă  un palĂ©orivage
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