441 research outputs found

    A Systematic Approach to Model Objectives in Predevelopment Projects

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    This contribution presents a systematic for the elicitation of objectives and the utilization of objectives to identify reference products. The systematic is based on existing meta models. The model of objectives as proposed in this research eases decision-making and outlines the next validation activities. A key success factor is the project transferability between teams, which is often necessary in predevelopment. This is ensured through comprehensibility of objectives which benefits from the linkage between the model of objectives and the knowledge base. The proposed systematic is applied to a predevelopment project which is used as case study. In the case study it has been shown that objectives can be used to identify reference products. The approach is validated in a live-lab setting with seven engineering teams with six graduate students, two engineers of an industrial partner and a research associate. Several workshops were used to train all members of the teams in the systematic. The effects of the systematic are assessed in dedicated interviews, a survey as well as with observation of the engineering teams during milestones and engineering activities between milestones

    Development and evaluation of a suite of isotope reference gases for methane in air

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    Measurements from multiple laboratories have to be related to unifying and traceable reference material in order to be comparable. However, such fundamental reference materials are not available for isotope ratios in atmospheric methane, which led to misinterpretations of combined data sets in the past. We developed a method to produce a suite of synthetic CH4-in-air standard gases that can be used to unify methane isotope ratio measurements of laboratories in the atmospheric monitoring community. Therefore, we calibrated a suite of pure methane gases of different methanogenic origin against international referencing materials that define the VSMOW (Vienna Standard Mean Ocean Water) and VPDB (Vienna Pee Dee Belemnite) isotope scales. The isotope ratios of our pure methane gases range between -320 and +40% for delta H-2-CH4 and between -70 and -40% for delta C-13-CH4, enveloping the isotope ratios of tropospheric methane (about -85 and -47% for delta H-2-CH4 and delta C-13-CH4 respectively). Estimated uncertainties, including the full traceability chain, are</p

    USGS44, a new high purity calcium carbonate reference material for δ13 C measurements

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    RATIONALE: The stable carbon isotopic (δ13 C) reference material (RM) LSVEC Li2 CO3 has been found to be unsuitable for δ13 C standardization work because its δ13 C value increases with exposure to atmospheric CO2 . A new CaCO3 RM, USGS44, has been prepared to alleviate this situation. METHODS: USGS44 was prepared from 8 kg of Merck high purity CaCO3 . Two sets of δ13 C values of USGS44 were determined. The first set of values was determined by on-line combustion, continuous-flow (CF) isotope-ratio mass spectrometry (IRMS) of NBS 19 CaCO3 (δ13 CVPDB = +1.95 milliurey (mUr) exactly, where mUr = 0.001 = 1 ‰), and LSVEC Li2 CO3 (δ13 CVPDB = -46.6 mUr exactly), and normalized to the two-anchor δ13 CVPDB-LSVEC isotope-delta scale. The second set of values was obtained by dual-inlet (DI) IRMS of CO2 evolved by reaction of H3 PO4 with carbonates, corrected for cross contamination, and normalized to the single anchor δ13 CVPDB scale. RESULTS: USGS44 is stable and isotopically homogeneous to within 0.02 mUr in 100-μg amounts. It has a δ13 CVPDB-LSVEC value of -42.21 ± 0.05 mUr. Single-anchor δ13 CVPDB values of -42.08 ± 0.01 and -41.99 ± 0.02 mUr were determined by DI-IRMS with corrections for cross contamination. CONCLUSIONS: The new high-purity, well homogenized calcium carbonate isotopic reference material USGS44 is stable and has a δ13 CVPDB-LSVEC value of -42.21 ± 0.05 mUr for both EA-IRMS and DI-IRMS measurements. As a carbonate relatively depleted in 13 C, it is intended for daily use as a secondary isotopic reference material to normalize stable carbon isotope-delta measurements to the δ13 CVPDB-LSVEC scale. It is useful in quantifying drift with time, determining mass-dependent isotopic fractionation (linearity correction), and adjusting isotope-ratio-scale contraction. Due to its fine grain size (smaller than 63 μm), it is not suitable as a δ18 O reference material. A δ13 CVPDB-LSVEC value of -29.99 ± 0.05 mUr was determined for NBS 22 oil

    Social Class

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    Discussion of class structure in fifth-century Athens, historical constitution of theater audiences, and the changes in the comic representation of class antagonism from Aristophanes to Menander

    Stress System Dynamics during “Life As It Is Lived”: An Integrative Single-Case Study on a Healthy Woman

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    Little is known about the dynamic characteristics of stress system activity during “life as it is lived”. Using as representative a study design as possible, this investigation sought to gain insights into this area. A healthy 25-year-old woman collected her entire urine over a period of 63 days in 12-h intervals (126 measurements) to determine cortisol and neopterin (immune activation marker) levels. In addition, she filled out questionnaires on emotional state and daily routine in 12-h intervals, and was interviewed weekly to identify emotionally negative and positive everyday incidents. Adjusted cross-correlational analyses revealed that stressful incidents were associated with cyclic response patterns in both urinary cortisol and urinary neopterin concentrations. Urinary cortisol levels first decreased 12–24 h after stressful incidents occurred (lag 1: −.178; p = 0.048) and then increased a total of 72–84 h later (lag 6: +.224; p = 0.013). Urinary neopterin levels first increased 0–12 h before the occurrence of stressful incidents (−lag 1: +.185; p = 0.040) and then decreased a total of 48–60 h following such stressors (lag 4: −.181; p = 0.044). Decreases in urinary neopterin levels were also found 24–36 and 48–60 h after increases in pensiveness (lag 2: −.215; p = 0.017) and depressiveness (lag 4: −.221; p = 0.014), respectively. Findings on emotionally positive incidents sharply contrasted with those dealing with negative experiences. Positive incidents were followed first by urinary cortisol concentration increases within 12 h (lag 0: +.290; p = 0.001) and then by decreases after a total of 60–72 h (lag 5: −.186; p = 0.039). Urinary neopterin levels first decreased 12–24 h before positive incidents occurred (−lag 2: −.233; p = 0.010) and then increased a total of 12–24 h following these incidents (lag 1: +.222; p = 0.014). As with previous investigations on patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), this study showed that stress system response can be considerably longer and more complex and differentiated than findings from conventional group studies have suggested. Further integrative single-case studies will need to be conducted in order to draw firm conclusions about stress system dynamics under real-life conditions

    The language(s) of comedy

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    Bericht \ufcber eine Sammelreise in \uc4thiopien 1959/60

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    Volume: 111Start Page: 1End Page: 1
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