4,116 research outputs found
SOLID WASTE DISPOSAL IN RURAL AREAS: ECONOMIC IMPLICATIONS
Community/Rural/Urban Development,
Urak Lawoi' : bbasic structures and a dictionary
Mode of access: Internet
Stochastic Regular Grazing Bifurcations
A grazing bifurcation corresponds to the collision of a periodic orbit with a
switching manifold in a piecewise-smooth ODE system and often generates
complicated dynamics. The lowest order terms of the induced Poincare map
expanded about a regular grazing bifurcation constitute a Nordmark map. In this
paper we study a normal form of the Nordmark map in two dimensions with
additive Gaussian noise of amplitude, epsilson [e]. We show that this
particular noise formulation arises in a general setting and consider a
harmonically forced linear oscillator subject to compliant impacts to
illustrate the accuracy of the map. Numerically computed invariant densities of
the stochastic Nordmark map can take highly irregular forms, or, if there
exists an attracting period-n solution when e = 0, be well approximated by the
sum of n Gaussian densities centred about each point of the deterministic
solution, and scaled by 1/n, for sufficiently small e > 0. We explain the
irregular forms and calculate the covariance matrices associated with the
Gaussian approximations in terms of the parameters of the map. Close to the
grazing bifurcation the size of the invariant density may be proportional to
the square-root of e, as a consequence of a square-root singularity in the map.
Sequences of transitions between different dynamical regimes that occur as the
primary bifurcation parameter is varied have not been described previously.Comment: Submitted to: SIAM J. Appl. Dyn. Sy
A photoelectron diffraction investigation of vanadyl phthalocyanine on Au(1 1 1)
Scanned-energy mode photoelectron diffraction using the O 1s and V 2p emission perpendicular to the surface has been used to investigate the orientation and internal conformation of vanadyl phthalocyanine (VOPc) adsorbed on Au(1 1 1). The results confirm earlier indications from scanning tunnelling microscopy that the Vdouble bond; length as m-dashO vanadyl bond points out of, and not into, the surface. The Vdouble bond; length as m-dashO bondlength is 1.60 ± 0.04 Ă
, not significantly different from its value in bulk crystalline VOPc. However, the V atom in the adsorbed molecule is almost coplanar with the surrounding N atoms and is thus pulled down into the approximately planar region defined by the N and C atoms by 0.52 (+0.14/â0.10) Ă
, relative to its location in crystalline VOPc. This change must be attributed to the bonding interaction between the molecule and the underlying metal surface
Creating the Future of Health
Creating the Future of Health is the fascinating story of the first fifty years of the Cumming School of Medicine at the University of Calgary. Founded on the recommendation of the Royal Commission on Health Services in 1964 the Cumming School has, from the very beginning, focused on innovation and excellence in health education. With a pioneering focus on novel, responsive and systems-based approaches, it was one of the first faculties to pilot multi-year training programs in family medicine and remains one of only two three-year medical schools in North America. Drawing on interviews with key players and extensive research into documents and primary material, Creating the Future of Health traces the history of the school through the leadership of its Deans. This is a story of perseverance through fiscal turbulence, sweeping changes to health care and health care education, and changing ideas of what health services are and what they should do. It is a story of triumph, of innovation, and of the tenacious spirit that thrives to this day at the Cumming School of Medicine
Examining the patient and caregiver experience with diazepam nasal spray for seizure clusters: Results from an exit survey of a phase 3, open-label, repeat-dose safety study
BACKGROUND: Ideal rescue treatments for acute treatment of seizure clusters should be easy to administer, so it is important to assess user perceptions of these treatments. Diazepam nasal spray is designed to have a rapid, noninvasive, and socially acceptable route of administration. Patient and caregiver (including care partner) responses to surveys from a phase 3 safety study of diazepam nasal spray are reported.
METHODS: The study enrolled patients aged 6-65âŻyears with seizure clusters. Surveys distributed to patients and caregivers at study end, completion, or discontinuation collected data on comfort using diazepam nasal spray outside the home, timing of administration and return to their usual selves, and comfort of use compared with rectal diazepam. Safety was assessed.
RESULTS: Of 175 patients enrolled at the October 31, 2019, interim cutoff, 158 received diazepam nasal spray. Sixty-seven (42.4%) patients and 84 (53.2%) caregivers responded to the surveys (including 35 matched pairs). Most patients (78.8%, 52/66) responded that they were very comfortable doing activities outside the home with diazepam nasal spray available; 59.4% of patients returned to their usual selves within an hour of administration. Twenty-seven (40.3%) of these patients reported self-administration, 48% doing so at the first sign of a seizure. Administration of diazepam nasal spray was rated extremely or very easy by 93.8% of caregivers. Safety profile was consistent with diazepam rectal gel; no patient discontinued owing to treatment-emergent adverse events. Nasal discomfort was typically mild and transient. Among patients who had used diazepam rectal gel, most were not at all comfortable using it outside the home (86.7%) or at home (64.5%) compared with diazepam nasal spray, whereas caregivers reported that diazepam rectal gel was not at all easy to use compared with diazepam nasal spray.
CONCLUSIONS: This survey from the phase 3 safety study of diazepam nasal spray shows that patients and caregivers were satisfied with, and more comfortable using, diazepam nasal spray than rectal diazepam in public. NCT02721069
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Past and Future Land Use Impacts of Canadian Oil Sands and Greenhouse Gas Emissions
The Canadian oil sands underlie 142,000 km2 of the boreal forest in northeastern Alberta. Oil sands production greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions increased from 15 million tonnes (Mt) to 55 Mt between 1990 and 2011. Their production represents the fastest-growing source of GHG emissions in Canada. A large body of studies show that oil sands industries have large environmental impacts, including effects on climate, land, water, and air quality but GHG emissions from oil sands land use disturbance and future land use impacts have yet to be examined in detail and the associated literature is scarce and incomplete. Our paper examines the historical and potential land use change and GHG emissions associated with oil sands development in Canada. Disturbance occurred between 1985 and 2009 from oil sands development were identified using remote sensing technique and mapped onto spatially explicit soil, biomass and peatlands carbon maps. We found that land use and GHG disturbance of oil sands production, especially in-situ technology that will be the dominant technology of choice for future oil sands development, are greater than previously reported. We estimate additional 500 km2 and 2,400 km2 of boreal forest including carbon-rich peatlands would be disturbed from surface mining and in-situ production, respectively, between 2012 and 2030; releasing additional 107â182 million tonnes of GHG from land use alone. Future efforts to monitor land use impacts of in-situ production are needed to reduce landscape impacts and associated GHG emissions. In addition, land reclamation after oil sands projects needs to be enforced for broad ecological benefits together with GHG benefits
A comparative framework: how broadly applicable is a 'rigorous' critical junctures framework?
The paper tests Hogan and Doyle's (2007, 2008) framework for examining critical junctures. This framework sought to incorporate the concept of ideational change in understanding critical junctures. Until its development, frameworks utilized in identifying critical junctures were subjective, seeking only to identify crisis, and subsequent policy changes, arguing that one invariably led to the other, as both occurred around the same time. Hogan and Doyle (2007, 2008) hypothesized ideational change as an intermediating variable in their framework, determining if, and when, a crisis leads to radical policy change. Here we test this framework on cases similar to, but different from, those employed in developing the exemplar. This will enable us determine whether the framework's relegation of ideational change to a condition of crisis holds, or, if ideational change has more importance than is ascribed to it by this framework. This will also enable us determined if the framework itself is robust, and fit for the purposes it was designed to perform â identifying the nature of policy change
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