364 research outputs found
Off-line computing for experimental high-energy physics
The needs of experimental high-energy physics for large-scale computing and data handling are explained in terms of the complexity of individual collisions and the need for high statistics to study quantum mechanical processes. The prevalence of university-dominated collaborations adds a requirement for high-performance wide-area networks. The data handling and computational needs of the different types of large experiment, now running or under construction, are evaluated. Software for experimental high-energy physics is reviewed briefly with particular attention to the success of packages written within the discipline. It is argued that workstations and graphics are important in ensuring that analysis codes are correct, and the worldwide networks which support the involvement of remote physicists are described. Computing and data handling are reviewed showing how workstations and RISC processors are rising in importance but have not supplanted traditional mainframe processing. Examples of computing systems constructed within high-energy physics are examined and evaluated
Areas of outstanding natural beauty management plans - a guide
This is a summary of the guidance produced by the Countryside Agency to assist local authorities, AONB staff units, AONB partners and others concerned with the production and implementation of AONB Management Plans in England. A parallel text has been produced by the
Countryside Council for Wales to cover Welsh AONBs.
The aims of the guide are to:
• assist local authorities and conservation boards to discharge their
statutory functions with regard to the production of AONB Management Plans;
• help ensure that Management Plans that are produced are
appropriate to the needs of the AONB, have the commitment of all AONB partners1 and other stakeholders, are implemented, and their policy objectives achieved.
The guide is has statutory force under the 2001 Countryside and Rights of Way Ac
Industrialization, urbanization, and land use in China:
Rapid industrial development and urbanization transfer more and more land away from agricultural production, threatening China's capability to feed itself. This paper analyzes the determinants of land use by modeling arable land and sown area separately. An inverse U-shaped relationship between land use intensity and industrialization is explored both theoretically and empirically. The findings highlight the conflict between the two policy goals of industrialization and grain self-sufficiency in the end. Several policy recommendations are offered to reconcile the conflict.Industrialization., Land use., Urbanization., China.,
Supporting Capabilities For Underground Facilities
The 2021 particle physics community study, known as "Snowmass 2021", has
brought together particle physicists around the world to create a unified
vision for the field over the next decade. One of the areas of focus is the
Underground Facilities (UF) frontier, which addresses underground
infrastructure and the scientific programs and goals of underground-based
experiments. To this effect, the UF Supporting Capabilities topical group
created two surveys for the community to identify potential gaps between the
supporting capabilities of facilities and those needed by current and future
experiments. Capabilities surveyed are discussed in this report and include
underground cleanroom space size and specifications, radon-reduced space needs
and availability, the assay need and other underground space needs as well
timeline for future experiments. Results indicate that future, larger
experiments will increasingly require underground assembly in larger, cleaner
cleanrooms, often with better radon-reduction systems and increased monitoring
capability for ambient contaminants. Most assay needs may be met by existing
worldwide capabilities with organized cooperation between facilities and
experiments. Improved assay sensitivity is needed for assays of bulk and
surface radioactivity for some materials for some experiments, and would be
highly beneficial for radon emanation
Life long learning in rural areas: a report to the Countryside Agency
Lifelong Learning is a broad umbrella term which includes many different kinds of provision and different forms of learning. At its heart is formal learning, often classroom based, or involving paper and electronic media, undertaken within educational institutions such as colleges and universities. It may or may not lead to an award and it includes learning undertaken for vocational reasons as well as for general interest. It encompasses what are sometimes also known as adult education, continuing education, continuing professional development (cpd), vocational training and the acquisition of basic skills. It may also include work-based learning, and may overlap with post compulsory (post 16) education, i.e. with further education and higher education, but normally applies to all ‘adult learning’ i.e. by people over the age of 19, in particular those who are returning to study after completing their initial education.
From the perspective of the individual learner, however, non-formal learning (organised, systematic study carried on outside the framework of the formal system) is also important. This forms a continuum with informal learning that occurs frequently in the process of daily living, sometimes coincidentally for example through information media or through interpretive provision (such as at museums or heritage sites ).
This report focuses on those aspects of adult learning which are directly affected by government policies, and thus of prime concern for rural proofing
California Water Myths
Presents eight common myths about water supply, ecosystems, and the legal and political aspects of governing California's water system and explains how each myth drives the debate, the reality, and alternatives for better informed policy discussions
執筆者紹介(執筆順)
1 mapa en 2 segments. R. Mount edita l'Atlas maritimus de Sellers, 1685, i The English Pilot, 1698 (?) Datat entre 1690 i 1699.52 x 63 c
Landscape conservation action plan guidance
Guidance on production of Landscape Conservation Action Plans (LCAPs) for Heritage Lottery Fund (HLF) Landscape Partnerships (LP) under HLF's fourth Strategic Framework (SF4) 2013-2018. The HLF LP programme funds multi-partner, multi-project schemes covering a defined area up to 200 km2 with grants from £100,000 - £3million. Funding is allocated for two phases; a development phase (of up to two years) and a delivery phase (up to five years). In order to progress from development to delivery, LP schemes are required to submit an acceptable LCAP. The LCAP articulates a landscape strategy for delivering benefits to natural and cultural heritage and local communities and a series of projects to achieve this
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