741 research outputs found
Resistance to acid attack, abrasion and leaching behavior of alkali-activated mine waste binders
This paper report results of a research
project on the development of alkali-activated binders using mine wastes. Abrasion and acid resistance of two
ordinary Portland cement (OPC) strength class concrete mixtures (C20/25 and C30/37) and several mine waste (MW) mixtures were compared. This study
indicates that MW binders possess higher acid and abrasion resistance than OPC based concrete mixtures.The leaching assessment of the MW binders shows it
can be considered an inert material which indicates that it could be used as a building material
Pilomatrixoma en un perro mestizo (Canis lupus familiaris) en Arequipa, Perú
The case of a 4-year-old crossbred female canine patient with pilomatrixoma, a benign neoplasm derived from hairy matrix cells, is detailed.Se detalla el caso de un paciente canino, hembra mestiza de 4 años con pilomatrixoma, neoplasia benigna derivada de las células de la matriz pilosa
Volcanic facies architecture, hydrothermal alteration and subsea-floor replacement at the Neves Corvo deposit, Iberian Pyrite Belt
Contribution to research project ARCHYMEDESII-POCTI/CTA/45873/2002.Three felsic volcanic sequences constitute the host succession to the Neves Corvo
VHMS deposit. The lower volcanic sequence (late Famennian) consists of a rhyolitic
fiamme-rich facies association that comprises polymictic and overall graded quartzphyric
fiamme breccia units (up to 60 m thick). These units have pyroclastic origin
and constitute the substrate to the rhyolite facies association (intermediate volcanic
sequence). The rhyolite facies association (late Strunian) comprises intervals of
coherent quartz-feldspar-phyric rhyolite (up to 10 m thick) that are enclosed by much
thicker intervals (up to 250 m) of jigsaw-fit and clast-rotated monomictic rhyolite
breccia. Laterally these breccias grade to beds of monomictic rhyolite breccia that
alternate with crystal-rich sandstone. The units defined by the rhyolite facies
association are rhyolitic lavas. The massive sulfide orebodies (late Strunian) directly
overly the lavas or are interleaved with relatively thin (up to 50 m) intervals of mudstone. The upper volcanic sequence (early Visean) consists of a thin interval of
monomictic dacite breccia. The host succession to the Neves Corvo orebodies thus
comprises proximal to source vent deposits from submarine explosive and effusive
eruptions. However, the ore-forming process relates both in time and space with the
rhyolitic lavas, which are coeval with the mineralization.
Neves Corvo is well known for its high-grade Cu ores and unique cassiterite
mineralization. Ore-related hydrothermal activity overprints an early metasomatic
stage and relates with a multi-sourced hydrothermal system, responsible for early
stringer and massive cassiterite deposition and subsequent massive sulfide oregeneration.
In the Corvo orebody, the early deposition of massive cassiterite ores was
fed by an independent stockwork in a tectonically-bounded alignment. Textural and
petrographic analyses, geochemistry and oxygen-isotope data indicate brusque
flushing of the tin-bearing fluid into seawater after minimal fluid-rock interaction
during up flow.
Massive sulfide-related hydrothermal alteration is essentially stratabound and
controlled by permeability contrasts. Alteration zonation is classical, consisting of an
inner chlorite/donbassite-quartz-sulfides-(sericite) core that grades into sericitequartz-
sulfides-(chlorite) and paragonite-quartz-sulfides-(chlorite) peripheral
envelopes. The aluminous hydrothermal alteration mineralogy coupled with elemental
and stable isotope geochemistry indicates very low pH, unusually high maximum
interaction temperature and predominant low-sulfidation alteration/mineralization
conditions. Textural and mass-balance analyses show extensive silicate-sulfide
replacement in the coherent volcanic rocks of the footwall sequence, and disseminated
replacement mineralization in the volcaniclatic/sedimentary units
Ferramentas Visuais para o Ensino de Machine Learning na Educação Básica
Ensinar Machine Learning (ML) em escolas ajuda a preparar estudantes para lidar com questões sociais, econômicas e éticas do século 21. Isso requer ferramentas apropriadas a cada idade que permitem que os estudantes criem uma concepção abrangente de ML e sua aplicação. Desse modo, apresentamos um mapeamento de ferramentas visuais emergentes que ajudam a ensinar conceitos de ML na Educação Básica e caracterizamos as ferramentas em relação ao suporte para o desenvolvimento e deployment de modelos de ML em contextos educacionais. Os resultados podem ajudar designers instrucionais e instrutores a selecionar ferramentas apropriadas a fim de contribuir para a democratização de competências em ML
Safflower oil: an integrated assessment of phytochemistry, antiulcerogenic activity, and rodent and environmental toxicity
Gastric ulcers are a significant medical problem and the development of complications lead to significant mortality rates worldwide. In Brazil, Carthamus tinctorius L., Asteraceae, seeds essential oil, the safflower oil, is currently used as a thermogenic compound and as treatment for problems related to the cardiovascular system. In this study, by Raman spectroscopy, it was shown that oleic and linoleic acids are the compounds present in higher concentrations in the safflower oil. We demonstrated that safflower oil (750 mg/kg, p.o.) decrease the ulcerogenic lesions in mice after the administration of hydrochloric acid-ethanol. The gastric ulcers induced by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) in mice treated with cholinomimetics were treated with four different doses of safflower oil, of which, the dose of 187.5 mg/kg (p.o.) showed significant antiulcerogenic properties (**p < 0.01). Moreover, the safflower oil at doses of 187.5 mg/kg (i.d.) increased the pH levels, gastric volume (**p < 0.01) and gastric mucus production (***p < 0.001), and decreased the total gastric acid secretion (***p < 0.001). The acute toxicity tests showed that safflower oil (5.000 mg/kg, p.o.) had no effect on mortality or any other physiological parameter. Ecotoxicological tests performed using Daphnia similis showed an EC50 at 223.17 mg/l, and therefore safflower oil can be considered “non-toxic” based on the directive 93/67/EEC on risk assessment for new notified substances by European legislation. These results indicate that the antiulcer activity of Safflower oil may be due to cytoprotective effects, which serve as support for new scientific studies related to this pathology.Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)Universidade Santa Cecília Programa de Pós-graduação em Sustentabilidade de Ecossistemas Costeiros e Marinhos Laboratório de Pesquisa em Produtos NaturaisUniversidade Estadual de Campinas Departamento de Fisiologia e Biofísica Laboratório de Produtos NaturaisUniversidade Santa Cecília Laboratório de EcotoxicologiaUniversidade Federal de São Paulo (UNIFESP) Instituto do MarUniversidade Camilo Castelo Branco Instituto de Engenharia BiomédicaUNIFESP, Instituto do MarFAPESP: 2009/01788-5SciEL
Equilibria-based Probabilistic Model Checking for Concurrent Stochastic Games
Probabilistic model checking for stochastic games enables formal verification
of systems that comprise competing or collaborating entities operating in a
stochastic environment. Despite good progress in the area, existing approaches
focus on zero-sum goals and cannot reason about scenarios where entities are
endowed with different objectives. In this paper, we propose probabilistic
model checking techniques for concurrent stochastic games based on Nash
equilibria. We extend the temporal logic rPATL (probabilistic alternating-time
temporal logic with rewards) to allow reasoning about players with distinct
quantitative goals, which capture either the probability of an event occurring
or a reward measure. We present algorithms to synthesise strategies that are
subgame perfect social welfare optimal Nash equilibria, i.e., where there is no
incentive for any players to unilaterally change their strategy in any state of
the game, whilst the combined probabilities or rewards are maximised. We
implement our techniques in the PRISM-games tool and apply them to several case
studies, including network protocols and robot navigation, showing the benefits
compared to existing approaches
Effect of Biodiversity Changes in Disease Risk: Exploring Disease Emergence in a Plant-Virus System
The effect of biodiversity on the ability of parasites to infect their host and cause disease (i.e. disease risk) is a major question in pathology, which is central to understand the emergence of infectious diseases, and to develop strategies for their management. Two hypotheses, which can be considered as extremes of a continuum, relate biodiversity to disease risk: One states that biodiversity is positively correlated with disease risk (Amplification Effect), and the second predicts a negative correlation between biodiversity and disease risk (Dilution Effect). Which of them applies better to different host-parasite systems is still a source of debate, due to limited experimental or empirical data. This is especially the case for viral diseases of plants. To address this subject, we have monitored for three years the prevalence of several viruses, and virus-associated symptoms, in populations of wild pepper (chiltepin) under different levels of human management. For each population, we also measured the habitat species diversity, host plant genetic diversity and host plant density. Results indicate that disease and infection risk increased with the level of human management, which was associated with decreased species diversity and host genetic diversity, and with increased host plant density. Importantly, species diversity of the habitat was the primary predictor of disease risk for wild chiltepin populations. This changed in managed populations where host genetic diversity was the primary predictor. Host density was generally a poorer predictor of disease and infection risk. These results support the dilution effect hypothesis, and underline the relevance of different ecological factors in determining disease/infection risk in host plant populations under different levels of anthropic influence. These results are relevant for managing plant diseases and for establishing conservation policies for endangered plant species
A hybrid system for route planning
Paper presented at Multimodal Reasoning : Papers from the 1998 AAAI Symposium, Menlo Park, CA.This paper presents a hybrid system for route planning. The
system is composed of two principal modules: a case based
reasoning (CBR) and a genetic module. The CBR module is
responsible for the user interface. It retrieves the solutions
founded by the genetic module, and adapts these solutions
to the user preferences. The genetic module is responsible
for generating new routes, based on the shortest path
between the origin and destination points
Social norms of cooperation in small-scale societies
Indirect reciprocity, besides providing a convenient framework to address the evolution of moral systems, offers a simple and plausible explanation for the prevalence of cooperation among unrelated individuals. By helping someone, an individual may increase her/his reputation, which may change the pre-disposition of others to help her/him in the future. This, however, depends on what is reckoned as a good or a bad action, i.e., on the adopted social norm responsible for raising or damaging a reputation. In particular, it remains an open question which social norms are able to foster cooperation in small-scale societies, while enduring the wide plethora of stochastic affects inherent to finite populations. Here we address this problem by studying the stochastic dynamics of cooperation under distinct social norms, showing that the leading norms capable of promoting cooperation depend on the community size. However, only a single norm systematically leads to the highest cooperative standards in small communities. That simple norm dictates that only whoever cooperates with good individuals, and defects against bad ones, deserves a good reputation, a pattern that proves robust to errors, mutations and variations in the intensity of selection.This research was supported by Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT) through grants SFRH/BD/94736/2013, PTDC/EEI-SII/5081/2014, PTDC/MAT/STA/3358/2014 and by multi-annual funding of CBMA and INESC-ID (under the projects UID/BIA/04050/2013 and UID/CEC/50021/2013 provided by FCT). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
First year of energetic particle measurements in the inner heliosphere with Solar Orbiter's Energetic Particle Detector
Context. Solar Orbiter strives to unveil how the Sun controls and shapes the heliosphere and fills it with energetic particle radiation. To this end, its Energetic Particle Detector (EPD) has now been in operation, providing excellent data, for just over a year.
Aims. EPD measures suprathermal and energetic particles in the energy range from a few keV up to (near-) relativistic energies (few MeV for electrons and about 500 MeV nuc−1 for ions). We present an overview of the initial results from the first year of operations and we provide a first assessment of issues and limitations. In addition, we present areas where EPD excels and provides opportunities for significant scientific progress in understanding how our Sun shapes the heliosphere.
Methods. We used the solar particle events observed by Solar Orbiter on 21 July and between 10 and 11 December 2020 to discuss the capabilities, along with updates and open issues related to EPD on Solar Orbiter. We also give some words of caution and caveats related to the use of EPD-derived data.
Results. During this first year of operations of the Solar Orbiter mission, EPD has recorded several particle events at distances between 0.5 and 1 au from the Sun. We present dynamic and time-averaged energy spectra for ions that were measured with a combination of all four EPD sensors, namely: the SupraThermal Electron and Proton sensor (STEP), the Electron Proton Telescope (EPT), the Suprathermal Ion Spectrograph (SIS), and the High-Energy Telescope (HET) as well as the associated energy spectra for electrons measured with STEP and EPT. We illustrate the capabilities of the EPD suite using the 10 and 11 December 2020 solar particle event. This event showed an enrichment of heavy ions as well as 3He, for which we also present dynamic spectra measured with SIS. The high anisotropy of electrons at the onset of the event and its temporal evolution is also shown using data from these sensors. We discuss the ongoing in-flight calibration and a few open instrumental issues using data from the 21 July and the 10 and 11 December 2020 events and give guidelines and examples for the usage of the EPD data. We explain how spacecraft operations may affect EPD data and we present a list of such time periods in the appendix. A list of the most significant particle enhancements as observed by EPT during this first year is also provided.Ministerio de Economía y CompetitividadAgencia Estatal de Investigació
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