5,429 research outputs found

    EmergencyGrid:Planning in Convergence Environments

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    Government agencies are often responsible for event handling, planning, coordination, and status reporting during emergency response in natural disaster events such as floods, tsunamis and earthquakes. Across such a range of emergency response scenarios, there is a common set of requirements that distributed intelligent computer systems generally address. To support the implementation of these requirements, some researchers are proposing the creation of grids, where final interface and processing nodes perform joint work supported by a network infrastructure. The aim of this project is to extend the concepts of emergency response grids, using a convergence scenario between web and other computational platforms. Our initial work focuses on the Interactive Digital TV platform, where we intend to transform individual TV devices into active final nodes, using a hierarchical planning structure. We describe the architecture of this approach and an initial prototype specification that is being developed to validate some concepts and illustrate the advantages of this convergence planning environment

    Solving 1ODEs with functions

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    Here we present a new approach to deal with first order ordinary differential equations (1ODEs), presenting functions. This method is an alternative to the one we have presented in [1]. In [2], we have establish the theoretical background to deal, in the extended Prelle-Singer approach context, with systems of 1ODEs. In this present paper, we will apply these results in order to produce a method that is more efficient in a great number of cases. Directly, the solving of 1ODEs is applicable to any problem presenting parameters to which the rate of change is related to the parameter itself. Apart from that, the solving of 1ODEs can be a part of larger mathematical processes vital to dealing with many problems.Comment: 31 page

    Estudo histopatológico das lesões causadas pelo veneno de urutu (Bothrops alternatus) em músculo esquelético de camundongos

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    Veneno bruto de urutu (Bothrops alternatus) dissolvido em solução salina fisiológica foi injetado no músculo tibial anterior direito de camundongos adultos na dose de 80 μg. Os músculos foram examinados em cortes de parafina, corados por Hematoxilina e Eosina. Aos 10 minutos já havia intensa hemorragia difusa no M. tibial anterior, mas apenas raras fibras musculares estavam necróticas. Nas horas seguintes, contudo, observou-se rápido aumento do número de fibras afetadas, sendo que às 24 hs o músculo apresentava-se totalmente necrótico. Vasos sangüíneos intramusculares e nas proximidades do M. tibial anterior mostravam necrose hialina da camada média e por vezes trombose. A fagocitose dos restos celulares ocorreu da periferia para o centro e acompanhou-se de regeneração muscular. Após 1 a 2 meses, em vários animais houve recuperação considerável do músculo, embora com persistência de cicatriz. As fibras regeneradas possuiam núcleos centrais e variavam em diâmetro, estando muitas atróficas. Em outros camundongos a regeneração do M. tibial anterior foi muito precária, tendo este sido substituído por tecido fibroadiposo com apenas raras fibras musculares. Os resultados mostram que, apesar da gravidade das lesões iniciais devidas ao veneno, ocorre regeneração muscular em grau variável de animal para animal. Sugere-se que a má regeneração observada em alguns casos poderia ser devida, ao menos em parte, a dano vascular permanente.Venom of urutu snake (Bothrops alternatus) injected into the Tibialis anterior muscle (Tib. ant.) of mice in a dose of 80 μg induced massive local haemorrhage within 10 min. Though muscle fibres appeared normal at this stage they later suffered necrosis in increasing numbers so that by 24 hr the whole muscle was necrotic. Arteries near the injection site often showed hyaline necrosis of the media and some were thrombosed. Phagocytosis of debris, which progressed from the periphery towards the centre of the necrotic area was usually complete by 2 weeks and was accompanied by muscle fibre regeneration. After 1 or 2 months several animals showed extensive recovery of the damaged muscle though a localized scar often remained. The regenerated muscle fibres showed central nuclei and varied in diameter, many appearing atrophic. In other mice, however, there was replacement of Tib. ant. by fibroadipose tissue with little or no muscle fibre regeneration. The results show that despite severe initial haemorrhage and necrosis, the affected muscles exhibit considerable capacity for regeneration. It is suggested that the poor regenerative response observed in some animals could result, at least to some extent, from permanent damage to the local blood vessels

    Quantum Fields with Noncommutative Target Spaces

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    Quantum field theories (QFT's) on noncommutative spacetimes are currently under intensive study. Usually such theories have world sheet noncommutativity. In the present work, instead, we study QFT's with commutative world sheet and noncommutative target space. Such noncommutativity can be interpreted in terms of twisted statistics and is related to earlier work of Oeckl [1], and others [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. The twisted spectra of their free Hamiltonians has been found earlier by Carmona et al [9,10]. We review their derivation and then compute the partition function of one such typical theory. It leads to a deformed black body spectrum, which is analysed in detail. The difference between the usual and the deformed black body spectrum appears in the region of high frequencies. Therefore we expect that the deformed black body radiation may potentially be used to compute a GZK cut-off which will depend on the noncommutative parameter θ\theta.Comment: 20 pages, 5 figures; Abstract changed. Changes and corrections in the text. References adde

    Boas práticas e sistema APPCC na fase de pós-colheita de milho.

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    bitstream/CNPMS-2010/22381/1/Circ-122.pd

    Explaining ATLAS and CMS Results Within the Reduced Minimal 3-3-1 model

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    Recently the ATLAS and CMS collaborations announced the discovery of a higgs particle with a mass of 125\sim 125 GeV. The results are mildly consistent with the Standard Model Higgs boson. However, the combined data from these collaborations seem to point to an excess in the hγγh \rightarrow \gamma \gamma channel. In this work we analyze under which conditions this excess may be plausibly explained within the reduced minimal 3-3-1 model, while being consistent with bb, WW, ZZ and τ+τ\tau^+\tau^- channels. Moreover, we derive the properties of the heavy neutral and the doubly charged scalars predicted by the model. We then conclude that at a scale of a few TeV, this model provides a good fit to the ATLAS and CMS signal strength measurements, and therefore stands as an appealing alternative to the standard model.Comment: 23 pages, 9 figures. References adde
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