943 research outputs found

    Air pollutant levels in air-conditioned and naturally ventilated museums: a pilot study

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    An air-conditioned and a naturally ventilated museum in a highly polluted part of London were compared for effectiveness of pollution control. Nitrogen dioxide, sulphur dioxide and hydrogen sulphide concentrations were measured inside and outside using diffusion tubes. Airborne particles were measured using a Grimm laser counting device. It was found that the benefits normally attributed to air-conditioning with filtration were not as great as might be thought. Only nitrogen dioxide and particle levels were significantly lower in the air-conditioned museum than in the naturally ventilated museum

    Preventive conservation strategies for sustainable urban pollution control in museums

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    The last 40 years have seen major changes in the sources and concentrations of urban pollution (nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and particulates). During this time, research has advanced our understanding of the impact of pollutants on objects in urban museums. As a consequence, pollutant control has become an important aspect of preventive conservation. There is also increased awareness of the need for pollution control strategies that are sustainable at an organizational and global level. This report, prepared by a chemist, a conservator, and two building scientists, reviews strategies for minimizing the impact of urban pollution on museum collections. The results of new research funded by the UK government identify current (1999) internal pollution levels in both naturally ventilated and air-conditioned museums with particle and gaseous filtration, in relation to external concentrations, ventilation strategies, and the characteristics of the internal fabric and finishes of these buildings. The last 40 years have seen major changes in the sources and concentrations of urban pollution (nitrogen dioxide, sulfur dioxide, hydrogen sulfide, and particulates). During this time, research has advanced our understanding of the impact of pollutants on objects in urban museums. As a consequence, pollutant control has become an important aspect of preventive conservation. There is also increased awareness of the need for pollution control strategies that are sustainable at an organizational and global level. This report, prepared by a chemist, a conservator, and two building scientists, reviews strategies for minimizing the impact of urban pollution on museum collections. The results of new research funded by the UK government identify current (1999) internal pollution levels in both naturally ventilated and air-conditioned museums with particle and gaseous filtration, in relation to external concentrations, ventilation strategies, and the characteristics of the internal fabric and finishes of these buildings

    Reviewing past environments in a historic house using building simulation

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    This paper reviews different heatingregimes applied to the same space,using building simulation. Theconstruction of a computer simulationmodel to investigate past and presentenvironments in a historic house libraryis described. The model simulated fourhypothetical scenarios, based on realdata. The simulation outputs werereviewed in terms of the risk ofphysical and chemical deterioration,and their relationship with an existingnational standard for archives. Thepossibility of simulating pastenvironments to investigate naturalageing is also discussed

    Dependency Modelling for Cultural Heritage

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    May 31st - June 3rd, 200

    Guidelines on Pollution Control in Museum Buildings

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    A case of metastatic Wilms’ tumour with reversible distortion of mediastinal anatomy : a diagnostic challenge for the echocardiographer

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    Delineation and documentation of anatomy in the presence of significant mass pathology presents a diagnostic challenge. This often necessitates the implementation of more than one imaging modality in order to perform an adequate assessment. We present a three-year old boy with extensive distortion of mediastinal anatomy secondary to pleural metastases from a Wilms tumour. This limited the ability to accurately assess mediastinal anatomy and cardiac function at baseline. Reassessment following initiation of chemotherapy showed a significant reduction in size of metastases with complete resolution of the mediastinal distortion.peer-reviewe

    Interannual sea-air CO2 flux variability from an observation-driven ocean mixed-layer scheme

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    Interannual anomalies in the sea–air carbon dioxide (CO2) exchange have been estimated from surface-ocean CO2 partial pressure measurements. Available data are sufficient to constrain these anomalies in large parts of the tropical and North Pacific and in the North Atlantic, in some areas covering the period from the mid 1980s to 2011. Global interannual variability is estimated as about 0.31 Pg Cyr−1 (temporal standard deviation 1993–2008). The tropical Pacific accounts for a large fraction of this global variability, closely tied to El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Anomalies occur more than 6 months later in the east than in the west. The estimated amplitude and ENSO response are roughly consistent with independent information from atmospheric oxygen data. This both supports the variability estimated from surface-ocean carbon data and demonstrates the potential of the atmospheric oxygen signal to constrain ocean biogeochemical processes. The ocean variability estimated from surface-ocean carbon data can be used to improve land CO2 flux estimates from atmospheric inversions
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