5,682 research outputs found
Exploring the case for a national-scale soil conservation and soil condition framework for evaluating and reporting on environmental and land use policies
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DOI in this record.It has long been realized that the conservation of soil capital and ecosystem services are of paramount importance, resulting in a growing case for a change in attitude and policymaking in respect of soils. Current UK and EU approaches are risk-based and focused on measures to manage and remediate the adverse impact of current policies and practices directed at maximizing productivity and profit, rather than one of resource conservation. Increasing soil loss and degradation is evidence that current policy is not working and a new approach is needed. In the UK there is governmental ambition to progress towards natural capital-led land use policies but, in the absence of a framework to determine the relative condition of the soil resource, the delivery of sustainable soil conservation policies will continue to be inhibited. Common Standards Monitoring (CSM) is an established monitoring and management framework (based on ecosystem structure, function and process) and has been effectively deployed for almost two decades by the UK Government for the monitoring and reporting of key biological and earth science natural capital and ecosystem services from ‘field’ to local, regional and national levels to the European Commission. It is argued that a CSM for soils could be developed for the UK's soil resources as well as for those elsewhere, and would be able to deliver a conservation rather than the current risk-based approach. It is capable of accommodating the complexities and variation in soil types and functions and potentially being practical and cost-effective in its implementation
Lorentz-Violating Supergravity
The standard forms of supersymmetry and supergravity are inextricably wedded
to Lorentz invariance. Here a Lorentz-violating form of supergravity is
proposed. The superpartners have exotic properties that are not possible in a
theory with exact Lorentz symmetry and microcausality. For example, the bosonic
sfermions have spin 1/2 and the fermionic gauginos have spin 1. The theory is
based on a phenomenological action that is shown to follow from a simple
microscopic and statistical picture.Comment: 15 pages; to be published in Proceedings of Beyond the Desert 2003
(Castle Ringberg, Tegernsee, Germany, 9-14 June 2003), edited by H. V.
Klapdor-Kleingrothau
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Non-linear dissolution mechanisms of sodium calcium phosphate glasses as a function of pH in various aqueous media
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd Phosphate glasses for bioresorbable implants display dissolution rates that vary significantly with composition, however currently their mechanisms of dissolution are not well understood. Based on this systematic study we present new insights into these mechanisms. Two-stage dissolution was observed, with time dependence initially parabolic and later linear, and a two-stage model was developed to describe this behaviour. Dissolution was accelerated by lower Ca concentration in the glass, and lower pH in the dissolution medium. A new dissolution mechanism is proposed, involving an initial stage where diffusion-controlled formation of a conversion layer occurs. Once the conversion layer is stabilised, layer dissolution reactions become rate-limiting. Under this mechanism the transition time is sensitive to the nature of the conversion layer and solution conditions. These results reveal the dependence of P2O5–CaO–Na2O glass dissolution on solution pH, and provide new insight into the dissolution mechanisms, particularly regarding the transition between the two dissolution stages
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Tuning structural relaxations, mechanical properties, and degradation timescale of PLLA during hydrolytic degradation by blending with PLCL-PEG
Poly-L-lactide (PLLA) is a popular choice for medical devices due to its
bioresorbability and superior mechanical properties compared with other
polymers. However, although PLLA has been investigated for use in bioresorbable
cardiovascular stents, it presents application-specific limitations which
hamper device therapies. These include low toughness and strength compared with
metals used for this purpose, and slow degradation. Blending PLLA with novel
polyethylene glycol functionalised
poly(L-lactide-co--caprolactone) (PLCL-PEG) materials has been
investigated here to tailor the mechanical properties and degradation behaviour
of PLLA. This exciting approach provides a foundation for a next generation of
bioresorbable materials whose properties can be rapidly tuned. The degradation
of PLLA was significantly accelerated by addition of PLCL-PEG. After 30 days of
degradation, several structural changes were observed in the polymer blends,
which were dependent on the level of PLCL-PEG addition. Blends with low
PLCL-PEG content displayed enthalpy relaxation, resulting in embrittlement,
while blends with high PLCL-PEG content displayed crystallisation, due to
enhanced chain mobility brought on by chain scission, also causing
embrittlement. Moderate PLCL-PEG additions (10% PLCL(70:30)-PEG and 20 - 30%
PLCL(80:20)-PEG) stabilised the structure, reducing the extent of enthalpy
relaxation and crystallisation and thus retaining ductility. Compositional
optimisation identified a sweet spot for this blend strategy, whereby the
ductility was enhanced while maintaining strength. Our results indicate that
blending PLLA with PLCL-PEG provides an effective method of tuning the
degradation timescale and mechanical properties of PLLA, and provides important
new insight into the mechanisms of structural relaxations that occur during
degradation, and strategies for regulating these.Lucideon Lt
Nonlinear Ultrasonic Properties of As-Quenched Steels
We have investigated the effect of carbon content on the nonlinear ultrasonic parameter β and the longitudinal phase velocity v L in a series of martensitic steel specimens. The specimens were measured in the as-quenched state to insure that the carbon was present primarily as an interstitial in the martensite. Experimentally, β increased with increasing mass percent carbon (or hardness), while v Lremained virtually the same for all specimens. Therefore we conclude that β is sensitive to microstructural variations between the specimens, but v L is not. X-ray diffraction experiments indicate that the dislocation density in the specimens is high (∼1011/cm2) and increases with increasing carbon content. These results support the hypothesis that the observed increase in β may be attributed to dislocations affected by internal stresses in the quenched specimens
Increased gravitational force reveals the mechanical, resonant nature of physiological tremor
Human physiological hand tremor has a resonant component. Proof of this is that its frequency can be modified by adding mass. However, adding mass also increases the load which must be supported. The necessary force requires muscular contraction which will change motor output and is likely to increase limb stiffness. The increased stiffness will partly offset the effect of the increased mass and this can lead to the erroneous conclusion that factors other than resonance are involved in determining tremor frequency. Using a human centrifuge to increase head-to-foot gravitational field strength, we were able to control for the increased effort by increasing force without changing mass. This revealed that the peak frequency of human hand tremor is 99% predictable on the basis of a resonant mechanism. We ask what, if anything, the peak frequency of physiological tremor can reveal about the operation of the nervous system.This work was funded by a BBSRC Industry Interchange Award
to J.P.R.S. and R.F.R. C.J.O. was funded by BBSRC grant
BB/I00579X/1. C.A.V. was funded by A∗Midex (Aix-Marseille
Initiative of Excellence
Reshaping Health Care Delivery for Adolescent Parents: Healthy Steps and Telemedicine
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://online.liebertpub.com/doi/abs/10.1089/153056203772744725.Healthy Steps over Telemedicine uses telemedicine technology to bring child development services to adolescent parents in an urban school district. Videoconferencing units link teen parents at a Kansas City high school to developmental specialists and physicians at the Kansas University Medical Center (KUMC). Program participants receive developmental services and valuable health care information without leaving the school. The Healthy Steps goals are to educate parents about health care issues and to help them access medical care for their children and themselves. The telehealth goals are to implement the established Health Steps program effectively over the new medium. This article describes the process of delivering Healthy Steps services via telemedicine, specifically, selection and description of the site, selection of the technology, services provided, research evaluation, and lessons learned
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Continuing mortality of vultures in India associated with illegal veterinary use of diclofenac and a potential threat from nimesulide
AbstractThe collapse of South Asia's Gyps vulture populations is attributable to the veterinary use of the non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) diclofenac. Vultures died after feeding on carcasses of recently-medicated animals. The governments of India, Nepal and Pakistan banned the veterinary use of diclofenac in 2006. We analysed results of 62 necropsies and 48 NSAID assays of liver and/or kidney for vultures of five species found dead in India between 2000 and 2012. Visceral gout and diclofenac were detected in vultures from nine states and three species: Gyps bengalensis, Gyps indicus and Gyps himalayensis. Visceral gout was found in every vulture carcass in which a measurable level of diclofenac was detected. Meloxicam, an NSAID of low toxicity to vultures, was found in two vultures and nimesulide in five vultures. Nimesulide at elevated tissue concentrations was associated with visceral gout in four of these cases, always without diclofenac, suggesting that nimesulide may have similar toxic effects to those of diclofenac. Residues of meloxicam on its own were never associated with visceral gout. The proportion of Gyps vultures found dead in the wild in India with measurable levels of diclofenac in their tissues showed a modest and non-significant decline since the ban on the veterinary use of diclofenac. The prevalence of visceral gout declined less, probably because some cases of visceral gout from 2008 onwards were associated with nimesulide rather than diclofenac. Veterinary use of nimesulide is a potential threat to the recovery of vulture populations.Financial support and assistance for the project from the Director, Indian Veterinary Research Institute (IVRI), the UK Government’s Darwin Initiative and the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds is gratefully acknowledged.This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Cambridge University Press via http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S003060531500037
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