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  • 1
    Unknown
    Rijeka : InTech
    Keywords: observational measurement ; flow problems ; vortex dynamics
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 1 Vortex Structure in the Plasma Flow Channels of the Venus Wake by Héctor Pérez-de-Tejada, Rickard Lundin and Devrie S. Intriligator --- Chapter 2 Interaction of Tropical Cyclones with a Dipole Vortex by Ismael Perez‐Garcia, Alejandro Aguilar‐Sierra and Jaime Hernández --- Chapter 3 Nonlinear Interaction Between Vortex and Wave in Rotating Shallow Water by Norihiko Sugimoto --- Chapter 4 Modelling of Temporal‐Spatial Distribution of Airplane Wake Vortex for Scattering Analysis by Jianbing Li, Zhongxun Liu and Xuesong Wang --- Chapter 5 Vorticity Evolution near the Turbulent/Non-Turbulent Interfaces in Free-Shear Flows by Tomoaki Watanabe, Koji Nagata and Carlos B. da Silva --- Chapter 6 Simulation of Axisymmetric Flows with Swirl in Vorticity- Stream Function Variables Using the Lattice Boltzmann Method by Omar D. Lopez, Sergio Pedraza and Jose R. Toro --- Chapter 7 Thickness and Thermal Conductivities of the Walls and Fluid Layer Effects on the Onset of Thermal Convection in a Horizontal Fluid Layer Heated from Below by Ildebrando Pérez‐Reyes, René Osvaldo Vargas‐Aguilar, Eduardo Valente Gómez‐Benítez and Iván Salmerón‐Ochoa --- Chapter 8 Role of Vortex Dynamics in Relativistic Fluids by Gunraj Prasad --- Chapter 9 Statistics of Gyrotropic Vortex Dynamics in Submicron Magnetic Disks by Gary Matthew Wysin --- Chapter 10 Two-Dimensional Solitons and Vortices in Linear and Nonlinear Lattice Potentials by Jianhua Zeng and Boris A. Malomed --- Chapter 11 Relaxation Theory for Point Vortices by Ken Sawada and Takashi Suzuki --- Chapter 12 Development of Vortex Bioreactor Technology for Decentralised Water Treatment by Andrew Landels, Neil Cagney, Lisa Bauer, Tracey A. Beacham, Stavroula Balabani and Michael J. Allen --- Chapter 13 Vortex Spinning System and Vortex Yarn Structure by Gizem Karakan Günaydin and Ali Serkan Soydan
    Pages: Online-Ressource (278 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9789535129448
    Language: English
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  • 2
    Unknown
    Rijeka : InTech
    Keywords: observational measurement ; flow problems ; vortex dynamics
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 1 Vortex Structures in Ultra-Cold Atomic Gases by Nick Verhelst and Jacques Tempere --- Chapter 2 Direct Generation of Vortex Laser Beams and Their Non-Linear Wavelength Conversion by Andrew James Lee and Takashige Omatsu --- Chapter 3 Superconducting Vortex‐Antivortex Pairs: Nucleation and Confinement in Magnetically Coupled Superconductor‐Ferromagnet Hybrids by Cinzia Di Giorgio, Domenico D'Agostino, Anna Maria Cucolo, Maria Iavarone, Alessandro Scarfato, Goran Karapetrov, Steven Alan Moore, Massimiliano Polichetti, Davide Mancusi, Sandro Pace, Valentyn Novosad, Volodymir Yefremenko and Fabrizio Bobba --- Chapter 4 Optical Vortices Illumination Enables the Creation of Chiral Nanostructures by Takashige Omatsu, Katsuhiko Miyamoto and Ryuji Morita --- Chapter 5 Dynamical Particle Motions in Vortex Flows by Steven Wang and Naoto Ohmura --- Chapter 6 Numerical Simulation of Vortex-Dominated Flows Using the Penalized VIC Method by Seung-Jae Lee --- Chapter 7 Vortex Structures in Saturable Media by İlkay Bakırtaş --- Chapter 8 Holographic Optical Elements to Generate Achromatic Vortices with Ultra-Short and Ultra-Intense Laser Pulses by María-Victoria Collados, Íñigo J. Sola, Julia Marín-Sáez, Warein Holgado and Jesús Atencia --- Chapter 9 Ultrashort Extreme Ultraviolet Vortices by Laura Rego, Julio San Román, Luis Plaja, Antonio Picón and Carlos Hernández-García --- Chapter 10 Fractal Light Vortices by Federico J. Machado, Juan A. Monsoriu and Walter D. Furlan --- Chapter 11 Partially Coherent Vortex Beam: From Theory to Experiment by Xianlong Liu, Lin Liu, Yahong Chen and Yangjian Cai --- Chapter 12 Vortices and Singularities in Electric Dipole Radiation near an Interface by Xin Li, Henk F. Arnoldus and Zhangjin Xu --- Chapter 13 Spin-Wave Dynamics in the Presence of Magnetic Vortices by Sławomir Mamica
    Pages: Online-Ressource (342 Seiten)
    ISBN: 9789535129301
    Language: English
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: In summer 2017, the ICDP SUSTAIN project (Surtsey Underwater volcanic System for Thermophiles, Alteration processes and INnovative concretes), drilled three cored boreholes (Table 1) through Surtsey at sites ≤10 m from a cored hole obtained in 1979. Drilling through the still hot volcano was carried out with an Atlas Copco CS1000 drill rig, whose components were transported by helicopter to Surtsey and re-assembled on site. The first vertical borehole, SE-02a, was cored in HQ diameter to 152 meters below surface (m b.s.) during August 7-16. It was terminated due to borehole collapse. A second vertical (SE-02b) cored borehole was then drilled in HQ diameter to 192 m during August 19-26. Wireline borehole logging in SE-02b was performed August 26. The anodized NQ-sized aluminum tubing of the Surtsey Subsurface Observatory was installed in SE-02b to 181 m depth on August 27. A third borehole, SE-03, angled 35° from vertical and directed 264°, was drilled from August 28 to September 4 and reached a measured depth of 354 m (~290 m vertical depth) under the eastern crater. The core is HQ diameter to a measured depth of 213 m and NQ diameter from 213-354 m measured depth. The core traverses the deep conduit and intrusions of the volcano to a total vertical depth of 290 m b.s. Seawater drilling fluid for boreholes SE-02a and SE-02b was filtered and doubly UV-sterilized at the drill site. No mud products were employed while coring SE-02a, while small amounts of attapulgite mud were used in SE-02b and SE-03. Core samples for geochemical analyses of pore water and microbiological investigations were collected on site from all three boreholes. About 650 m of core was transported by helicopter to Heimaey, 18 km northeast of Surtsey, to a processing laboratory where the core was scanned, documented, and described. Additional core processing has taken place at the Náttúrufraedistofnun Íslands, the Icelandic Institute of Natural History in Gardabaer, where both the 1979 and 2017 cores are stored.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/report
    Format: application/pdf
    Format: application/pdf
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Description: The dithiol functionalized UiO-66-(SH)2 is developed as an efficient adsorbent for the removal of mercury in aqueous media. Important parameters for the application of MOFs in real-life circumstances include: stability and recyclability of the adsorbents, selectivity for the targeted Hg species in the presence of much higher concentrations of interfering species, and ability to purify wastewater below international environmental limits within a short time. We show that UiO-66-(SH)2 meets all these criteria.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2020-02-12
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2022-03-28
    Description: We carried out a passive seismic experiment formed by 50 broadband and short-period stations with an interstation distance of 3-4 km. These stations were in operation for 22 months, from 06/2013 to 05/2015. The seismic array (TRANSCORBE) was deployed in a linear configuration of 170 km length in a NW-SE direction. The southern edge of the prolife is located near the Mediterranean coast in Mazarrón (Murcia) crossing the Alhama de Murcia fault and the Cazorla Mountain range in the north. The main goal of this project is to study the crustal and upper mantle structures under the Eastern Betics mountain ranges and their variations along the different geological domains. It probes, from southeast to northwest, the Alboran domain (metamorphic rocks), the External zones (sedimentary rocks) and the Variscan terrains of the Iberian Massif. The proposed scientific work includes the analysis of the data using mainly P and S receiver functions, and velocity and attenuation tomographic techniques. The study area has undergone a complex tectonic evolution where slow WNW-ESE oblique convergence of Iberian and African plates coexists with a rapid westward rollback of a subducting slab. The inter-station distance allows us obtaining high-resolution images of the crustal structure essential to understand the tectonic evolution of the area and how the deformation produced by these processes is distributed among the involved geologic domains. This experiment was the results of a joint effort between the Instituto Andaluz de Geofísica (IAG), Granada University, and GFZ Potsdam. Waveform data are available from the GEOFON data centre, under network code 9H and are embargoed until Jan 2021.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2022-03-28
    Description: We carried out a passive experiment operated with 10 broadband and short period seismic stations which were installed between July 2013 and May 2015 by a joint effort between the Instituto Andaluz de Geofísica, Granada University and the German Research Centre for Geosciences GFZ. The goal of this project is to study the crustal and upper mantle structures under the Central Betic mountain ranges and the variations of these structures between the different geological domains as a prolongation towards the north of the HIRE profile (Heit, Yuan and Mancilla; 2010). Waveform data is available from the GEOFON data centre, under network code 3J.
    Language: English
    Type: info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2021-03-29
    Keywords: canopy stability; liana cutting; secondary succession; tree-fall gaps; tropical dry forest; tropical storms ; 551
    Language: English
    Type: article , publishedVersion
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2018-11-19
    Keywords: ddc:300
    Repository Name: Wuppertal Institut für Klima, Umwelt, Energie
    Language: English
    Type: report , doc-type:report
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2022-10-07
    Description: Specialization in agricultural systems can lead to trade-offs between economic gains and ecosystem functions. We suggest and explore a conceptual framework in which economic gains can be maximized when production activities are specialized at increasingly broader scales (from the household to the village, region or above), particularly when markets for outputs and inputs function well. Conversely,more specialization likely reduces biodiversity and significantly limits ecosystem functions. When agricultural specialization increases and moves to broader scales as a result of improved infrastructure and markets or other drivers, ecosystem functions can also be endangered at broader spatial scales. Policies to improve agricultural incomes may influence the level of specialization at different scales and thus affect the severity of the trade-offs. This paper takes Jambi province in Indonesia, a current hotspot of rubber and oil palm monoculture, as a case study to illustrate these issues.We empirically show that the level of specialization differs across scales with higher specialization at household and village levels and higher diversification towards the province level. We discuss ways to resolve trade-offs between economic gains and ecological costs, including landscape design, targeted policies, and adoption of longterm perspectives.
    Keywords: ddc:634
    Language: English
    Type: doc-type:article , publishedVersion
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