6,086 research outputs found
Improving irrigation management through better information: Testing practical options in Indonesia
Information services / Irrigable land / Performance evaluation / Monitoring / Water users' associations / Water allocation / Irrigation management / Irrigated sites / Water delivery / Economic aspects / Benefits / Mapping / Labor / Indonesia / West Java / Cerebon
Liver transplantation in primary biliary cirrhosis: Risk assessment and 11-year follow-up
Background/Aims: Liver transplantation (LTx) is the only established treatment in patients with end-stage primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC). Although short-term survival after LTx in this group of patients is usually good, few data exist on the long-term survival. The optimal timing of transplantation is difficult. Thus, the aims of this study were to assess the long-term survival of patients with PBC after LTx and to identify potential predictive factors for a positive outcome. Methods: Survival of 28 patients with PBC who underwent LTx between 1985 and July 1999 in a single center was studied by Kaplan-Meier analysis and was compared to predicted survival without LTx using established prognostic models for PBC, the Mayo and European risk scores. Potential prognostic parameters obtained before LTx were tested for correlation to survival. Rates of bone fractures as markers of hepatic osteodystrophy were compared before and after LTx. Results: Median follow-up after LTx was 90 months with a maximum of 140 months. Actuarial survival of patients with PBC was 89% after 1, 5, and 10 years and was significantly better than estimated survival without LTx after 1-7 years as calculated by the Mayo and European risk scores. Of several parameters tested, only serum bilirubin and the prognostic scores, but no other liver function tests obtained immediately prior to transplantation were significantly correlated with survival after LTx. The duration of intensive care after LTx was not associated with any parameters obtained before LTx. Bone fractures were diagnosed in 43% of patients of whom the vast majority were osteopenic before LTx as determined by osteodensitometry. Conclusion: Longterm survival of a well-defined group of patients with PBC was excellent after LTx and was inversely correlated with preoperative serum bilirubin levels as well as Mayo and European risk scores. Copyright (C) 2000 S. Karger AG. Basel
National Evaluation of the Capacity Building Programme in English Local Government: Evaluation of the National Programmes: Annex 2: Evaluation of the National Programmes
The report is one of a series of outputs from the national evaluation of the CBP, being undertaken by a team of researchers at the Policy Research Institute (PRI) at Leeds Metropolitan University and the Cities Research Unit at the University of West of England. The Capacity Building Programme for local government was launched in 2003 as a joint Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) / Local Government Association (LGA) initiative to support capacity building and improvement activities within local authorities in England. The evaluation of the Capacity Building Programme has been underway since late 2004. A scoping phase was conducted until May 2005, including a short evaluation of the Pilot Programmes. The main phase of the evaluation commenced in September 2005 and encompassed four main phases (see Section 1.3: p10)
Scale-dependence of magnetic helicity in the solar wind
We determine the magnetic helicity, along with the magnetic energy, at high
latitudes using data from the Ulysses mission. The data set spans the time
period from 1993 to 1996. The basic assumption of the analysis is that the
solar wind is homogeneous. Because the solar wind speed is high, we follow the
approach first pioneered by Matthaeus et al. (1982, Phys. Rev. Lett. 48, 1256)
by which, under the assumption of spatial homogeneity, one can use Fourier
transforms of the magnetic field time series to construct one-dimensional
spectra of the magnetic energy and magnetic helicity under the assumption that
the Taylor frozen-in-flow hypothesis is valid. That is a well-satisfied
assumption for the data used in this study. The magnetic helicity derives from
the skew-symmetric terms of the three-dimensional magnetic correlation tensor,
while the symmetric terms of the tensor are used to determine the magnetic
energy spectrum. Our results show a sign change of magnetic helicity at
wavenumber k~2 AU^{-1} (or frequency nu~2 uHz) at distances below 2.8 AU and at
k~30 AU^{-1} (or nu~25 uHz) at larger distances. At small scales the magnetic
helicity is positive at northern heliographic latitudes and negative at
southern latitudes. The positive magnetic helicity at small scales is argued to
be the result of turbulent diffusion reversing the sign relative to what is
seen at small scales at the solar surface. Furthermore, the magnetic helicity
declines toward solar minimum in 1996. The magnetic helicity flux integrated
separately over one hemisphere amounts to about 10^{45} Mx^2/cycle at large
scales and to a 3 times lower value at smaller scales.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, ApJ (in press
On the occurrence of phreatic eruptions at Ruapehu: statistics and probabilistic hazard forecast for ballistics
Flux Rope Formation Preceding Coronal Mass Ejection Onset
We analyse the evolution of a sigmoidal (S shaped) active region toward
eruption, which includes a coronal mass ejection (CME) but leaves part of the
filament in place. The X-ray sigmoid is found to trace out three different
magnetic topologies in succession: a highly sheared arcade of coronal loops in
its long-lived phase, a bald-patch separatrix surface (BPSS) in the hours
before the CME, and the first flare loops in its major transient intensity
enhancement. The coronal evolution is driven by photospheric changes which
involve the convergence and cancellation of flux elements under the sigmoid and
filament. The data yield unambiguous evidence for the existence of a BPSS, and
hence a flux rope, in the corona prior to the onset of the CME.Comment: ApJ Letters, in pres
ISO-3D Applications of 3-Dimensional Electromagnetic Induction by Sources in the Oceans: a MAST-3 Project. Final report of ISO-3D Working Group.
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