225 research outputs found
Validation of Observed Bedload Transport Pathways Using Morphodynamic Modeling
Phenomena related to braiding, including local scour and fill, channel bar development, migration
and avulsion, make numerical morphodynamic modeling of braided rivers challenging. This paper investigates
the performance of a Delft3D model, in a 2D depth-averaged formulation, to simulate the
morphodynamics of an anabranch of the Rees River (New Zealand). Model performance is evaluated using
data from field surveys collected on the falling limb of a major high flow, and using several sediment
transport formulas. Initial model results suggest that there is generally good agreement between observed and
modeled bed levels. However, some discrepancies in the bed level estimations were noticed, leading to bed
level, water depth and water velocity estimation errors
The effect of polyethylene glycol on shellac stability
The effect of polyethylene glycol (PEG) having amolecular weight of 1000 and 2000 on shellac stability has been investigated in this research. The shellac was shellac wax free, and the solvent was ethanol 96%. Shellac films were prepared by solventevaporationmethod. The stability of shellac was investigated using insoluble solid test, Fourier Transform Infra Red (FTIR), Thermogravimetry Analyzer (TGA), and Water Vapour Transmission Rate (WVTR). The results showed that stability of shellac decreased after heating at 125oC for 10,30,90,and 180 minutes, and storing for 1 month at 27 oC and 85 relative humidity (RH). PEG improved the stability, and the most stable effect was achieved through PEG1000
Cross-national variations in reported discrimination among people treated for major depression worldwide : the ASPEN/INDIGO international study
No study has so far explored differences in discrimination reported by people with major depressive disorder (MDD) across countries and cultures. To (a) compare reported discrimination across different countries, and (b) explore the relative weight of individual and contextual factors in explaining levels of reported discrimination in people with MDD. Cross-sectional multisite international survey (34 countries worldwide) of 1082 people with MDD. Experienced and anticipated discrimination were assessed by the Discrimination and Stigma Scale (DISC). Countries were classified according to their rating on the Human Development Index (HDI). Multilevel negative binomial and Poisson models were used. People living in ‘very high HDI’ countries reported higher discrimination than those in ‘medium/low HDI’ countries. Variation in reported discrimination across countries was only partially explained by individual-level variables. The contribution of country-level variables was significant for anticipated discrimination only. Contextual factors play an important role in anticipated discrimination. Country-specific interventions should be implemented to prevent discrimination towards people with MDD
Two images of Nantes as a ‘Green Model’ of Urban Planning and Governance: The ‘Collaborative City’ Versus the ‘Slow City’
This article examines how the city of Nantes, European Green Capital in 2013, came to promote plans for a new international airport at Notre-Dame-des-Landes. Deploying poststructuralist discourse theory, it analyses how the highly politicised struggle against the airport reveals the limits of the Nantes model of urban sustainability and collaboration, giving rise to a counter model, which we provisionally characterise as the ‘slow city’. While the struggle against the airport can be understood as a rural social movement, we show how its ideals and logics have been progressively displaced to Nantes itself, disclosing new images and possibilities of urban governance
Comparing policies to tackle ethnic inequalities in health: Belgium 1 Scotland 4
Ethnic-minority health is a public health priority in Europe. This study compares strategies
for tackling ethnic inequalities in health from two countries, Scotland and Belgium. Methods: We
compared the countries using the Whitehead framework. Official policy documents were retrieved
and reviewed and two databases related to immigrant health policies were also used. Ethnic inequalities
in health were compared using the UK and Belgian Censuses of 2001. We analysed the recognition of
the problem, the policies and the services and described ethnic health inequalities. Results: Scotland has
recognized the problem of ethnic inequalities in health, thanks to better data and the Scottish
Government has come up with a bold strategy. Belgium is a later starter, unable to properly monitor
ethnic inequalities. In addition, there is no clear government commitment to tackling either health
inequalities or ethnic inequalities in health. Both countries provide health-care services to ethnic
minority groups through the mainstream services, although ethnic minority groups have more choice
in Belgium than in Scotland. Overall, ethnic heath inequalities are lower in Scotland than in Belgium.
Conclusion: Scotland has provided a more advanced and comprehensive response to tackling ethnic
inequalities in health than Belgium. It has acknowledged that discrimination exists and that ethnic
minority groups may have different needs. Belgium still assumes non-discrimination in health care
and effectively denies the need for policy to tailor services to meet these needs. In Scotland, public
organizations have been made accountable for promoting equality in health. This is an important
contribution to European health policy
Long-term Monitoring on Mrk 501 for Its VHE gamma Emission and a Flare in October 2011
As one of the brightest active blazars in both X-ray and very high energy
-ray bands, Mrk 501 is very useful for physics associated with jets
from AGNs. The ARGO-YBJ experiment is monitoring it for -rays above 0.3
TeV since November 2007. Starting from October 2011 the largest flare since
2005 is observed, which lasts to about April 2012. In this paper, a detailed
analysis is reported. During the brightest -rays flaring episodes from
October 17 to November 22, 2011, an excess of the event rate over 6 is
detected by ARGO-YBJ in the direction of Mrk 501, corresponding to an increase
of the -ray flux above 1 TeV by a factor of 6.62.2 from its steady
emission. In particular, the -ray flux above 8 TeV is detected with a
significance better than 4 . Based on time-dependent synchrotron
self-Compton (SSC) processes, the broad-band energy spectrum is interpreted as
the emission from an electron energy distribution parameterized with a single
power-law function with an exponential cutoff at its high energy end. The
average spectral energy distribution for the steady emission is well described
by this simple one-zone SSC model. However, the detection of -rays
above 8 TeV during the flare challenges this model due to the hardness of the
spectra. Correlations between X-rays and -rays are also investigated.Comment: have been accepted for publication at Ap
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