685 research outputs found

    Assessment of Natural Resources Use for Sustainable Development - DPSIR Framework for Case Studies in Portsmouth and Thames Gateway, U.K.

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    This chapter reports on the uses of the DPSIR framework to assess the sustainability of the intertidal environments within the two UK case study areas, Portsmouth and Thames Gateway. It focuses on statutory conservation areas dominated by intertidal habitats. Two are located in Portsmouth (Portsmouth and Langstone Harbours) and four in the Thames Gateway (Benfleet Marshes, South Thames Estuary, Medway Estuary and the Swale in the Thames Gateway). Based on the reduction of a number of pressures and impacts observed in recent decades and the improvement of overall environmental quality, all six SSSIs are considered to be sustainable in the short and medium term. In the future, it is possible that the impacts of climate change, especially sea-level rise, might result in further reduction in the area and/or quality of intertidal habitats. Further integration between conservation and planning objectives (both for urban development and management of flood risk) at local level is needed to support the long-term sustainability of intertidal habitats

    Mantra 2.0: An online collaborative resource for drug mode of action and repurposing by network analysis

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    Elucidation of molecular targets of a compound (mode of action, MoA) and of its off-targets is a crucial step in drug development. We developed an online collaborative resource (MANTRA 2.0) that supports this process by exploiting similarities between drug-induced transcriptional profiles. Drugs are organised in a network of nodes (drugs) and edges (similarities) highlighting “communities” of drugs sharing a similar MoA. A user can upload gene expression profiles (GEPs) before and after drug treatment in one or multiple cell types. An automated processing pipeline transforms the GEPs into a unique drug ”node” embedded in the drug-network. Visual inspection of the neighbouring drugs and communities helps in revealing its MoA, and to suggest new applications of known drugs (drug repurposing). MANTRA 2.0 allows storing and sharing user-generated network nodes, thus making MANTRA 2.0 a collaborative ever-growing resource

    Neural Basis of Object Recognition

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    Time-lapse characterization of hydrothermal seawater and microbial interactions with basaltic tephra at Surtsey Volcano

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    A new International Continental Drilling Program (ICDP) project will drill through the 50-yearoldedifice of Surtsey Volcano, the youngest of the Vestmannaeyjar Islands along the south coast of Iceland, to perform interdisciplinary time-lapse investigations of hydrothermal and microbial interactions with basaltic tephra. The volcano, created in 1963–1967 by submarine and subaerial basaltic eruptions, was first drilled in 1979. In October 2014, a workshop funded by the ICDP convened 24 scientists from 10 countries for 3 and a half days on Heimaey Island to develop scientific objectives, site the drill holes, and organize logistical support. Representatives of the Surtsey Research Society and Environment Agency of Iceland also participated. Scientific themes focus on further determinations of the structure and eruptive processes of the type locality of Surtseyan volcanism, descriptions of changes in fluid geochemistry and microbial colonization of the subterrestrial deposits since drilling 35 years ago, and monitoring the evolution of hydrothermal and biological processes within the tephra deposits far into the future through the installation of a Surtsey subsurface observatory. The tephra deposits provide a geologic analog for developing specialty concretes with pyroclastic rock and evaluating their long-term performance under diverse hydrothermal conditions

    Direct numerical simulation of an oblique jet in a particle-laden crossflow

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    Jet in crossflow is a classic fluid dynamics problem widely studied in the last decades because of the big quantity of natural and industrial processes in which it is encountered (Mahesh in Annu Rev Fluid Mech 45(1):379–407, 2013 [6]). The present study focuses on the interaction between solid suspended particles and gas turbines film cooling that is a commonly used coolant technique aiming at generating a protective film of cold fluid around the blade profile. Effective cooling systems are crucial to increase turbine inlet gas temperature and to protect turbine blade surfaces from the huge thermal stress generated

    Influence of turbulence models in the prediction of cavitation occurrence

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    In the present paper the effect of turbulence models on cavitation occurrence is evaluated by means of numerical simulations on a NACA 66 (MOD) profile. Cavitation will be assessed through the employment of the widely applied Singhal model, based on the use of the Rayleigh-Plesset equation for bubble dynamics description. Two different turbulence models are used to assess the effect of turbulence on cavitation. For this purpose, Scale Adaptive Simulations (SASs) and Transitional Shear Stress Transport (TSST) simulations are carried out on the NACA test case. Results are discussed for two distinct cavitation numbers comparing experimental data and simulations-obtained values of the non-dimensional pressure coefficients. Moreover, temporal trends and Fast Fourier Transformations (FFTs) will be evaluated for the physical quantities of interest, highlighting the main turbulence-induced fluctuating modes. A direct visualization of the cavity breathing phenomenon is then proposed for the severer cavitating condition case

    Temporal Control of the Host-Guest Properties of a Calix[6]arene Receptor by the Use of a Chemical Fuel

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    The host-guest interaction of a 1,3,5-trisaminocalix[6]arene receptor with N-methylisoquinolinium trifluoromethanesulfonate (Kassof 500 ± 30 M-1in CD2Cl2) can be dissipatively driven by means of 2-cyano-2-(4′-chloro)phenylpropanoic acid used as a convenient chemical fuel. When the fuel is added to a dichloromethane solution containing the above complex, the host is induced to immediately release the guest in the bulk solution. Consumption of the fuel allows the guest to be re-uptaken by the host. The operation can be satisfactorily reiterated with four subsequent additions of fuel, producing four successive release-reuptake cycles. The percentage of the guest temporarily released in the bulk solution by the host and the time required for the reuptake process can be finely regulated by varying the quantities of added fuel

    Multiscenario flood hazard assessment using probabilistic runoff hydrograph estimation and 2D hydrodynamic modelling

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    In this paper, we aim to define a procedure of flood hazard assessment applicable to large river basins in which flood events can be induced/sustained by the full basin area or by fractions of the total area as functions of the extent of the triggering precipitation event. The proposed procedure is based on a combined approach accounting for (1) the reconstruction of intensity–duration–frequency curves expressing the magnitude in terms of intensity for multiple return periods; (2) the application of the soil conservation service method for runoff estimation from a selected rainfall scenario considering some characteristics of the basin (i.e. soil type, land use/treatment, surface condition, and antecedent moisture conditions); (3) 2D hydrodynamic modelling conducted by the HEC-RAS model using runoff hydrographs as hydrological input data; (4) the reconstruction of flood hazard maps by overlaying multiple inundation maps depicting flood extent for different return periods. To account for the variability in the extent of the triggering precipitation event and the resulting input hydrograph, multiple contributing areas are considered. The procedure is tested at the archaeological site of Sybaris in southern Italy, which is periodically involved in flood events of variable magnitude. The obtained results highlight that the variable extent of the floodable area is strongly conditioned by the extent of the contributing area and return period, as expected. The archaeological site is always involved in the simulated flooding process, except for the smallest contributing area for which only a 300-year event involves this part of the site. Our findings may be useful for developing and supporting flood risk management plans in the area. The developed procedure might be easily exported and tested in other fluvial contexts in which evaluations of multiple flood hazard scenarios, due to the basin geometry and extent, are needed
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