Search results for "Tidal"
showing 10 items of 193 documents
Sea Wave Energy. A Review of the Current Technologies and Perspectives
2021
The proposal of new technologies capable of producing electrical energy from renewable sources has driven research into seas and oceans. Research finds this field very promising in the future of renewable energies, especially in areas where there are specific climatic and morphological characteristics to exploit large amounts of energy from the sea. In general, this kind of energy is referred to as six energy resources: waves, tidal range, tidal current, ocean current, ocean thermal energy conversion, and saline gradient. This review has the aim to list several wave-energy converter power plants and to analyze their years of operation. In this way, a focus is created to understand how many …
Beaches in Valencian Coast
2018
The main factors that determined the Valencian beaches characteristics are the configuration of relief structures; fluvial sediment supply; low tidal range; the predominance of low energy waves; scarcity of big storms; longshore littoral drift; and human action. There is a significant prevalence of sandy beaches. Nevertheless, both at the northern part of the Gulf of Valencia and in the structural segment, between the Cape Sant Antoni and Alicante city, pebble and gravel beaches are predominant. Most of the Valencian beaches have experienced significant morphological changes during the last decades due to the human interventions -voluntary or involuntary- in the coastal system. The implemen…
Concurrent fast and slow synchronized efferent phrenic activities in time and frequency domain.
1990
Abstract In urethane-anesthetized or decerebrated vagotomized rabbits efferent multifiber activity of the phrenic nerve was investigated for synchronized activities both in time and frequency domains. When respiratory drive was steadily increased by either an elevation of end-tidal CO2 concentration or i.v. administration of 4-aminopyridine, medium-frequency oscillations (MFO) first increased, then decreased and finally became absent. The power of high-frequency oscillations (HFO) steadily rose with increasing respiratory drive. In contrast to HFO which revealed a unimodal spectral peak of mostly small bandwidth, the MFO spectrum in most cases consisted of a broad complex. This complex in s…
Ventilation, oxidative stress and risk of brain injury in preterm newborn
2020
AbstractPreterm infants have an increased risk of cognitive and behavioral deficits and cerebral palsy compared to term born babies. Especially before 32 weeks of gestation, infants may require respiratory support, but at the same time, ventilation is known to induce oxidative stress, increasing the risk of brain injury. Ventilation may cause brain damage through two pathways: localized cerebral inflammatory response and hemodynamic instability. During ventilation, the most important causes of pro-inflammatory cytokine release are oxygen toxicity, barotrauma and volutrauma. The purpose of this review was to analyze the mechanism of ventilation-induced lung injury (VILI) and the relationship…
Trophic structure and functioning of vermetid reef community based on carbon and nitrogen stable isotope analysis.
2009
Problems in Precise Measurement of Tidal Volumes
1998
Respiratory gas flows and volumes can conveniently be measured by pneumo-tachography.3 However, the pneumotachographic signal depends on gas temperature, humidity, and composition, and therefore the achievable precision of measurement is limited to about 5–10%2,8 — which is not sufficient for determining the human ventilation distribution with satisfactory accuracy.6,7,5 As a — potentially more accurate — alternative, a plethysmographic method may be used in which the tested subject breathes out of and into bags that are suspended in a large tank of constant volume (Figure 1). Volume V and pressure P in the system (consisting of tank, tubings, valves, and the subject) are related via Boyle-…
Theoretical Analysis of Factors Influencing Recovery of Ventilation Distributions from Inert Gas Washout Data
1990
For the quantitative analysis of intraregional ventilation inhomogeneities, one classically applies the inert gas washout method [7,24] in which an inert gas of negligible solubility in blood and tissue is washed into the lungs. After washin is complete, the inspiratory inert gas fraction is set to a smaller value and the time course of the mixed endexpiratory inert gas fraction during the subsequent inert gas washout is recorded. The determinants of this time course are: The endexpiratory alveolar volume at the instant of change in inspiratory inert gas fraction, the anatomical dead space, the gas exchange ratio, the respiratory frequency, the in- and expiratory tidal volumes, and the inho…
Observatory science with eXTP
2019
Disponible preprint en: arXiv:1812.04023v1 [astro-ph.HE] [v1] Mon, 10 Dec 2018 19:00:52 UTC (4,376 KB)
Isotopes Trace Biogeochemistry and Sources of Cu and Zn in an intertidal soil
2013
River floodplain soils are sinks and potential sources for toxic trace metals like Cu and Zn. We hypothesize that stable Cu and Zn isotope ratios reflect both the mobilization and the sources of metals. We determined the soil properties, the concentrations and partitioning of Cu and Zn, and variations in δ65Cu and δ66Zn values in a core obtained from an Aquic Udifluvent developed on a freshwater intertidal mudflat of the River Elbe, Germany. The core was sampled at 2 cm intervals to a depth of 34 cm, which corresponds to approximately 9 yr of sedimentation. Elevated concentrations of Cu (up to 320 μg g−1) and Zn (up to 2080 μg g−1) indicated anthropogenic pollution. At the time of sampling …
Role of peat organic matter on isotopic composition of most abundant benthic organisms in intertidal habitats of SW Iceland
2008
The transfer of peat organic matter (OM) from tidal pools of upper littoral to downstream rocky shores and its potential incorporation into marine biota were investigated using the stable isotope approach. Samplings were carried out in September 2004 in two SW Icelandic sites (Osar and Hvassahraun), where we selected (1) areas with shores where grass gently declined towards rocks and, on reaching the sea line, formed small tidal peat pools and (2) areas where grass and rocky shores were not contiguous, rather the grass lower limits were several hundreds of meters back from the shore. In both grass and no grass areas, in the intertidal zone, all benthic organisms and all potential OM sources…