Search results for "wt"

showing 10 items of 5424 documents

Landfill Culture: Some Implications to Degrowth

2016

To some extent, waste is just one more sign of the unsustainability of growth. Waste from industrial and socio-economic metabolism must be understood as any unusable material left over after a job, function or operation has been completed, which however, retains the ability to disrupt natural systems and interfere with them as one of its inherent properties. As part of such waste, Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) represents the unusable (or underused) and rejected fraction of the material resources mobilized by the sophisticated urban and/or industrial ecosystem. Although the volume of MSW is relatively small compared to other waste types, it is increasingly important as a result of its steady r…

Waste treatmentIntervention (law)Municipal solid wasteDegrowthSustainabilityPublic debateBusinessBiodegradable wasteReuseEnvironmental planning
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Validation of a predictive model for the growth of chalk yeasts on bread.

2015

The present study focused on the effects of temperature, T, and water activity, aw, on the growth of Hyphopichia burtonii, Pichia anomala, and Saccharomycopsis fibuligera on Sabouraud Agar Medium. Cardinal values were estimated by means of cardinal models with inflection. All the yeasts were xerophilic, and they exhibited growth at 0.85 aw. The combined effects of T, aw, and pH on the growth of these species were described by the gamma-concept and validated on bread in the range of 15-25 °C, 0.91-0.97 aw, and pH 4.6-6.8. The optimum growth rates on bread were 2.88, 0.259, and 1.06 mm/day for H. burtonii, P. anomala, and S. fibuligera, respectively. The optimal growth rate of S. fibuligera o…

Water activityPichia anomalaEthyl acetateFood ContaminationSabouraud agarMicrobiologychemistry.chemical_compoundYeastsOptimum growthBotanyFood scienceAnomalabiologyTemperaturefood and beveragesWaterGeneral MedicineBreadHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationModels Theoreticalbiology.organism_classificationSaccharomycopsis fibuligeraCulture MediachemistrySaccharomycetalesFood MicrobiologyHyphopichia burtoniiFood ScienceInternational journal of food microbiology
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Survival of Bothryosphaeriaceae species after hot water treatment

2014

The use of Hot Water Treatment (HWT) in the grapevine propagation process has been shown to be A potenzially effective tool to control "Petri" and "Black foot" fungal pathogens. However, effects of HWT on Bothryosphaeriaceae after HWT in two different experiments. First, mycelial plugs contained in Eppendorf tubes with sterile distilled water were subjected to different combination of temperature (50-54°C) and exposure time (!5- 30- 45 minutes)in a hot water bath.In a second trial, the fungi were inoculated into 110 Richter rootstock canes, prviously subjected to HWT. Inoculated canes were incubated at 25°C for three weeks to allow for fungal colonization abd then were subjected at HWT in t…

Water treatment Bothryosphaeria HWT pathogensSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni Erbacee
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An optical classification tool for global lake waters

2017

Shallow and deep lakes receive and recycle organic and inorganic substances from within the confines of these lakes, their watershed and beyond. Hence, a large range in absorption and scattering and extreme differences in optical variability can be found between and within global lakes. This poses a challenge for atmospheric correction and bio-optical algorithms applied to optical remote sensing for water quality monitoring applications. To optimize these applications for the wide variety of lake optical conditions, we adapted a spectral classification scheme based on the concept of optical water types. The optical water types were defined through a cluster analysis of in situ hyperspectral…

Watershed010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesAtmospheric correctionHyperspectral imagingSediment02 engineering and technology01 natural sciences6. Clean water/dk/atira/pure/sustainabledevelopmentgoals/life_below_waterColored dissolved organic matter13. Climate actionGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental sciencemedia_common.cataloged_instancelakes; reflectance; classification; OWT; atmospheric correction; MERIS; OLCI; water quality14. Life underwaterWater qualitySDG 14 - Life Below WaterEuropean unionEutrophication021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesmedia_commonRemote sensing
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A Preliminary Energy Assessment to Improve the Energy Sustainability in the Small Islands of the Mediterranean Sea

2020

Power plants supplied by renewable energy sources are expanding around the world, in order to reduce the carbon dioxide emissions, limit the global warming and improve the energy sustainability. Despite the relevant achieved results, small islands are heavily reliant on fossil fuels. In this context, renewable energy sources are available but practically unused, due to landscape and economic constraints. This condition is quite common in the Mediterranean Sea. These islands are normally fed by a stand-alone electrical grid and a power plant, equipped with diesel engines. In order to improve the sustainability of the energy sector, the paper considers the case study of Ustica, a small Italia…

Wave energy converterEnergy Engineering and Power TechnologySettore ING-IND/32 - Convertitori Macchine E Azionamenti ElettriciEnvironmental Science (miscellaneous)small islandslcsh:Technologylcsh:HD72-88Small islandlcsh:Economic growth development planningMediterranean seaEnvironmental protectionEnergy sustainabilitywave energy converterWater Science and TechnologySettore ING-IND/11 - Fisica Tecnica Ambientalelcsh:TRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industrymediterranean sea.sea wave energyrenewable energyEnergy assessmentenergy sustainabilityRenewable energy;Energy sustainability;Sea wave energy;Wave energy converter;Small islands;Mediterranean sea.Renewable energyEnvironmental sciencebusinessJournal of Sustainable Development of Energy, Water and Environment Systems
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Study of Photo-Induced Thin Film Growth on Cds Substrates.*

1983

ABSTRACTPhoto-induced growth of ZnS on CdS has been studied using amorphous (thin film) and single-crystal substrates. The effect has been found to occur for light of wavelength shorter than the CdS absorption edge; a maximum light-induced thickness enhancement of 700 Å has been obtained for the ZnS film, with a growth rate of 2000 Å/min. The lightinduced growth, with its observed “memory” of several minutes is consistent with photo-desorption of an adlayer.

WavelengthMaterials sciencegenetic structuresAbsorption edgebusiness.industryOptoelectronicsGrowth rateThin filmbusinessAmorphous solidMRS Proceedings
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Fire Responses to the 2010 and 2015/2016 Amazonian Droughts

2019

Extreme droughts in Amazonia cause anomalous increase in fire occurrence, disrupting the stability of environmental, social and economic systems. Thus, understanding how droughts affect fire patterns in this region is essential for anticipating and planning actions for remediation of possible impacts. Focused on the Brazilian Amazon biome, we investigated fire responses to the 2010 and 2015/2016 Amazonian droughts using a remote sensing data. Our results revealed that the 2015/2016 drought surpassed the 2010 drought in intensity and extent. During the 2010 drought, we found a maximum area of 846,800 km2 (24% of the Brazilian Amazon biome) with significant (p<0.05) rainfall decrease in the f…

Wet seasongeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryAmazon rainforestAmazonianBiomerainfalltemperatureForestryVegetationOld-growth forestold-growth forestremote sensingMODISDeforestationGreenhouse gasEnvironmental scienceGeneral Earth and Planetary Scienceslcsh:Qlcsh:ScienceCHIRPSFrontiers in Earth Science
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A relativistic approach to gravitational instability in the expanding Universe: second-order Lagrangian solutions

1994

A Lagrangian relativistic approach to the non--linear dynamics of cosmological perturbations of an irrotational collisionless fluid is considered. Solutions are given at second order in perturbation theory for the relevant fluid and geometric quantities and compared with the corresponding ones in the Newtonian approximation. Specifically, we compute the density, the volume expansion scalar, the shear, the ``electric" part, or tide, and the ``magnetic" part of the Weyl tensor. The evolution of the shear and the tide beyond the linear regime strongly depends on the ratio of the characteristic size of the perturbation to the cosmological horizon distance. For perturbations on sub--horizon scal…

Weyl tensorPhysicsGravitational waveAstrophysics (astro-ph)FOS: Physical sciencesPerturbation (astronomy)Astronomy and AstrophysicsAstrophysicsConservative vector fieldMetric expansion of spaceGeneral Relativity and Quantum Cosmologysymbols.namesakeClassical mechanicsSpace and Planetary ScienceHubble volumesymbolsNewtonian fluidPerturbation theory (quantum mechanics)Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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Lightweight LCP construction for next-generation sequencing datasets

2012

The advent of "next-generation" DNA sequencing (NGS) technologies has meant that collections of hundreds of millions of DNA sequences are now commonplace in bioinformatics. Knowing the longest common prefix array (LCP) of such a collection would facilitate the rapid computation of maximal exact matches, shortest unique substrings and shortest absent words. CPU-efficient algorithms for computing the LCP of a string have been described in the literature, but require the presence in RAM of large data structures. This prevents such methods from being feasible for NGS datasets. In this paper we propose the first lightweight method that simultaneously computes, via sequential scans, the LCP and B…

Whole genome sequencingGenomics (q-bio.GN)FOS: Computer and information sciencesSequenceBWT; LCP; next-generation sequencing datasetsBWT LCP text indexes next-generation sequencing datasets massive datasetsSettore INF/01 - InformaticaComputer scienceComputationString (computer science)LCP arrayParallel computingData structureDNA sequencingSubstringBWTLCPFOS: Biological sciencesComputer Science - Data Structures and AlgorithmsQuantitative Biology - GenomicsData Structures and Algorithms (cs.DS)next-generation sequencing datasets
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Efficient growth of sub-micrometric MOF crystals inside the channels of AAO membranes

2013

International audience; A dynamic step-by-step methodology has been implemented to grow the HKUST-1 porous coordination polymer inside commercial anodic aluminium oxide membranes. Efficient crystal growth is achieved from the membrane inner walls and over the whole membrane thickness when copper acetate colloidal suspensions and benzene tricarboxylic acid solutions are forced to flow through the membrane. Sorption properties of the HKUST-1 embedded in membranes show selectivity for CO2 over CO, CH4, O2 and N2 similar to the bulk material.

Whole membraneMaterials scienceCoordination polymerMatériauxInorganic chemistry[ SPI.MAT ] Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialschemistry.chemical_elementCrystal growth02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistry01 natural sciencesCrystals[SPI.MAT]Engineering Sciences [physics]/Materialschemistry.chemical_compoundGeneral Materials Sciencechemistry.chemical_classificationRenewable Energy Sustainability and the EnvironmentSorptionAAO membranesGeneral ChemistryTricarboxylic acid[CHIM.MATE]Chemical Sciences/Material chemistry021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyCopperSub-micrometric MOF0104 chemical sciencesMembranechemistry[ CHIM.MATE ] Chemical Sciences/Material chemistryAluminium oxide0210 nano-technology
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