DataverseNO
Not a member yet
2167 research outputs found
Sort by
Replication data for: Laboratory-Scale Experiments on Ignited Hydrogen Jets: Flame Acceleration and Overpressure Analysis
This dataset includes results from laboratory-scale experiments examining the behavior of ignited hydrogen jets in open atmospheric conditions with delay ignition. The tests investigate flame acceleration, overpressure development, and the influence of obstacle configurations on flame propagation. Key parameters varied during the experiments include ignition location, mass flow rates, and the spacing between obstacles and the nozzle. Using high-speed imaging and pressure sensors, the dataset provides detailed data on combustion dynamics
Replication Data for: In Vitro Digestion of High-Fat Commercial Dairy Products: Detailed Analysis of Lipid Classes
This dataset contains data from fatty acid methyl ester (FAME) analyses on samples of four different dairy products and different lipid fractions isolated after in vitro digestion of the dairy products. The lipid fractions were triacylglycerols (TAG), diacylglycerols (DAG), monoacylglycerols (MAG), free fatty acids (FFA), and polar lipids (PL), and the dairy products chosen were full-fat cream, full-fat sour cream, cream cheese, and a Gouda-type cheese. We employed the INFOGEST 2.0 digestion model. The isolated lipids were fractionated by solid-phase extraction (SPE), and the FAMEs of each fraction was detected and quantified using GC–MS
Simulation data for the coupled CFD–DEM approach implemented in REEF3D
This dataset contains the input files, geometry files, solver configuration, and selected output time-series necessary to reproduce the benchmark case shown in the associated paper, accepted for publication in the Coastal and Offshore Science and Engineering (COSE) journal: the buoyant rise and collision of three rigid spheres in a two-phase (air–water) tank simulated with a coupled CFD–DEM framework implemented in REEF3D. The dataset includes REEF3D configuration files, DEM collision parameters, raw solver outputs (binary/VTK), and plots presented in the paper. The numerical framework combines a high-order finite-difference CFD solver with a Direct Forcing Immersed Boundary Method (DF-IBM) and a multi-level collision detection and viscoelastic contact model
Replication Data for: Maternal and paternal crude oil exposure differentially shapes early developmental transcriptomes and survival outcomes in Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua)
This dataset originates from an intergenerational crude oil exposure experiment involving Atlantic cod (Gadus morhua) broodstock. Mature cod in late gametogenesis were exposed for 20 days to either a water-soluble fraction of crude oil or untreated seawater. The water-soluble fraction was generated using an oiled gravel column setup, resulting in an initial total PAH (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon) concentration (sum of 44 PAHs) of 97 μg/L, which declined to 17 μg/L by the end of the exposure period. Sixteen days after the end of the exposure, the fish were strip-spawned, and in vitro cross-fertilization was used to produce four distinct offspring lineages: control (unexposed parents), maternally exposed, paternally exposed and biparentally exposed. Embryos were reared in clean seawater until larval stages (42 days post fertilization). The dataset includes a variety of data types: rearing water temperature, body burden analysis of crude oil related compounds in freshly fertilized eggs and in embryos at 4 days post fertilization and embryo and larval phenotypic data, including egg diameter, hatching success, morphology, axial deformation, cardiotoxicity and larval survival. This dataset does not include transcriptomic (RNA-seq) data. However, quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) data generated to validate the RNA-seq findings are included. The transcriptomics data generated is deposited separately (see Related Dataset). This experiment was conducted at the Tromsø Aquaculture Research Station (Havbruksstasjonen i Tromsø AS, Kårvik) and the Centre for Marine Aquaculture (CAM, NOFIMA AS, Kraknes), and was approved by the Norwegian Animal Research Authority (ID 22461)
Python scripts for Soft Ordering 1-D CNN to Estimate the Capacity Factor of Windfarms for Identifying the Age-Related Performance Degradation.
The supplementary materials provide the complete codebase for the Soft Ordering 1-D Convolutional Neural Network (1-D CNN) model for estimating the capacity factor of wind farms, as presented in "Soft Ordering 1-D CNN to Estimate the Capacity Factor of Windfarms for Identifying the Age-Related Performance Degradation" (PHME 2024).
This research was funded by Analytics for Asset Integrity Management of Windfarms (AIMWind), under grant no. 312486, from the Research Council of Norway (RCN). AIMWind is a collaborative research project from the University of Agder, Norwegian Research Center (NORCE), and TU Delft, with DNV and Origo Solutions as advisory partners.</p
Data for 'A Topographical analysis of skin thickness in horses'
This dataset contains skin thickness measurements of two different cohort of horses (cohort 1: 9 warmblood horses; cohort 2: 8 warmblood horses, 10 coldblood horses). Measurements have been obtained on different locations across the body and extremities, and have been obtained using different measuring methods (macroscopic measurements in cohort 1, microscopic measurements in cohort 2)
Francis-99 workshop 1: Steady state operation
Francis-99 is the series of workshops that provided open data to the researchers worldwide. Hydraulic turbines play essential roles to mitigate the renewable energy demand. The design data of the turbine are rarely available due to confidentiality. The workshop series provides an unique opportunity to the researchers worldwide and provides the state-of-the-art measurement data with computational model.
The data contains experimental results of the mode Francis turbine in the Waterpower laboratory, NTNU. The provided data can be used to define boundary conditions and validation of the computational fluid dynamic model. The data also contains the computational fluid dynamic model. The dataset corresponds to the first workshop of the Francis-99.
The data includes both pressure measurements at selected locations in the turbine and velocity measurements in draft tube. Velocity was measured using PIV in the draft tube. The measurement data contains three operating points: (1) BEP - design load (2) part load and (3) high load. A potential user can use these data and validate the numerical simulation model. Detailed information about the data is available in the attached report
Supporting Dataset for “Global evidence map of feedstock portfolios in biomass- and waste-to-X technologies”
This dataset supports a global evidence map of feedstock portfolios reported across biomass- and waste-to-X conversion technologies. It contains technology-specific labelled feedstock datasets, reference-record datasets with assigned record IDs, summary distributions and shares in Excel and CSV formats, files mapping absolute-hazard feedstocks to List of Waste (LoW) codes, a reference LoW classification file, and supplementary tables associated with the study. Together, these files make feedstock assumptions, label assignments, hazard-related classification, and supporting evidence explicit, auditable, and reusable for comparative sustainability analysis, policy interpretation, and future method development
Replication Data for: Henrik Ibsen's Writings, Version 1.4
The dataset "Henrik Ibsen's Writings, Version 1.4", short HISe 1.4 dataset, contains the corpus and framework of the digital scholarly edition of Henrik Ibsen's Writings, currently available at ibsen.uio.no.
HISe is the digital version of the editorial project Henrik Ibsen's Writings, a twin project resulting in both a 16 volume book edition of edited main versions and secondary material, and a digital version including all drafts, manuscripts and printed versions in Ibsen's lifetime. The active editorial project lasted from 1999 to 2010, after which HISe was created based on the same files. The project is documented on Wikipedia: https://no.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henrik_Ibsens_skrifter. The edition is managed by Center for Ibsen Studies, University of Oslo.
HISe was developed from the book production files after the active editorial project ended in 2010. The first version 1.0 was launched in 2014, version 1.1 in 2015, 1.2 in 2016, 1.3 in 2017 and 1.4 in 2024. The digital edition contains everything Ibsen wrote in transcripts and facsimiles, alongside with secondary materials, introductions, historical and linguistic commentaries, and critical apparatus, as well as bibliographic, structural and semantic metadata
Supplementary data for: Parental alienation and its impact on self-esteem and well-being
Supplementary material and research data for the review study that has resulted in the journal article called "Parental alienation and its impact on self-esteem and well-being: A meta-ethnography".
ABSTRACT
Introduction
Previous studies have highlighted that the transformations of the family of origin and parent-child relationships impact children's personal growth and mental health, which persist well into adulthood. Research has mainly focused on experiences of parental divorce during childhood, which motivated us to examine what impact parental alienation during childhood has on self-esteem and well-being in adulthood.
Methods
Original qualitative studies were identified and systematically synthesized using a meta-ethnographic approach. Six databases were searched for relevant full-text articles in English, as well as in Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish. There were no limitations concerning the year of publication. Articles were first screened against inclusion criteria for eligibility and then assessed for quality and analyzed using Noblit and Hare’s seven-step meta-ethnography process. The ENTREQ checklist for systematic reviews was used. Ten qualitative studies were included in the analysis.
Results
The analysis resulted in four themes: Lack of trust and insecure relationships, Emotional pain and feelings of loss and guilt, Low self-esteem affecting life paths, and Embracing strategies and changes. A synthesis of the four themes is illuminated in the line of argument and metaphor: A tree that grows in the shadow of its roots.
Conclusions
By understanding the experiences parental alienation has on adults’ self-esteem and wellbeing, health and social care professionals, services, and educational institutions can better support and help persons to find the strength in their roots, find a balanced sense of vulnerability and freedom that contributes to health and well-being, and an ability to follow their own life path