254 research outputs found
Modelling Interregional Trade of Energy Crops in Eastern Germany
Renewable resources gain in importance in our modern society. The line of reasoning is based on their positive effects on agriculture, the environment and the economy. To support renewable energy from biomass the EU promotes the cultivation of energy crops. A spatial equilibrium model is applied based on the concept of maximizing net welfare, to provide information whether energy crop production competes with food production for land area. The Model of Interregional Trade of Energy Crops (ITEC) refers to Eastern Germany and adjacent areas of Poland. First results show that the regions have enough feedstocks to meet the required demand for food and biofuel production. In many cases both food crops and biofuels are either traded on interregional basis or exported to "Rest of Europe" indicating that there is no competition between food and energy crops. Only green maize for biogas production strongly competes in areas where the crop is required as feed for cattle.Energy crops, spatial equilibrium analysis, interregional trade, International Relations/Trade,
In-situ study of emerging metallicity and memory effect on ion-beam bombarded strontium titanate surface:
In this work we present an investigation of the occurrence of conductivity on the surface of SrTiO3 due to argon ion bombardment. We created a model to describe this process and found that the temperature during the ion milling is a crucial factor for the conductivity. Depending on the temperatures we found surface carrier densities ranging from 1.5*10^18 to 2.6*10^20cm^-3 by just analyzing the conductivity behavior.
Clustering of vacancies goes along with temperature and affects the conductivity significantly. Furthermore we found that ion milling is a gentle way create vacancies because the clustering rate is small compared to annealing samples in high vacuum. The amount of clusters at room temperature was measured to be around 3-4 times higher than at -140C.
We found that samples with a conducting surface change their resistance over time at room temperature due to the ongoing process of oxygen vacancy clustering. This effect may be suppressed by decreasing the temperature.
The bistable switching behavior in oxygen deficient SrTiO3 is shown without any additional doping. The vacancy migration is the major mechanism behind this memory effect. Comparing this behavior with annealed samples in high vacuum shows that the therein present amount of vacancy clusters must be much larger and has a negative effect on the bistable switching behavior.M.S.Includes bibliographical references (p. 83-87)by Heiko Gros
Handle with Care : Implementation of the List Experiment and Crosswise Model in a Large-Scale Survey on Academic Misconduct
Acknowledgments We thank the anonymous reviewers as well as Alexander Ehlert, Isabel Raabe, and Justus Rathmann for their concise comments and constructive feedback on our work. Co-authors in alphabetical order. Study Design: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Coding and Analysis: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. First draft: Julia Jerke, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Revisions: David Johann, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Final approval of the paper: Julia Jerke, David Johann, Heiko Rauhut, Kathrin Thomas, Antonia Velicu. Funding Information: The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: This research is supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), Starting Grant “CONCISE” BSSGIO 155981 of Heiko Rauhut.Peer reviewe
The Definitive Guide to NetBeans Platform
The Definitive Guide to NetBeans(t) Platform is a thorough and definitive introduction to the NetBeans Platform, covering all its major APIs in detail, with relevant code examples used throughout. The original German book on which this title is based was well received. The NetBeans Platform Community has put together this English translation, which author Heiko Bock updated to cover the latest NetBeans Platform 6.5 APIs. With an introduction by known NetBeans Platform experts Jaroslav Tulach, Tim Boudreau, and Geertjan Wielenga, this is the most up-to-date book on this topic at the moment. Al
An adaptive system for patient-controlled analgesia vol.1
Volume 2 is the actual data. Please contact the author for this information. Heiko Rudolph [[email protected]] http://www.set.rmit.edu.au/~e55643/Deposited with permission of the author. © 1995 Dr. Heiko E. R. Rudolph.Patient-Controlled Analgesia (PCA) has become accepted as an important means of self-regulated relief from post-surgical pain. In commonly used PCA systems, patients use a hand-held push-button to indicate the presence of pain and initiate a predetermined bolus of drug infusion. A disadvantage of this system is that no means is provided to accommodate variations in the intensity of pain or the sensitivity of the patient to the analgesic in use apart from the frequency of button pushing. A fixed rate background infusion is usually an option. A new adaptive PCA system is proposed to provide improved PCA through the use a variable background infusion, the provision for an extended high range of analgesic dosages and a novel handset which allows patients to rate their pain. The total system is under the control of an expert algorithm and is proposed to overcome some of the shortcomings of current systems. (For complete abstract open document
Bicycle Ambulances in rural Uganda - Analysis of factors influencing its usage
This article reports on a study undertaken to analyze the usage of the bicycle ambulances in Uganda. Since 1997, approximately 400 bicycle ambulances have been distributed to villages in rural Uganda to improve accessibility to health centers. Approximately 20% of the population of Uganda have to travel more than 5 km to a health center, in a country where most transportation is by foot. A bicycle ambulance is a bicycle with an attached trailer used to transport seriously sick patients up to 15 km. The author conducted guided interviews with receivers and the distributors of bicycle ambulances in selected villages. Factors have been defined that influence the usage of bicycle ambulances, including individual village characteristics, the features of the bicycle ambulance, the system of distribution, and the organization of the groups using the bicycle ambulances. The distance to the health center, nor the distance to the main road and quality of the road itself significantly influenced the usage of the bicycle ambulance. The frequency of usage of the bicycle ambulances was limited to a few cases in a month or year. The only significant influence on the frequency of usage was observed based on the different organizational structures of the bicycle ambulance groups. The author considers some of the barriers to use, including long distances to health centers and costs of repairs, but notes that these and other barriers can be overcome through the positive attitude of group members
Bicycle Ambulances in rural Uganda - Analysis of factors influencing its usage
This article reports on a study undertaken to analyze the usage of the bicycle ambulances in Uganda. Since 1997, approximately 400 bicycle ambulances have been distributed to villages in rural Uganda to improve accessibility to health centers. Approximately 20% of the population of Uganda have to travel more than 5 km to a health center, in a country where most transportation is by foot. A bicycle ambulance is a bicycle with an attached trailer used to transport seriously sick patients up to 15 km. The author conducted guided interviews with receivers and the distributors of bicycle ambulances in selected villages. Factors have been defined that influence the usage of bicycle ambulances, including individual village characteristics, the features of the bicycle ambulance, the system of distribution, and the organization of the groups using the bicycle ambulances. The distance to the health center, nor the distance to the main road and quality of the road itself significantly influenced the usage of the bicycle ambulance. The frequency of usage of the bicycle ambulances was limited to a few cases in a month or year. The only significant influence on the frequency of usage was observed based on the different organizational structures of the bicycle ambulance groups. The author considers some of the barriers to use, including long distances to health centers and costs of repairs, but notes that these and other barriers can be overcome through the positive attitude of group members
Efficient Token Distribution and Load Balancing on Reconfigurable Meshes with Restricted Bus Length
A solution to the token distribution problem is presented for the 2-dimensional reconfigurable mesh with restricted bus length. The algorithm is shown to be asymptotically worst-case optimal in reducing the discrepancy \Delta between maximum and minimum processor loads to ffi in optimal \Theta((\Delta\Gammaffi) \Delta n) time steps. The algorithm meets the time complexity of current state-of-the-art algorithms for sorting and permutation routing, but remains a factor of 2 from the bisection bound. Publishing Information Submitted: Australian Computer Science Conference, ACSC'97, Sydney Australia Author Information Heiko Schroder studied mathematics, physics, and computer science at CAU in Kiel (Germany) where he received his Ph.D. in computer science in 1977. Until 1989 he was Assistant Professor of Computer Science at CAU and Kansas University (U.S.A.) and Senior Research Fellow at ANU in Canberra (Australia). Until 1994 he was Professor of Microelectronics in Newcastle (Australia)..
Palaeoclimatology of the late Palaeocene to middle Eocene: geochemical records of stable and transient climate states
The late Palaeocene to late Eocene period of Earth's history is characterised by remarkable change. Temperate ice free poles at the beginning of this period gradually cooled until permanent ice formed on Antarctica around 33.5 million years before present (Ma) and sea ice formed in the Arctic. The intervening time was not stable and data, despite relatively low resolution, appear to show that the Eocene climate was dynamic. This period was the most recent time when atmospheric pCO2 concentrations were as high as predicted by models simulating the effects of anthropogenic fossil fuel burning on Earths' climate. The ability to understand the mechanisms of climate change in the Eocene will help to understand potential climate impacts in the future. This thesis examines 3 contrasting periods of climate change. Geochemical data indicate that a 3.5 million year period of high biogenic silica deposition during the Eocene was climatically relatively stable in the Arctic basin with only infrequent communication to the world's oceans outside. This period is correlated with high organic burial in the basin and global siliceous rich deposits which acted to gradually draw down pCO2. This period of `quiet' climate compares to two periods of warming where significant carbon isotope perturbations may indicate the forcing of the Earth's climate into an alternative quasi-stable state. The Palaeocene { Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) represents a significant input of exogenic carbon into the atmosphere over the course of several thousand years and significant warming of the Earth. Records of bulk carbonate isotopes from a section in NE Italy show several other Delta13C perturbations both before and after the PETM event, albeit a quarter to a half of the magnitude of the PETM, and having durations of only 40 { 60 thousand years (kyr). These events are thought to be the result of a re-arrangement of the internal carbon cycle of the Earth - atmosphere and may represent orbitally forced changes in deep water ocean ventilation similar to controls seen on modern day glacial { interglacial cycles. These rapid changes in the carbon cycle are shown to be inverse at the middle Eocene Climatic Optimum (MECO), where gradual warming over 400 kyr is ended abruptly by significant cooling. From the first marginal marine section of this event rapid organic carbon burial occurs over 50 { 100 kyr and is associated with previously unrecorded low oxygen bottom water conditions and high organic burial. We hypothesize that if this burial was extended over significant shelf areas then this could rapidly have returned the middle Eocene to the general cooling trend of the Eocene
The ‘Galilean Style in Science’ and the Inconsistency of Linguistic Theorising
Chomsky’s principle of epistemological tolerance says that in theoretical linguistics contradictions between the data and the hypotheses may be temporarily tolerated in order to protect the explanatory power of the theory. The paper raises the following problem: What kinds of contradictions may be tolerated between the data and the hypotheses in theoretical linguistics? First a model of paraconsistent logic is introduced which differentiates between week and strong contradiction. As a second step, a case study is carried out which exemplifies that the principle of epistemological tolerance may be interpreted as the tolerance of week contradiction. The third step of the argumentation focuses on another case study which exemplifies that the principle of epistemological tolerance must not be interpreted as the tolerance of strong contradiction. The reason for the latter insight is the unreliability and the uncertainty of introspective data. From this finding the author draws the conclusion that it is the integration of different data types that may lead to the improvement of current theoretical linguistics and that the integration of different data types requires a novel methodology which, for the time being, is not available
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