3,162 research outputs found
Figs 1–6 in An annotated list and a key to Vietnamese species of the genus Hyperxipha Maa, 1949 (Hymenoptera: Xiphydriidae) with description of a new species
Figs 1–6. Hyperxiphia punctata Pham, sp. n., holotype ♀. 1 – head, frontal view; 2 –Published as part of Pham, P.H., Nguyen, A.T.T. & Nguyen, N.T., 2023, An annotated list and a key to Vietnamese species of the genus Hyperxipha Maa, 1949 (Hymenoptera: Xiphydriidae) with description of a new species, pp. 1-7 in Far Eastern Entomologist 470 on page 3, DOI: 10.25221/fee.470.1, http://zenodo.org/record/761642
RRS Discovery Cruise 306, 23 Jun-06 Jul 2006. Pelagic biogeochemistry of the PAP Site
The aim of this cruise was to develop a better understanding of carbon cycling in the pelagic waters of the Porcupine Abyssal Plain (PAP). There were three objectives 1) Turnaround moorings at the PAP Observatory; 2) Conduct a 1-D time series on the central station of a wide range of biogeochemical processes and to back this up with a mesoscale survey of key variables; 3) To trial the use of Autosub for mesoscale surveys in conjunction with the ship. All objectives were met, although the tops of the moorings were found to be missing probably due to fishing activity and the Autosub trials were incomplete due to vehicle failure. A full mesoscale survey was carried out using the ship and an eleven day time series at the central station was achieved
Stereoscopic PIV measurement in laminar rotating plane Couette flow
Plane Couette flow with spanwise system rotation shows structures of streamwise-oriented roll cells that arise due to the instability by the Coriolis force when the system rotation is in the opposite direction to the mean flow vorticity. The momentum transport caused by such roll cell structures makes the flow tend to exhibit zero absolute vorticity. In the present study, stereoscopic PIV measurements in the rotating plane Couette flow were carried out in order to further illuminate the vortex structures and transport phenomena in this flow. The Reynolds stresses and some terms of its transport equation were evaluated to discuss the transport phenomena caused by the coherent structure. Furthermore, the wall shear stress was evaluated based on the measurement results of the Reynolds and viscous shear stresses and its variation with the system rotation rate is also presented
Physical Location of Smart Key Activators: A Building Security Penetration Test
Purpose – When security managers choose to deploy a smart lock activation system, the number of units needed and their location needs to be established. This study presents the results of a penetration test involving smart locks in the context of building security. We investigated how the amount of effort an employee has to invest in complying with a security policy (i.e. walk from the office to the smart key activator) influences vulnerability. In particular, the attractiveness of a no-effort alternative (i.e. someone else walking from your office to the key activators to perform a task on your behalf) was evaluated. The contribution of this study relates to showing how experimental psychology can be used to determine the cost-benefit analysis (CBA) of physical building security measures.Design/methodology/approach – Twenty-seven different ‘offenders’ visited the offices of 116 employees. Using a script, each offender introduced a problem, provided a solution and asked the employee to hand over their office key.Findings – A total of 58.6% of the employees handed over their keys to a stranger; no difference was found between female and male employees. The likelihood of handing over the keys for employees close to a key activator was similar to that of those who were further away.Research limitations/implications – The results suggest that installing additional key activators is not conducive to reducing the building’s security vulnerability associated with the handing over of keys to strangers.Originality/value – No research seems to have investigated the distribution of smart key activators in the context of a physical penetration test. This research highlights the need to raise awareness of social engineering and of the vulnerabilities introduced via smart locks (and other smart systems).Accepted Author ManuscriptCyber Securit
Generalized diagnostic scaling for high-order moments in turbulent boundary layers
The present work builds upon the diagnostic plot for the streamwise turbulence intensity [Alfredsson & Örlü, 2010] and generalises it for higher-order (even and odd) moments providing a general description of the probability density distribution of streamwise velocity fluctuations. Turbulent boundary layers (up to a friction Reynolds number of 20'000) are employed and demonstrate its feasibility to scale data throughout the overlap and outer region
PV architectures for DC microgrids using buck or boost exclusive microconverters
DC microgrids can connect directly dc renewable energy sources with increasing amount of dc loads. In this paper it is looked for possible architectures for integrating PV panels into dc microgrids, by means of microconverter strings. Three topologies are considered, featuring only buck microconverters and only boost microconverters, since they promise higher efficiency due to fewer semiconductors in the current path. The topologies under exam are tested with a perturb and observe MPPT, in the cases of abrupt local shading and uneven shading over a solar panels' array. Among the three, the best topology by response time and control ease is found.Accepted Author ManuscriptOld - EWI-ESE-DC&S DC systems & StorageElectrical Power Processin
Matching PV array output with residential load by optimisation of array orientation
Currently PV modules are positioned to receive the highest amount of incident radiation in a year. Therefore, the generation pattern is independent of the consumption and a large storage is required to compensate for the same. This paper studies the possibility of orienting the modules differently in order to match the consumption more efficiently.Accepted Author ManuscriptOld - EWI-ESE-DC&S DC systems & Storag
Mobile Data, Dynamic Allocation and Zero Aliasing: an occam Experiment
F.R.M. Barnes and P.H. Welch Communicating Process Architectures 2001 (WoTUG 24) Traditional imperative languages (such as C) and modern object-oriented languages are plagued by uncontrolled resource aliasing problems. Add in concurrency and the problems compound exponentially. Improperly synchronised access to shared (i.e. aliased) resources leads to problems of race-hazard, deadlock, livelock and starvation. This paper describes the binding into occam (a concurrent processing language based on CSP) of a secure, dynamic and efficient way of sharing data between parallel processes with minimal synchronisation overheads. The key new facilities provided are: a movement semantics for assignment and communication, strict zero-aliasing, apparently dynamic memory allocation and automatic zero-or-very-small-unit-time garbage collection. The implementation of this mechanism is also presented, along with some initial performance figures (e.g. 80ns for mobile communication on an 800 MHz Pentium 3). With occam becoming available on a variety of microprocessors for GUI building, internet services and small-memory-footprint embedded products, these capabilities are timely. Lessons are drawn for concurrency back in OO languages - and especially for the JCSP (CSP for Java) package library
Davis, P.H. ; Cullen, J. — The identification of Flowering Plant families, including a key to those native and cultivated in north temperate regions. Edinburgh and London, Oliver and Boyd, 1965
Penot Jacques. Davis, P.H. ; Cullen, J. — The identification of Flowering Plant families, including a key to those native and cultivated in north temperate regions. Edinburgh and London, Oliver and Boyd, 1965. In: La Terre et La Vie, Revue d'Histoire naturelle, tome 20, n°2, 1966. p. 205
Stress Testing: A Review of Key Concepts
The note is a review of the literature on the quantitative methods used to assess the vulnerabilities of financial systems to risks. In particular, the author focuses on the role of system-wide stress testing. He summarizes the recent developments in the literature, highlighting topics relevant for the Czech case. He presents the key concepts relating to systemwide stress tests, overviews the stress tests performed by central banks and international financial institutions, and discusses conceptual issues relating to modeling of individual risk factors.Financial soundness, macroprudential analysis, stress tests.
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