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1.
J Environ Manage ; 330: 117140, 2023 Mar 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36603252

ABSTRACT

Natural resource governance is inherently complex owing to the socio-ecological systems in which it is embedded. Working arrangements have been fundamentally transformed throughout the COVID-19 pandemic with potential negative impacts on trust-based social networks foundational to resource management and transboundary governance. To inform development of a post-pandemic new-normal in resource management, we examined trust relationships using the Laurentian Great Lakes of North America as a case study. 82.9% (n = 97/117) of Great Lakes fishery managers and scientists surveyed indicated that virtual engagement was effective for maintaining well-established relationships during the pandemic; however, 76.7% (n = 89/116) of respondents indicated in-person engagement to be more effective than virtual engagement for building and maintaining trust. Despite some shortcomings, virtual or remote engagement presents opportunities, such as: (1) care and nurturing of well-established long-term relationships; (2) short-term (1-3 years) trust maintenance; (3) peer-peer or mentor-mentee coordination; (4) supplemental communications; (5) producer-push knowledge dissemination; and, if done thoughtfully, (6) enhancing diversity, equity, and inclusion. Without change, pre-pandemic trust-based relationships foundational to cooperative, multinational, resource management are under threat.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , COVID-19/epidemiology , Pandemics , Trust , Natural Resources , Conservation of Natural Resources
2.
Pure Appl Geophys ; 179(5): 1701-1727, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35469177

ABSTRACT

This study is a metrological investigation of eight superconducting gravimeters that have operated in the Strasbourg gravimetric Observatory. These superconducting gravimeters include an older compact C026 model, a new observatory type iOSG23 and six iGravs (6, 15, 29, 30, 31, 32). We first compare the amplitude calibration of the meters using measurements from FG5 #206 absolute gravimeter (AG). In a next step we compute the amplitude calibration of all the meters by time regression with respect to iOSG23 itself carefully calibrated by numerous AG experiments. The relative calibration values are much more precise than absolute calibration for each instrument and strongly reduce any tidal residual signal. We also compare the time lags of the various instruments with respect to iOSG23, either by time cross-correlation or tidal analysis for the longest records (about 1 year). The instrumental drift behavior of the iGravs and iOSG23 is then investigated and we examine the relationships observed between gravity and body temperature measurements. Finally, we compare the noise levels of all the instruments. A three-channel correlation analysis is used to separate the incoherent (instrumental) noise from the coherent (ambient) noise. The self-noise is then compared to a model of thermal noise (Brownian motion) using the known instrumental parameters of the damped harmonic oscillator. The self-noise of iGrav instruments is well-explained by the thermal noise model at seismic frequencies (between 10-3 and 10-2 Hz). As expected, the self-noise of iOSG23 with a heavier sphere is also lower than that of iGravs at such frequencies.

3.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 15324, 2018 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30333563

ABSTRACT

Gravimetry is a well-established tool to probe the deep Earth's processes. Geophysical signals coming from the deep Earth, like the inner core free oscillations, have however never been detected. Challenging quests raise the question of the limits of detection of elusive signals at the Earth's surface. Knowledge of the instrumental limits and of the environmental noise level at a site is fundamental to judge the true sensitivity of an instrument. We perform a noise level comparison of various gravimeters and a long-period seismometer at the J9 gravimetric observatory of Strasbourg (France) to provide a reference of instrumental performances. We then apply a three-channel correlation analysis of time-varying surface gravity from superconducting gravimeter records to isolate the instrumental self-noise from the environmental noise. The self-noise coherence analysis shows that the instrumental noise level remains flat towards lower frequencies till 10-4 Hz. At seismic frequencies, the self-noise is well explained by a Brownian thermal noise model. At daily and sub-daily time-scales, self-noise is increasing with the period but to a much lesser extent than observed noise level. Observed Earth's ambient noise level at sub-seismic frequencies is hence mostly due to unmodeled geophysical processes. At hourly time-scales, our ability to detect elusive signals coming from the deep Earth's interior is not limited by the instrument capability but is mostly due to the environmental effects.

4.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 14064, 2018 Sep 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30218107

ABSTRACT

We present the MIGA experiment, an underground long baseline atom interferometer to study gravity at large scale. The hybrid atom-laser antenna will use several atom interferometers simultaneously interrogated by the resonant mode of an optical cavity. The instrument will be a demonstrator for gravitational wave detection in a frequency band (100 mHz-1 Hz) not explored by classical ground and space-based observatories, and interesting for potential astrophysical sources. In the initial instrument configuration, standard atom interferometry techniques will be adopted, which will bring to a peak strain sensitivity of [Formula: see text] at 2 Hz. This demonstrator will enable to study the techniques to push further the sensitivity for the future development of gravitational wave detectors based on large scale atom interferometers. The experiment will be realized at the underground facility of the Laboratoire Souterrain à Bas Bruit (LSBB) in Rustrel-France, an exceptional site located away from major anthropogenic disturbances and showing very low background noise. In the following, we present the measurement principle of an in-cavity atom interferometer, derive the method for Gravitational Wave signal extraction from the antenna and determine the expected strain sensitivity. We then detail the functioning of the different systems of the antenna and describe the properties of the installation site.

5.
Chirurg ; 79(9): 866, 868-73, 2008 Sep.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18516574

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery has been performed since 1983 at the Bad Cannstatt Hospital near Stuttgart, Germany. The aim of this study was to investigate the development of bariatric surgery during the past 25 years. METHODS: Data were collected retrospectively. The parameters were number of surgical procedures, hospital stay, and postoperative complications. RESULTS: In the 25-year period 1,041 primary bariatric operations were performed. Open horizontal bypass and open vertical banded gastroplasty were performed initially. Starting in 2003 there was a change to laparoscopic procedures (gastric banding and Roux-en-Y bypass). The mean hospital stays were 14.7+/-5.1 days for open procedures and 6.7+/-4.2 days for laparoscopic methods, with 30-day mortalities of 0.8% and 0.0% and short-term complications at 16.9% and 7.8%, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: Perioperative complications and hospital stay were reduced by performing laparoscopic bariatric surgery. Our study emphasizes the advantages of the laparoscopic procedures which are standard at our hospital and fit in with the remaining operations in a department of visceral surgery.


Subject(s)
Bariatric Surgery/statistics & numerical data , Obesity, Morbid/surgery , Adult , Bariatric Surgery/adverse effects , Bariatric Surgery/methods , Bariatric Surgery/mortality , Body Mass Index , Female , Gastric Bypass/methods , Germany , Hospitals, General , Humans , Laparoscopy , Laparotomy , Length of Stay , Male , Middle Aged , Postoperative Complications , Reoperation , Retrospective Studies , Time Factors
6.
Phys Rev Lett ; 88(16): 167201, 2002 Apr 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11955256

ABSTRACT

Heat capacity (C), magnetic torque, and proton NMR relaxation rate (1/T(1)) measurements were performed on Fe6:Li single crystals in order to study the crossings between S = 0 and S = 1 and between S = 1 and S = 2 magnetic states of the molecular rings, at magnetic fields B(c1) = 11.7 T and B(c2) = 22.4 T, respectively. C vs B data at 0.78 K show that the energy gap between two states remains finite at B(c)'s (Delta(1)/k(B) = 0.86 K and Delta(2)/k(B) = 2.36 K) thus proving that levels repel each other. The large Delta(1) value may also explain the anomalously large width of the peak in 1/T(1) vs B, around B(c1). This anticrossing, unexpected in a centrosymmetric system, requires a revision of the Hamiltonian.

7.
Phys Rev Lett ; 88(5): 056601, 2002 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11863761

ABSTRACT

We present a study of Nernst effect in underdoped La(2-x)Sr(x)CuO4 in magnetic fields as high as 28 T. At high fields, a sizable Nernst signal was found to persist in the presence of a field-induced nonmetallic resistivity. By simultaneously measuring resistivity and the Nernst coefficient, we extract the entropy of vortex cores in the vicinity of this field-induced superconductor-insulator transition. Moreover, the temperature dependence of the thermoelectric Hall angle provides strong constraints on the possible origins of the finite Nernst signal above T(c), as recently discovered by Xu et al. [Nature (London) 406, 486 (2000)].

8.
Z Gerontol Geriatr ; 32(5): 312-7, 1999 Oct.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10552169

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: to examine mortality, mobility, pain, institutionalization rates six month after hip fractures. DESIGN: observational study, non-selected consecutive patients, time-set protocol. SETTING: urban area (population n = 116,5000), five hospitals. PARTICIPANTS: hip fracture patients (n = 214), age 65 + years (mean 82.4 years). MEASUREMENTS: age, gender, prefracture status, operative procedures, complications, comorbidity, cognition (MMSE), depression (GDS), fear of falling, ADL (Barthel) and mobility and pain status (SAHFE protocol). RESULTS: the incidence for this age group was 636.9/100,000, 31.8% were institutionalized elderly. 84% of the patients were female. Pre-existing comorbidity showed a high prevalence of neurodegenerative (cognitive deficits 53. 6%, Parkinson's disease/syndrome 11.2%) and cerebrovascular diseases (16.8%). Six month postfracture, the mortality was 17.6%. From those surviving 76.2% did walk indoors, 58.5% did also walk outdoors. Independent to dress were 54.6%. Severe pain was reported by 10.2%, whereas 36.9% described no pain. The institutionalization rate at six month was 19.0%. CONCLUSIONS: the study showed considerable mortality, a significant loss in function and social disintegration. Considerable differences were observed for subgroups of patients. Future treatment should focus on risk stratification and include postdischarge training programs. Moreover, preventive strategies should be implemented for high risk groups, such as ambulating patients with a history of stroke. Parkinson's disease and syndrome, dementia and nursing home residents.


Subject(s)
Activities of Daily Living/classification , Geriatric Assessment/statistics & numerical data , Hip Fractures/rehabilitation , Social Adjustment , Activities of Daily Living/psychology , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Cause of Death , Comorbidity , Disability Evaluation , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Hip Fractures/mortality , Hip Fractures/psychology , Humans , Institutionalization/statistics & numerical data , Male , Prospective Studies , Risk Factors
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