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토마스린덴버거 ( Thomas Lindenberger ) 역사문제연구소 2004 역사문제연구 Vol.- No.13
The essay opens with a discussion of the notions of society and cultureand their application to a polity under the rule of a totalitarian state party such as the Socialist Unity Party of Germany (SED) in the GDR The middle section contains some basic factual information about the development of society and cultural life in the GDR: demographic development and social structure, gender and generations, the state controlled public, the infrastructure and practice of everyday life, the paramount importance of the socialist enterprise as the central site of socialization, and the role of the churches and dissident sub-cultures. The last section presents problems of an accurate historical interpretation of these data. Was the GDR rather a modern or a traditional society? What were the consequences of its close relations with the Western hemisphere? Where there limits of dictatorshipwithin society or should one rather speak of a dictatorship of limitsimposed on any attempts of autonomous societal practice? Finally: What was the mode of existence of GDR society(if there existed any): Immobilized and permeated by domination? Fragmented and insulated?
Numerical analysis of the effects of air on light distribution in a bubble column photobioreactor
McHardy, Christopher,Luzi, Giovanni,Lindenberger, Christoph,Agudo, Jose R.,Delgado, Antonio,Rauh, Cornelia Elsevier 2018 Algal research Vol.31 No.-
<P><B>Abstract</B></P> <P>Light distribution inside photobioreactors (PBR) is a crucial parameter for the determination of growth of phototropic microorganisms and reactor productivity. In order to compute the light propagation inside PBR, scattering due to the presence of microorganisms is often neglected, since it is difficult to measure experimentally and it is not trivial to handle numerically. Moreover, absorption is usually assumed constant, but it is affected by the concentration of microorganisms and the presence of gas bubbles. In the present contribution we study how the flow hydrodynamics and local gas fractions inside a bubble column PBR affect the light distribution. First, we perform numerical simulations of a bubble column flow at different gas superficial velocities. Afterwards, we use instantaneous air volume fractions to calculate the effective scattering and absorption coefficient of the mixture, as well as the effective scattering phase function. Finally, we compute the polychromatic light distribution inside the PBR by means of a Lattice-Boltzmann solver. On the one hand, we find that gas bubbles affect both spatial distribution and magnitude of the light intensity field and their impact increases at higher gas superficial velocity. On the other hand, we also observe that the biomass counteracts these effects already at concentrations less than 1 kg/m<SUP>3</SUP> so that the role of the gas phase on light fields seems to be of minor importance in PBR.</P> <P><B>Highlights</B></P> <P> <UL> <LI> Hybrid numerical simulation of fluid flow and light distribution in a photobioreactor. </LI> <LI> Spatial distribution of gas bubbles affect symmetry and magnitude of the light intensity field. </LI> <LI> Increasing biomass concentration suppresses the effects of the gas phase. </LI> <LI> Role of the gas phase on light fields is of minor importance for cell growth in photobioreactors. </LI> </UL> </P>
Seismic Performance of High-rise Concrete Buildings in Chile
Lagos, Rene,Kupfer, Marianne,Lindenberg, Jorge,Bonelli, Patricio,Saragoni, Rodolfo,Guendelman, Tomas,Massone, Leonardo,Boroschek, Ruben,Yanez, Fernando Council on Tall Building and Urban Habitat Korea 2012 International journal of high-rise buildings Vol.1 No.3
Chile is characterized by the largest seismicity in the world which produces strong earthquakes every $83{\pm}9years$ in the Central part of Chile, where it is located Santiago, the capital of Chile. The short interval between large earthquakes magnitude 8.5 has conditioned the Chilean seismic design practice to achieve almost operational performance level, despite the fact that the Chilean Code declares a scope of life safe performance level. Several Indexes have been widely used throughout the years in Chile to evaluate the structural characteristics of concrete buildings, with the intent to find a correlation between general structural conception and successful seismic performance. The Indexes presented are related only to global response of buildings under earthquake loads and not to the behavior or design of individual elements. A correlation between displacement demand and seismic structural damage is presented, using the index $H_o/T$ and the concrete compressive strain ${\varepsilon}_c$. Also the Chilean seismic design codes pre and post 2010 Maule earthquake are reviewed and the practice in seismic design vs Performance Based Design is presented. Performance Based Design procedures are not included in the Chilean seismic design code for buildings, nevertheless the earthquake experience has shown that the response of the Chilean buildings has been close to operational. This can be attributed to the fact that the drift of most engineered buildings designed in accordance with the Chilean practice falls below 0.5%. It is also known by experience that for frequent and even occasional earthquakes, buildings responded elastically and thus with "fully operational" performance. Taking the above into account, it can be said that, although the "basic objective" of the Chilean code is similar to the SEAOC VISION2000 criteria, the actual performance for normal buildings is closer to the "Essential/Hazardous objective".
Genetic parameters for worm resistance in Santa Inês sheep using the Bayesian animal model
Rodrigues, Francelino Neiva,Sarmento, Jose Lindenberg Rocha,Leal, Tania Maria,de Araujo, Adriana Mello,Filho, Luiz Antonio Silva Figueiredo Asian Australasian Association of Animal Productio 2021 Animal Bioscience Vol.34 No.2
Objective: The objective of this study was to estimate the genetic parameters for worm resistance (WR) and associated characteristics, using the linear-threshold animal model via Bayesian inference in single- and multiple-trait analyses. Methods: Data were collected from a herd of Santa Inês breed sheep. All information was collected with animals submitted to natural contamination conditions. All data (number of eggs per gram of feces [FEC], Famacha score [FS], body condition score [BCS], and hematocrit [HCT]) were collected on the same day. The animals were weighed individually on the day after collection (after 12-h fasting). The WR trait was defined by the multivariate cluster analysis, using the FEC, HCT, BCS, and FS of material collected from naturally infected sheep of the Santa Inês breed. The variance components and genetic parameters for the WR, FEC, HCT, BCS, and FS traits were estimated using the Bayesian inference under the linear and threshold animal model. Results: A low magnitude was obtained for repeatability of worm-related traits. The mean values estimated for heritability were of low-to-high (0.05 to 0.88) magnitude. The FEC, HCT, BCS, FS, and body weight traits showed higher heritability (although low magnitude) in the multiple-trait model due to increased information about traits. All WR characters showed a significant genetic correlation, and heritability estimates ranged from low (0.44; single-trait model) to high (0.88; multiple-trait model). Conclusion: Therefore, we suggest that FS be included as a criterion of ovine genetic selection for endoparasite resistance using the trait defined by multivariate cluster analysis, as it will provide greater genetic gains when compared to any single trait. In addition, its measurement is easy and inexpensive, exhibiting greater heritability and repeatability and a high genetic correlation with the trait of resistance to worms.
Figueiredo Filho, Luiz Antonio Silva,Sarmento, Jose Lindenberg Rocha,Campelo, Jose Elivalto Guimaraes,de Oliveira Almeida, Marcos Jacob,de Sousa, Antonio Junior,da Silva Santos, Natanael Pereira,da Si Asian Australasian Association of Animal Productio 2018 Animal Bioscience Vol.31 No.9
Objective: The aim of this study was to estimate (co) variance components and genetic parameters for categorical carcass traits using Bayesian inference via mixed linear and threshold animal models in Anglonubian goats. Methods: Data were obtained from Anglonubian goats reared in the Brazilian Mid-North region. The traits in study were body condition score, marbling in the rib eye, ribeye area, fat thickness of the sternum, hip height, leg perimeter, and body weight. The numerator relationship matrix contained information from 793 animals. The single- and two-trait analyses were performed to estimate (co) variance components and genetic parameters via linear and threshold animal models. For estimation of genetic parameters, chains with 2 and 4 million cycles were tested. An 1,000,000-cycle initial burn-in was considered with values taken every 250 cycles, in a total of 4,000 samples. Convergence was monitored by Geweke criteria and Monte Carlo error chain. Results: Threshold model best fits categorical data since it is more efficient to detect genetic variability. In two-trait analysis the contribution of the increase in information and the correlations between traits contributed to increase the estimated values for (co) variance components and heritability, in comparison to single-trait analysis. Heritability estimates for the study traits were from low to moderate magnitude. Conclusion: Direct selection of the continuous distribution of traits such as thickness sternal fat and hip height allows obtaining the indirect selection for marbling of ribeye.