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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
201

Elektros įrenginių patikimumo ir nelaimingų atsitikimų priežastinio ryšio tyrimai / Research of causality between reability of elektric devices accidents with them

Budzevičius, Gediminas 14 June 2004 (has links)
Reability of electric device is examined in diploma work engineer’s degree. It is written about classification in reability, in incorruptibility rate. It is researched in accidents, causability of accidents in Lithuania. One question – what should we do to make less accidents. One of solution is to use safety and reability electric devices. Data of accident in Lithuania is used, which happened till the 5th of may 2003 year. Conclusion and recommendation – do not economize to safety and reability electrical device.
202

Tiered Networks: Modeling, Resource and Interference Management

Erturk, Mustafa Cenk 01 January 2012 (has links)
The wireless networks of the future are likely to be tiered, i.e., a heterogeneous mixture of overlaid networks that have different power, spectrum, hardware, coverage, mobility, complexity, and technology requirements. The focus of this dissertation is to improve the performance and increase the throughput of tiered networks with resource/interference management methods, node densification schemes, and transceiver designs; with their applications to advanced tiered network structures such as heterogeneous networks (i.e., picocells, femtocells, relay nodes, and distributed antenna systems), device-to-device (D2D) networks, and aeronautical communication networks (ACN). Over the last few decades, there has been an incredible increase in the demand for wireless services in various applications in the entire world. This increase leads to the emergence of a number of advanced wireless systems and networks whose common goal is to provide a very high data rate to countless users and applications. With the traditional macrocellular network architectures, it will be extremely challenging to meet such demand for high data rates in the upcoming years. Therefore, a mixture of different capability networks has started being built in a tiered manner. While the number and capabilities of networks are increasing to satisfy higher requirements; Modeling, managing, and maintaining the entire structure has become more challenging. The capacity of wireless networks has increased with various different advanced technologies/methodologies between 1950-2000 which can be summarized under three main titles: spectrum increase (x25), spectrum efficiency increase (x25), and network density (spectrum reuse) increase (x1600). It is vital to note that among different schemes, the most important gain is explored with increasing the reuse and adding more nodes/cells into the system, which will be the focus of this dissertation. Increasing the reuse by adding nodes into the network in an uncoordinated (irregular in terms of power, spectrum, hardware, coverage, mobility, complexity, and technology) manner brought up heterogeneity to the traditional wireless networks: multi-tier resource management problems in uncoordinated interference environments. In this study, we present novel resource/interference management methods, node densification schemes, and transceiver designs to improve the performance of tiered networks; and apply our methodologies to heterogeneous networks, D2D networks, and ACN. The focus and the contributions of this research involve the following perspectives: 1. Resource Management in Tiered Networks: Providing a fairness metric for tiered networks and developing spectrum allocation models for heterogeneous network structures. 2. Network Densification in Tiered Networks: Providing the signal to interference plus noise ratio (SINR) and transmit power distributions of D2D networks for network density selection criteria, and developing gateway scheduling algorithms for dense tiered networks. 3. Mobility in Tiered Networks: Investigation of mobility in a two-tier ACN, and providing novel transceiver structures for high data rate, high mobility ACN to mitigate the effect of Doppler.
203

Chondrichthyans and the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery: Bycatch reduction, biology, conservation status and sustainability

Peter Kyne Unknown Date (has links)
The chondrichthyan (shark, batoid and holocephalan) bycatch of the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery (ECTF) was examined through a series of fishery-independent trawl surveys, together with fishery-dependent (opportunistic) sampling. Project aims were to document the chondrichthyan bycatch composition in order to test the effectiveness of turtle exclusion devices (TEDs) and bycatch reduction devices (BRDs), to examine biological aspects of bycatch species, and to combine data collected through these parts to assess the conservation status and sustainability of bycatch species. A total of 37 chondrichthyan species (one holocephalan, 19 batoids and 17 sharks) from 18 families were recorded in the bycatch of the fishery. The most speciose families recorded were the stingrays (Dasyatidae; 7 species), the requiem sharks (Carcharhinidae; 5 species), the catsharks (Scyliorhinidae; 4 species) and the stingarees (Urolophidae; 3 species). Chondrichthyan bycatch was highly variable between fishery sectors; catch rates were low in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector (north Queensland; 0.02–0.12 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector (southern Queensland; 0.08 individuals ha-1 trawled), intermediate in Hervey Bay (southern Queensland; 0.25 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the scallop sector (central Queensland coast; 0.31 individuals ha-1 trawled) and highest in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector (southern Queensland; 0.96 individuals ha-1 trawled). Chondrichthyan bycatch in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector was dominated by the three batoids Aptychotrema rostrata, Trygonoptera testacea and Urolophus kapalensis (~92% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector by the skate Dipturus polyommata and the two catsharks Asymbolus rubiginosus and Figaro boardmani (~83% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the scallop sector by the three batoids A. rostrata, Neotrygon kuhlii and Neotrygon picta (~91% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), and in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector by the two batoids Himantura astra and Gymnura australis and the two sharks Chiloscyllium punctatum and Hemigaleus australiensis (~67% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number). The testing of TEDs and BRDs, which are mandatory throughout the fishery, demonstrated only a limited ability to reduce chondrichthyan bycatch in the ECTF, which is comprised mainly of relatively small species. The shorter trawl durations of the surveys compared with normal commercial activities may have under-represented larger species. No significant reductions in chondrichthyan bycatch were found using a TED and a radial escape section BRD in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector, using a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector, or using a TED and a fisheye BRD in Hervey Bay. There was however, a significant difference in the probability of capturing the group ‘sharks and guitarfishes’ (comprised largely of A. rostrata) between codend types in the scallop sector, with the lowest probability of capture in nets fitted with both a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD (the difference was largely attributed to the effects of the TED). In the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector, in which three different BRDs were trialed (fisheye, square-mesh codend, square-mesh panel), the probability of capturing chondrichthyans was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD than in the standard (control) net, and the probability of capturing batoids was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD or with a square-mesh codend BRD than in the standard (control) net. The small sample size of chondrichthyan catches in some sectors may have reduced to power to detect bycatch reduction. The biology of several bycatch species from the families Rajidae, Rhinobatidae, Urolophidae and Scyliorhinidae was examined. For D. polyommata, size at birth was estimated at ~100–110 mm total length (LT), size at first feeding at ~105–110mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 321 (305–332) mm LT for females and 300 (285–306) mm LT for males. Diet (described by the index of relative importance as a percentage) was predominantly crustacean based, with carid shrimps (53.6%) and penaeoid prawns (23.3%) being the most significant prey groups. For A. rostrata, size at birth was estimated at <170 mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 640 (618–663) mm LT for females and 597 (551–649) mm LT for males, and litter size was 9–20 (n = 9; mean ± S.E. = 15.1 ± 1.2). For T. testacea, size at birth was estimated at 77–100 mm disc width (WD), size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 163 (156–169) mm WD for females and 146 (140–150) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 6). For U. kapalensis, size at birth was estimated at 75–100 mm WD, size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 154 (145–160) mm WD for females and 155 (149–159) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 16). The catsharks A. analis, A. rubiginosus and F. boardmani were all confirmed as single oviparous species (carrying only one egg case in each uterus at one time). Ovarian fecundity (the number of vitellogenic follicles) averaged 13.6 (range 13–20) in A. analis, 13.5 (range 5–23) in A. rubiginosus and 10.4 (range 9–13) in F. boardmani. While only limited data were available from southern Queensland, several indicators suggest that Asymbolus catsharks are reproductively active year-round. A general lack of small-sized or immature catsharks captured during the study made assessments of size at maturity difficult for these species. The conservation status of ECTF bycatch species was examined through the application of the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM Categories and Criteria, which considers extinction risk at the global level. Of the 24 ECTF chondrichthyan bycatch species evaluated against the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, four have been assessed globally as Vulnerable (a threatened category indicating that a species is ‘facing a high risk of extinction in the wild’), seven as Near Threatened, 11 as Least Concern and two as Data Deficient. While the four globally threatened species (A. nichofii, Heteroscyllium colcloughi, Rhynchobatus australiae and Urolophus sufflavus) were only minor components of the ECTF bycatch, their global conservation status warrants that fisheries management and industry should act to ensure minimal impacts on these species. An ecological risk assessment method (Susceptibility-Recovery Analysis) was used to assess the relative sustainability or risk of individual species to the fishing activities of the ECTF. Two separate approaches were taken to the technique, which considers sustainability to be dependent on the susceptibility of a species to the fishery and the recovery potential of a species after depletion by fishing activities. The first approach applied the precautionary principal when data were lacking for the calculation of recovery attributes, while the second used biological data from similar species when species-specific data were lacking. The precautionary approach tended to overestimate risk to poorly known oviparous species. The biological approach suggested that A. nichofii, F. boardmani, Rhizoprionodon acutus, Rhizoprionodon taylori and Rhynchobatus palpebratus face the least risk (i.e. were the most sustainable) while several medium-large batoids and the sharks Loxodon macrorhinus and Heteroscyllium colcloughi were the species most at risk (i.e. least sustainable). Demonstrating ecological sustainability of the ECTF will need to be a continued management objective into the future. To further improve the ecological sustainability of the fishery in relation to sharks, batoids and holocephalans, a number of management recommendations are proposed: (1) give warranted conservation consideration to listed threatened species as well as species identified as being at risk; (2) expand required logbook information on chondrichthyan species to include recording of catches of these species; (3) encourage safe release practices for all chondrichthyans to maximise survivorship of discards; (4) initiate research into the survivorship of discards; (5) ensure long-term observer coverage on commercial vessels to monitor bycatch levels; and, (6) test and quantify reduced TED bar spacings (presently 120 mm) in fishery sectors which show the highest chondrichthyan bycatch levels, that is, the eastern king prawn (shallow water) and scallop sectors.
204

Chondrichthyans and the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery: Bycatch reduction, biology, conservation status and sustainability

Peter Kyne Unknown Date (has links)
The chondrichthyan (shark, batoid and holocephalan) bycatch of the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery (ECTF) was examined through a series of fishery-independent trawl surveys, together with fishery-dependent (opportunistic) sampling. Project aims were to document the chondrichthyan bycatch composition in order to test the effectiveness of turtle exclusion devices (TEDs) and bycatch reduction devices (BRDs), to examine biological aspects of bycatch species, and to combine data collected through these parts to assess the conservation status and sustainability of bycatch species. A total of 37 chondrichthyan species (one holocephalan, 19 batoids and 17 sharks) from 18 families were recorded in the bycatch of the fishery. The most speciose families recorded were the stingrays (Dasyatidae; 7 species), the requiem sharks (Carcharhinidae; 5 species), the catsharks (Scyliorhinidae; 4 species) and the stingarees (Urolophidae; 3 species). Chondrichthyan bycatch was highly variable between fishery sectors; catch rates were low in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector (north Queensland; 0.02–0.12 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector (southern Queensland; 0.08 individuals ha-1 trawled), intermediate in Hervey Bay (southern Queensland; 0.25 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the scallop sector (central Queensland coast; 0.31 individuals ha-1 trawled) and highest in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector (southern Queensland; 0.96 individuals ha-1 trawled). Chondrichthyan bycatch in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector was dominated by the three batoids Aptychotrema rostrata, Trygonoptera testacea and Urolophus kapalensis (~92% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector by the skate Dipturus polyommata and the two catsharks Asymbolus rubiginosus and Figaro boardmani (~83% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the scallop sector by the three batoids A. rostrata, Neotrygon kuhlii and Neotrygon picta (~91% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), and in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector by the two batoids Himantura astra and Gymnura australis and the two sharks Chiloscyllium punctatum and Hemigaleus australiensis (~67% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number). The testing of TEDs and BRDs, which are mandatory throughout the fishery, demonstrated only a limited ability to reduce chondrichthyan bycatch in the ECTF, which is comprised mainly of relatively small species. The shorter trawl durations of the surveys compared with normal commercial activities may have under-represented larger species. No significant reductions in chondrichthyan bycatch were found using a TED and a radial escape section BRD in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector, using a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector, or using a TED and a fisheye BRD in Hervey Bay. There was however, a significant difference in the probability of capturing the group ‘sharks and guitarfishes’ (comprised largely of A. rostrata) between codend types in the scallop sector, with the lowest probability of capture in nets fitted with both a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD (the difference was largely attributed to the effects of the TED). In the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector, in which three different BRDs were trialed (fisheye, square-mesh codend, square-mesh panel), the probability of capturing chondrichthyans was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD than in the standard (control) net, and the probability of capturing batoids was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD or with a square-mesh codend BRD than in the standard (control) net. The small sample size of chondrichthyan catches in some sectors may have reduced to power to detect bycatch reduction. The biology of several bycatch species from the families Rajidae, Rhinobatidae, Urolophidae and Scyliorhinidae was examined. For D. polyommata, size at birth was estimated at ~100–110 mm total length (LT), size at first feeding at ~105–110mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 321 (305–332) mm LT for females and 300 (285–306) mm LT for males. Diet (described by the index of relative importance as a percentage) was predominantly crustacean based, with carid shrimps (53.6%) and penaeoid prawns (23.3%) being the most significant prey groups. For A. rostrata, size at birth was estimated at <170 mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 640 (618–663) mm LT for females and 597 (551–649) mm LT for males, and litter size was 9–20 (n = 9; mean ± S.E. = 15.1 ± 1.2). For T. testacea, size at birth was estimated at 77–100 mm disc width (WD), size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 163 (156–169) mm WD for females and 146 (140–150) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 6). For U. kapalensis, size at birth was estimated at 75–100 mm WD, size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 154 (145–160) mm WD for females and 155 (149–159) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 16). The catsharks A. analis, A. rubiginosus and F. boardmani were all confirmed as single oviparous species (carrying only one egg case in each uterus at one time). Ovarian fecundity (the number of vitellogenic follicles) averaged 13.6 (range 13–20) in A. analis, 13.5 (range 5–23) in A. rubiginosus and 10.4 (range 9–13) in F. boardmani. While only limited data were available from southern Queensland, several indicators suggest that Asymbolus catsharks are reproductively active year-round. A general lack of small-sized or immature catsharks captured during the study made assessments of size at maturity difficult for these species. The conservation status of ECTF bycatch species was examined through the application of the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM Categories and Criteria, which considers extinction risk at the global level. Of the 24 ECTF chondrichthyan bycatch species evaluated against the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, four have been assessed globally as Vulnerable (a threatened category indicating that a species is ‘facing a high risk of extinction in the wild’), seven as Near Threatened, 11 as Least Concern and two as Data Deficient. While the four globally threatened species (A. nichofii, Heteroscyllium colcloughi, Rhynchobatus australiae and Urolophus sufflavus) were only minor components of the ECTF bycatch, their global conservation status warrants that fisheries management and industry should act to ensure minimal impacts on these species. An ecological risk assessment method (Susceptibility-Recovery Analysis) was used to assess the relative sustainability or risk of individual species to the fishing activities of the ECTF. Two separate approaches were taken to the technique, which considers sustainability to be dependent on the susceptibility of a species to the fishery and the recovery potential of a species after depletion by fishing activities. The first approach applied the precautionary principal when data were lacking for the calculation of recovery attributes, while the second used biological data from similar species when species-specific data were lacking. The precautionary approach tended to overestimate risk to poorly known oviparous species. The biological approach suggested that A. nichofii, F. boardmani, Rhizoprionodon acutus, Rhizoprionodon taylori and Rhynchobatus palpebratus face the least risk (i.e. were the most sustainable) while several medium-large batoids and the sharks Loxodon macrorhinus and Heteroscyllium colcloughi were the species most at risk (i.e. least sustainable). Demonstrating ecological sustainability of the ECTF will need to be a continued management objective into the future. To further improve the ecological sustainability of the fishery in relation to sharks, batoids and holocephalans, a number of management recommendations are proposed: (1) give warranted conservation consideration to listed threatened species as well as species identified as being at risk; (2) expand required logbook information on chondrichthyan species to include recording of catches of these species; (3) encourage safe release practices for all chondrichthyans to maximise survivorship of discards; (4) initiate research into the survivorship of discards; (5) ensure long-term observer coverage on commercial vessels to monitor bycatch levels; and, (6) test and quantify reduced TED bar spacings (presently 120 mm) in fishery sectors which show the highest chondrichthyan bycatch levels, that is, the eastern king prawn (shallow water) and scallop sectors.
205

Chondrichthyans and the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery: Bycatch reduction, biology, conservation status and sustainability

Peter Kyne Unknown Date (has links)
The chondrichthyan (shark, batoid and holocephalan) bycatch of the Queensland East Coast Trawl Fishery (ECTF) was examined through a series of fishery-independent trawl surveys, together with fishery-dependent (opportunistic) sampling. Project aims were to document the chondrichthyan bycatch composition in order to test the effectiveness of turtle exclusion devices (TEDs) and bycatch reduction devices (BRDs), to examine biological aspects of bycatch species, and to combine data collected through these parts to assess the conservation status and sustainability of bycatch species. A total of 37 chondrichthyan species (one holocephalan, 19 batoids and 17 sharks) from 18 families were recorded in the bycatch of the fishery. The most speciose families recorded were the stingrays (Dasyatidae; 7 species), the requiem sharks (Carcharhinidae; 5 species), the catsharks (Scyliorhinidae; 4 species) and the stingarees (Urolophidae; 3 species). Chondrichthyan bycatch was highly variable between fishery sectors; catch rates were low in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector (north Queensland; 0.02–0.12 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector (southern Queensland; 0.08 individuals ha-1 trawled), intermediate in Hervey Bay (southern Queensland; 0.25 individuals ha-1 trawled) and in the scallop sector (central Queensland coast; 0.31 individuals ha-1 trawled) and highest in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector (southern Queensland; 0.96 individuals ha-1 trawled). Chondrichthyan bycatch in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector was dominated by the three batoids Aptychotrema rostrata, Trygonoptera testacea and Urolophus kapalensis (~92% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector by the skate Dipturus polyommata and the two catsharks Asymbolus rubiginosus and Figaro boardmani (~83% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), in the scallop sector by the three batoids A. rostrata, Neotrygon kuhlii and Neotrygon picta (~91% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number), and in the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector by the two batoids Himantura astra and Gymnura australis and the two sharks Chiloscyllium punctatum and Hemigaleus australiensis (~67% of the chondrichthyan bycatch by number). The testing of TEDs and BRDs, which are mandatory throughout the fishery, demonstrated only a limited ability to reduce chondrichthyan bycatch in the ECTF, which is comprised mainly of relatively small species. The shorter trawl durations of the surveys compared with normal commercial activities may have under-represented larger species. No significant reductions in chondrichthyan bycatch were found using a TED and a radial escape section BRD in the eastern king prawn (shallow water) sector, using a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD in the eastern king prawn (deepwater) sector, or using a TED and a fisheye BRD in Hervey Bay. There was however, a significant difference in the probability of capturing the group ‘sharks and guitarfishes’ (comprised largely of A. rostrata) between codend types in the scallop sector, with the lowest probability of capture in nets fitted with both a TED and a square-mesh codend BRD (the difference was largely attributed to the effects of the TED). In the tiger/Endeavour prawn sector, in which three different BRDs were trialed (fisheye, square-mesh codend, square-mesh panel), the probability of capturing chondrichthyans was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD than in the standard (control) net, and the probability of capturing batoids was significantly lower in nets fitted with a fisheye BRD or with a square-mesh codend BRD than in the standard (control) net. The small sample size of chondrichthyan catches in some sectors may have reduced to power to detect bycatch reduction. The biology of several bycatch species from the families Rajidae, Rhinobatidae, Urolophidae and Scyliorhinidae was examined. For D. polyommata, size at birth was estimated at ~100–110 mm total length (LT), size at first feeding at ~105–110mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 321 (305–332) mm LT for females and 300 (285–306) mm LT for males. Diet (described by the index of relative importance as a percentage) was predominantly crustacean based, with carid shrimps (53.6%) and penaeoid prawns (23.3%) being the most significant prey groups. For A. rostrata, size at birth was estimated at <170 mm LT, size at 50% maturity (LT50 and 95% CI) at 640 (618–663) mm LT for females and 597 (551–649) mm LT for males, and litter size was 9–20 (n = 9; mean ± S.E. = 15.1 ± 1.2). For T. testacea, size at birth was estimated at 77–100 mm disc width (WD), size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 163 (156–169) mm WD for females and 146 (140–150) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 6). For U. kapalensis, size at birth was estimated at 75–100 mm WD, size at 50% maturity (WD50 and 95% CI) at 154 (145–160) mm WD for females and 155 (149–159) mm WD for males, and litter size was always one (n = 16). The catsharks A. analis, A. rubiginosus and F. boardmani were all confirmed as single oviparous species (carrying only one egg case in each uterus at one time). Ovarian fecundity (the number of vitellogenic follicles) averaged 13.6 (range 13–20) in A. analis, 13.5 (range 5–23) in A. rubiginosus and 10.4 (range 9–13) in F. boardmani. While only limited data were available from southern Queensland, several indicators suggest that Asymbolus catsharks are reproductively active year-round. A general lack of small-sized or immature catsharks captured during the study made assessments of size at maturity difficult for these species. The conservation status of ECTF bycatch species was examined through the application of the IUCN Red List of Threatened SpeciesTM Categories and Criteria, which considers extinction risk at the global level. Of the 24 ECTF chondrichthyan bycatch species evaluated against the IUCN Red List Categories and Criteria, four have been assessed globally as Vulnerable (a threatened category indicating that a species is ‘facing a high risk of extinction in the wild’), seven as Near Threatened, 11 as Least Concern and two as Data Deficient. While the four globally threatened species (A. nichofii, Heteroscyllium colcloughi, Rhynchobatus australiae and Urolophus sufflavus) were only minor components of the ECTF bycatch, their global conservation status warrants that fisheries management and industry should act to ensure minimal impacts on these species. An ecological risk assessment method (Susceptibility-Recovery Analysis) was used to assess the relative sustainability or risk of individual species to the fishing activities of the ECTF. Two separate approaches were taken to the technique, which considers sustainability to be dependent on the susceptibility of a species to the fishery and the recovery potential of a species after depletion by fishing activities. The first approach applied the precautionary principal when data were lacking for the calculation of recovery attributes, while the second used biological data from similar species when species-specific data were lacking. The precautionary approach tended to overestimate risk to poorly known oviparous species. The biological approach suggested that A. nichofii, F. boardmani, Rhizoprionodon acutus, Rhizoprionodon taylori and Rhynchobatus palpebratus face the least risk (i.e. were the most sustainable) while several medium-large batoids and the sharks Loxodon macrorhinus and Heteroscyllium colcloughi were the species most at risk (i.e. least sustainable). Demonstrating ecological sustainability of the ECTF will need to be a continued management objective into the future. To further improve the ecological sustainability of the fishery in relation to sharks, batoids and holocephalans, a number of management recommendations are proposed: (1) give warranted conservation consideration to listed threatened species as well as species identified as being at risk; (2) expand required logbook information on chondrichthyan species to include recording of catches of these species; (3) encourage safe release practices for all chondrichthyans to maximise survivorship of discards; (4) initiate research into the survivorship of discards; (5) ensure long-term observer coverage on commercial vessels to monitor bycatch levels; and, (6) test and quantify reduced TED bar spacings (presently 120 mm) in fishery sectors which show the highest chondrichthyan bycatch levels, that is, the eastern king prawn (shallow water) and scallop sectors.
206

A comparative study of the Linux and windows device driver architecture with a focus on IEEE1394 (high speed serial bus) drivers /

Tsegaye, Melekam Asrat. January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (M. Sc. (Computer Science))--Rhodes University, 2004.
207

DISPOSITIVO E CONTRADISPOSITIVO NA CONSTRUÇÃO POÉTICA DO RETRATO / DEVICE AND COUNTER-DEVICE IN THE POETIC CONSTRUCTION OF THE PORTRAIT

Happke, Rafael 08 June 2015 (has links)
This paper aims to make an investigation into the use of devices as the camera and counter-devices created specifically for photographic portraits as poetic realizations, seeking a new construction of the appearances represented in them, in an attempt to attain a renewed aesthetic of this photographic category, which has been widely requested since the beginning of photography. This study is based on the works of different artists such as Julia Margaret Cameron, Felix Nadar, Arthur Omar and Sarah Moon, among others, through an observation of the expressions of the portrait that can clarify and ensure a personal poetic achievement that will enrich this subject in the Visual Arts. Secondly, the counter-device plays a key role in the practical and reflective direction of this research. Thus, we seek to analyze the counter-device as a key element and to explore what knowledge it may hold and what action it has in making photography. In this context where devices allow the creation of sensitive objects fitting for reflection, we base our work in Giorgio Agamben, Flusser, Arlindo Machado, Annatereza Fabris and Françoise Soulages among others, and divergent concepts arise throughout the work and problematize the object of this investigation. Finally, we present a series of portraits made during the research that combine theoretical thinking with practice. / Este trabalho tem por objetivo fazer uma investigação fundada no uso do dispositivo e do contradispositivo e criada especificamente para a realização poética do retrato fotográfico, buscando uma nova construção das aparências nele representadas na tentativa de uma estética renovada desta categoria de fotografia amplamente requisitada desde os primeiros passos da fotografia. Este estudo se apoia nas obras de diferentes artistas como Julia Margareth Cameron, Felix Nadar, Arthur Omar, Sarah Moon, entre outros, observando as expressões do retrato que possam esclarecer e nos assegurar de uma realização poética pessoal que venha enriquecer este sujeito nas Artes Visuais. Num segundo momento, o contradispositivo tem um papel fundamental no encaminhamento prático e reflexivo desta pesquisa. Assim, busca-se a análise do contradispositivo como elemento fundamental que demanda o conhecimento do que ele pode ser, bem como sua ação no fazer fotográfico. Neste contexto onde aparelhos permitem criar objetos sensíveis propícios para serem pensados, a reflexão apoia-se em Giorgio Agamben, Vilém Flusser, Arlindo Machado, Annatereza Fabris e Françoise Soulages entre outros, e os diferentes conceitos vão surgindo ao longo do trabalho e problematizando o objeto desta investigação. Por fim, apresenta-se uma série de retratos realizados no decorrer da pesquisa que conjugam o pensamento teórico com a prática.
208

The Role of the Collisional Broadening of the States on the Low-Field Mobility in Silicon Inversion Layers

January 2017 (has links)
abstract: Scaling of the Metal-Oxide-Semiconductor Field Effect Transistor (MOSFET) towards shorter channel lengths, has lead to an increasing importance of quantum effects on the device performance. Until now, a semi-classical model based on Monte Carlo method for instance, has been sufficient to address these issues in silicon, and arrive at a reasonably good fit to experimental mobility data. But as the semiconductor world moves towards 10nm technology, many of the basic assumptions in this method, namely the very fundamental Fermi’s golden rule come into question. The derivation of the Fermi’s golden rule assumes that the scattering is infrequent (therefore the long time limit) and the collision duration time is zero. This thesis overcomes some of the limitations of the above approach by successfully developing a quantum mechanical simulator that can model the low-field inversion layer mobility in silicon MOS capacitors and other inversion layers as well. It solves for the scattering induced collisional broadening of the states by accounting for the various scattering mechanisms present in silicon through the non-equilibrium based near-equilibrium Green’s Functions approach, which shall be referred to as near-equilibrium Green’s Function (nEGF) in this work. It adopts a two-loop approach, where the outer loop solves for the self-consistency between the potential and the subband sheet charge density by solving the Poisson and the Schrödinger equations self-consistently. The inner loop solves for the nEGF (renormalization of the spectrum and the broadening of the states), self-consistently using the self-consistent Born approximation, which is then used to compute the mobility using the Green-Kubo Formalism. / Dissertation/Thesis / Doctoral Dissertation Electrical Engineering 2017
209

Electrical and Thermal Transport in Alternative Device Technologies

January 2013 (has links)
abstract: The goal of this research work is to develop a particle-based device simulator for modeling strained silicon devices. Two separate modules had to be developed for that purpose: A generic bulk Monte Carlo simulation code which in the long-time limit solves the Boltzmann transport equation for electrons; and an extension to this code that solves for the bulk properties of strained silicon. One scattering table is needed for conventional silicon, whereas, because of the strain breaking the symmetry of the system, three scattering tables are needed for modeling strained silicon material. Simulation results for the average drift velocity and the average electron energy are in close agreement with published data. A Monte Carlo device simulation tool has also been employed to integrate the effects of self-heating into device simulation for Silicon on Insulator devices. The effects of different types of materials for buried oxide layers have been studied. Sapphire, Aluminum Nitride (AlN), Silicon dioxide (SiO2) and Diamond have been used as target materials of interest in the analysis and the effects of varying insulator layer thickness have also been investigated. It was observed that although AlN exhibits the best isothermal behavior, diamond is the best choice when thermal effects are accounted for. / Dissertation/Thesis / M.S. Electrical Engineering 2013
210

Mulheres criminosas: transgressÃo, violÃncia e repressÃo na Fortaleza do SÃculo XIX

Walter de Carvalho Junior 00 October 2018 (has links)
nÃo hà / Neste trabalho procuramos analisar os discursos construÃdos sobre a mulher transgressora na Fortaleza oitocentista. A sociedade da Ãpoca determinou espaÃos e comportamentos especÃficos para homens e mulheres, processo que encontrou sustentaÃÃo em dispositivos de controle como a honra, na teia discursiva mantida pelo discurso jurÃdico em torno dos comportamentos idealizados/esperados para o masculino e o feminino, no carÃter pedagÃgico dos romances e folhetins, e nos noticiÃrios dos jornais. Os jornais de grande circulaÃÃo do perÃodo, principalmente O Cearense e Pedro II trazem em suas pÃginas a preocupaÃÃo de uma elite que alÃm de modernizar-se busca transformar a cidade no espaÃo ideal para si, privilegiando determinados comportamentos ditos civilizados e estendendo o seu olhar vigilante para os indesejÃveis com os quais coexistiam no espaÃo da urbe. à nesse jogo engendrado pelos discursos reguladores que as assassinas, adÃlteras, prostitutas, loucas e infanticidas sÃo representadas com todo o vigor como aquelas que nÃo representam a natureza feminina, tornam-se, aos olhos do pÃblico, verdadeiras feras e como tal, devem ser privadas do convÃvio social, encarceradas nas prisÃes ou no asilo. A figura da mulher fatal ao homem vai povoar o imaginÃrio social oitocentista como eco de uma sÃrie de representaÃÃes negativas em torno do feminino que com o advento da medicina social passou a transformar as transgressoras nÃo sà naquelas que rompiam com os padrÃes sociais, mas, por fugirem do papel esperado para o seu sexo, passaram a ser tratadas tambÃm como anormais. Estas anormais, isoladas do convÃvio social, marcadas pelo peso de suas transgressÃes ao papel de mulher ideal compunham o quadro que deixa evidente, no contraste entre as representaÃÃes em torno das mulheres ideais e das outras mulheres o esforÃo na manutenÃÃo dos privilÃgios do patriarcado principalmente no que se refere à violÃncia, em suas dimensÃes fÃsica, moral e simbÃlica. / Neste trabalho procuramos analisar os discursos construÃdos sobre a mulher transgressora na Fortaleza oitocentista. A sociedade da Ãpoca determinou espaÃos e comportamentos especÃficos para homens e mulheres, processo que encontrou sustentaÃÃo em dispositivos de controle como a honra, na teia discursiva mantida pelo discurso jurÃdico em torno dos comportamentos idealizados/esperados para o masculino e o feminino, no carÃter pedagÃgico dos romances e folhetins, e nos noticiÃrios dos jornais. Os jornais de grande circulaÃÃo do perÃodo, principalmente O Cearense e Pedro II trazem em suas pÃginas a preocupaÃÃo de uma elite que alÃm de modernizar-se busca transformar a cidade no espaÃo ideal para si, privilegiando determinados comportamentos ditos civilizados e estendendo o seu olhar vigilante para os indesejÃveis com os quais coexistiam no espaÃo da urbe. à nesse jogo engendrado pelos discursos reguladores que as assassinas, adÃlteras, prostitutas, loucas e infanticidas sÃo representadas com todo o vigor como aquelas que nÃo representam a natureza feminina, tornam-se, aos olhos do pÃblico, verdadeiras feras e como tal, devem ser privadas do convÃvio social, encarceradas nas prisÃes ou no asilo. A figura da mulher fatal ao homem vai povoar o imaginÃrio social oitocentista como eco de uma sÃrie de representaÃÃes negativas em torno do feminino que com o advento da medicina social passou a transformar as transgressoras nÃo sà naquelas que rompiam com os padrÃes sociais, mas, por fugirem do papel esperado para o seu sexo, passaram a ser tratadas tambÃm como anormais. Estas anormais, isoladas do convÃvio social, marcadas pelo peso de suas transgressÃes ao papel de mulher ideal compunham o quadro que deixa evidente, no contraste entre as representaÃÃes em torno das mulheres ideais e das outras mulheres o esforÃo na manutenÃÃo dos privilÃgios do patriarcado principalmente no que se refere à violÃncia, em suas dimensÃes fÃsica, moral e simbÃlica. / In this work we looking for analyze the discourses built about the transgressor woman in the nineteenth-century Fortaleza. The way how society, at the time, determined specific spaces and behaviors for men and women found support both control devices such as honor, in the dicoursive web maintained by the legal discourse around the idealized / expected behaviorsfor the masculine and the feminine and in the massifier reach of newspapaer. The newspapers of great circulations at the time, mainly O Cearense and Pedro II bring in their pages the concern of an elite which in addition to modernizing itself seeks to tranform the city into the ideal space for itself, favoring certain behaviors called civilized and extending its watchful eye to the undesirables with which coexixted in the space of the city. It is in this game engedered by the regulatory discourses that murderers, adulterers, prostitutes, madwoman, infanticides are represented with all the force like those that do not represent the feminine nature, become, in the eyes of the public, true beasts and as such, they should be private of social conviviality, incarcerated in prisons or asylum. The figure of the woman fatal to man goes to populate the social imaginary nineteenth-century as echo of a series of negative representations around the feminine that with the advent of the social medicine turn to transform the transgressors not only those who broke the social patterns, but, for escaping from the expected role for their sex, were also treated as abnormal. These abnormals, isolated from the social life, marked by the weight of their transgressions to the role of ideal woman formed the picture that leaves evident, in the contrast between the representations around the ideal women and the others women, the effort in the maintenance of the privileges of the patriarchy, mainly in what it refers to violence, in their physical, moral and symbolic dimensions. In the contrast between representations around the ideal women and the others it is possible to perceive the reinforcement and the maintenance of the privileges of the patriarchy, mainly with regard to violence, in its physical, moral and symbolic dimensions. / In this work we looking for analyze the discourses built about the transgressor woman in the nineteenth-century Fortaleza. The way how society, at the time, determined specific spaces and behaviors for men and women found support both control devices such as honor, in the dicoursive web maintained by the legal discourse around the idealized / expected behaviorsfor the masculine and the feminine and in the massifier reach of newspapaer. The newspapers of great circulations at the time, mainly O Cearense and Pedro II bring in their pages the concern of an elite which in addition to modernizing itself seeks to tranform the city into the ideal space for itself, favoring certain behaviors called civilized and extending its watchful eye to the undesirables with which coexixted in the space of the city. It is in this game engedered by the regulatory discourses that murderers, adulterers, prostitutes, madwoman, infanticides are represented with all the force like those that do not represent the feminine nature, become, in the eyes of the public, true beasts and as such, they should be private of social conviviality, incarcerated in prisons or asylum. The figure of the woman fatal to man goes to populate the social imaginary nineteenth-century as echo of a series of negative representations around the feminine that with the advent of the social medicine turn to transform the transgressors not only those who broke the social patterns, but, for escaping from the expected role for their sex, were also treated as abnormal. These abnormals, isolated from the social life, marked by the weight of their transgressions to the role of ideal woman formed the picture that leaves evident, in the contrast between the representations around the ideal women and the others women, the effort in the maintenance of the privileges of the patriarchy, mainly in what it refers to violence, in their physical, moral and symbolic dimensions. In the contrast between representations around the ideal women and the others it is possible to perceive the reinforcement and the maintenance of the privileges of the patriarchy, mainly with regard to violence, in its physical, moral and symbolic dimensions.

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