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The Influence of Synoptic Weather Conditions on Weekday-weekend Effect of Extreme Ground-level Ozone Events in the Toronto areaLeung, Kinson He Yin 10 January 2011 (has links)
Ground-level ozone (O3) is a familiar pollutant because it is associated with summer haze and smog alerts. The 2000-2008 weekday-weekend variations of ozone concentration were examined in relation to the Toronto weather conditions. The goal of this work is twofold: (1) To determine whether extreme ozone events were associated with specific weather conditions, (2) To determine whether the weekday-weekend effect of extreme ozone events could be detectable during the nine-year study period. The results show that in the study period, there were totally 313 days having extreme ground-level ozone events with ozone concentration ≥ 80 ppb, which is the current Ontario Ambient Air Quality Criterion for ozone concentration, in the four selected Toronto sites. Additionally, the weather condition mainly associated with these 313 days was the Dry Tropical one. This study also shows the phenomenon of the weekday-weekend effect of extreme ozone events in the past nine years in Toronto.
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The Influence of Synoptic Weather Conditions on Weekday-weekend Effect of Extreme Ground-level Ozone Events in the Toronto areaLeung, Kinson He Yin 10 January 2011 (has links)
Ground-level ozone (O3) is a familiar pollutant because it is associated with summer haze and smog alerts. The 2000-2008 weekday-weekend variations of ozone concentration were examined in relation to the Toronto weather conditions. The goal of this work is twofold: (1) To determine whether extreme ozone events were associated with specific weather conditions, (2) To determine whether the weekday-weekend effect of extreme ozone events could be detectable during the nine-year study period. The results show that in the study period, there were totally 313 days having extreme ground-level ozone events with ozone concentration ≥ 80 ppb, which is the current Ontario Ambient Air Quality Criterion for ozone concentration, in the four selected Toronto sites. Additionally, the weather condition mainly associated with these 313 days was the Dry Tropical one. This study also shows the phenomenon of the weekday-weekend effect of extreme ozone events in the past nine years in Toronto.
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Viral Mineralization and Geochemical InteractionsKyle, Jennifer 03 March 2010 (has links)
Viruses are ubiquitous biological entities whose importance and role in aquatic habits is beginning to take form. However, several habitats have undergone limited to no examination with viral-geochemical parameters minimally examined and viral-mineral relationships in the natural environment and the role of mineralization on viral-host dynamic completely lacking. To further develop knowledge on the presence and abundances of viruses, how viruses impact aquatic systems, and how viral-host interactions can be impacted under mineralizing conditions, viruses were examined under a variety of habitats and experimental conditions. Water samples were collected from the deep subsurface (up to 450 m underground) and acid mine drainage (AMD) systems in order to determine the presence, abundance, and viral-geochemical relationships within the systems. Samples were also collected from a variety of freshwater habitats, which have undergone limited examination, to determine viral-geochemical and viral-mineral relationships. Lastly, bacteriophage-host dynamics were examined under authigenic mineral precipitation to determine how mineralization impacts this relationship.
Results reveal that not only are viruses present in the deep subsurface and AMD systems, but they are abundant (up to 107 virus-like particles/mL) and morphogically diverse. Viruses are also the strongest predictor of prokaryotic abundance in southern Ontario freshwater systems where potential nutrients are rich. Geochemical variables, such as pH and Eh, were shown to have negative impacts of viral abundance indicting that AMD environments are detrimental for free viruses (i.e. not particle associated).
Direct evidence of viral-mineral interactions was found using transmission electron microscopy as viral particles were shown attached to iron-bearing mineral phases (determined through elemental analysis). In addition, evidence of viral participation in mineralization events was found in both AMD and freshwater environments where inverse correlations were noted between viral abundance and jarosite saturation indices (r = -0.71 and r = -0.33, respectively), and goethite saturation indices were also noted to be the strongest predictor of VLP abundance in freshwater habitats explaining 78% of the variability in the data. Lastly, iron precipitation and/or metal ion binding to bacterial surfaces greatly reduced phage replication (~98%) revealing bacterial mineralization has a protective benefit strongly hindering viral replication.
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Low-noise circuitry for extreme environment detection systems implemented in SiGe BiCMOS technologyKenyon, Eleazar Walter 05 July 2012 (has links)
This work evaluates two SiGe BiCMOS technology platforms as candidates for implementing extreme environment capable circuitry, with an emphasis on applications requiring high sensitivity and low noise.
In Chapter 1, applications requiring extreme environment sensing circuitry are briefly reviewed and the motivation for undertaking this study is outlined. A case is then presented for the use of SiGe BiCMOS technology to meet this need, documenting the benefits of operating SiGe HBTs at cryogenic temperatures. Chapter 1 concludes with a brief description of device radiation effects in bipolar and CMOS devices, and a basic overview of noise in semiconductor devices and electronic components.
Chapter 2 further elaborates on a specific application requiring low-noise circuitry capable of operating at cryogenic temperatures and proposes a number of variants of band-gap reference circuits for use in said system. Detailed simulation and theoretical analysis of the proposed circuits are presented and compared with measurements, validating the techniques used in the proposed designs and emphasizing the need for further understanding of device level low-temperature noise phenomena.
Chapter 3 evaluates the feasibility of using a SiGe BiCMOS process, whose response to ionizing radiation was previously uncharacterized, for use in unshielded electronic systems needed for exploration of deep space planets or moons, specifically targeting Europa mission requirements. Measured total ionizing dose (TID) responses for both CMOS and bipolar SiGe devices are presented and compared to similar technologies. The mechanisms responsible for device degradation are outlined, and an explanation of unexpected results is proposed.
Finally, Chapter 4 summarizes the work presented and understanding provided by this thesis, concluding by outlining future research needed to build upon this study and fully realize SiGe based extreme environment capable precision electronic systems.
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Essays on Currency CrisesKarimi Zarkani, Mohammad 07 March 2012 (has links)
(None) Technical Summary of Thesis:
The topic of my thesis is currency crisis. Currency crises have been a recurrent feature of the international economy from the invention of paper money. They are not confined to particular economies or specific region. They take place in developed, emerging, and developing countries and are spread all over the globe. Countries that experience currency crises face economic losses that can be huge and disruptive. However, the exacted toll is not only financial and economic, but also human, social, and political. It is clear that the currency crisis is a real threat to financial stability and economic prosperity.
The main objective of this thesis is to analyze the determinants of currency crises for twenty OECD countries and South Africa from 1970 through 1998. It systematically examines the role of economic fundamentals and contagion in the origins of currency crises and empirically attempts to identify the channels through which the crises are being transmitted. It also examines the links between the incidence of currency crises and the choice of exchange rate regimes as well as the impact of capital market liberalization policies on the occurrence of currency crises.
The first chapter identifies the episodes of currency crisis in our data set. Determining true crisis periods is a vital step in the empirical studies and has direct impact on the reliability of their estimations and the relevant policy implications. We define a period as a crisis episode when the Exchange Market Pressure (EMP) index, which consists of changes in exchange rates, reserves, and interest rates, exceeds a threshold. In order to minimize the concerns regarding the accuracy of identified crisis episodes, we apply extreme value theory, which is a more objective approach compared to other methods. In this chapter, we also select the reference country, which a country’s currency pressure index should be built around, in a more systematic way rather than by arbitrary choice or descriptive reasoning.
The second chapter studies the probability of a currency exiting a tranquil state into a crisis state. There is an extensive literature on currency crises that empirically evaluate the roots and causes of the crises. Despite the interesting results of the current empirical literature, only very few of them account for the influence of time on the probability of crises. We use duration models that rigorously incorporate the time factor into the likelihood functions and allow us to investigate how the amount of time that a currency has already spent in the tranquil state affects the stability of a currency. Our findings show that high values of volatility of unemployment rates, inflation rates, contagion factors (which mostly work through trade channels), unemployment rates, real effective exchange rate, trade openness, and size of economy increases the hazard of a crisis. We make use of several robustness checks, including running our models on two different crisis episodes sets that are identified based on monthly and quarterly type spells.
The third chapter examines the links between the incidence of currency crises and the choice of exchange rate regimes as well as the impact of capital market liberalization policies on the occurrence of currency crises. As in our previous paper, duration analysis is our methodology to study the probability of a currency crisis occurrence under different exchange rate regimes and capital mobility policies. The third chapter finds that there is a significant link between the choice of exchange rate regime and the incidence of currency crises in our sample. Nevertheless, the results are sensitive to the choice of the de facto exchange rate system. Moreover, in our sample, capital control policies appear to be helpful in preventing low duration currency crises. The results are robust to a wide variety of sample and models checks.
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Agile Methods (Scrum, XP) Applying into Small (Micro) Enterprise Brusiness Website Development : A case study of Dalsland Travel AB website development projectShen, Bin January 2013 (has links)
No description available.
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Teoría de Krein-Milman en espacios vectoriales topológicos sobre cuerpos valuadosPérez García, María Cristina 03 December 1982 (has links)
En esta memoria se incluyen diversas alternativas a una teoría de krein-milman no arquimediana las cuales vienen sugeridas bien por intentos anteriores de otros autores bien por conseguir una teoría unificada en los casos arquimediano o no o bien por lograr una teoría independiente del cuerpo valuado y que en condiciones de comparación dan lugar a resultados muy similares / This monography provides several alternatives to a non-Archimedan Krein-Milman Theory. They are suggested by some previous attempts to this subject carried out by other authors, as well as by the aim of getting an unified theory that works in the Archimede and in the non-Archimedean cases, in the sense that in the Archimedean context, this theory coincides with the well-known one existing in the classical literature
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Operational Risk Capital Provisions for Banks and Insurance CompaniesAfambo, Edoh Fofo 11 May 2006 (has links)
This dissertation investigates the implications of using the Advanced Measurement Approaches (AMA) as a method to assess operational risk capital charges for banks and insurance companies within Basel II paradigms and with regard to U.S. regulations. Operational risk has become recognized as a major risk class because of huge operational losses experienced by many financial firms over the last past decade. Unlike market risk, credit risk, and insurance risk, for which firms and scholars have designed efficient methodologies, there are few tools to help analyze and quantify operational risk. The new Basel Revised Framework for International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards (Basel II) gives substantial flexibility to internationally active banks to set up their own risk assessment models in the context of the Advanced Measurement Approaches. The AMA developed in this thesis uses actuarial loss models complemented by the extreme value theory to determine the empirical probability distribution function of the overall capital charge in terms of various classes of copulas. Publicly available operational risk loss data set is used for the empirical exercise.
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Of chaos and internal fire : the quest for nothingness by lyrical manifestations of re-interpreted Gnostic thoughtAndersson, Robert January 2012 (has links)
This essay researches the prevalence of Gnostic influences in contemporary music lyrics, more exclusively within the context of the extreme metal scene. A resurgence of such topics has also been evident in contemporary music; not surprisingly, as music in general is part of the foundations of culture, and in a wider aspect, of society at large. The essay is performed using a hermeneutic method, interpreting music lyrics and discussing them from a background of cultural and religious theory. The purposes of researching the influences of Gnosticism in this environment are to determine the presence of Gnostic thought in extreme metal lyrics, research the eventual re-interpretations of historical sources of Gnosticism, and to discuss the acknowledged Gnostic influences in the displayed art form in a contemporary cultural perspective, related to cultural aspects such as secularization, modernity and globalization. Sources include music lyrics appropriate to the subject matter at hand as well as previously published interviews. The results of the investigation demonstrate that there are multiple interpretations of Gnostic thought apparent in extreme metal lyrics, varying from slight re-interpretations to more extensive ones, as apparent in what is identified as a chaos-gnostic current. The Gnostic material has in the latter scenario been integrated into an originally satanic worldview and as a result has become a major part of the chaos-gnostic belief system. The chaos-gnostic current has appeared in a highly secular surrounding, and the results of the essay propose that a secular surrounding can breed elements of trangression within individuals, leading to the resurgence of oppositional counter-cultural characteristics and an awakening of alternative spirituality with oppositional overtones.
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Raising IslandsKnight, Christopher James Snazel 11 May 2012 (has links)
In an era of dawning anthropogenic climate change, people of atoll nations face grievous threats to their future. Rising sea levels, warming oceans, and changing weather patterns conspire with economic isolation, rapidly growing populations, and the loss of traditional livelihoods to perpetuate conditions of dependence and wardship which threaten the very existence of their island homes. This project examines an atoll nation of the equatorial Pacific, the Republic of the Marshall Islands, where the outward appearance of pristine tropical paradise belies a tragic history of nuclear weapons and ballistic missile testing at the hands of the US military. While the islands have been consistently framed in rhetoric which stresses vulnerability, smallness and unsustainability, this project contests the limited scope of the regimes of power in Oceania by considering how the independent, grassroots actions of local groups of islanders have achieved surprising and dramatic results in defiance of the policies and planners at the top.
In developing a design proposal for the contemporary condition, this thesis examines the persistent ways in which the islands and people are framed by outsiders. This project engages with the social, political and natural history of the atolls: common tropes are challenged by the actions and agency of a people who have dealt with imperialist outsiders in sophisticated and conscious ways. It explores the traditional cultural practices which enabled the ancestors of the Marshallese people to flourish, and suggests that it is at the level of actions by ordinary people that the most fertile potentials lie, and are in fact already being played out. What forms of urbanism might be appropriate in this environment? How can islanders effectively manage their landscape and engage with the natural processes - as their ancestors once did to a remarkable degree? By pairing traditional techniques with modern technologies, a proposal is synthesized which could empower the contemporary Marshallese to transform their landscape and develop sustainable livelihoods in this extreme and dynamic environmental condition: to build a future which offers the best aspects of both traditional and contemporary ways of life.
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