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Haranczyk, H.; Weglarz, W.
Funding organisation: Polish Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw (Poland)
Materials presented at the 26. All-Polish Seminar on the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and its application1994
Funding organisation: Polish Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw (Poland)
Materials presented at the 26. All-Polish Seminar on the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and its application1994
AbstractAbstract
[en] The work concerns application of magnetic nuclear relaxation for observation of extraction fraction in the bark of Aesculus hippocastanum and Pinus silvestris. Solubilization of extraction fraction and increase of the mobility of molecular groups in cellulose were observed
Original Title
Obserwacjia rozpuszczalnej frakcji ekstrakcyjnej w korze kasztanowca (aesculus hippocastanum L.) oraz sosny (Pinus silvestris L.) metoda magnetycznej relaksacji jadrowej
Primary Subject
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Source
Hennel, J.W. (comp.); Institute of Nuclear Physics, Cracow (Poland). Funding organisation: National Atomic Energy Agency, Warsaw (Poland); Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw (Poland); Bruker Analytische Messtechnik GmbH, Rheinstetten (Germany); Schering AG, Berlin (Germany); Siemens AG, Berlin (Germany); Varian Associates, Santa Clara, CA (United States); 511 p; 1994; p. 477-481; 26. All-Polish seminar on the nuclear magnetic resonance and its application; 26. Ogolnopolskie seminarium na temat magnetycznego rezonansu jadrowego i jego zastosowan; Cracow (Poland); 1-2 Dec 1993; KBN GRANT NO. 224119102; 5 refs, 3 figs.
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Aim of the study: The aim of this study was to 1) estimate the amount of dead wood in managed beech (Fagus sylvatica L.) stands in northern Iberian Peninsula and 2) evaluate the most appropriate volume equation and the optimal transect length for sampling downed wood. Area of study: The study area is the Aralar Forest in Navarra (Northern Iberian Peninsula). Material and methods: The amount of dead wood by component (downed logs, snags, stumps and fine woody debris) was inventoried in 51 plots across a chronosequence of stand ages (0-120 years old). Main results: The average volume and biomass of dead wood was 24.43 m3 ha-1 and 7.65 Mg ha-1, respectively. This amount changed with stand development stage [17.14 m3 ha-1 in seedling stage; 34.09 m3 ha-1 inpole stage; 22.54 m3 ha-1 in mature stage and 24.27 m3 ha-1 in regular stand in regeneration stage], although the differences were not statistically significant for coarse woody debris. However, forest management influenced the amount of dead wood, because the proportion of mass in the different components and the decay stage depended on time since last thinning. The formula based on intersection diameter resulted on the smallest coefficient of variation out of seven log-volume formulae. Thus, the intersection diameter is the preferred method because it gives unbiased estimates, has the greatest precision and is the easiest to implement in the field. Research highlights: The amount of dead wood, and in particular snags, was significantly lower than that in reserved forests. Results of this study showed that sampling effort should be directed towards increasing the number of transects, instead of increasing transect length or collecting additional piece diameters that do not increase the accuracy or precision of DWM volume estimation. (Author)
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Available from http://revistas.inia.es/index.php/fs/issue/view/139
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Journal Article
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Forest Systems (Online); ISSN 2171-9845;
; v. 25(3); 12 p

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Mo, Yuchang, E-mail: myc@zjnu.cn2013
AbstractAbstract
[en] BDD (Binary Decision Diagrams) have proven to be a very efficient tool to assess Fault Trees. However, the size of BDD, and therefore the efficiency of the whole methodology, depends dramatically on the choice of variable ordering. The determination of the best variable ordering is intractable. Therefore, heuristics have been designed to select reasonably good variable orderings. One very important common feature for good static heuristics is to respect modules. In this paper, the notion of module-respect is studied in a systematic way. It is proved that under certain condition there always exists an optimal ordering that respects modules. This condition is that for each module there is always a smallest module BDD and each included module variable appears only once. On the other hand, it is shown that for the trees not satisfying the above sufficient condition the optimal orderings may not be able to be directly generated using module-respect heuristics, even when the shuffling strategy is used.
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S0951-8320(12)00234-7; Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ress.2012.11.005; Copyright (c) 2012 Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands, All rights reserved.; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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AbstractAbstract
[en] The distributions of 90Sr and 137Cs in tree trunks were measured for eight species. The concentration of 137Cs was relatively uniform in the wood xylem and did not show any correlation with the temporal record of cumulative deposition of fallout in the northern hemisphere, indicating that 137Cs was mobile in the wood xylem. The distributions of 90Sr were classified into three groups. All of the gymnosperms - red spruce, eastern hemlock and white pine - showed a maximum 90Sr specific activity in rings formed in the 1960s and the overall distribution was closely associated with the temporal record of the cumulative deposition of fallout. Three of five angiosperms -hickory, elm and American beech - showed similar distributions to the gymnosperms except that the maximum 90Sr specific activity corresponded to the 1970s. The other two angiosperms - yellow poplar and sugar maple - did not show any correlation with the cumulative fallout deposition. The radial distribution of 90Sr in gymnosperms was simulated considering a steady-state cycling of 90Sr in the forest ecosystem. The model suggested that a few per cent of stable Sr are replaced annually in the nutrient pool of gymnosperms. (Author)
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Although a binary decision diagram (BDD) algorithm has been tried to solve large fault trees until quite recently, they are not efficiently solved in a short time since the size of a BDD structure exponentially increases according to the number of variables. Furthermore, the truncation of If-Then-Else (ITE) connectives by the probability or size limit and the subsuming to delete subsets could not be directly applied to the intermediate BDD structure under construction. This is the motivation for this work. This paper presents an efficient BDD algorithm for large coherent systems (coherent BDD algorithm) by which the truncation and subsuming could be performed in the progress of the construction of the BDD structure. A set of new formulae developed in this study for AND or OR operation between two ITE connectives of a coherent system makes it possible to delete subsets and truncate ITE connectives with a probability or size limit in the intermediate BDD structure under construction. By means of the truncation and subsuming in every step of the calculation, large fault trees for coherent systems (coherent fault trees) are efficiently solved in a short time using less memory. Furthermore, the coherent BDD algorithm from the aspect of the size of a BDD structure is much less sensitive to variable ordering than the conventional BDD algorithm
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S0951832003002369; Copyright (c) 2003 Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands, All rights reserved.; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Rydval, M.; Druckenbrod, D.; Anchukaitis, K.J.; Wilson, R., E-mail: mr286@st-andrews.ac.uk2016
AbstractAbstract
[en] Nonclimatic disturbance events are an integral element in the history of forests. Although the identification of the occurrence and duration of such events may help to understand environmental history and landscape change, from a dendroclimatic perspective, disturbance can obscure the climate signal in tree rings. However, existing detrending methods are unable to remove disturbance trends without affecting the retention of long-term climate trends. Here, we address this issue by using a novel method for the detection and removal of disturbance events in tree-ring width data to assess their spatiotemporal occurrence in a network of Scots pine (Pinus sylvestris L.) trees from Scotland. Disturbance trends 'superimposed' on the tree-ring record are removed before detrending and the climate signals in the precorrection and postcorrection chronologies are evaluated using regional climate data, proxy system model simulations, and maximum latewood density (MXD) data. Analysis of subregional chronologies from the West Highlands and the Cairngorms in the east reveals a higher intensity and more systematic disturbance history in the western subregion, likely a result of extensive timber exploitation. The method improves the climate signal in the two subregional chronologies, particularly in the more disturbed western sites. Our application of this method demonstrates that it is possible to minimise the effects of disturbance in tree-ring width chronologies to enhance the climate signal. (author)
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Available from doi: https://doi.org/10.1139/cjfr-2015-0366; 69 refs., 4 tabs., 7 figs.
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Journal Article
Journal
Canadian Journal of Forest Research; ISSN 0045-5067;
; v. 46(3); p. 387-401

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Dannenberg, Matthew P, E-mail: matthew-dannenberg@uiowa.edu2021
AbstractAbstract
[en] Process-based models of tree-ring width are used both for reconstructing past climates and for projecting changes in growth due to climate change. Since soil moisture observations are unavailable at appropriate spatial and temporal scales, these models generally rely on simple water budgets driven in part by temperature-based potential evapotranspiration (PET) estimates, but the choice of PET model could have large effects on simulated soil moisture, moisture stress, and radial growth. Here, I use four different PET models to drive the VS-Lite model and evaluate the extent to which they differ in both their ability to replicate observed growth variability and their simulated responses to projected 21st century warming. Across more than 1200 tree-ring width chronologies in the conterminous United States, there were no significant differences among the four PET models in their ability to replicate observed radial growth, but the models differed in their responses to 21st century warming. The temperature-driven empirical PET models (Thornthwaite and Hargreaves) simulated much larger warming-induced increases in PET and decreases in soil moisture than the more physically realistic PET models (Priestley–Taylor and Penman–Monteith). In cooler and more mesic regions with relatively minimal moisture constraints to growth, the models simulated similarly small reductions in growth with increased warming. However, in dry regions, the Thornthwaite- and Hargreaves-driven VS-Lite models simulated an increase in moisture stress roughly double that of the Priestley–Taylor and Penman–Monteith models, which also translated to larger simulated declines in radial growth under warming. While the lack of difference in the models’ ability to replicate observed radial growth variability is an encouraging sign for some applications (e.g. attributing changes in growth to specific climatic drivers), the large differences in model responses to warming suggest that caution is needed when applying the temperature-driven PET models to climatic conditions with large trends in temperature. (letter)
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Available from http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/ac1292; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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Journal Article
Journal
Environmental Research Letters; ISSN 1748-9326;
; v. 16(8); [12 p.]

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Weglarz, W.; Haranczyk, H.
Funding organisation: Polish Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw (Poland)
Materials presented at the 26. All-Polish Seminar on the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and its application1994
Funding organisation: Polish Committee for Scientific Research, Warsaw (Poland)
Materials presented at the 26. All-Polish Seminar on the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance and its application1994
AbstractAbstract
[en] Water bound in the bark of Aesculus hippocastanum L. was studied by two-dimensional decomposition of nuclear relaxation function. The aim of the work was to increase accuracy of relaxation function measurement. The work shows three components of relaxation function
Original Title
Badanie kory kasztanowca (Aesculus hippocastanum L.) metoda dwuwymiarowej dekompozycji funkcji relaksacji jadrowej
Primary Subject
Secondary Subject
Source
Hennel, J.W. (comp.); Institute of Nuclear Physics, Cracow (Poland). Funding organisation: National Atomic Energy Agency, Warsaw (Poland); Polish Academy of Sciences, Warsaw (Poland); Bruker Analytische Messtechnik GmbH, Rheinstetten (Germany); Schering AG, Berlin (Germany); Siemens AG, Berlin (Germany); Varian Associates, Santa Clara, CA (United States); 511 p; 1994; p. 163-168; 26. All-Polish seminar on the nuclear magnetic resonance and its application; 26. Ogolnopolskie seminarium na temat magnetycznego rezonansu jadrowego i jego zastosowan; Cracow (Poland); 1-2 Dec 1993; KBN GRANT NO. 224119102; 6 refs, 4 figs, 4 tabs.
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AbstractAbstract
No abstract available
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International Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna (Austria). Joint FAO/IAEA Div. of Atomic Energy in Food and Agriculture; Proceedings series; p. 35-38; 1973; IAEA; Vienna; Panel on mutation breeding of vegetatively propagated and perennial crops; Vienna, Austria; 11 Sep 1972; IAEA-PL--501/3
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Book
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Delvosalle, C.; Fievez, C.; Pipart, A.; Fabrega, J. Casal; Planas, E.; Christou, M.; Mushtaq, F., E-mail: christian.delvosalle@fpms.ac.be2005
AbstractAbstract
[en] In the frame of the ESREL special session on ARAMIS project, this paper aims at presenting the work carried out in the first Work Package, devoted to the definition of accident scenarios. This topic is a key-point in risk assessment, and serves as basis for the whole risk quantification. A first part of the work aims at building a Methodology for the Identification of Major Accident Hazards (MIMAH), which is carried out with the development of generic fault and event trees based on a typology of equipment and substances. This work is coupled with an historical analysis of accidents. In a second part, influence of safety devices and policies will be considered, in order to build a Methodology for the Identification of Reference Accident Scenarios (MIRAS). This last one will take into account safety systems and lead to obtain more realistic scenarios
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ESREL 2003: European safety and reliability conference; Maastricht (Netherlands); 15-18 Jun 2003; S0951-8320(04)00262-5; Copyright (c) 2004 Elsevier Science B.V., Amsterdam, The Netherlands, All rights reserved.; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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