Refine
H-BRS Bibliography
- no (2101) (remove)
Departments, institutes and facilities
- Institut für funktionale Gen-Analytik (IFGA) (343)
- Institut für Cyber Security & Privacy (ICSP) (175)
- Institut für Verbraucherinformatik (IVI) (76)
- Institut für Technik, Ressourcenschonung und Energieeffizienz (TREE) (5)
- Institut für Sicherheitsforschung (ISF) (1)
- Institut für Soziale Innovationen (ISI) (1)
Document Type
- Article (828)
- Conference Object (687)
- Part of a Book (253)
- Book (monograph, edited volume) (82)
- Lecture (57)
- Report (56)
- Doctoral Thesis (36)
- Contribution to a Periodical (35)
- Patent (32)
- Master's Thesis (8)
Year of publication
Keywords
- ENaC (9)
- Sozialversicherung (9)
- Deutschland (7)
- Entrepreneurship (7)
- Malus domestica (7)
- Culture (6)
- E-Learning (6)
- Entwicklungspolitik (6)
- apoptosis (6)
- sustainability (6)
Theoretische Informatik
(2002)
Eine anschauliche Einführung in die klassischen Themenbereiche der Theoretischen Informatik für Studierende der Informatik im Haupt- und Nebenfach. Die Autoren wählen einen Ansatz, der durch zahlreiche ausgearbeitete Beispiele auch LeserInnen mit nur elementaren Mathematikkenntnissen den Zugang zu Berechenbarkeit, Komplexitätstheorie und formalen Sprachen ermöglicht. Die mathematischen Konzepte werden sowohl formal eingeführt als auch informell erläutert und durch grafische Darstellungen veranschaulicht. Das Buch umfasst den Lehrstoff einführender Vorlesungen in die Theoretische Informatik und bietet zahlreiche Übungsaufgaben zu jedem Kapitel an. (Verlagsangaben)
We examine the effect of nanometer-sized aircraft-induced aqueous sulfuric acid (H2SO4/H2O) particles on atmospheric ozone as a function of temperature. Our calculations are based on a previously derived parameterization for the regional-scale perturbations of the sulfate surface area density due to air traffic in the North Atlantic Flight Corridor (NAFC) and a chemical box model. We confirm large scale model results that at temperatures T>210 K additional ozone loss -- mainly caused by hydrolysis of BrONO2 and N2O5 -- scales in proportion with the aviation-produced increase of the background aerosol surface area. However, at lower temperatures (< 210 K) we isolate two effects which efficiently reduce the aircraft-induced perturbation: (1) background particles growth due to H2O and HNO3 uptake enhance scavenging losses of aviation-produced liquid particles and (2) the Kelvin effect efficiently limits chlorine activation on the small aircraft-induced droplets by reducing the solubility of chemically reacting species. These two effects lead to a substantial reduction of heterogeneous chemistry on aircraft-induced volatile aerosols under cold conditions. In contrast we find contrail ice particles to be potentially important for heterogeneous chlorine activation and reductions in ozone levels. These features have not been taken into consideration in previous global studies of the atmospheric impact of aviation. Therefore, to parameterize them in global chemistry and transport models, we propose the following parameterisation: scale the hydrolysis reactions by the aircraft-induced surface area increase, and neglect heterogeneous chlorine reactions on liquid plume particles but not on ice contrails and aircraft induced ice clouds.
Human molybdenum cofactor deficiency is a rare and devastating autosomal-recessive disease for which no therapy is known. The absence of active sulfite oxidase-a molybdenum cofactor-dependent enzyme-results in neonatal seizures and early childhood death. Most patients harbor mutations in the MOCS1 gene, whose murine homolog was disrupted by homologous recombination with a targeting vector. As in humans, heterozygous mice display no symptoms, but homozygous animals die between days 1 and 11 after birth. Biochemical analyis of these animals shows that molydopterin and active cofactor are undetectable. They do not possess any sulfite oxidase or xanthine dehydrogenase activity. No organ abnormalities were observed and the synaptic localization of inhibitory receptors, which was found to be disturbed in molybdenum cofactor deficient-mice with a Gephyrin mutation, appears normal. MOCS1(-/-) mice could be a suitable animal model for biochemical and/or genetic therapy approaches.
Screening in clinical trials
(2002)
Optical distortions, resulting from lens characteristics, non-aligned projection and variations in the light source, decrease the quality of projection displays. Knowledge of the sources and characteristics of these distortions allows their electronic correction. The integration of electronic image correction in the display controller IC allows high quality projection without additional components.