Export 4149 results:
Sort by: Author Title Type [ Year  (Desc)]
2006
F. Alencar, C. Silva, A. Moreira, J. Araújo, and J. F. B. Castro. "Identifying Candidate Aspects with I-star Approach." Workshop on Early Aspects, AOSD 2006. Bonn, Germany 2006. Abstract

n/a

C. Silva, J. F. B. Castro, P. Tedesco, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, and J. Mylopoulos. "Improving the Architectural Detailed Design of Multi-Agent Systems: The Tropos Case." 5th International Workshop on Software Engineering for Large Scale Systems (SELMAS 2006), na 28th International Conference on Software Engineering (ICSE 2006). Shanghai, China: ACM Press, 2006. Abstract

n/a

Santos, Celina, Ricardo Afonso, Maria Pedro Guarino, Rita Patarrão, Ana Fernandes, João Paulo Noronha, Maria Paula Macedo, and Jorge Caldeira. "In vitro Nitrosation of Insulin A and B-chains." Eur J. Mass Spectrom.. 12.5 (2006): 331-338.
Mahiout, A., R. Damann, J. Pera, A. Luonsi, M. Kolari, J. Siivinen, J. F. Santos Oliveira, N. Lapa, G. Pourcelly, and F. Aslan. "Industrial liquid effluents in the pulp and paper industry." Industrial Liquid Effluents - A Guide Book on the Treatment of Effluents from the Mining/Metallurgy, Paper, Plating and Textile Industries. Eds. M. Cox, P. Négré, and L. Yurramendi. Donostia - San Sebastián: INASMET-Tecnalia and European Commission, 2006. 33-73.
Mateus, O., A. Walen, and MT Antunes. "The large theropod fauna of the Lourinhã Formation (Portugal) and its similarity to the Morrison Formation, with a description of a new species of Allosaurus." New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science Bulletin. 36 (2006): 123-129. Abstractmateus_walen_antunes_-_2006_-_the_large_theropod_fauna_of_the_lourinha_formation__portugal__and_its_similarity_to_the_morrison_formation__with_a_description_of_a_new_species_of_allosaurus.pdf

Late Jurassic theropod dinosaurs have been known in Portugal since 1863 but only now are they being fully understood, with the recognition of genera such as Allosaurus, Aviatyrannis, Ceratosaurus, Lourinhanosaurus, and Torvosaurus from the Lourinhã and Alcobaça Formations (Kimmeridgian/Tithonian). Ceratosaurus dentisulcatus can now be reported from Portugal. It represents the only occurrence of this species outside the Morrison Formation.
New cranial elements confirm the presence of Torvosaurus tanneri, in Portugal. Torvosaurus was the largest Late Jurassic land carnivore. New postcranial and cranial elements allow the erection of a new species from Portugal, Allosaurus europaeus n.sp. The theropod assemblage of Portugal is similar to that of the Morrison Formation.

Lapa, N., R. Barbosa, S. Camacho, R. C. C. Monteiro, M. H. V. Fernandes, and J. S. Oliveira. "Leaching behaviour of a glass produced from a MSWI bottom ash." Materials Science Forum. 514-516 (2006): 1736-1741. AbstractWebsite

This paper is mainly focused on the characterisation of a glass material (GM) obtained from the thermal treatment of a bottom ash (BA) produced at the Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) incineration plant of Valorsul. By melting the BA at 1400ºC during 2 hours, and without using any chemical additives, a homogeneous black-coloured glass was obtained. The thermal and mechanical properties of this glass were characterised. The thermal expansion coefficient, measured by dilatometry, was 9-10 x 10-6 per ºC and the modulus of rupture, determined by four-point bending test, was 75±6 MPa, which are similar values to those exhibited by commercial soda-lime-silica glasses used in structural applications. The chemical and the ecotoxicological leaching behaviour of the GM were also analysed. The GM was submitted to a leaching procedure composed of 15 sequential extraction cycles. A liquid/solid (L/S) ratio of 2 l/kg was applied in each cycle. The leachates were filtered through a membrane of PTFE (porosity: 0.45 8m). The filtered leachates were characterised for different chemical parameters and for an ecotoxicological indicator (bacterium Vibrio fischeri). The GM was also submitted to a microwave acidic digestion for the assessment of the total metal content. The crude BA was also submitted to the same experimental procedures. The GM showed levels of chemical emission and ecotoxicity for V. fischeri much lower than those determined for the crude BA. Similar characterisation studies will be pursued with the glass-ceramics produced by adequate thermal treatment of the glass, in order to investigate the effect of the crystallization on the final properties.

Cardoso, António S., Nuno M. da Costa Guerra, Armando. N. Antão, and Manuel Matos Fernandes. "Limit analysis of anchored concrete soldier-pile walls in clay under vertical loading." Canadian Geotechnical Journal. 43 (2006): 516-530. AbstractWebsite

The vertical stability of anchored concrete soldier-pile walls is highly influenced by the complexity of the interaction between the different parts of the structure, i.e., wall, anchors, and supported soil mass. The problem is analyzed using upper bound limit analysis through published solutions and proposed closed-form equations. A comparison is made between these equations and numerical limit analyses. An estimate of the theoretical minimum pile resistance required to avoid excavation collapse is presented. Published finite element elastoplastic results are used for comparison.Key words: anchored retaining wall, concrete soldier-pile walls, vertical equilibrium, finite elements, limit analysis, soil-to-wall interface shear forces.

R. Ramos, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, J. F. B. Castro, F. Alencar, and C. Silva. "A Model to Evaluate Aspect-Oriented Requirements Documents." 4th Iberian Workshop on Aspect Oriented Software Development (DSOA 2006),. Barcelona, Spain: University of Extremadura, 2006. Abstract

n/a

S. Gordillo, G. Rossi, A. Moreira, J. Araújo, C. Vairetti, and M. Urbieta. "Modeling and Composing Navigational Concerns in Web Applications: Requirement and Design Issues." Fourth Latin American Web Congress (LA-WEB'06). IEEE Computer Society, 2006. 25-31. Abstract

n/a

C. Silva, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, J. F. B. Castro, F. Alencar, and R. Ramos. "Modeling Multi-Agent Systems using UML." 20th Brazilian Symposium on Software Engineering (SBES). Brazil 2006. Abstract

n/a

Schulp, AS, M. J. Polcyn, O. Mateus, LL Jacobs, LM Morais, and TS Tavares. "New mosasaur material from the Maastrichtian of Angola, with notes on the phylogeny, distribution and palaeoecology of the genus Prognathodon." Publicaties van het Natuurhistorisch Genootschap in Limburg Reeks XLV aflevering 1. Stichting Natuurpublicaties Limburg, Maastricht (2006): 57-67 .schulp_polcyn_mateus_jacobs_et_al_2006_new_mosasaur_material_from_the_maastrichtian_of_angola_with_notes_on_the_phylogeny_distribution_and_palaeoecology_of_the_genus_prognathodon.pdf
Jacobs, LL, O. Mateus, M. J. Polcyn, AS Schulp, MT Antunes, ML Morais, and T. da Silva Tavares. "The occurrence and geological setting of Cretaceous dinosaurs, mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and turtles from Angola." Paleont. Soc. Korea. 22.1 (2006): 91-110. Abstractjacobs_mateus-et_al_2006_angola.pdf

Vertebrate-bearing fossiliferous outcrops of Cretaceous age in sub-Saharan Africa are rare because of younger superficial deposits, vegetation cover, and the widespread occurrence of Precambrian metamorphic plateau basement comprising much of the continent. However, one area of extensive marine and nonmarine
Cretaceous exposures is found between the plateau and the coast in Angola. The Angolan margin was formed in conjunction with the breakup of Gondwana and subsequent growth of the South Atlantic. Cretaceous deposits are constrained in age by the emplacement of oceanic crust, which began no later than magnetozone M3
(approximately 128 Ma, Barremian). Shallow marine facies are exposed in sea cliffs but equivalent facies become increasingly terrestrial inland. Few vertebrate fossils have been described from Angola aside from sharks.
Notable exceptions are the late Turonian mosasaurs Angolasaurus bocagei and Tylosaurus iembeensis from northern Angola. Those taxa are significant because they are among the earliest derived mosasaurs. Recent field work led to the discovery of a new skull of Angolasaursus as well as sharks, fish, plesiosaurs, the skull of a new taxon of turtle, additional mosasaurs, and the articulated forelimb of a sauropod dinosaur, the first reported dinosaur from Angola. In southern Angola, marine sediments spanning the Cretaceous-Paleogene boundary are found.

Castanhinha, R., and O. Mateus. "On the left-right asymmetry in dinosaurs." Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 26.Suppl. To 3 (2006): 48A. Abstractcastanhinhamateus2006.pdf

The study of different kinds of morphological left-right (L-R) asymmetries in all taxa is a very powerful tool to understand evolution since it is a way to measure the developmentalstability of an organism against environmental perturbations. Excluding every pathologic or subtle asymmetry and all cases of taphonomic distortion, this work focuses only on two
kinds of unambiguous asymmetries: fluctuating and adaptative asymmetry. There are several cases of conspicuous left-right asymmetry in dinosaurs and is probably more common than previously thought. The pneumatic cavities systems in skull and vertebrae of theropodsand sauropods are the most common cases reported. The shape (but not the occurrence) of pneumatic cavities might have been exposed to weak selective pressure becoming more random than other body structures. Asymmetries are rarer in the appendicular bones possibly because it represents a strong handicap in the function of the limbs, consequently in the locomotion of the individual. Teeth counting show many exceptions to the typical L-R symmetry. Peculiar cases of adaptive asymmetry are related with the plates of stegosaurs and the ear displacement in the skull of the troodontids, which may have an important role in the physiology and ecology of the animals. The asymmetric displacement maximizes the surface exposure of the stegosaurs dorsal plates. This is an advantage, either the plates were used for thermoregulation, display or specific identification. Work in progress on the braincases of some troodontids specimens shows asymmetric ear openings, which suggests thatcan be an analogy resulting from convergent evolution between troodontids and strigiformes birds, used for 3D directional acoustics. Asymmetries are more common in animals that develop under stress. Animals that lived under dramatic environmental changes periods—like mass-extinctions episodes are believed to be—should present more asymmetries.
However, much more sampling and time accuracy is required in order to be able to relate dinosaur asymmetries to extinction episodes. Asymmetries show strong intra-individual variation and should be taken in consideration in taxonomical studies.

Marques, C., R. C. da Silva, A. Wemans, M. J. P. Maneira, A. Kozanecki, and E. Alves. "Optical properties tailoring by high fluence implantation of Ag ions on sapphire." Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section B-Beam Interactions with Materials and Atoms. 242.1-2 (2006): 104-108.
C. Silva, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, J. F. B. Castro, F. Alencar, and R. Ramos. "Organizational Architectural Styles Specification." JISBD 2006. Sitges, Spain 2006. Abstract

n/a

Crous, PW, B. Slippers, MJ WINGFIELD, J. Rheeder, WFO Marasas, AJL Philips, A. Alves, T. Burgess, P. Barber, and JZ Groenewald. "Phylogenetic lineages in the Botryosphaeriaceae." Studies in Mycology. 55 (2006): 235-253. Abstract

n/a

C. Silva, J. F. B. Castro, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, F. Alencar, and R. Ramos. "Separation and Modularization of Design Patterns-Specific Concerns in Detailed Architectural Design." CAiSE'06 Forum, 18th Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE 2006),. Luxembourg: University of Luxembourg, 2006. Abstract

n/a

and Monteiro, Lima M. R. C. C. "Shrinkage behaviour of borosilicate glass-Al(2)O(3) composites during isothermal sintering." in Advanced Materials Forum Iii, Pts 1 and 2, Vol. 514-516. Materials Science Forum. 514-516 (2006): 648-652.
R. Raminhos, M. Pantoquilho, J. Araújo, and A. Moreira. "A Systematic Analysis Patterns Specification." International Conference on Enterprise Information Systems (ICEIS). Paphos, Cyprus 2006. Abstract

n/a

I. S. Brito, A. Moreira, and J. Araújo. "Tool Support for Aspect-Oriented Requirements." The 10th IASTED International Conference on Software Engineering and Applications. IASTED, 2006. Abstract

n/a

C. Silva, J. Araújo, A. Moreira, J. F. B. Castro, D. Penaforte, and A. Carvalho. "Towards an Aspect Oriented Modeling in Multi-agent Systems." Workshop on AOSD, WASP'06, 20th Brasilian Symposium on Software Engineering (SBES'06). Florianópolis, Brazil 2006. Abstract

n/a

P. Sanchez, J. M. Lopes, L. Fuentes, A. Moreira, and J. Araújo. "Towards MDD Transformations from AO Requirements into AO Architecture." Software Architecture, Third European Workshop, EWSA 2006. Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Springer-Verlag, 2006. 159-174. Abstract

n/a

F. Alencar, A. Moreira, J. Araújo, J. F. B. Castro, and C. Silva. "Using Aspects to Simplify i* Models." 14th IEEE International Requirements Engineering Conference (RE 2006). IEEE Computer Society, 2006. Abstract

n/a