Academic literature on the topic 'Staging area'

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Journal articles on the topic "Staging area"

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El-Wessimy, Mahmoud, Hoda M.O. Mokhtar, and Osman Hegazy. "Enhancement Techniques for Data Warehouse Staging Area." International Journal of Data Mining & Knowledge Management Process 3, no. 6 (November 30, 2013): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.5121/ijdkp.2013.3601.

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Mitchell, A. P. "A VAST staging area for regulatory proteins." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105, no. 20 (May 12, 2008): 7111–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0803384105.

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Temple, Claire F. L., Shirley A. Huchcroft, David J. Hurlbut, and John S. D. Davidson. "Histologic staging in malignant melanoma: Cross-sectional area revisited." Journal of Surgical Oncology 69, no. 2 (October 1998): 83–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/(sici)1096-9098(199810)69:2<83::aid-jso7>3.0.co;2-e.

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LEITO, A., J. TRUU, and M. ÕUNSAAR. "The impact of agriculture on autumn staging Eurasian Cranes (Grus grus) in Estonia." Agricultural and Food Science 17, no. 1 (December 4, 2008): 53. http://dx.doi.org/10.2137/145960608784182281.

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This paper explores the relation between the local numbers and distribution of autumn staging Eurasian Cranes (Grus grus Linn.) and agricultural land use during recent decades in Estonia. The analysis is based on the long-term monitoring data of staging cranes and the statistical data of land use in Estonia. We found that great changes in cropping area, as well as in crane numbers have taken place in Estonia since the 1960s. We also found a significant positive correlation between crane numbers and the cropping area of summer wheat, winter wheat, winter rye and all cereals together, and a negative correlation with the area of potatoes. Generally, arable land, particularly that used for growing cereals, has a great influence on the local numbers and distribution of staging cranes. Based on our findings, we predict that changes in the local numbers and distribution of Eurasian Cranes staging during their migration in Estonia and elsewhere will depend on changes in agricultural land use in staging areas, rather than on the size of the breeding population. As about 10 percent of the European Eurasian Crane population stop over in Estonia during the autumn migration, the country has an important role to play in the protection of the species.;
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Chaudhari, Mr Rohit Kiran. "Non-Linear Time History Analysis of an Elevated Water Tank." International Journal for Research in Applied Science and Engineering Technology 9, no. VI (June 30, 2021): 4327–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.22214/ijraset.2021.35939.

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It was discovered that reinforced concrete elevated water tanks with frame staging outperformed reinforced concrete elevated water tanks with shaft staging in terms of seismic resistance. These can be due to the frame staging's seismic energy absorption capability. As a result, the primary goal of this research is to better understand the seismic behavior and performance characteristics of elevated water tanks with frame staging. Furthermore, when compared to other shapes, circular tanks have the smallest surface area for a given tank size. As a result, the amount of material needed for a circular water tank is less than for other shapes. As a result, a circular water tank was chosen, and seismic analysis of elevated RC circular water tanks was carried out according to IITK-GSDMA guidelines, with the behavior of the water tank analysed for various parameters such as zone factor, soil condition, and different staging heights. SAP 2000 was used to determine the structure's modal characteristics (mode shapes and modal participation mass ratio).
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Hipp, Jason, Jerome Cheng, Stephanie Daignault, Jefferey Sica, Michael C. Dugan, David Lucas, Yukako Yagi, Stephen Hewitt, and Ulysses J. Balis. "Automated Area Calculation of Histopathologic Features Using SIVQ." Analytical Cellular Pathology 34, no. 5 (2011): 265–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2011/606273.

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Recently, with the advent of the 7th edition of the AJCC Cancer Staging manual, at least one set of criteria (e.g. breast) were modified to now require the measurement of maximal depth of stromal invasion. With the current manual interpretive morphological approaches typically employed by surgical pathologists to assess tumor extent, the specialty now potentially has stumbled upon a crossroads of practice, where the diagnostic criteria have exceeded the capabilities of our commonly available tools. While whole slide imaging (WSI) technology holds the potential to offer many improvements in clinical workflow over conventional slide microscopy including unambiguous utility for facilitating quantitative diagnostic tasks with one important example being the determination of both linear dimension and surface area. However, the availability of histology data in digital form is of little utility if time-consuming and cumbersome manual workflow steps are necessarily imposed upon the pathologist in order to generate such measurements, especially as encountered with the complex and ill-defined shapes inherent to infiltrative tumors. In this communication, we demonstrate the utility of the recently described SIVQ algorithm to serve as the basis of a highly accurate, precise and semi-automated tool for direct surface area measurement of tumor infiltration from WSI data sets. By anticipating the current trend in cancer staging that emphasizes increasingly precise feature characterization, as witnessed by the recent publication of AJCC's 7th edition of the Cancer Staging Manual, this tool holds promise to will be of value to pathologists for clinical utility.
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Petrie, S. A., and K. L. Wilcox. "Migration chronology of Eastern-Population Tundra Swans." Canadian Journal of Zoology 81, no. 5 (May 1, 2003): 861–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1139/z03-063.

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We used satellite platform transmitting transmitters (PTTs) in 1998–2000 to track spring and fall migratory movements of Tundra Swans (Cygnus columbianus columbianus) captured at Long Point, Ontario. Migration corridors reported here corroborated those identified in previous studies using alphanumerically coded neck collars. However, PTTs provided additional information on duration of spring and fall migrations, duration of stay in different staging regions, time spent on breeding and wintering areas, and migration speed. Birds migrated between the Atlantic coast and northern prairies along a narrow geographic corridor through portions of the southern Great Lakes. From the northern prairies, swans followed 3 corridors to breeding areas on the west coast of Hudson Bay, central High Arctic, and Mackenzie River delta. While swans spent considerable time on Great Lakes (27% of spring migration) and northern prairie (40%) staging areas in spring, the northern boreal forest was an important fall staging area (48% of fall migration). Tundra Swans spent 20% of the annual cycle on wintering areas, 28% on spring staging areas, 29% on breeding areas, and 23% on fall staging areas. The long duration of migration and the fact that birds spend half their lives on staging areas underscore the importance of conserving Tundra Swan migratory habitats. Thirty-gram neck-collar-attached PTTs were more suitable than 95-g Teflon-harness-attached backpack PTTs for tracking Tundra Swans.
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Watts, Bryan D., Fletcher M. Smith, and Barry R. Truitt. "Departure patterns of Whimbrels using a terminal spring staging area." Wader Study 124, no. 2 (August 1, 2017): 141–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.18194/ws.00075.

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Smallwood, Ashley M. "Clovis Technology and Settlement in the American Southeast: Using Biface Analysis to Evaluate Dispersal Models." American Antiquity 77, no. 4 (October 2012): 689–713. http://dx.doi.org/10.7183/0002-7316.77.4.689.

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AbstractKelly and Todd’s (1988) “high-technology forager” model predicts Clovis groups were highly mobile populations that left behind behaviorally consistent records of Clovis fluted points as evidence of their short-term occupations. Anderson’s (1990, 1996) staging-area model predicts that Clovis settlement was more gradual; groups entered the continent and slowed migration to concentrate territorial ranges around resource-rich river valleys, and these staging areas became the demographic foundations for early cultural regionalization. This study analyzes southeastern Clovis point data and biface assemblages from Carson-Conn-Short; Topper, and Williamson to test the technological implications of these two models. Significant subregional variation exists in Clovis point morphology and biface production techniques. This variation suggests the subregions represent distinct populations who distinctly altered aspects of their technology but maintained fundamental elements of the Clovis tradition. These findings are at odds with the high-technology forager model and more closely fit the staging-area model.
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Watts, Bryan D., and Barry R. Truitt. "Decline of Whimbrels within a Mid-Atlantic Staging Area (1994–2009)." Waterbirds 34, no. 3 (September 2011): 347–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.1675/063.034.0308.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Staging area"

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Frank, Maureen G. "Migratory Waterbird Ecology at a Critical Staging Area, Great Salt Lake, Utah." DigitalCommons@USU, 2016. https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/etd/4940.

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Despite the hemispheric importance of Great Salt Lake (GSL) as a staging area for migratory birds, little is known about the resources that GSL provides to these birds, or how changes to the GSL ecosystem might impact the avian community. Three species of migratory waterbirds that stage at GSL are Wilson’s phalaropes (Phalaropus tricolor), red-necked phalaropes (Phalaropus lobatus), and eared grebes (Podiceps nigricollis). My objective for this research was to study the impacts of prey availability on the staging ecology of these species. In Chapter 2, I examined the use of GSL habitats by both species of phalaropes. In the high-salinity bays of GSL, phalaropes were most strongly associated with shallow water. In the low-salinity bay, there were no strong associations between phalarope presence and particular habitat characteristics. In Chapter 3, I analyzed the behaviors of phalaropes relative to prey densities. Phalaropes commonly foraged in Carrington Bay, which had the highest densities of brine fly (Ephydridae) adults, and in Farmington Bay, which had high densities of benthic macroinvertebrates. Foraging behavior differed between Wilson’s and red-necked phalaropes, with Wilson’s phalaropes spinning more often than red-necked phalaropes. In Chapter 4, I examined interannual and nightly variations in eared grebe fall migration departures in relation to prey availability and environmental conditions. Eared grebes began migration relatively early when lake temperatures were relatively warm, densities of brine shrimp (Artemia franciscana) adults were high, and densities of brine shrimp cysts were low. The likelihood that eared grebes would depart on a given night was positively associated with the average barometric pressure 12 hours prior to sunset. The resources provided by GSL support substantial proportions of the staging populations of phalaropes and eared grebes. Management efforts should seek to maintain the habitats and resources needed by phalaropes and eared grebes at GSL. Future large-scale diversions of freshwater may threaten GSL’s suitability as a staging area for these birds.
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Chartrand, Lise L. "The staging of APEC." Thesis, 2004. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/15405.

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In 1993, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum (APEC) held the first APEC Economic Leaders Meeting (AELM). Raising APEC interaction to the top track, the level of leaders, proved to be an effective and powerful dynamic; the AELM continues to meet annually and to shape APEC policy. The focus on the AELM as the source of vision and direction reinforces the pivotal importance of this political assemblage, reassures the populace that leaders do prevail and all is well: essential ingredients, according to Clifford Geertz, of political theater. The role of journalists, the contemporary scribes or critics, is to inform the audience of this political drama. The objective of this research is to demonstrate that real political value exists in the 'Staging of APEC' in terms of effective economic and political integration of benefit to broad regional interests. The findings draw on the results of a content analysis of news reports covering the first six years of the AELM (1993-1998). Formally, the AELM is an opportunity for regional political leaders to engage in regional policy formation outlined by the pillars of APEC (trade liberalization, facilitation and cooperation) guided by the principals of open regionalism and concerted unilateralism. Activity on the formal, or main stage, also flows to the small stage where leaders merge in a neutral venue. On this stage, leaders are free to examine distinctly non-economic, yet intersecting interests including domestic agendas, human rights and pluri-lateral security concerns. Together, these dual stages, neither one complete without the other, form the political theatre of APEC and provide the value added for the leaders and ultimately for the Asia – Pacific region.
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LIN, WANG-KUN, and 林王焜. "A Study on the Outbound Staging Area Design of a Large Cross-docking Center." Thesis, 2016. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/85912124680609641567.

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碩士
東吳大學
企業管理學系
104
In the logistics industry, firms generate lots of data every day but seldom use this information well. Nowadays many firms are capable of statistics analysis to convert huge amount of data into insight for better decision making and excel among their peers in the same business sectors. Literatures showed Cross-docking (CD) is a superior method to increase competitiveness for retail chains. Thus, in order to be able to effectively play a benefit retail cross-docking logistics center, a strict and analytical planning technique for the operation of a cross-docking facility is very important and having high-value research. This study has investigated the best space design of shipping staging area of a large supermarket retail chain and provided improvement suggestions. There are two major results obtained from this study: 1. According to the data of 374 stores scenario in 2016, the best store cage capacity design in the shipping staging area is 32 cages per day, which can optimize the utilization of shipping staging area and reduce the operational cost. 2. Due to the limited space, this study developed the optimum of delivery. The result shows two deliveries per day with 16 cages in the shipping staging area can optimize the utilization of space and reduce the operational cost. The major contribution of this research is to develop business analytics methods for the outbound operational planning of key operations in a large cross-docking facility, based on total logistic cost analysis. Conclusions are very encouraging regarding its applicability in the large cross-docking operational planning and provide logistics management suggestions for future stewardship. Keywords: Logistic center operational planning, Cross-docking operational planning, shipping staging area design, Logistic cost
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Aluko-Kpotie, Oluwabukola Omolara. "Staging sustainability : an indigenous performance approach to development communication." Thesis, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26612.

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The process of communicating notions of sustainable development in rural grassroots communities in the oil-rich region of southern Nigeria, West Africa, is complex and remains an on-going challenge. The material consequences of ineffective communication between community leaders and their constituencies are evident in the Nigerian communities examined in this dissertation, where poverty is pervasive and where a large majority of the population can neither read nor write in English. Popular performances, specifically theatre, are an essential medium of communication and information dissemination on community development projects in these communities. Theatre for Development (TFD), as these form of popular performances are called, was first introduced to the country in 1975. Its methodology is an adaptation of the techniques of Theatre of the Oppressed created by theatre scholar Augusto Boal. The method is aimed specifically at effecting dialogue, encouraging critical thinking, and motivating the desire for community development and social change. A number of challenges, however, limit the effectiveness of this method in achieving these goals. They include funding constraints, which restrict the amount of time TFD participants spend working in any community and limit follow-up visits to sustain integral dialogues begun during a post-performance discussion. In essence, funding restrictions limit the possibility of achieving sustainable community development. To address this key challenge of time constraints and to facilitate sustained development dialogue between community stakeholders, this dissertation examines the use of indigenous performance practices staged by local performers in rural grassroots communities. By creating and staging a TFD performance using structural elements of oriki, an indigenous performance practice in the region, I address a core research question: How do structures and contents of indigenous performance practices create forums for sustained dialogue and collective consciousness awakening? The answer to this question lays the foundation for sustainable development projects in Nigeria and offers a practical way to improve the effectiveness of TFD as a medium of information dissemination, a tool to facilitate sustained dialogue, and a community development approach in rural grassroots communities in the country.
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Guppy, Graeme Blair. "Two sides to staging public space : enhancing civic function and establishing symbolic content to the Vancouver Art Gallery landscape." Thesis, 2002. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/12071.

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This paper explores urban design possibilities for the enhancement of the Vancouver Art Gallery landscape. It is understood that urban public places are necessary for not only the daily functioning of society, but as venues of and for celebrations, demonstrations, and communication. All public urban spaces have the potential to serve as significant locations of human experience. The designed urban landscape should have the capacity to elicit response and heighten our perceptions, thereby furthering our understanding of the world. Understanding the Vancouver Art Gallery landscape as a central urban space of significant civic importance, it is necessary that its design illuminate the interactions between humans and the physical world - the actors, the audience, and the stage. A literature review is conducted in order to discern possible connections between museum processes and designed landscapes. Analogies are drawn between the processes and display of art within and around galleries and museums, and the cultural meanings associated with these displays. These processes also reveal themselves in the designed landscape. Second, museum-landscape analogs are proposed, and from these, precedents are researched in order to identify criteria that support and reinforce these analogs. These analogs are typologies that may serve to inform the urban design, and landscape architectural process. In response to the research, the Vancouver Art Gallery landscape is designed according to one of the types (analogs) identified - Landscape as Theatre. The design provides a model for the expression of the theatrical aspects of urban life that contribute to the vibrancy and cultural richness of the urban landscape. The conclusions drawn herein are suggestive of urban design enhancement opportunities that exist within central downtown Vancouver, in particular the Vancouver Art Gallery landscape. It is recognized that significant investment in our urban spaces is a requirement for ensuring the successful evolution of urban life. In addition to the enhancement of human experiences within the city, successful urban projects that elicit international acclaim and recognition further the economic growth of, and investment in the city. Certainly, when public spaces are used and enjoyed steadily and repeatedly the experiences of places are enriched, and human experience is enhanced.
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Ilharco, Ana Miguel Tavares. "Projeto UC-Num: desenvolvimento de uma Data Warehouse para a Universidade de Coimbra - Estágio A." Master's thesis, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10316/35685.

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Dissertação de Mestrado em Engenharia Informática apresentada à Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia da Universidade de Coimbra.
Com o aumento do volume de informação e dos recursos das instituições do ensino superior, a tomada de decisões de gestão tem-se revelado uma tarefa árdua e complexa. Tanto a equipa reitoral, como o conselho de gestão, conselho geral e diretores das unidades orgânicas da Universidade de Coimbra (UC) necessitam, cada vez mais, de ter ao seu alcance um conjunto de indicadores de performance (KPIs). A nível interno, tais indicadores são definidos no Plano Estratégico e de Ação (PEA), estabelecido até 2015, e abrangem diversas áreas, das quais se destaca a Económico-Financeira. Para além destes, existem ainda outros indicadores mais específicos dessa área que, embora não figurem no Plano Estratégico da UC, são absolutamente indispensáveis para que a equipa reitoral acompanhe a execução do modelo de distribuição orçamental aprovado em conselho de gestão. Todos estes indicadores permitem avaliar e monitorizar a instituição. O problema que se coloca é na obtenção dos seus valores: o cálculo é feito manualmente pelas equipas operacionais de cada área, tornando-se, por conseguinte, uma tarefa morosa e propensa a erros. Com vista a eliminar essas falhas, o presente estágio tem por fim desenvolver um data mart (subconjunto de uma Data Warehouse que representa uma área funcional específica) onde seja possível calcular indicadores da área Económico- Financeira, em particular os da área de Gestão Orçamental. A criação de um modelo multidimensional para o data mart vem permitir uma performance elevada na consulta de grandes volumes de dados, o que se torna vantajoso para, a posteriori, se realizar uma análise OLAP (Online Analytical Processing) sobre a informação armazenada. Essas análises são, então, disponibilizadas aos utilizadores finais sob a forma de dashboards interativos e intuitivos, disponíveis numa aplicação web já desenvolvida para o efeito, embora no âmbito de outras áreas.
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Books on the topic "Staging area"

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Busk, Peter Linde. The staging area: Peter Linde Busk. Edited by Kjems Folke and Holstebro kunstmuseum. Holstebro: Holstebro Kunstmuseum, 2012.

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Stolfa, M. L. Zucchi. Stagni costieri del Mediterraneo: Area di delta del F. Tagliamento (Adriatico settentrionale) = Ponds on the Mediterranean coasts : river Tagliamento delta area (northern Adriatic Sea). [Udine?: s.n., 1985.

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1938-, Romani Valerio, and Giuliano Walter, eds. Uomini e parchi: La straordinaria attualità di un libro che ha aperto una nuova stagione nella cultura delle aree protette e nella politica del territorio. Milano: FrancoAngeli, 2002.

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Volmar, Axel, and Kyle Stine, eds. Media Infrastructures and the Politics of Digital Time. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463727426.

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In a crucial sense, all machines are time machines. The essays in Media Infrastructures and the Politics of Digital Time develop the central concept of hardwired temporalities to consider how technical networks hardwire and rewire patterns of time. Digital media introduce new temporal patterns in their features of instant communication, synchronous collaboration, intricate time management, and continually improved speed. They construct temporal infrastructures that affect the rhythms of lived experience and shape social relations and practices of cooperation. Interdisciplinary in method and international in scope, the volume draws together insights from media and communication studies, cultural studies, and science and technology studies while staging an important encounter between two distinct approaches to the temporal patterning of media infrastructures, a North American strain emphasizing the social and cultural experiences of lived time and a European tradition, prominent especially in Germany, focusing on technological time and time-critical processes.
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Staging Creolization: Women's Theater and Performance from the French Caribbean. University of Virginia Press, 2017.

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Sahakian, Emily. Staging Creolization: Women's Theater and Performance from the French Caribbean. University of Virginia Press, 2017.

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Jeffs, Kathleen. Staging the Spanish Golden Age. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198819349.001.0001.

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This book offers first-hand experiences from the rehearsal room of the Royal Shakespeare Company’s 2004–5 Spanish Golden Age season in order to put forth a collaborative model for translating, rehearsing, and performing Spanish Golden Age drama. Building on the RSC season, the volume proposes translation and communication methodologies that can feed the creative processes of working actors and directors, while maintaining an ethos of fidelity with regards to the original texts. A successful theatrical ensemble thrives on the mingling of these different voices directed towards a common goal. The work carried out during this season has repercussions in the areas comedia critics debate on the page; each of the chapters engages with one area of these overlapping disciplines. Now that the Royal Shakespeare Company’s Spanish Golden Age season has closed, this book posits a model for future productions of the comedia in English, one that recognizes the need for the languages of the scholar and the theatre artist to be made mutually intelligible by the use of collaborative strategies, mediated by a consultant or dramaturg proficient in both tongues. This model applies more generally to theatrical collaborations involving a translator, writer, and director, and is intended to be useful for translation and performance processes in any language.
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White, Bretton. Staging Discomfort. University Press of Florida, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5744/florida/9781683401544.001.0001.

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Staging Discomfort examines how queer bodies are theatrically represented on the Cuban stage in order to re-evaluate the role of categorization as one of the state’s primary revolutionary tools. These performances concentrate on an aesthetics of fluidity, and thus upset traditional understandings of performer and spectator, and what constitutes the ideal Cuban citizenry. New affective modes are produced when performing bodies highlight—often in uncomfortably intimate, grotesque, or raw ways—the unavoidability of spectators’ bodies, and their capacity for queerness. Here the imagining of new continuities and subjectivities can lead to a reconfiguration of forms of Cuban citizenship. The affective responses from the closeness experienced in the performances in Staging Discomfort are challenges to the Cuban state’s self-designated role as primary provider for the needs of its citizens’ bodies. Through the lens of queer theory, the manuscript explores the body’s centrality to the state’s deployment of fear to successfully marginalize gay life, which this group of works seeks to defuse through an articulation of intimacies, shame, the death drive, cruising, and failure. These affective experiences shape Cuban subjectivities that emerge out of queerness, but whose focus on inclusivity necessarily involves all Cubans. Several of the central questions that guide Staging Discomfort are: How is Cuban theater agile in its critiques considering the state’s limitations on expression? How do queer performances allow for new understandings about the effects of the state’s failing socialist utopian contract with its citizens? And, can Cuban bodies that come together in queer ways re-imagine Cuban citizenship?
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Woodruff, Paul. Staging Wisdom through Hamlet. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190698515.003.0003.

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Hamlet illustrates how wisdom can be staged in theater. It ought to be impossible, because theater is watching, and wisdom can't be watched at all. Moreover, people spouting wisdom are rarely worth watching. Successful theater makes fun of those who spout wisdom (such as Polonius) and engages its audiences constantly with humor or emotion, leaving no space for the reflection that leads to wisdom. So how could a play present wisdom successfully in performance? Plato concluded that the playwrights of his time could put nothing but fake wisdom on stage. Plato was wrong: although divine wisdom is beyond the reach of theater, human wisdom is not. Human wisdom lies mainly in recognizing human limitations. In writing to please his audience, Shakespeare succeeded in staging human wisdom, most notably in Hamlet, which brilliantly exposes the folly of those who pretend to be wise.
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Prati, Raquel, and Olga Olevsky. Breast Cancer Staging and Treatment. Edited by Christoph I. Lee, Constance D. Lehman, and Lawrence W. Bassett. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190270261.003.0012.

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Breast carcinomas are a heterogeneous group of diseases that can be further characterized based on their histology, biomarkers, and molecular profiles. These characteristics, gathered during disease staging, provide crucial information with regard to treatment decisions. Staging has evolved from informing the operability of breast tumors to providing prognostic information, and consequently helping establish local and systemic treatment guidelines. This chapter provides a succinct overview of breast cancer staging and treatment. Topics covered include the histological classification of breast cancers, as well as classification by tumor size and location, lymph node involvement, and metastatic involvement. The topic of molecular assays for prognostic information is reviewed. Finally, current treatment paradigms, including surgery, radiation, and chemotherapy regimens for different types of breast cancer, are discussed.
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Book chapters on the topic "Staging area"

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Kirsch, Brian James, Shu-Jyuan Chang, Michael James Betenbaugh, and Anne Le. "Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma Metabolism." In The Heterogeneity of Cancer Metabolism, 103–16. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65768-0_7.

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AbstractNon-Hodgkin lymphomas (NHLs) are a heterogeneous group of lymphoid neoplasms with different biological characteristics. About 90% of all lymphomas in the United States originate from B lymphocytes, while the remaining originate from T cells [1]. The treatment of NHLs depends on the neoplastic histology and stage of the tumor, which will indicate whether radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or a combination is the best suitable treatment [2]. The American Cancer Society describes the staging of lymphoma as follows: Stage I is lymphoma in a single node or area. Stage II is when that lymphoma has spread to another node or organ tissue. Stage III is when it has spread to lymph nodes on two sides of the diaphragm. Stage IV is when cancer has significantly spread to organs outside the lymph system. Radiation therapy is the traditional therapeutic route for localized follicular and mucosa-associated lymphomas. Chemotherapy is utilized for the treatment of large-cell lymphomas and high-grade lymphomas [2]. However, the treatment of indolent lymphomas remains problematic as the patients often have metastasis, for which no standard approach exists [2].
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Fahy, Thomas. "“I Cannot Live without a Macaroon!”: Food, Hunger, and the Dangers of Modern American Culture in Edna St. Vincent Millay’S Aria Da Capo and Other Plays." In Staging Modern American Life, 21–51. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230339590_2.

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Baker, Stephanie Alice. "Recalling Social Tragedy: Staging Zinédine Zidane’s Transgression on France’s Postcolonial Arena." In Social Tragedy, 75–109. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137379139_4.

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van Herpen, Carla M. L. "Patients with Rare Head Neck Cancers: Do They Need a Different Approach?" In Critical Issues in Head and Neck Oncology, 309–15. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63234-2_20.

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AbstractA cancer is considered rare when the annual cancer incidence is less than 6 per 100,000 inhabitants. In absolute numbers more than 500,000 patients per year are diagnosed with a rare cancer, and 4,300,000 rare cancer patients are prevalent in Europe. The definition is widely adopted among the different scientific international societies like ESMO and ESTRO. This means that 22% of all diagnosed cancers are rare and out of the 260 cancer types identified (www.rarecare), 223 (86%) are rare. The European Network for Rare Solid Cancers (EURACAN) uses this definition to create reference networks in order to improve rare cancer care.In Europe rare cancer patients have poorer survival as compared to common cancer patients. Moreover, the survival of rare cancer patients in the Netherlands has barely increased over time (from 50% in 1995–2000 to 56% in 2012–2016), in contrast to the common cancers (from 59% in 1995–2012 to 72% in 2012–2016). Clinical decision-making is more problematic in the case of a rare cancer because clinical studies on that tumor will be more difficult to do; so, the quality of available evidence tends to be limited. Furthermore, the decreased survival is partly caused by a delay in the diagnostic trajectory and found to be related to more advanced staging resulting in less effective treatment options.Examples of rare cancers in the head and neck region are salivary gland cancers, which can be divided in 22 histological subtypes, and epithelial tumors of the nasal cavity and sinuses, e.g. intestinal type adenocarcinoma. Furthermore, soft tissue sarcoma and bone sarcoma and Merkel cell carcinoma, which are rare and frequently located in the head and neck area (Table 20.1).New developments in the treatment of (recurrent/metastatic) salivary gland cancer, especially salivary duct cancer, will be discussed. By unraveling tumor characteristics, such as genetic alterations and protein expression profiles, therapeutic strategies tailored to the patient’s tumor can be rationalized. This genomic profiling and mapping of immunohistochemical expression profiles is essential in the search for a suitable treatment or study approach. Thereby, it alleviates the paucity in systemic treatment options and can significantly alter the prognosis of patients with rare cancers.
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Mohaghegh, Bahram, Fatemeh Mahshadnia, and Shabnam Aghnianejad. "Pre-identification of Staging Areas for Probable Earthquake of Tehran (Municipality No.5) Using OWA Method." In Engineering Geology for Society and Territory - Volume 5, 681–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09048-1_132.

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Conti, Eugenio. "Guides as forest experience co-creators: lessons learned at Fulufjället National Park, Sweden." In Managing visitor experiences in nature-based tourism, 34–48. Wallingford: CABI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789245714.0034.

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Abstract This chapter explores the role of tour guides as human experience brokers of naturalness in forest areas. After outlining conceptual discussions around the role and tasks of the guide as experience broker, empirical findings from Fulufjället National Park (Sweden) are presented, showing the guide as a pivotal forest experience co-creator. Implications are discussed, with particular emphasis on how the guide's personal valuations of the forest, background and personal aims are reflected in the guide's pathfinding, storytelling and staging strategies, and on how tourists are positively impacted by unexpected and different ways of valuing, mapping and interpreting the forest landscape.
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Conti, Eugenio. "Guides as forest experience co-creators: lessons learned at Fulufjället National Park, Sweden." In Managing visitor experiences in nature-based tourism, 34–48. Wallingford: CABI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/9781789245714.0004.

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Abstract This chapter explores the role of tour guides as human experience brokers of naturalness in forest areas. After outlining conceptual discussions around the role and tasks of the guide as experience broker, empirical findings from Fulufjället National Park (Sweden) are presented, showing the guide as a pivotal forest experience co-creator. Implications are discussed, with particular emphasis on how the guide's personal valuations of the forest, background and personal aims are reflected in the guide's pathfinding, storytelling and staging strategies, and on how tourists are positively impacted by unexpected and different ways of valuing, mapping and interpreting the forest landscape.
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Schachtner, Christina. "The Net Generation’s Stories: A Typology." In The Narrative Subject, 125–83. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-51189-0_4.

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Abstract In this chapter, the empirical data are presented as a typology of narratives in which experiences and activities in virtual space and the real world are interwoven, along with ideas and wishes for the future, what has happened in the past, and what is happening in the present. They run like a subterranean web through the narrators’ lives, initiating patterns of thinking and doing which revolve around a specific focus. The following types of narrations were identified: stories about interconnectedness, self-staging, supplying and selling, managing boundaries, and transformation, as well as setting out and breaking away.
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Fan, Xing. "Visual Communication through Design." In Staging Revolution. Hong Kong University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5790/hongkong/9789888455812.003.0009.

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Chapter 8 examines the design of model jingju. The author focuses on three areas: scenic design, lighting design, and costume and makeup design. Each area is contextualized by its departure from that of traditional repertory and by its gradual creative evolution during the twentieth century. The author pays special attention to three issues: new concepts and practices introduced by the design teams of model jingju, the overall style and characteristics of design, and specific issues that challenged designers and their resulting strategies. This chapter includes a discussion of the aesthetic conflicts between representational scenery and jingju’s indicative style, and features personal interviews with key set, lighting, costume, and makeup designers.
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"The Borgo and the Area outside the Walls." In Staging Holiness: The Case of Hospitaller Rhodes (ca. 1309-1522), 140–92. BRILL, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004444225_004.

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Conference papers on the topic "Staging area"

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de Vicq, Nicolas, Frederic Robert, Julien Penders, Bert Gyselinckx, and Tom Torfs. "Wireless Body Area Network for Sleep Staging." In 2007 IEEE Biomedical Circuits and Systems Conference. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/biocas.2007.4463334.

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Prabhakar, Ramya, Sudharshan S. Vazhkudai, Youngjae Kim, Ali R. Butt, Min Li, and Mahmut Kandemir. "Provisioning a Multi-tiered Data Staging Area for Extreme-Scale Machines." In 2011 31st International Conference on Distributed Computing Systems (ICDCS). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icdcs.2011.33.

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Dinsoreanu, Mihaela, Lucian Braescu, and Andrei Bacu. "Towards a semantic-driven automatic staging area design for heterogeneous data integration." In the 14th International Conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/2428736.2428785.

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Aktas, Mehmet Fatih, Javier Diaz-Montes, Ivan Rodero, and Manish Parashar. "WA-Dataspaces: Exploring the Data Staging Abstractions for Wide-Area Distributed Scientific Workflows." In 2017 46th International Conference on Parallel Processing (ICPP). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icpp.2017.34.

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Sattelmayer, T., W. Polifke, D. Winkler, and K. Döbbeling. "NOx-Abatement Potential of Lean-Premixed GT-Combustors." In ASME 1996 Turbo Asia Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/96-ta-021.

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The influence of the structure of perfectly premixed flames on NOx-formation is investigated theoretically. Since a network of reaction kinetics modules and model flames is used for this purpose, the results obtained are independent of specific burner geometries. Calculations are presented for a mixture temperature of 630K, an adiabatic flame temperature of 1840K and 1 and 15 bars combustor pressure. In particular, the following effects are studied separately from each other: - molecular diffusion of temperature and species - flame strain - local quench in highly strained flames and subsequent reignition - turbulent diffusion (no preferential diffusion) - small scale mixing (stirring) in the flame front Either no relevant influence or an increase in NOx-production over that of the one-dimensional laminar flame is found. As a consequence, besides the improvement of mixing quality, a future target for the development of low-NOx burners is to avoid excessive turbulent stirring in the flame front. Turbulent flames that exhibit locally and instantaneously near laminar structures (“flamelets”) appear to be optimal. Using the same methodology, the scope of the investigation is extended to lean-lean staging, since a higher NOx-abatement potential can be expected in principle. As long as the chemical reactions of the second stage take place in the boundary between the fresh mixture of the second stage and the combustion products from upstream, no advantage can be expected from lean-lean staging. Only if the primary burner exhibits much poorer mixing than the second stage can lean-lean staging be beneficial. In contrast, if full mixing between the two stages prior to afterburning can be achieved (lean-mix-lean technique), the combustor outlet temperature can in principle be increased somewhat without NO-penalty. However, the complexity of such a system with a larger flame tube area to be cooled will increase the reaction zone temperatures, so that the full advantage cannot be realised in an engine. Of greater technical relevance is the potential of a lean-mix-lean combustion system within an improved thermodynamic cycle. A reheat process with sequential combustion is perfectly suited for this purpose, since, firstly, the required low inlet temperature of the second stage is automatically generated after partial expansion in the high pressure turbine, secondly, the efficiency of the thermodynamic cycle has its maximum and, thirdly, high exhaust temperatures are generated, which can drive a powerful Rankine cycle. The higher thermodynamic efficiency of this technique leads to an additional drop in NOx-emissions per power produced.
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Andrews, Gordon E., and S. A. R. Ahmed. "Jet Shear Layer Size and Number Influences on Grid Plate Direct Fuel Injection Shear Layer Mixing Low NOx Gas Turbine Combustion With Fuel Staging for Power Turn Down." In ASME Turbo Expo 2008: Power for Land, Sea, and Air. ASMEDC, 2008. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2008-50408.

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The scale up of jet shear layer low NOx concepts for compact gas turbine applications is considered using natural gas as the fuel with all experiments at one atmosphere pressure and 600K air inlet temperature. A 76mm diameter cylindrical combustor with 4 round jet shear layers was compared with a near double scale combustor with 140mm diameter and 4 round jet shear layers with the same total blockage as for the smaller combustor. This is compared with 16 round jet shear layers of the same diameter as for the smaller combustor. The shear layer air holes were fuelled by eight radial inward fuel injection holes in each shear layer jet. All three designs had acceptable combustion efficiencies, but the NOx emissions were considerably higher for the 4 shear layer design in the larger combustion. When the same shear layer hole size was used and the number increased in the larger combustor the NOx emissions were identical. Changing the shape of the hole from circulat to slot for the same area, considerably reduced the NOx in the four hole 76mm combustor, but had little effect on the 16 hole 140mm combustor. Fuel staging within the array of shear layers was successfully demonstrated for four levels of fuel staging. There was some intermixing of air from the unfuelled jets, but this had only a small effect on the combustion efficiency and flame stability. A practical range of simulated power turndown was demonstrated with little NOx penalty. This was achieved with no wall between the staged shear layer regions and hence leads to very compact combustor designs.
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Haynes, Comas, William Rooker, Vaughn Melbourne, and Jeffery Jones. "Analogies Between Fuel Cells and Heat Exchangers: From Phenomena to Design Principles." In ASME 2003 1st International Conference on Fuel Cell Science, Engineering and Technology. ASMEDC, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/fuelcell2003-1736.

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Fuel cells and heat exchangers have numerous similarities. Both technologies are used to produce an “energy-in-transit.” Heat exchangers foster thermal transport (heat) as a result of thermal potential differences between streams; fuel cells foster charge transport across electrodes (current leading to power) as a result of electrochemical/electric potential differences between the reactant streams and fuel cell electrodes. Additional analogs include series resistance formulations, active regions for transport phenomena and pertinent capacity rates. These similarities have motivated the extension of heat exchanger design philosophies to fuel cells development. Pilot simulations have been done wherein solid oxide fuel cell geometries and process settings are being optimized via electrochemical pinch points, electroactive area optimization (patterned after optimal area allocation within heat exchangers), electrode “fins” for diminished polarization, and electrochemical multi-staging (motivated by heat exchanger network concepts). The prevailing theme has been to bridge methodologies from the mature field of heat exchanger design to improve fuel cell design practices.
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Culler, Wyatt, Xiaoling Chen, Stephen Peluso, Domenic Santavicca, Jacqueline O’Connor, and David Noble. "Comparison of Center Nozzle Staging to Outer Nozzle Staging in a Multi-Flame Combustor." In ASME Turbo Expo 2018: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2018-75423.

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Combustion instability in gas turbines is often mitigated using fuel staging, a strategy where the fuel is split unevenly between different nozzles of a multiple-nozzle combustor. This work examines the efficacy of different fuel staging configurations by comparing axisymmetric and non-axisymmetric fuel staging in a four-around-one model gas turbine combustor. Fuel staging is accomplished by increasing the equivalence ratio of the center nozzle (axisymmetric staging) or an outer nozzle (non-axisymmetric staging). When the global equivalence ratio is ϕ = 0.70 and all nozzles are fueled equally, the combustor undergoes longitudinal, self-excited oscillations. These oscillations are suppressed when the center nozzle equivalence ratio is increased above ϕStaging = 0.79. This bifurcation equivalence ratio varies between ϕStaging = 0.86 and ϕStaging = 0.76 for the outer nozzles, and is attributed to minor hardware differences between each nozzle. High speed CH* chemiluminescence images in combination with dynamic pressure measurements are used to determine the instantaneous phase difference between the heat release rate fluctuation and the combustor pressure fluctuation throughout the combustor. This analysis shows that the staged flame has similar phase relationships for all staging configurations. It is found that axisymmetric staging can be as effective as non-axisymmetric staging; however, the aforementioned hardware variations can impact both the bifurcation equivalence ratio and the effectiveness of staging.
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Mao, Ronghai, and Mingtao Shang. "Numerical Simulation on Circumferential Staging of an Aeroengine LPP Combustor." In ASME Turbo Expo 2013: Turbine Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2013-95286.

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With the increasing stringency of the CAEP regulation on the pollutant emissions, combustors in lean burn architecture are being widely developed by aero-engine manufacturers to achieve low NOx emission performance with competitive margins to CAEP thresholds. A three-dimensional numerical simulation has been carried out in the present investigation to study an LPP combustor and circumferential staging effects on its main stage, for potential application to ACAE CJ-1000A aeroengine. A realizable k-ε turbulent model has been employed by the simulation, together with a Discrete Phase model based on Lagrangian methodology for the two-phase flow. The generic performances of the combustor, mainly in terms of flow and flame structures, fuel-air enhanced mixing performance, total pressure loss, combustion efficiency, outlet temperature distribution, and pollutant emissions have been analyzed. It was found that a large-scale central recirculation region is formed in the flame tube, which is beneficial to the stability of the combustion. The total pressure loss of the combustor is insensitive to the circumferential staging. Under approach mode the circumferential staging enhances the combustion efficiency from 73.8% without staging to 93.8% with staging; meanwhile the local turbulent flame speed increases more than two times. However the OTDF deteriorates from 0.30 without staging to 0.78 with staging, although the RTDF is found to be insensitive to the circumferential staging. The radial temperature distribution profiles are found to be pretty flat during the whole LTO cycle. The NOx emission without circumferential staging is simulated to be 68% reduction relative to CAEP 6. The circumferential staging, however, increases NOx emission to 65% reduction relative to CAEP 6. While gaining higher combustion efficiency, the major drawbacks of the circumferential staging are degradations of OTDF and NOx emission. Although the numerical results seem to be quite encouraging, the uncertainty of CFD results especially the temperature distribution and emissions might be tremendous. Experimental work has to follow up for further clarification.
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Samarasinghe, Janith, Wyatt Culler, Bryan D. Quay, Domenic A. Santavicca, and Jacqueline O’Connor. "The Effect of Fuel Staging on the Structure and Instability Characteristics of Swirl-Stabilized Flames in a Lean Premixed Multi-Nozzle Can Combustor." In ASME Turbo Expo 2017: Turbomachinery Technical Conference and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/gt2017-63688.

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Fuel staging, or fuel splitting, is a commonly used strategy for the suppression of combustion instabilities in gas turbine engines. In multi-nozzle combustor configurations, this is achieved by varying the fuel flow rate to the different nozzles. The effect of fuel staging on flame stabilization and heat release rate distribution (referred to as flame structure), and self-excited instability characteristics is investigated in a research can combustor employing five small-scale lean-premixed industrial nozzles. The nozzles are arranged in a “four-around-one” configuration and fuel staging is achieved by injecting additional fuel to the middle nozzle. An operating condition was identified where all five nozzles were fueled equally and the combustor was subject to a self-excited instability. At the operating condition considered, the self-excited instabilities are suppressed with fuel staging: this is true for cases where overall equivalence ratio is increased by staging (by only increasing the fuel flow rate to the middle nozzle) as well as cases where overall equivalence ratio is kept constant while staging (by simultaneously decreasing the fuel flow rate of the outer nozzles while increasing the fuel flow rate to the middle nozzle). Fuel staging causes variations in the distribution of time-averaged heat release rate in the regions where adjacent flames interact. The locations of highest heat release rate fluctuation are not altered with increased fuel staging but the fluctuation amplitude is reduced. A breakup in the monotonic phase behavior that is characteristic of convective disturbances is observed with increased fuel staging, resulting in a lower pressure fluctuation amplitude. In particular, the monotonic variation in phase in the middle flame and the region where adjacent flames interact is out-of-phase with that of the outer flames, resulting in a cancellation of the global heat release rate oscillations. The distribution of local Rayleigh integral within the combustor shows that during a self-excited instability, the regions of highest heat release rate fluctuation are in phase-with the pressure fluctuation. When staging fuel is introduced, these regions fluctuate out-of-phase with the pressure fluctuation, further illustrating that fuel staging suppresses instabilities by altering the phase relationship of convective disturbances that travel along the flame front.
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Reports on the topic "Staging area"

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Huckfeldt, R. A., and D. T. Lott. Fire hazards analysis for W-413, West Area Tank Farm Storage and Staging Facility. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), December 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/10110548.

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Sandoval, Leonard Frank. Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan TA-60 Roads and Grounds Facility and Associated Sigma Mesa Staging Area. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1342836.

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Sandoval, Leonard Frank. Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan - TA-60 Roads and Grounds Facility and Associated Sigma Mesa Staging Area. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), January 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1419721.

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Sandoval, Leonard Frank. Storm Water Pollution Prevention Plan TA-60 Roads and Grounds Facility and Associated Sigma Mesa Staging Area. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1514919.

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Klote, John H., Harold E. Nelson, Scot Deal, and Bernard M. Levin. Staging areas for persons with mobility limitations. Gaithersburg, MD: National Institute of Standards and Technology, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.6028/nist.ir.4770.

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Bell, Gary, and Duncan Bryant. Red River Structure physical model study : bulkhead testing. Engineer Research and Development Center (U.S.), June 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21079/11681/40970.

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The US Army Corps of Engineers, St. Paul District, and its non-federal sponsors are designing and constructing a flood risk management project that will reduce the risk of flooding in the Fargo-Moorhead metropolitan area. There is a 30-mile long diversion channel around the west side of the city of Fargo, as well as a staging area that will be formed upstream of a 20-mile long dam (referred to as the Southern Embankment) that collectively includes an earthen embankment with three gated structures: the Diversion Inlet Structure, the Wild Rice River Structure, and the Red River Structure (RRS). A physical model has been constructed and analyzed to assess the hydraulic conditions near and at the RRS for verification of the structure’s flow capacity as well as optimization of design features for the structure. This report describes the modeling techniques and instrumentation used in the investigation and details the evaluation of the forces exerted on the proposed bulkheads during emergency operations for the RRS.
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Sandoval, Leonard Frank. MSGP Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan TA-60 Roads and Grounds Facility, Sigma Mesa Staging Areas, and Asphalt Batch Plant. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1493528.

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Buene, Eivind. Intimate Relations. Norges Musikkhøgskole, August 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.22501/nmh-ar.481274.

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Blue Mountain is a 35-minute work for two actors and orchestra. It was commissioned by the Ultima Festival, and premiered in 2014 by the Danish National Chamber Orchestra. The Ultima festival challenged me – being both a composer and writer – to make something where I wrote both text and music. Interestingly, I hadn’t really thought of that before, writing text to my own music – or music to my own text. This is a very common thing in popular music, the songwriter. But in the lied, the orchestral piece or indeed in opera, there is a strict division of labour between composer and writer. There are exceptions, most famously Wagner, who did libretto, music and staging for his operas. And 20th century composers like Olivier Messiaen, who wrote his own poems for his music – or Luciano Berio, who made a collage of such detail that it the text arguably became his own in Sinfonia. But this relationship is often a convoluted one, not often discussed in the tradition of musical analysis where text tend to be taken as a given, not subjected to the same rigorous scrutiny that is often the case with music. This exposition is an attempt to unfold this process of composing with both words and music. A key challenge has been to make the text an intrinsic part of the performance situation, and the music something more than mere accompaniment to narration. To render the words meaningless without the music and vice versa. So the question that emerged was how music and words can be not only equal partners, but also yield a new species of music/text? A second questions follows en suite, and that is what challenges the conflation of different roles – the writer and the composer – presents? I will try to address these questions through a discussion of the methods applied in Blue Mountain, the results they have yielded, and the challenges this work has posed.
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Final environmental assessment: TRU waste drum staging building, Technical Area 55, Los Alamos National Laboratory. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), February 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/201731.

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Radiological and chemical characterization report for the planned Quarry Construction Staging Area and Water Treatment Plant: Revision 1. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), March 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/6018625.

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