Results 121 to 130 of about 149 (149)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.

The Thames Barrier

IEE Proceedings A Physical Science, Measurement and Instrumentation, Management and Education, Reviews, 1980
An area of over 100 km2 of industrial and residential property was at increasing risk from flooding, including some 700,000 residents and the central section of the underground railway. Attention was drawn to this risk in a 1966 report by Sir Herman Bondi, and the GLC was empowered by the Thames Barrier Act of 1972 to construct a barrier at Woolwich ...
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BARRIER code: Calculation of fission barriers

Computer Physics Communications, 1999
zbMATH Open Web Interface contents unavailable due to conflicting licenses.
E. Garrote   +8 more
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Nontariff Barriers [PDF]

open access: possible, 2016
Nontariff barriers (NTBs) refer to the wide range of policy interventions other than border tariffs that affect trade of goods, services, and factors of production. Most taxonomies of NTBs include market-specific trade and domestic policies affecting trade in that market. Extended taxonomies include macro-economic policies affecting trade.
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Overcoming the Barrier

New England Journal of Medicine, 2018
Overcoming the Barrier A 74-year-old man presented to the emergency department with jaundice. Three days earlier, his wife had noted yellow discoloration of his eyes and skin, followed by progressi...
Lisa G. Winston   +6 more
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Barriers to xenotransplantation

Nature Medicine, 1995
The current resurgence of interest in xenotransplantation will result in better definition of the mechanisms responsible for xenograft rejection and should facilitate appropriate therapeutic strategies to provide for long-term graft survival.
Simon C. Robson   +6 more
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Don the Barriers

Critical Care Nursing Quarterly, 2001
Health care workers (HCWs) have many "barriers" at their disposal to protect them from risk of occupational exposures to bloodborne pathogens or communicable diseases. These barriers include the daily use of personal protective attire, such as gloves, gowns, masks, and eye protection; following appropriate isolation precautions; using work practice ...
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Barriers to Stability

SIAM Journal on Numerical Analysis, 1983
Our goal is to combine the Dahlquist–Henrici theory of multistep methods in time with the von Neumann–Lax theory of multistep methods in space. This paper concentrates on the hyperbolic equation $u_1 = u_x $, corresponding to the marginally stable equation $u' = i\omega u$.
Gilbert Strang, Arieh Iserles
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Barriers to writing

Nursing Standard, 2016
How can we encourage our colleagues to become involved in writing for publication.
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The butterfly barrier

International Journal of Parallel Programming, 1986
We describe and algorithm for barrier synchronization that requires only read and write to shared store. The algorithm is faster than the traditionallocked counter approach for two processors and has an attractive log2N time scaling for largerN. The algorithm is free of hot spots and critical regions and requires a shared memory bandwidth which grows ...
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The epidermal barrier

Seminars in Neonatology, 2000
A mature epidermis is an effective barrier which prevents dehydration from the loss of body water, poisoning from the absorption of noxious substances, and systemic infection from invading surface microorganisms. The epidermal barrier resides within the most superficial layer of the skin, the stratum corneum.
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