5 resultados para Kamarimusiikki Lied Schubert
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
Reconocimiento, homenaje y propuesta de investigación sobre dos autores de gran importancia en el estudio y la difusión de nuiestro patrimonio arquitectónico y urbano
Resumo:
La Basílica de la Virgen de los Desamparados, construida entre 1652 y 1667, es el edificio valenciano más importante del siglo XVII (Bérchez 1995). Su elemento más notables es la gran cúpula oval que, en planta, aparece inscrita en un trapezoide. Esta disposición fue muy popular en el Barroco y tiene su origen en los proyectos de Vignola para Sant Andrea in Via Flaminia (1550) y Sant= Anna dei Palafraneri (1572), véase Lotz (1955). En España se construyeron varias cúpulas ovales hacia 1600 (Rodríguez G. de Ceballos 1983); la más grande es la del convento de las Recoletas Bernardas in Alcalá de Henares, 1617-1626, con ejes de 25 x 18 m, y una altura de 11 m (según levantamiento de Schubert 1908). Treinta y tres años tras su terminación, hacia 1700, se construyó una nueva cúpula interior, encajada dentro de la original, para servir de soporte a un enorme fresco del pintor Antonio Palomino en honor de la Virgen de los Desamparados. Esta cúpula es extraordinariamente delgada y presenta algunas disposiciones que la convierten en un caso de excepcional interés en la historia de las cúpulas de fábrica. La estructura y construcción de la Basílica de los Desamparados fue estudiada exhaustivamente en los años 1990 con vistas a elaborar posteriormente un proyecto de restauración. Los trabajos y el proyecto fueron dirigidos por el arquitecto Ignacio Bosch Reig. Algunos estudios fueron publicados en 1999 (Roig y Bosch 1999), y toda la información referente a los estudios y posterior restauración fue compilada y publicada en un libro (Bosch 2006). En este caso se dispone, por tanto, de una enorme cantidad de información sobre la estructura, construcción y forma del edificio. En lo que sigue trataremos sólo la construcción y comportamiento estructural de la doble cúpula de la Basílica.
Resumo:
NeuroAIDS persists in the era of combination antiretroviral therapies. We describe here the recovery of brain structure and function following 6 months of therapy in a treatment-naive patient presenting with HIV-associated dementia. The patient’s neuropsychological test performance improved and his total brain volume increased by more than 5 %. Neuronal functional connectivity measured by magnetoencephalography changed from a pattern identical to that observed in other HIV-infected individuals to one that was indistinguishable from that of uninfected control subjects. These data suggest that at least some of the effects of HIV on the brain can be fully reversed with treatment.
Resumo:
This contribution deals with the question, what makes cities sustainable and integrative, and suggests an approach for "liveable cities of tomorrow" designed to sustain mobility. The liveable city of tomorrow needs to meet both ecological and social requirements in an integrative approach. To design urban patterns appropriate or “sustainable mobility” based on a concept of mobility defined as the number of accessible destinations (different to that for “fossil mobility” defined as the ability to cover distances) is a key element of such an approach. Considering the limited reserves of fossil fuels and the long lifetime of the built structure, mobility needs to rely on modes independent of fossil fuels (public transport and pedestrians) to make it sustainable and the urban pattern needs to be developed appropriately for these modes. Crucial for the success of public transport is the location of buildings within the catchment area of stops. An attractive urban environment for pedestrians is characterised by short distances in a compact settlement with appropriate/qualified urban density and mixed land use as well as by attractive public space. This, complemented by an integrative urban development on the quarter level including neighbourhood management with a broad spectrum of activity areas (social infrastructure, integration of diverse social and ethnic groups, health promotion, community living, etc.), results in increased liveability. The role of information technology in this context is to support a sustainable use of the built structures by organisational instruments. Sustainable and liveable communities offer many benefits for health, safety and well-being of their inhabitants.
Resumo:
An important aspect of Process Simulators for photovoltaics is prediction of defect evolution during device fabrication. Over the last twenty years, these tools have accelerated process optimization, and several Process Simulators for iron, a ubiquitous and deleterious impurity in silicon, have been developed. The diversity of these tools can make it difficult to build intuition about the physics governing iron behavior during processing. Thus, in one unified software environment and using self-consistent terminology, we combine and describe three of these Simulators. We vary structural defect distribution and iron precipitation equations to create eight distinct Models, which we then use to simulate different stages of processing. We find that the structural defect distribution influences the final interstitial iron concentration ([Fe-i]) more strongly than the iron precipitation equations. We identify two regimes of iron behavior: (1) diffusivity-limited, in which iron evolution is kinetically limited and bulk [Fe-i] predictions can vary by an order of magnitude or more, and (2) solubility-limited, in which iron evolution is near thermodynamic equilibrium and the Models yield similar results. This rigorous analysis provides new intuition that can inform Process Simulation, material, and process development, and it enables scientists and engineers to choose an appropriate level of Model complexity based on wafer type and quality, processing conditions, and available computation time.