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Daniel Hansson

Researcher at University of Gothenburg

Publications -  10
Citations -  489

Daniel Hansson is an academic researcher from University of Gothenburg. The author has contributed to research in topics: Anoxic waters & Water column. The author has an hindex of 9, co-authored 9 publications receiving 400 citations. Previous affiliations of Daniel Hansson include Sahlgrenska University Hospital.

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Investigating hypoxia in aquatic environments: diverse approaches to addressing a complex phenomenon

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide an overview of new knowledge on oxygen depletion (hypoxia) and related phenomena in aquatic systems resulting from the EU-FP7 project HYPOX (http://www.hypox.net).
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Sleep in chronic respiratory disease: COPD and hypoventilation disorders.

TL;DR: Management of OSA-COPD overlap patients differs from COPD alone and the survival of overlap patients treated with nocturnal positive airway pressure is superior to those untreated.
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The Baltic Sea ocean climate system memory and response to changes in the water and heat balance components

TL;DR: In this article, the Baltic Sea climate system is analyzed based on observation and mathematical modelling, and steady state and transient response characteristics are derived and analyzed, and sensitivity experiments are also run based on observed forcing extracted from various Baltic Sea regions representing a range extending from sub-arctic to marine climatic conditions.
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An Experiment with Forced Oxygenation of the Deepwater of the Anoxic By Fjord, Western Sweden

TL;DR: In a 2.5-year-long environmental engineering experiment in the By Fjord, surface water was pumped into the deepwater where the frequency of deepwater renewals increased by a factor of 10, and theDeepwater became long-term oxic, and nitrate became the dominating dissolved inorganic nitrogen component.
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Reconstruction of river runoff to the Baltic Sea, AD 1500–1995

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reconstructed river runoff to the Baltic Sea since 1500 using temperature and atmospheric circulation indices, showing the important atmospheric processes for river runoff in different regions, and found that runoff sensitivity to temperature shows that the south region may become drier with rising air temperatures.