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Institution

The Cyprus Institute

OtherNicosia, Cyprus
About: The Cyprus Institute is a other organization based out in Nicosia, Cyprus. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Aerosol & Environmental science. The organization has 418 authors who have published 1252 publications receiving 32586 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
12 Feb 2016-PLOS ONE
TL;DR: This work develops an environmentally-driven mathematical model of the population dynamics of the Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, using a Bayesian approach and demonstrates high predictive skill over the reference region and beyond, confirming most of the current reports of vector presence in Europe.
Abstract: The Asian tiger mosquito, Aedes albopictus, is a highly invasive vector species. It is a proven vector of dengue and chikungunya viruses, with the potential to host a further 24 arboviruses. It has recently expanded its geographical range, threatening many countries in the Middle East, Mediterranean, Europe and North America. Here, we investigate the theoretical limitations of its range expansion by developing an environmentally-driven mathematical model of its population dynamics. We focus on the temperate strain of Ae. albopictus and compile a comprehensive literature-based database of physiological parameters. As a novel approach, we link its population dynamics to globally-available environmental datasets by performing inference on all parameters. We adopt a Bayesian approach using experimental data as prior knowledge and the surveillance dataset of Emilia-Romagna, Italy, as evidence. The model accounts for temperature, precipitation, human population density and photoperiod as the main environmental drivers, and, in addition, incorporates the mechanism of diapause and a simple breeding site model. The model demonstrates high predictive skill over the reference region and beyond, confirming most of the current reports of vector presence in Europe. One of the main hypotheses derived from the model is the survival of Ae. albopictus populations through harsh winter conditions. The model, constrained by the environmental datasets, requires that either diapausing eggs or adult vectors have increased cold resistance. The model also suggests that temperature and photoperiod control diapause initiation and termination differentially. We demonstrate that it is possible to account for unobserved properties and constraints, such as differences between laboratory and field conditions, to derive reliable inferences on the environmental dependence of Ae. albopictus populations.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a perturbative and nonperturbative analysis of the renormalization constants of the fermion field and the twist-2 bilinear operators is presented.
Abstract: Perturbative and nonperturbative results on the renormalization constants of the fermion field and the twist-2 fermion bilinears are presented with emphasis on the nonperturbative evaluation of the one-derivative twist-2 vector and axial-vector operators. Nonperturbative results are obtained using the twisted mass Wilson fermion formulation employing two degenerate dynamical quarks and the tree-level Symanzik improved gluon action. The simulations have been performed for pion masses in the range of about 450--260 MeV and at three values of the lattice spacing $a$ corresponding to $\ensuremath{\beta}=3.9$, 4.05, 4.20. Subtraction of $\mathcal{O}({a}^{2})$ terms is carried out by performing the perturbative evaluation of these operators at 1-loop and up to $\mathcal{O}({a}^{2})$. The renormalization conditions are defined in the $\mathrm{R}{\mathrm{I}}^{\ensuremath{'}}$-MOM scheme, for both perturbative and nonperturbative results. The renormalization factors, obtained for different values of the renormalization scale, are evolved perturbatively to a reference scale set by the inverse of the lattice spacing. In addition, they are translated to $\overline{\mathrm{MS}}$ at 2 GeV using 3-loop perturbative results for the conversion factors.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used trace gases within the anticyclone by the CARIBIC flying observatory revealed large enhancements in the greenhouse gas methane (CH4), which increased over the course of the monsoon.
Abstract: [1] During the summer monsoon the upper troposphere over South Asia is characterized by the monsoon anticyclone centered above the Tibetan Plateau. Surface air that has been rapidly transported upwards through deep convection becomes trapped within the strong anticyclonic circulation. Observations of trace gases within this anticyclone by the CARIBIC flying observatory revealed large enhancements in the greenhouse gas methane (CH4), which increased over the course of the monsoon. Meteorological analysis indicated that these air masses originated primarily in India, for which relatively little is known about CH4 emissions. Using correlations between concentrations of CH4 and carbon monoxide (CO) we estimated total emissions of 30.8 Tg CH4during the 2008 monsoon season (June–September), 19.7 Tg of which were identified as additional, monsoon-related biogenic methane using the relationship of CH4 to ethane (C2H6). After accounting for the ∼3.9 Tg attributed to rice agriculture in the current inventories, ∼15.8 Tg of additional CH4 remain. Underestimated rice emissions provide a partial explanation, with the remainder most likely attributable to microbial production in waterlogged areas such as landfills, polluted waterways and wetlands.

43 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Model estimates of dew formation overnight and evaporation in the morning hours are hypothesized to be the main contributing factor in keeping rural air temperatures lower, thus increasing the UHI intensity.

42 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a simple semi-empirical model was developed for predicting the size distribution of singlet particles as a function of the process conditions. But the model assumes that a plume of a turbulent aerosol flow flares out from a concentrated point source, eventually reaching the walls of the confinement where a fraction of the particles is deposited.
Abstract: Among the numerous point vapor sources, microsecond-pulsed spark ablation at atmospheric pressure is a versatile and environmentally friendly method for producing ultrapure inorganic nanoparticles ranging from singlets having sizes smaller than 1 nm to larger agglomerated structures. Due to its fast quenching and extremely high supersaturation, coagulational growth already begins at the atomic scale at room temperature. On the basis of this knowledge, we develop a simple semiempirical yet versatile model for predicting the size distribution of singlet particles as a function of the process conditions. The model assumes that a plume of a turbulent aerosol flow flares out from a concentrated point source, eventually reaching the walls of the confinement where a fraction of the particles is deposited. Despite the complexity of the entire process, the concentration and size evolution of particles can be adequately described by a first-order differential equation accounting for coagulation, turbulent dilution,...

42 citations


Authors

Showing all 459 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Philippe Ciais149965114503
Jonathan Williams10261341486
Jos Lelieveld10057037657
Andrew N. Nicolaides9057230861
Efstathios Stiliaris8834025487
Leonard A. Barrie7417717356
Nikos Mihalopoulos6928015261
Karl Jansen5749811874
Jean Sciare561299374
Euripides G. Stephanou5412814235
Lefkos T. Middleton5418415683
Elena Xoplaki5312912097
Theodoros Christoudias501977765
Dimitris Drikakis492867136
George K. Christophides4812711099
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202366
202274
2021200
2020157
2019136
2018111