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Institution

University of Ljubljana

EducationLjubljana, Slovenia
About: University of Ljubljana is a education organization based out in Ljubljana, Slovenia. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Population & Liquid crystal. The organization has 17210 authors who have published 47013 publications receiving 1082684 citations. The organization is also known as: Univerza v Ljubljani.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a case-study that highlights the importance of sustainable machining technologies in achieving sustainable development objectives, and a technology evaluation was undertaken to understand the likely impacts of the use of technology on sustainability performance measures.

314 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that τ + τ − searches pose a serious challenge to NP explanations of the lepton flavor universality violation observed in semi-tauonic B meson decays with high p T tau leptons at the LHC.

314 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a review summarizes recent progress in this field with emphasis on theoretical and computational developments and their applications to materials including molecular structures, Dirac-like systems, optical metamaterials, composites with nontrivial boundary conditions, and biological matter.
Abstract: Electromagnetic fluctuation-induced interactions known as van der Waals, Casimir, and Casimir-Polder forces are an active and exciting area of research. This review summarizes recent progress in this field with emphasis on theoretical and computational developments and their applications to materials including molecular structures, Dirac-like systems, optical metamaterials, composites with nontrivial boundary conditions, and biological matter.

311 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A formal definition of human standing up and sitting down movements based on sagittal plane goniometric and force plate data from 20 normal subjects is presented, and consists of defined characteristic events and relative time intervals between them.

310 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Freshwater amphipods are greatly polyphyletic, continental invasions have taken place repeatedly in different time frames and regions of the world, and have had great impacts on European fluvial ecosystems.
Abstract: Amphipods are brooding peracaridan crustaceans whose young undergo direct development, with no independent larval dispersal stage. Most species are epibenthic, benthic, or subterranean. There are some 1,870 amphipod species and subspecies recognized from fresh or inland waters worldwide at the end of 2005. This accounts for 20% of the total known amphipod diversity. The actual diversity may still be several-fold. Amphipods are most abundant in cool and temperate environments; they are particularly diversified in subterranean environments and in running waters (fragmented habitats), and in temperate ancient lakes, but are notably rare in the tropics. Of the described freshwater taxa 70% are Palearctic, 13% Nearctic, 7% Neotropical, 6% Australasian and 3% Afrotropical. Approximately 45% of the taxa are subterranean; subterranean diversity is highest in the karst landscapes of Central and Southern Europe (e.g., Niphargidae), North America (Crangonyctidae), and Australia (Paramelitidae). The majority of Palearctic epigean amphipods are in the superfamily Gammaroidea, whereas talitroid amphipods (Hyalella) account for all Neotropic and much of the Nearctic epigean fauna. Major concentrations of endemic species diversity occur in Southern Europe, Lake Baikal, the Ponto-Caspian basin, Southern Australia (including Tasmania), and the south-eastern USA. Endemic family diversity is similarly centered in the Western Palearctic and Lake Baikal. Freshwater amphipods are greatly polyphyletic, continental invasions have taken place repeatedly in different time frames and regions of the world. In the recent decades, human mediated invasions of Ponto-Caspian amphipods have had great impacts on European fluvial ecosystems.

309 citations


Authors

Showing all 17388 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
David Miller2032573204840
Hyun-Chul Kim1764076183227
James M. Tour14385991364
Carmen García139150396925
Bernt Schiele13056870032
Vladimir Cindro129115782000
Teresa Barillari12998478782
Sven Menke129112182034
Horst Oberlack12998580069
Hubert Kroha129112680746
Peter Schacht129103080092
Siegfried Bethke1291266103520
Igor Mandić128106579498
Stefan Kluth128126184534
Andrej Gorišek12895167830
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
202390
2022331
20213,150
20203,110
20192,780
20182,479