225 episodes

Die Universitätsbibliothek (UB) verfügt über ein umfangreiches Archiv an elektronischen Medien, das von Volltextsammlungen über Zeitungsarchive, Wörterbücher und Enzyklopädien bis hin zu ausführlichen Bibliographien und mehr als 1000 Datenbanken reicht. Auf iTunes U stellt die UB unter anderem eine Auswahl an Dissertationen der Doktorandinnen und Doktoranden an der LMU bereit.

Fakultät für Geowissenschaften - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

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Die Universitätsbibliothek (UB) verfügt über ein umfangreiches Archiv an elektronischen Medien, das von Volltextsammlungen über Zeitungsarchive, Wörterbücher und Enzyklopädien bis hin zu ausführlichen Bibliographien und mehr als 1000 Datenbanken reicht. Auf iTunes U stellt die UB unter anderem eine Auswahl an Dissertationen der Doktorandinnen und Doktoranden an der LMU bereit.

    Entwicklung und Anwendung von Hochleistungs-Software für Mantelkonvektionssimulationen

    Entwicklung und Anwendung von Hochleistungs-Software für Mantelkonvektionssimulationen

    The Earth mantle convects on a global scale, coupling the stress field at every point to every other location at an instant. This way, any change in the buoyancy field has an immediate impact on the convection patterns worldwide. At the same time, mantle convection couples to processes at scales of a few kilometers or even a few hundred meters. Dynamic topography and the geoid are examples of such small-scale expressions of mantle convection. Also, the depth of phase transitions varies locally, with strong influences on the buoyancy, and thus the global stress field. In order to understand these processes dynamically it is essential to resolve the whole mantle at very high numerical resolutions.
    At the same time, geodynamicists are trying to answer new questions with their models, for example about the rheology of the mantle, which is most likely highly nonlinear. Also, due to the extremely long timescales we cannot observe past mantle states, which calls for simulations backwards in time. All these issues lead to an extreme demand in computing power. To cater to those needs, the physical models of the mantle have to be matched with efficient solvers and fast algorithms, such that we can efficiently exploit the enormous computing power of current and future high performance systems.
    Here, we first give an extensive overview over the physical models and introduce some numerical concepts to solve the equations. We present a new two-dimensional software as a testbed and elaborate on the implications of realistic mineralogic models for efficient mantle convection simulations. We find that phase transitions present a major challenge and suggest some procedures to incorporate them into mantle convection modeling. Then we give an introduction to the high-performance mantle convection prototype HHG, a multigrid-based software framework that scales to some of the fastest computers currently available. We adapt this framework to a spherical geometry and present first application examples to answer geodynamic questions. In particular, we show that a very thin and very weak asthenosphere is dynamically plausible and consistent with direct and indirect geological observations.

    Molecular biology of octocoral mitochondria

    Molecular biology of octocoral mitochondria

    The mitochondria of non-bilaterian metazoans display a staggering diversity of genome organizations and also a slow rate of mtDNA evolution, unlike bilaterians, which may hold a key to understand the early evolution of the animal mitochondrion. Octocorals are unique members of Phylum Cnidaria, harboring several atypical mitochondrial genomic features, including a paucity of tRNA genes, various genome arrangements and the presence of novel putative mismatch repair gene (mtMutS) with various potential biological roles. Thus octocorals represents an interesting model for the study of mitochondrial biology and evolution. However, besides its utility in molecular phylogenetics, the mtDNA of octocorals is not studied from the perspective of DNA repair, oxidative stress response or gene expression; and there is a general lack of knowledge on the DNA repair capabilities and role of the mtMutS gene, response to climate-change, and mtDNA transcription in absence of interspersed tRNA genes of octocoral mitochondrial genome. In order to put the observed novelties in the octocoral mitochondria in an evolutionary and an environmental context, and to understand their potential functions and the consequences of their presence in conferring fitness during climate change induced stress, this study was undertaken. This dissertation aims to explore the uniqueness and diversity of octocoral mtDNA from an environmental as well as an evolutionary perspective.
    The thesis comprises five chapters exploring various facets of octocoral biology. The introductory section provides basic information and elaborates on the importance of studying non-bilaterian mitochondria. The first chapter sets the base for subsequent gene expression studies. Octocorals are extensively studied from a taxonomic and phylogenetic point of view. However, gene expression studies on these organisms have only recently started to appear. To successfully employ the most commonly used gene expression profiling technique i.e., the quantitation real-time PCR (qPCR), it is necessary to have an experimentally validated, treatment-specific set of stably expressed reference genes that will support for the accurate quantification of changes in expression of genes of interest. Hence, seven housekeeping genes, known to exhibit constitutive expression, were investigated for expression stability during simulated climate-changed (i.e. thermal and low-pH) induced stress. These genes were validated and subsequently used in gene expression studies on Sinularia cf. cruciata, our model octocoral.
    The occurrence of a mismatch repair gene, and the slow rates of mtDNA evolution in octocoral mitogenome calls for further investigations on the potential robustness of octocoral mitochondria to the increased oxidative stress. The second chapter presents a mitochondrion-centric view of climate-change stress response by investigating mtDNA damage, repair, and copy number dynamics during stress. The changes in gene expression of a set of stress-related nuclear, and mitochondrial genes in octocorals were also monitored. A robust response of octocoral mitochondria to oxidative mtDNA damage was observed, exhibiting a rapid recovery of the damaged mtDNA. The stress-specific regulation of the mtMutS gene was detected, indicating its potential involvement in stress response. The results highlight the resilience potential of octocoral mitochondria, and its adaptive benefits in changing oceans.
    The tRNA genes in animal mitochondria play a pivotal role in mt-mRNA processing and maturation. The influence of paucity of tRNA genes on transcription of the mitogenome in octocorals has not been investigated. The third chapter steps in the direction to understand the mitogenome transcription by investigating the nature of mature mRNAs. Several novel features not present in a “typical” animal mt-mRNAs were detected. The majority of the mitochondrial transcripts were observed as polycistronic units (i.e. the mRNA carryi

    Möglichkeiten und Chancen der Geowissenschaften innerhalb des interdisziplinären Profilfaches Naturwissenschaft und Technik der gymnasialen Sekundarstufe I in Baden-Württemberg

    Möglichkeiten und Chancen der Geowissenschaften innerhalb des interdisziplinären Profilfaches Naturwissenschaft und Technik der gymnasialen Sekundarstufe I in Baden-Württemberg

    Beschreibung von Grenzflächen-induzierten elektronischen Phasen in Oxid-Heterostrukturen mittels Dichtefunktionaltheorie

    Beschreibung von Grenzflächen-induzierten elektronischen Phasen in Oxid-Heterostrukturen mittels Dichtefunktionaltheorie

    Einkristallzüchtung und Charakterisierung intermetallischer Phasen des Ga-Pd-Systems

    Einkristallzüchtung und Charakterisierung intermetallischer Phasen des Ga-Pd-Systems

    An integrative approach using remote sensing and social analysis to identify different settlement types and the specific living conditions of its inhabitants

    An integrative approach using remote sensing and social analysis to identify different settlement types and the specific living conditions of its inhabitants

    Someday in 2007, the world population reached a historical landmark: for the first time in human history, more than half of the world´s population was urban. A stagnation of this urbanization process is not in sight, so that by 2050, already 70 percent of humankind is projected to live in urban settlements. Over the last few decades, enormous migrations from rural hinterlands to steadily growing cities could be witnessed coming along with a dramatic growth of the world’s urban population. The speed and the scale of this growth, particularly in the so called less developed regions, are posing tremendous challenges to the countries concerned as well as to the world community. Within mega cities the strongest trends and the most extreme dimensions of the urbanization process can be observed. Their rapid growth results in uncontrolled processes of fragmentation which is often associated with pronounced poverty, social inequality, socio-spatial and political fragmentation, environmental degradation as well as population demands that outstrip environmental service capacity. For the majority of the mega cities a tremendous increase of informal structures and processes has to be observed. Consequentially informal settlements are growing, which represent those characteristic municipal areas being subject to particularly high population density, dynamics as well as marginalization. They have quickly become the most visible expression of urban poverty in developing world cities.
    Due to the extreme dynamics, the high complexity and huge spatial dimension of mega cities, urban administrations often only have an obsolete or not even existing data basis available to be at all informed about developments, trends and dimensions of urban growth and change. The knowledge about the living conditions of the residents is correspondingly very limited, incomplete and not up to date. Traditional methods such as statistical and regional analyses or fieldwork are no longer capable to capture such urban process. New data sources and monitoring methodologies are required in order to provide an up to date information basis as well as planning strate¬gies to enable sustainable developments and to simplify planning processes in complex urban structures.
    This research shall seize the described problem and aims to make a contribution to the requirements of monitoring fast developing mega cities. Against this background a methodology is developed to compensate the lack of socio-economic data and to deduce meaningful information on the living conditions of the inhabitants of mega cities. Neither social science methods alone nor the exclusive analysis of remote sensing data can solve the problem of the poor quality and outdated data base. Conventional social science methods cannot cope with the enormous developments and the tremendous growth as they are too labor-, as well as too time- and too cost-intensive. On the other hand, the physical discipline of remote sensing does not allow for direct conclusions on social parameters out of remote sensing images.
    The prime objective of this research is therefore the development of an integrative approach − bridging remote sensing and social analysis – in order to derive useful information about the living conditions in this specific case of the mega city Delhi and its inhabitants. Hence, this work is established in the overlapping range of the research topics remote sensing, urban areas and social science.
    Delhi, as India’s fast growing capital, meanwhile with almost 25 million residents the second largest city of the world, represents a prime example of a mega city. Since the second half of the 20th century, Delhi has been transformed from a modest town with mainly administrative and trade-related functions to a complex metropolis with a steep socio-economic gradient. The quality and amount of administrative and socio-economic data are poor and the knowledge about the circumstances of Delhi’s residents

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