scholarly journals Development of a basic integrated information model based on GIS technologies of isolated regions of the North

Author(s):  
R. A. Spasov
1995 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hwa T. Kho ◽  
Lu J. Huang ◽  
Daniel J. Valentino ◽  
Gregory H. Tashima ◽  
Ricky K. Taira ◽  
...  

Energies ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 2356 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ferdinando Chiacchio ◽  
Fabio Famoso ◽  
Diego D’Urso ◽  
Luca Cedola

Grid-connected low voltage photovoltaic power plants cover most of the power capacity installed in Italy. They offer an important contribution to the power demand of the utilities connected but, due to the nature of the solar resource, the night-time consumption can be satisfied only withdrawing the energy by the national grid, at the price of the energy distributor. Thanks to the improvement of storage technologies, the installation of a system of battery looks like a promising solution by giving the possibility to increase auto-consumption dramatically. In this paper, a model-based approach to analyze and discuss the performance and the economic feasibility of grid-connected domestic photovoltaic power plants with a storage system is presented. Using as input to the model the historical series (2008–2017) of the main ambient variables, the proposed model, based on Stochastic Hybrid Fault Tree Automaton, allowed us to simulate and compare two alternative technical solutions characterized by different environmental conditions, in the north and in the south of Italy. The performances of these systems were compared and an economic analysis, addressing the convenience of the storage systems was carried out, considering the characteristic useful-life time, 20 years, of a photovoltaic power plant. To this end the Net Present Value and the payback time were evaluated, considering the main characteristics of the Italian market scenario.


2006 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 195-202
Author(s):  
Marvin R. Pyles ◽  
Mari Kramer

Abstract An aerial photo-based inventory of landslides on recently harvested and reforested land after a significant landslide-producing storm in February 1996, was compared with a digital elevation model-based assessment of slope stability (shallow landsliding stability model [SHALSTAB]) for Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians (CTSI) and surrounding forestland. The SHALSTAB predictions of landslide locations did not correlate well with the locations of observed landslides. Eighty-nine percent of the landslides on the more stable landform in the southern portion of the CTSI ownership occurred on land that SHALSTAB indicated to be at a low risk of landsliding. Seventy-two percent of the landslides on the less stable landform to the north occurred on land that SHALSTAB indicated to be at a low risk of landsliding. Conversely, only 11 and 28%, respectively, of the observed landslides occurred on lands predicted to be “chronically unstable” or at “high risk” by SHALSTAB. This level of correct prediction of landsliding was judged to be unacceptable for SHALSTAB to be used for slope stability assessment as a part of forest management planning. West. J. Appl. For. 21(4):195–202.


Author(s):  
Reinhard Heister ◽  
Reiner Anderl

Workflows to produce dental products by using CAD/CAM technology are very complex. Each patient needs an individual restoration. The challenge is to provide a patient individual production aiming at a price of mass production. But every single job has to run through an individual development as well manufacturing process. Typically, three stakeholders are involved in the workflow. The dentist performs the treatment and defines requirements for restoration. The dental laboratory plans the workflow and designs the reconstruction by using a dental CAD system. Subsequently, a milling center produces the restoration. Because of these highly heterogeneous workflows, diverse data streams and incompatibilities result. Often improper partners and resources are involved in the workflow. This fact is a significant source for errors. An additional complication is that errors are often discovered in late phases of the workflow. To avoid high costs and unacceptable delivery times, the aim is to develop a new concept for integrated workflow planning. The concept depends on three parts: Federative dental data management (FDDM) as a basic approach, including anticipated logic and structured activities. The federative data management provides a loosely coupling of heterogeneous systems crossing enterprise borders by using web technology. The FDDM service depends on APP technology. Each participant applies its specialized APP: FDDMz (dentist), FDDMd (dental laboratory) and FDDMf (milling center). FDDM services enable a continuously integrated workflow throughout the whole process of a patient individual production. Each participating enterprise is able to register its available processes and resources. Information about resources like 3D dental scanner or milling machines are able to add, according to a global data model schema. This schema depends on an integrated information model with eight partial models: Collaboration, resource, process, workflow, requirements, product, work preparation and production model. This integrated information model provides dental information including interlinked objects. Through a proper anticipation logic, conclusions about later phases can be anticipated already at early phases. The last conceptual part is workflow management on frame of structured activities. By combining the information network with the anticipation logic, filtering of appropriate partners, processes, resources and sequences is supported. Next, a prototypical implementation is demonstrated exemplarily. This concept delivers an important contribution to increase process reliability and quality as well as to reduce delivery times and costs for digital dental workflows.


2016 ◽  
Vol 91 ◽  
pp. 193-200 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Li ◽  
Fengyue Yang

Geophysics ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 64 (6) ◽  
pp. 1816-1827 ◽  
Author(s):  
Guochun Lu ◽  
Bjørn Ursin ◽  
Jan Lutro

We have developed a procedure to attenuate water‐layer multiple reflections. We estimate the sea‐bottom reflectivity function and use it plus calculated amplitude functions to model all order water‐layer multiple reflections, taking into account both amplitude and waveform shape. We model the primary and multiple reflections from the sea bottom in the frequency‐slowness domain. The amplitude function in the data modeling includes the source directivity function, source ghost response, receiver array directivity function, receiver ghost response, and offset‐dependent geometrical spreading. For small offsets we can assume that the seabed reflectivity depends only on frequency, and it is estimated using a least‐squares algorithm. An unknown scaling constant in the data is estimated using the amplitude of the primary and first multiple reflection from the sea bed. The composite sea‐bottom reflectivity is estimated as a function of frequency for each common midpoint (CMP) position. We apply the algorithm to high‐resolution seismic data from the North Sea. The modelled data match the recorded data well, and the estimated primary reflectivity is more geologically meaningful than the stacked trace. By comparison with Radon transform multiple removal applied to the same data, the model‐based method was more computationally efficient and left less residual multiple energy.


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