202 research outputs found
Nitrate reduction and the occurrence of a deep nitrite maximum in the ocean off the west coast of South America
Between 10°S and 23°S off the coast of Peru, at depths where the oxygen concentration is less than 0.2 ml/l, a pronounced secondary nitrite maximum is found; for the same or gr eater depth range, results indicate a loss of nitrate in the water column. It has been assumed that either nitrate reduction has taken place or there has been an arrested oxidation of organic nitrogen...
A Graph based architectural (re)configuration language
For several different reasons, such as changes in the business or technological environment, the configuration of a system may need to evolve during the execution. Support for such evolution can be conceived in terms of a language for specifying the dynamic reconfiguration of systems. In this paper, continuing our work on the development of a formal platform for architectural design, we present a high-level language to describe architectures and for operating changes over a configuration (i.e., an architecture instance), such as adding, removing or substituting components or interconnections. The language follows an imperative style and builds on a semantic domain established in previous work. Therein, we model architectures through categorical diagrams and dynamic reconfiguration through algebraic graph rewriting
The SENSORIA reference modelling language
This chapter provides an overview of SRML - the Sensoria Reference Modelling Language. Our focus will be on the language primitives that SRML offers for modelling business services and activities, the methodological approach that SRML supports, and the mathematical semantics the underpins the modelling approach, including techniques for qualitative and quantitative analysis. © 2011 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
Specifying and Analysing SOC Applications with COWS
COWS is a recently defined process calculus for specifying and combining service-oriented applications, while modelling their dynamic behaviour. Since its introduction, a number of methods and tools have been devised to analyse COWS specifications, like e.g. a type system to check confidentiality properties, a logic and a model checker to express and check functional properties of services. In this paper, by means of a case study in the area of automotive systems, we demonstrate that COWS, with some mild linguistic additions, can model all the phases of the life cycle of service-oriented applications, such as publication, discovery, negotiation, orchestration, deployment, reconfiguration and execution. We also provide a flavour of the properties that can be analysed by using the tools mentioned above
A reification calculus for model-oriented software specification
This paper presents a transformational approach to the derivation of
implementations from model-oriented specifications of abstract data types.
The purpose of this research is to reduce the number of formal proofs required
in model refinement, which hinder software development. It is shown to be appli-
cable to the transformation of models written in Meta-iv (the specification lan-
guage of Vdm) towards their refinement into, for example, Pascal or relational
DBMSs. The approach includes the automatic synthesis of retrieve functions
between models, and data-type invariants.
The underlying algebraic semantics is the so-called final semantics “`a la Wand”:
a specification “is” a model (heterogeneous algebra) which is the final ob ject (up
to isomorphism) in the category of all its implementations.
The transformational calculus approached in this paper follows from exploring
the properties of finite, recursively defined sets.
This work extends the well-known strategy of program transformation to model
transformation, adding to previous work on a transformational style for operation-
decomposition in META-IV. The model-calculus is also useful for improving
model-oriented specifications.(undefined
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