178 research outputs found

    Multitemporal monitoring of plant area index in the Valencia Rice District with PocketLAI

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    Leaf area index (LAI) is a key biophysical parameter used to determine foliage cover and crop growth in environmental studies in order to assess crop yield. Frequently, plant canopy analyzers (LAI-2000) and digital cameras for hemispherical photography (DHP) are used for indirect effective plant area index (PAIeff ) estimates. Nevertheless, these instruments are expensive and have the disadvantages of low portability and maintenance. Recently, a smartphone app called PocketLAI was presented and tested for acquiring PAIeff measurements. It was used during an entire rice season for indirect PAIeff estimations and for deriving reference high-resolution PAIeff maps. Ground PAIeff values acquired with PocketLAI, LAI-2000, and DHP were well correlated (R2 = 0.95, RMSE = 0.21 m2/m2 for Licor-2000, and R2 = 0.94, RMSE = 0.6 m2/m2 for DHP). Complementary data such as phenology and leaf chlorophyll content were acquired to complement seasonal rice plant information provided by PAIeff. High-resolution PAIeff maps, which can be used for the validation of remote sensing products, have been derived using a global transfer function (TF) made of several measuring dates and their associated satellite radiances

    Precision Agriculture Technology for Crop Farming

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    This book provides a review of precision agriculture technology development, followed by a presentation of the state-of-the-art and future requirements of precision agriculture technology. It presents different styles of precision agriculture technologies suitable for large scale mechanized farming; highly automated community-based mechanized production; and fully mechanized farming practices commonly seen in emerging economic regions. The book emphasizes the introduction of core technical features of sensing, data processing and interpretation technologies, crop modeling and production control theory, intelligent machinery and field robots for precision agriculture production

    An investigation of change in drone practices in broadacre farming environments

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    The application of drones in broadacre farming is influenced by novel and emergent factors. Drone technology is subject to legal, financial, social, and technical constraints that affect the Agri-tech sector. This research showed that emerging improvements to drone technology influence the analysis of precision data resulting in disparate and asymmetrically flawed Ag-tech outputs. The novelty of this thesis is that it examines the changes in drone technology through the lens of entropic decay. It considers the planning and controlling of an organisation’s resources to minimise harmful effects through systems change. The rapid advances in drone technology have outpaced the systematic approaches that precision agriculture insists is the backbone of reliable ongoing decision-making. Different models and brands take data from different heights, at different times of the day, and with flight of differing velocities. Drone data is in a state of decay, no longer equally comparable to past years’ harvest and crop data and are now mixed into a blended environment of brand-specific variations in height, image resolution, air speed, and optics. This thesis investigates the problem of the rapid emergence of image-capture technology in drones and the corresponding shift away from the established measurements and comparisons used in precision agriculture. New capabilities are applied in an ad hoc manner as different features are rushed to market. At the same time existing practices are subtly changed to suit individual technology capability. The result is a loose collection of technically superior drone imagery, with a corresponding mismatch of year-to-year agricultural data. The challenge is to understand and identify the difference between uniformly accepted technological advance, and market-driven changes that demonstrate entropic decay. The goal of this research is to identify best practice approaches for UAV deployment for broadacre farming. This study investigated the benefits of a range of characteristics to optimise data collection technologies. It identified widespread discrepancies demonstrating broadening decay on precision agriculture and productivity. The pace of drone development is so rapidly different from mainstream agricultural practices that the once reliable reliance upon yearly crop data no longer shares statistically comparable metrics. Whilst farmers have relied upon decades of satellite data that has used the same optics, time of day and flight paths for many years, the innovations that drive increasingly smarter drone technologies are also highly problematic since they render each successive past year’s crop metrics as outdated in terms of sophistication, detail, and accuracy. In five years, the standardised height for recording crop data has changed four times. New innovations, coupled with new rules and regulations have altered the once reliable practice of recording crop data. In addition, the cost of entry in adopting new drone technology is sufficiently varied that agriculturalists are acquiring multiple versions of different drone UAVs with variable camera and sensor settings, and vastly different approaches in terms of flight records, data management, and recorded indices. Without addressing this problem, the true benefits of optimization through machine learning are prevented from improving harvest outcomes for broadacre farming. The key findings of this research reveal a complex, constantly morphing environment that is seeking to build digital trust and reliability in an evolving global market in the face of rapidly changing technology, regulations, standards, networks, and knowledge. The once reliable discipline of precision agriculture is now a fractured melting pot of “first to market” innovations and highly competitive sellers. The future of drone technology is destined for further uncertainty as it struggles to establish a level of maturity that can return broadacre farming to consistent global outcomes

    Non-invasive imaging of drought-induced cavitation in plants

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    The increased frequency of extreme events, associated with climate change, can lead to loss of biodiversity and forest dieback. Intense drought has disastrous effects on plants growth and physiology and maintaining hydraulic conductivity during time of water stress is necessary for plants survival. However, during drought, the blockage of the hydraulic pathway by air-seeding results in the loss of conductivity by embolism formation. Therefore, it is essential to be able to accurately measure the conductivity, leading to a better prediction of species vulnerability through vulnerability curves (VCs). The measure of vulnerability thresholds is necessary in order to evaluate the causes of forests dieback. Moreover, understanding the mechanisms behind drought-recovery and embolism repair can contribute to the advance of models used to predict the impact of drought on vegetation dynamics. This PhD was designed to test the accuracy and applicability of new visual techniques and aim to provide alternatives to invasive methods for measure of VCs. While invasive techniques measure conductivity on cut samples, visual techniques allow for measurements on intact samples. However, the question of the accuracy of visual methods are still discussed on the ground that they do not provide a direct measurement of conductivity (PLC) but instead use a proxy through the measurements of loss of vessels (PLV). In conclusion, my PhD research addresses the use of visual techniques as an accurate alternative for invasive methods and aims to provide further knowledge concerning mechanisms that regulates drought-induced embolism and recovery, under controlled conditions as well as in field-based studies. The results of this research suggest that (1) visual techniques may be used with all xylem anatomy, but need precise implementation in order to avoid erroneous results, (2) embolism repair via refilling is not a common for E. saligna and severe drought may be responsible for lagged-mortality also observed in the field and that (3) hydraulic failure driven by drought-induced embolism was one of the factors that contributed to the massive dieback of A. marina in northern Australia. Overall, drought-induced embolism may lead to forest mortality and lagged-mortality in many ecosystems, and the understanding of species dependant embolism recovery responses is necessary to determine species resistance and resilience to extreme events and climate change

    Precision Agriculture Technology for Crop Farming

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    This book provides a review of precision agriculture technology development, followed by a presentation of the state-of-the-art and future requirements of precision agriculture technology. It presents different styles of precision agriculture technologies suitable for large scale mechanized farming; highly automated community-based mechanized production; and fully mechanized farming practices commonly seen in emerging economic regions. The book emphasizes the introduction of core technical features of sensing, data processing and interpretation technologies, crop modeling and production control theory, intelligent machinery and field robots for precision agriculture production

    Intelligent Circuits and Systems

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    ICICS-2020 is the third conference initiated by the School of Electronics and Electrical Engineering at Lovely Professional University that explored recent innovations of researchers working for the development of smart and green technologies in the fields of Energy, Electronics, Communications, Computers, and Control. ICICS provides innovators to identify new opportunities for the social and economic benefits of society.  This conference bridges the gap between academics and R&D institutions, social visionaries, and experts from all strata of society to present their ongoing research activities and foster research relations between them. It provides opportunities for the exchange of new ideas, applications, and experiences in the field of smart technologies and finding global partners for future collaboration. The ICICS-2020 was conducted in two broad categories, Intelligent Circuits & Intelligent Systems and Emerging Technologies in Electrical Engineering

    Development of an earth observation processing chain for crop biophysical parameters at local and global scale

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    This thesis’ topics embrace remote sensing for Earth observation, specifically in Earth vegetation monitoring. The Thesis’ main objective is to develop and implement an operational processing chain for crop biophysical parameters estimation at both local and global scales from remote sensing data. Conceptually, the components of the chain are the same at both scales: First, a radiative transfer model is run in forward mode to build a database composed by simulations of vegetation surface reflectance and concomitant biophysical parameters associated to those spectrum. Secondly, the simulated database is used for training and testing nonlinear and non-parametric machine learning regression algorithms. The best model in terms of accuracy, bias and goodness-of-fit is then selected to be used in the operational retrieval chain. Once the model is trained, remote sensing surface reflectance data is fed into the trained model as input in the inversion process to retrieve the biophysical parameters of interest at both local and global scales depending on the inputs spatial resolution and coverage. Eventually, the validation of the leaf area index estimates is performed at local scale by a set of ground measurements conducted during coordinated field campaigns in three countries during 2015 and 2016 European rice seasons. At global scale, the validation is performed through intercomparison with the most relevant and widely validated reference biophysical products. The work elaborated in this Thesis is structured in six chapters including an introduction of remote sensing for Earth observation, the developed processing chain at local scale, the ground LAI measurements acquired with smartphones, the developed chain at global scale, a chapter discussing the conclusions of the work, and a chapter which includes an extended abstract in Valencian. The Thesis is completed by an annex which include a compendium of peer-reviewed publications in remote sensing international journals

    New advances in vehicular technology and automotive engineering

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    An automobile was seen as a simple accessory of luxury in the early years of the past century. Therefore, it was an expensive asset which none of the common citizen could afford. It was necessary to pass a long period and waiting for Henry Ford to establish the first plants with the series fabrication. This new industrial paradigm makes easy to the common American to acquire an automobile, either for running away or for working purposes. Since that date, the automotive research grown exponentially to the levels observed in the actuality. Now, the automobiles are indispensable goods; saying with other words, the automobile is a first necessity article in a wide number of aspects of living: for workers to allow them to move from their homes into their workplaces, for transportation of students, for allowing the domestic women in their home tasks, for ambulances to carry people with decease to the hospitals, for transportation of materials, and so on, the list don’t ends. The new goal pursued by the automotive industry is to provide electric vehicles at low cost and with high reliability. This commitment is justified by the oil’s peak extraction on 50s of this century and also by the necessity to reduce the emissions of CO2 to the atmosphere, as well as to reduce the needs of this even more valuable natural resource. In order to achieve this task and to improve the regular cars based on oil, the automotive industry is even more concerned on doing applied research on technology and on fundamental research of new materials. The most important idea to retain from the previous introduction is to clarify the minds of the potential readers for the direct and indirect penetration of the vehicles and the vehicular industry in the today’s life. In this sequence of ideas, this book tries not only to fill a gap by presenting fresh subjects related to the vehicular technology and to the automotive engineering but to provide guidelines for future research. This book account with valuable contributions from worldwide experts of automotive’s field. The amount and type of contributions were judiciously selected to cover a broad range of research. The reader can found the most recent and cutting-edge sources of information divided in four major groups: electronics (power, communications, optics, batteries, alternators and sensors), mechanics (suspension control, torque converters, deformation analysis, structural monitoring), materials (nanotechnology, nanocomposites, lubrificants, biodegradable, composites, structural monitoring) and manufacturing (supply chains). We are sure that you will enjoy this book and will profit with the technical and scientific contents. To finish, we are thankful to all of those who contributed to this book and who made it possible.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
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