22,284 research outputs found

    A Methodological Approach for Assessing Soil Salinity Hazard in Irrigated Areas. Case Study: The rut Irrigation District, Colombia

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    Se desarrolló una metodología para la evaluación y mapeo de la amenaza de salinización de suelos en distritos de riego de Colombia, con base en la concentración y tipo de sales en el agua de riego. La evaluación inició con la identificación de áreas de riego y la caracterización de sus parámetros fisicoquímicos. Esta caracterización permitió, por un lado, conocer la concentración de sales a través de la CEw, y por otro, estimar los tipos de sales presentes empleando el modelo Sosalriego. Luego, se asignaron niveles de amenaza en cada zona de riego, los cuales fueron espacializados empleando SIG. Finalmente, la aplicación del modelo permitió priorizar y orientar acciones de manejo para cada nivel de peligro identificados en el caso de estudio.A methodology towards assessing soil salinity hazard at irrigated areas of Colombia was developed based on both electrical conductivity and solubility of salts in water. First, irrigated areas were identified; and then, their physicochemical parameters were determined for characterizing electrical conductivity of water (ECw) as well as predicting salt contents in water by employing the Solsariego model. Afterwards, levels of salinity hazard were assessed by matching classes of ECw and solubility of salts in water. Finally, the salinity hazard was mapped for each irrigated zone. As a major conclusion, we consider that the methodological approach based on water quality assessment (ECw, salt contents, and their solubility in the irrigated water) allowed to prioritize hazard level. Hence, we can address activities for managing the soil salinity in the case study

    Develop Guidelines for Pavement Preservation Treatments and for Building a Pavement Preservation Program Platform for Alaska

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    INE/AUTC 12.0

    Sampietrini stone pavements: Distress analysis using pavement condition index method

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    In several Italian cities, it is possible to find historical pavements such as the Sampietrini pavements, which are mainly located in the center of the city of Rome. The Sampietrini pavement is a particular road surface paved in natural stone with irregular sharp elements that are assembled by hand with the evident not plan effect. Because of their peculiarities, they are not suitable for streets where high speed is allowed. In many cases, high vibration and noise levels due to road traffic traveling on Sampietrini pavements are caused by inadequate maintenance, which is also affected by the absence of specific evaluation criteria regarding surface conditions and performances of Sampietrini pavements. It is not possible, in fact, to adopt common approaches developed to be used for flexible and rigid pavements, because they present completely different features and distresses. In this paper, to overpass this problem, a new evaluation criterion based on Pavement Condition Index (PCI) method established for block pavements is proposed. Furthermore, to fully characterize this kind of pavements, other analyses, i.e., International Roughness Index (IRI) and comfort level evaluation based on ISO 2631 standard, were also carried out. The results showed a good correlation between PCI and IRI approaches (R 2 = 0.82), also highlighting that new or reconstructed Sampietrini pavements present not negligible roughness level. This aspect was also confirmed estimating the comfort level perceived by users traveling at several speeds (≤50 km/h). Finally, speed related threshold values to be adopted for PCI and IRI methods are proposed. The proposed method can be implemented by pavement managers in a PMS ad hoc for stone block paving and thus, it can be integrated with other equivalents methods of visual inspection based on PCI

    Modularization for the Cell Ontology

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    One of the premises of the OBO Foundry is that development of an orthogonal set of ontologies will increase domain expert contributions and logical interoperability, and decrease maintenance workload. For these reasons, the Cell Ontology (CL) is being re-engineered. This process requires the extraction of sub-modules from existing OBO ontologies, which presents a number of practical engineering challenges. These extracted modules may be intended to cover a narrow or a broad set of species. In addition, applications and resources that make use of the Cell Ontology have particular modularization requirements, such as the ability to extract custom subsets or unions of the Cell Ontology with other OBO ontologies. These extracted modules may be intended to cover a narrow or a broad set of species, which presents unique complications.

We discuss some of these requirements, and present our progress towards a customizable simple-to-use modularization tool that leverages existing OWL-based tools and opens up their use for the CL and other ontologies

    FIXES, a system for automatic selection of set-ups and design of fixtures

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    This paper reports on the development of a computer aided planning system for the selection of set-ups and the design of fixtures in part manufacturing. First, the bottlenecks in the present planning methods are indicated. A brief description is given of the CAPP environment PART, in which FIXES is incorporated. The planning procedure of FIXES consists of two parts: the selection of set-ups and the design of a fixture for each set-up. The automatic selection of set-ups is based on the comparison of the tolerances of the relations between the different shape elements of the part. A tolerance factor has been developed to be able to compare the different tolerances. The system automatically selects the positioning faces and supports the selection of tools for positioning, clamping and supporting the part. A prototype implementation of FIXES is discussed

    Teaching and learning about controversial science issues

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    The overarching Nature of Science (NoS) strand in our revised science curriculum presents teachers of science with a number of challenges. One of them is the ‘Participating and Contributing’ achievement aim with its focus on controversial science issues (CSI). This article reports on a new classroom model for exploring controversial science issues with students that was trialled in New Zealand science classrooms, writes Dr. Kathy Saunders, the University of Waikato

    Automatic Test Framework Anomaly Detection in Home Routers

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    In a modern world most people have a home network and multiple devices behind it. These devices include simple IoT, that require external protection not to join a botnet. This protection can be granted by a security router with a feature of determining the usual network traffic of a device and alerting its unusual behaviour. This work is dedicated to creating a testbed to verify such router's work. The test bed includes tools to capture IoT traffic, edit and replay it. Created tool supports UDP, TCP, partially ICMP and is extendable to other protocols. UDP and TCP protocols are replayed using OS sockets at transport network layer. The methods described have proved to work on a real setup
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