2,892 research outputs found
Proposal for a Performance Dashboard for the Monitoringof Water and Sewage Service Companies (WaSCs)
The water and sewage industry provides an essential service to the community, but it is characterized by natural monopoly tendencies of service suppliers. In this framework, it is very important to assist regulators with a small set of critical indicators (performance dashboard) for the evaluation and monitoring of the service provided by Water and Sewage Companies (WaSCs). The paper originates from the analysis of situation of Piemonte (Italy), where each regional and local body adopts a proprietary Performance Measurement System (PMS). In order to improve the coordination of information flow and to support the definition of common service standards, a methodology to merge existing PMSs and define a unique shared reference system is proposed. The Kaplan and Norton's Balanced Scorecard (BSC) is adopted as the reference model of this approach. BSC is widely recognized to be an exhaustive and balanced framework in describing the performances of an organization and ensures that all the operational aspects of WaSCs are adequately monitored. The output of the proposed procedure is a general performance dashboard for the monitoring of WaSCs. The dashboard is shown and some remarks about indicators properties are developed. In particular, this analysis highlights some common pitfalls originated by a ârushed' aggregation of several performance indicators. Description is supported by several example
Publication and patent analysis of European researchers in the field of production technology and manufacturing systems
This paper develops a structured comparison among a sample of European researchers in the field of Production Technology and Manufacturing Systems, on the basis of scientific publications and patents. Researchers are evaluated and compared by a variegated set of indicators concerning (1) the output of individual researchers and (2) that of groups of researchers from the same country. While not claiming to be exhaustive, the results of this preliminary study provide a rough indication of the publishing and patenting activity of researchers in the field of interest, identifying (dis)similarities between different countries. Of particular interest is a proposal for aggregating analysis results by means of maps based on publication and patent indicators. A large amount of empirical data are presented and discusse
Proposals for evaluating the regularity of a scientist'sresearch output
Evaluating the career of individual scientists according to their scientific output is a common bibliometric problem. Two aspects are classically taken into account: overall productivity and overall diffusion/impact, which can be measured by a plethora of indicators that consider publications and/or citations separately or synthesise these two quantities into a single number (e.g. h-index). A secondary aspect, which is sometimes mentioned in the rules of competitive examinations for research position/promotion, is time regularity of one researcher's scientific output. Despite the fact that it is sometimes invoked, a clear definition of regularity is still lacking. We define it as the ability of generating an active and stable research output over time, in terms of both publications/ quantity and citations/diffusion. The goal of this paper is introducing three analysis tools to perform qualitative/quantitative evaluations on the regularity of one scientist's output in a simple and organic way. These tools are respectively (1) the PY/CY diagram, (2) the publication/citation Ferrers diagram and (3) a simplified procedure for comparing the research output of several scientists according to their publication and citation temporal distributions (Borda's ranking). Description of these tools is supported by several examples
Combining Physical galaxy models with radio observations to constrain the SFRs of high-z dusty star forming galaxies
We complement our previous analysis of a sample of z~1-2 luminous and
ultra-luminous infrared galaxies ((U)LIRGs), by adding deep VLA radio
observations at 1.4 GHz to a large data-set from the far-UV to the sub-mm,
including Spitzer and Herschel data. Given the relatively small number of
(U)LIRGs in our sample with high S/N radio data, and to extend our study to a
different family of galaxies, we also include 6 well sampled near IR-selected
BzK galaxies at z~1.5. From our analysis based on the radiative transfer
spectral synthesis code GRASIL, we find that, while the IR luminosity may be a
biased tracer of the star formation rate (SFR) depending on the age of stars
dominating the dust heating, the inclusion of the radio flux offers
significantly tighter constraints on SFR. Our predicted SFRs are in good
agreement with the estimates based on rest-frame radio luminosity and the Bell
(2003) calibration. The extensive spectro-photometric coverage of our sample
allows us to set important constraints on the SF history of individual objects.
For essentially all galaxies we find evidence for a rather continuous SFR and a
peak epoch of SF preceding that of the observation by a few Gyrs. This seems to
correspond to a formation redshift of z~5-6. We finally show that our physical
analysis may affect the interpretation of the SFR-M* diagram, by possibly
shifting, with respect to previous works, the position of the most dust
obscured objects to higher M* and lower SFRs.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS on
Dec. 4th, 201
Experimental comparison of dynamic tracking performanceof iGPS and laser tracker
External metrology systems are increasingly being integrated with traditional industrial articulated robots, especially in the aerospace industries, to improve their absolute accuracy for precision operations such as drilling, machining and jigless assembly. While currently most of the metrology assisted robotics control systems are limited in their position update rate, such that the robot has to be stopped in order to receive a metrology coordinate update, some recent efforts are addressed toward controlling robots using real-time metrology data. The indoor GPS is one of the metrology systems that may be used to provide real-time 6DOF data to a robot controller. Even if there is a noteworthy literature dealing with the evaluation of iGPS performance, there is, however, a lack of literature on how well the iGPS performs under dynamic conditions. This paper presents an experimental evaluation of the dynamic measurement performance of the iGPS, tracking the trajectories of an industrial robot. The same experiment is also repeated using a laser tracker. Besides the experiment results presented, this paper also proposes a novel method for dynamic repeatability comparisons of tracking instrument
Clustering of the Diffuse Infrared Light from the COBE DIRBE maps. III. Power spectrum analysis and excess isotropic component of fluctuations
The cosmic infrared background (CIB) radiation is the cosmic repository for
energy release throughout the history of the universe. Using the all-sky data
from the COBE DIRBE instrument at wavelengths 1.25 - 100 mic we attempt to
measure the CIB fluctuations. In the near-IR, foreground emission is dominated
by small scale structure due to stars in the Galaxy. There we find a strong
correlation between the amplitude of the fluctuations and Galactic latitude
after removing bright foreground stars. Using data outside the Galactic plane
() and away from the center () we extrapolate
the amplitude of the fluctuations to cosec. We find a positive intercept
of nW/m2/sr at 1.25, 2.2,3.5 and 4.9 mic
respectively, where the errors are the range of 92% confidence limits. For
color subtracted maps between band 1 and 2 we find the isotropic part of the
fluctuations at nW/m2/sr. Based on detailed numerical and
analytic models, this residual is not likely to originate from the Galaxy, our
clipping algorithm, or instrumental noise. We demonstrate that the residuals
from the fit used in the extrapolation are distributed isotropically and
suggest that this extra variance may result from structure in the CIB. For
2\deg< \theta < 15^\deg, a power-spectrum analysis yields firm upper limits
of (\theta/5^\deg) \times\delta F_{\rm rms} (\theta) < 6, 2.5, 0.8, 0.5
nW/m2/sr at 1.25, 2.2, 3.5 and 4.9 mic respectively. From 10-100 mic, the upper
limits <1 nW/m2/sr.Comment: Ap.J., in press. 69 pages including 24 fig
Supersymmetry without a light Higgs boson but with a light pseudoscalar
We consider the lambda-SUSY model, a version of the NMSSM with large lambda
H_1 H_2 S coupling, relaxing the approximation of large singlet mass and
negligible mixing of the scalar singlet with the scalar doublets. We show that
there are regions of the parameter space in which the lightest pseudoscalar can
be relatively light, with unusual consequences on the decay pattern of the
CP-even Higgs bosons and thus on the LHC phenomenology.Comment: 11 pages, 3 figures. v3: Conforms to published versio
Time-dependent seismic fragility curves for existing RC core-wall buildings exposed to corrosion
This work aims at investigating the seismic response of existing reinforced concrete core-wall buildings with corroded bars erected in the marine environments, with the main focus on the dependency of seismic fragility curves on aging and degradation effects caused by environmental actions. The structural capacity is predicted by nonlinear finite-element analyses, where the effect of chloride corrosion is implemented within the framework of PARC_CL_2.1 crack model. The proposed methodology is applied to a pre-code six-story reinforced concrete (RC) building with moment-resisting (MR) frames and an internal core assumed as a testbed. For a given exposure class, pushover analyses are performed for different ages of the building. Time-dependent fragility curves are then obtained through a procedure based on incremental static analysis. Different corrosion scenarios are assessed by considering deterioration effects applied either on the sole RC walls or on both walls and columns. The obtained results highlight that time-dependent fragility curves are strongly affected by corrosion, therefore the date of construction should be considered in seismic risk mapping, not only for evaluating the effect of obsolete standard codes used in the design but also in terms of damage induced by aging and deterioration
Non-equilibrium fluctuations for SEP() with open boundary
We analyze the non-equilibrium fluctuations of the partial symmetric simple
exclusion process, SEP(), which allows at most
particles per site, and we put it in contact with stochastic reservoirs whose
strength is regulated by a parameter . Setting , we find the results of [22, 16, 17] and extend the known results to cover
all range of .Comment: 45 pages, 4 figure
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