3,665 research outputs found
A New Economic Dispatch for Coupled Transmission and Active Distribution Networks Via Hierarchical Communication Structure
Traditionally, the economic dispatch problem (EDP) of the bulk generators connected to transmission networks (TNs) is solved in a centralized dispatching center (CDC) while modeling distribution networks as passive loads. With the increasing penetration levels of distributed generation, coordinating the economic dispatch between TNs and active distribution networks (ADNs) became vital to maximizing system efficiency. This article proposes a hierarchical communication structure, which requires minimal upgrades to the CDC, for solving the EDP of coupled TNs and ADNs. Based on the minimal data transfer between the CDC and distribution network operators, the problem is formulated and solved while considering the network losses in both TNs and ADNs. Furthermore, a sensitivity analysis is conducted to assess the effect of the ratio of the distribution lines on the economic dispatch solution and the operational cost of the system. The numerical results demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed centralized scheme and highlight the significance of considering the network losses of both TNs and ADNs when solving the EDP. The results show that the proposed framework can achieve savings of up to 17.98% by taking into account the network losses of TNs and ADNs
Beyond a warming fingerprint: individualistic biogeographic responses to heterogeneous climate change in California.
Understanding recent biogeographic responses to climate change is fundamental for improving our predictions of likely future responses and guiding conservation planning at both local and global scales. Studies of observed biogeographic responses to 20th century climate change have principally examined effects related to ubiquitous increases in temperature - collectively termed a warming fingerprint. Although the importance of changes in other aspects of climate - particularly precipitation and water availability - is widely acknowledged from a theoretical standpoint and supported by paleontological evidence, we lack a practical understanding of how these changes interact with temperature to drive biogeographic responses. Further complicating matters, differences in life history and ecological attributes may lead species to respond differently to the same changes in climate. Here, we examine whether recent biogeographic patterns across California are consistent with a warming fingerprint. We describe how various components of climate have changed regionally in California during the 20th century and review empirical evidence of biogeographic responses to these changes, particularly elevational range shifts. Many responses to climate change do not appear to be consistent with a warming fingerprint, with downslope shifts in elevation being as common as upslope shifts across a number of taxa and many demographic and community responses being inconsistent with upslope shifts. We identify a number of potential direct and indirect mechanisms for these responses, including the influence of aspects of climate change other than temperature (e.g., the shifting seasonal balance of energy and water availability), differences in each taxon's sensitivity to climate change, trophic interactions, and land-use change. Finally, we highlight the need to move beyond a warming fingerprint in studies of biogeographic responses by considering a more multifaceted view of climate, emphasizing local-scale effects, and including a priori knowledge of relevant natural history for the taxa and regions under study
Attitudes and perceived social norms towards drug use among gay and bisexual men in Australia
Background: Gay and bisexual men (GBM) report distinctive patterns and contexts of drug use, yet little has been published about their attitudes towards drug use.
Objectives: We developed measures of attitudes and perceived social norms towards drug use, and examined covariates of more accepting attitudes and norms among GBM in Australia.
Methods: We analysed baseline data from the [removed for blinded review] study. This is an online prospective observational study of drug use among Australian GBM. We used principal components factor analysis to generate two attitudinal scales assessing “drug use for social and sexual enhancement” and “perceptions of drug risk”. A third perceived social norms scale examined “acceptability of drug use among gay friends”.
Results: Among 2,112 participants, 61% reported illicit drug use in the preceding 6 months. Stronger endorsement of drug use for social and sexual engagement and lower perceptions of drug risk were found among men who were more socially engaged with other gay men and reported regular drug use and drug use for sex. In multivariate analyses, all three scales were associated with recent drug use (any use in the previous six months), but only the drug use for social and sexual enhancement scale was associated with regular (at least monthly) use.
Conclusions: Drug use and sex are difficult to disentangle for some GBM, and health services and policies could benefit from a better understanding of attitudinal and normative factors associated with drug use in gay social networks, while recognising the role of pleasure in substance use
Laminar-turbulent boundary in plane Couette flow
We apply the iterated edge state tracking algorithm to study the boundary
between laminar and turbulent dynamics in plane Couette flow at Re=400.
Perturbations that are not strong enough to become fully turbulent nor weak
enough to relaminarize tend towards a hyperbolic coherent structure in state
space, termed the edge state, which seems to be unique up to obvious continuous
shift symmetries. The results reported here show that in cases where a fixed
point has only one unstable direction, as for the lower branch solution in in
plane Couette flow, the iterated edge tracking algorithm converges to this
state. They also show that choice of initial state is not critical, and that
essentially arbitrary initial conditions can be used to find the edge state.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figure
Analytical approach to viscous fingering in a cylindrical Hele-Shaw cell
We report analytical results for the development of the viscous fingering
instability in a cylindrical Hele-Shaw cell of radius a and thickness b. We
derive a generalized version of Darcy's law in such cylindrical background, and
find it recovers the usual Darcy's law for flow in flat, rectangular cells,
with corrections of higher order in b/a. We focus our interest on the influence
of cell's radius of curvature on the instability characteristics. Linear and
slightly nonlinear flow regimes are studied through a mode-coupling analysis.
Our analytical results reveal that linear growth rates and finger competition
are inhibited for increasingly larger radius of curvature. The absence of
tip-splitting events in cylindrical cells is also discussed.Comment: 14 pages, 3 ps figures, Revte
The Wide-Field Spatio-Spectral Interferometer: System Overview, Data Synthesis and Analysis
The Wide-field Imaging Interferometry Testbed (WIIT) is a double Fourier (DF) interferometer operating at optical wavelengths, and provides data that are highly representative of those from a space-based far-infrared interferometer like SPIRIT. We have used the testbed to observe both geometrically simple and astronomically representative test scenes. Here we present an overview of the astronomical importance of high angular resolution at the far infrared, followed by the description of the optical set-up of WIIT, including the source simulator CHIP (Calibrated Hyperspectral Image Projector). We describe our synthesis algorithms used in the reconstruction of the input test scenes via a simulation of the most recent measurements. The updated algorithms, which include instruments artifacts that allow the synthesis of DF experimental data, are presented and the most recent results analyzed
Recent Experiments Conducted with the Wide-Field Imaging Interferometry Testbed (WIIT)
The Wide-field Imaging Interferometry Testbed (WIIT) was developed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center to demonstrate and explore the practical limitations inherent in wide field-of-view double Fourier (spatio-spectral) interferometry. The testbed delivers high-quality interferometric data and is capable of observing spatially and spectrally complex hyperspectral test scenes. Although WIIT operates at visible wavelengths, by design the data are representative of those from a space-based far-infrared observatory. We used WIIT to observe a calibrated, independently characterized test scene of modest spatial and spectral complexity, and an astronomically realistic test scene of much greater spatial and spectral complexity. This paper describes the experimental setup, summarizes the performance of the testbed, and presents representative data
The Counterpart Principle of Analogical Support by Structural Similarity
We propose and investigate an Analogy Principle in the context of Unary Inductive Logic based on a notion of support by structural similarity which is often employed to motivate scientific conjectures
Conjunctions of Among Constraints
Many existing global constraints can be encoded as a conjunction of among
constraints. An among constraint holds if the number of the variables in its
scope whose value belongs to a prespecified set, which we call its range, is
within some given bounds. It is known that domain filtering algorithms can
benefit from reasoning about the interaction of among constraints so that
values can be filtered out taking into consideration several among constraints
simultaneously. The present pa- per embarks into a systematic investigation on
the circumstances under which it is possible to obtain efficient and complete
domain filtering algorithms for conjunctions of among constraints. We start by
observing that restrictions on both the scope and the range of the among
constraints are necessary to obtain meaningful results. Then, we derive a
domain flow-based filtering algorithm and present several applications. In
particular, it is shown that the algorithm unifies and generalizes several
previous existing results.Comment: 15 pages plus appendi
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