26,934 research outputs found
Reverse engineering in construction
Recently a great deal of research into construction IT has been completed, and this is ongoing to improve efficiency and quality in the construction sector. The new innovation of 3D laser scanning is aimed at being used to improve the efficiency and quality of construction projects, such as maintenance of buildings or group of buildings that are going to be renovated for new services.
The 3D laser scanner will be integrated with other VR tools such as GIS solutions and workbench for visualisation, analysis and interaction with a building VR model. An integration strategy is proposed for an Ordnance Survey map of the area and 3D model created by means of the laser scanner. The integrated model will then be transferred to the VR workbench in order to visualise, interact and analyse the interested buildings on purpose
Interoperable services based on activity monitoring in ambient assisted living environments
Ambient Assisted Living (AAL) is considered as the main technological solution that will enable the aged and people in recovery to maintain their independence and a consequent high quality of life for a longer period of time than would otherwise be the case. This goal is achieved by monitoring humanâs activities and deploying the appropriate collection of services to set environmental features and satisfy user preferences in a given context. However, both human monitoring and services deployment are particularly hard to accomplish due to the uncertainty and ambiguity characterising human actions, and heterogeneity of hardware devices composed in an AAL system. This research addresses both the aforementioned challenges by introducing 1) an innovative system, based on Self Organising Feature Map (SOFM), for automatically classifying the resting location of a moving object in an indoor environment and 2) a strategy able to generate context-aware based Fuzzy Markup Language (FML) services in order to maximize the usersâ comfort and hardware interoperability level. The overall system runs on a distributed embedded platform with a specialised ceiling- mounted video sensor for intelligent activity monitoring. The system has the ability to learn resting locations, to measure overall activity levels, to detect specific events such as potential falls and to deploy the right sequence of fuzzy services modelled through FML for supporting people in that particular context. Experimental results show less than 20% classification error in monitoring human activities and providing the right set of services, showing the robustness of our approach over others in literature with minimal power consumption
Nonlinear surface waves on the plasma-vacuum interface
In this paper we study the propagation of weakly nonlinear surface waves on a
plasma-vacuum interface. In the plasma region we consider the equations of
incompressible magnetohydrodynamics, while in vacuum the magnetic and electric
fields are governed by the Maxwell equations. A surface wave propagate along
the plasma-vacuum interface, when it is linearly weakly stable.
Following the approach of Ali and Hunter, we measure the amplitude of the
surface wave by the normalized displacement of the interface in a reference
frame moving with the linearized phase velocity of the wave, and obtain that it
satisfies an asymptotic nonlocal, Hamiltonian evolution equation. We show the
local-in-time existence of smooth solutions to the Cauchy problem for the
amplitude equation in noncanonical variables, and we derive a blow up
criterion.Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:1305.5327 by other author
New light on the âDrummer of Tedworthâ: conflicting narratives of witchcraft in Restoration England
This paper presents a definitive text of hitherto little-known early documents concerning âThe Drummer of Tedworthâ, a poltergeist case that occurred in 1662-3 and became famous not least due to its promotion by Joseph Glanvill in his demonological work, Saducismus Triumphatus. On the basis of these and other sources, it is shown how responses to the events at Tedworth evolved from anxious piety on the part of their victim, John Mompesson, to confident apologetic by Glanvill, before they were further affected by the emergence of articulate scepticism about the case
Bright Ultraviolet Regions and Star Formation Characteristics in Nearby Dwarf Galaxies
We compare star formation in the inner and outer disks of 11 dwarf Irregular
galaxies (dIm) within 3.6 Mpc. The regions are identified on GALEX near-UV
images, and modeled with UV, optical, and near-IR colors to determine masses
and ages. A few galaxies have made 10^5-10^6 Msun complexes in a starburst
phase, while others have not formed clusters in the last 50 Myrs. The maximum
region mass correlates with the number of regions as expected from the
size-of-sample effect. We find no radial gradients in region masses and ages,
even beyond the realm of Halpha emission, although there is an exponential
decrease in the luminosity density and number density of the regions with
radius. Halpha is apparently lacking in the outer parts only because nebular
emission around massive stars is too faint to see. The outermost regions for
the 5 galaxies with HI data formed at average gas surface densities of 1.9-5.9
Msun/pc2. These low average densities imply either that local gas densities are
high or sub-threshold star formation is possible. The distribution of regions
on a log Mass - log age plot is is usually uniform along log age for equal
intervals of log Mass. This uniformity results from either an individual region
mass that varies as 1/age or a region disruption probability that varies as
1/age. A correlation between fading-corrected surface brightness and age
suggests the former.Comment: Astronomical Journal, in press for November 2009. 34 pages, 18
figures, 5 table
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