218,503 research outputs found
A high resolution spatiotemporal model for in-vehicle black carbon exposure : quantifying the in-vehicle exposure reduction due to the Euro 5 particulate matter standard legislation
Several studies have shown that a significant amount of daily air pollution exposure is inhaled during trips. In this study, car drivers assessed their own black carbon exposure under real-life conditions (223 h of data from 2013). The spatiotemporal exposure of the car drivers is modeled using a data science approach, referred to as microscopic land-use regression (mu LUR). In-vehicle exposure is highly dynamical and is strongly related to the local traffic dynamics. An extensive set of potential covariates was used to model the in-vehicle black carbon exposure in a temporal resolution of 10 s. Traffic was retrieved directly from traffic databases and indirectly by attributing the trips through a noise map as an alternative traffic source. Modeling by generalized additive models (GAM) shows non-linear effects for meteorology and diurnal traffic patterns. A fitted diurnal pattern explains indirectly the complex diurnal variability of the exposure due to the non-linear interaction between traffic density and distance to the preceding vehicles. Comparing the strength of direct traffic attribution and indirect noise map-based traffic attribution reveals the potential of noise maps as a proxy for traffic-related air pollution exposure. An external validation, based on a dataset gathered in 2010-2011, quantifies the exposure reduction inside the vehicles at 33% (mean) and 50% (median). The EU PM Euro 5 PM emission standard (in force since 2009) explains the largest part of the discrepancy between the measurement campaign in 2013 and the validation dataset. The mu LUR methodology provides a high resolution, route-sensitive, seasonal and meteorology-sensitive personal exposure estimate for epidemiologists and policy makers
Energy losses by gravitational radiation in inspiralling compact binaries to five halves post-Newtonian order
This paper derives the total power or energy loss rate generated in the form
of gravitational waves by an inspiralling compact binary system to the five
halves post-Newtonian (2.5PN) approximation of general relativity. Extending a
recently developed gravitational-wave generation formalism valid for arbitrary
(slowly-moving) systems, we compute the mass multipole moments of the system
and the relevant tails present in the wave zone to 2.5PN order. In the case of
two point-masses moving on a quasi-circular orbit, we find that the 2.5PN
contribution in the energy loss rate is entirely due to tails. Relying on an
energy balance argument we derive the laws of variation of the instantaneous
frequency and phase of the binary. The 2.5PN order in the accumulated phase is
significantly large, being grossly of the same order of magnitude as the
previous 2PN order, but opposite in sign. However finite mass effects at 2.5PN
order are small. The results of this paper should be useful when analyzing the
data from inspiralling compact binaries in future gravitational-wave detectors
like VIRGO and LIGO.Comment: 39 pages, version which includes the correction of an Erratum to be
published in Phys. Rev. D (2005
Guidelines for participatory noise sensing based on analysis of high quality mobile noise measurements
Noise based microscopic land-use regression model resolves the instantaneous personal exposure to Black Carbon
Spatiotemporal activity based and route sensitive air pollution indicators for epidemiologists
Quaternary global change: review and issues(Special issue in memory of Hugues Faure)
The French National Committee of INQUA, the IGCP Project n° 459 (Carbon Cycle and Hydrology in the Paleo Terrestrial Environments),the CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), the CCGM (Commission de la Carte Géologique du Monde), the IRD (Institut de Recherche pour le Développement), and the BRGM (Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières) have organized in June 2004 a special International Colloquium dedicated to the memory of Hugues Faure who passed away in May 2003. It was the occasion to make a review and to emphasize new results and issues on the different topics initiated by Hugues and his collaborators. It was also a chance for all his colleagues and friends to remember a rare human being and a great scientist, passionately involved in the observation and understanding of the planet, which he called “the real world”, and assuming his destiny up to the end. The Scientific committee of this colloquium has decided to publish a special issue of Global and Planetary Change with some selected papers presented during this colloquium. This GPC special issue includes some of the papers presented at this colloquium and some invited papers from scientific personalities who wished to contribute to this special volume. The general theme of the special publication in honour to Hugues Faure is the Quaternary and the Global Changes. It will focus on the global cycles and Quaternary climate (3 papers), sea-level fluctuations, tectonics and climate variations (3 papers), climate changes in terrestrial records (9 papers), and man, environment and global change (4 papers). A total of 20 contributions, including a foreword on Hugues Faure, are proposed by the participants of this colloquium
Flexibilities with regard to meeting EU regulatory objectives and requirements : Report on Belgium
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