497 research outputs found
Collaborative Mapping of London Using Google Maps: The LondonProfiler
This paper begins by reviewing the ways in which the innovation of Google Maps has transformed our ability to reference and view geographically referenced data. We describe the ways in which the GMap Creator tool developed under the ESRC National Centre for E Social Science programme enables users to ‘mashup’ thematic choropleth maps using the Google API. We illustrate the application of GMap Creator using the example of www.londonprofiler.org, which makes it possible to view a range of health, education and other socioeconomic datasets against a backcloth of Google Maps data. Our conclusions address the ways in which Google Map mashups developed using GMap Creator facilitate online exploratory cartographic visualisation in a range of areas of policy concern
Spatial determinants of local government action on climate change: an analysis of local authorities in England
The engagement of UK local authorities is vital if national government is to meet its
climate change commitments. However, with no mandatory targets at local government
level, other drivers must explain engagement. Using a Geographic Information System,
this study compares the spatial distribution of action on climate change based on past
actions and stated intentions to a suite of relevant independent variables. The Action
Index created is among the first to quantify climate change engagement beyond a simple
binary measure and provides a useful comparative study to recent work in the US. The
Index enables investigation of both mitigation and adaptation, which show different
trends in relation to some variables. The study shows that action is strongest where the
voting habits of the local population suggest environmental concern and where
neighbouring local authorities are also engaging in action on climate change. Physical
vulnerability to the effects of climate change is a motivator for action only where the
dangers are obvious. Action is less likely where other resource intensive issues such as
crime and housing exist within a local authority area
Public Domain GIS, Mapping & Imaging Using Web-based Services
In this paper, we outline a series of related applications and a web service designed to enable non-expert users to develop online visualizations which are essentially map-based. In the last five years, public domain GIS (geographic information systems) software for map display and beyond has become available for non-expert users in the public domain, the best examples being the various products from Google such as Google Maps and Google Earth. We have devised various software to enable non-experts to take appropriate map data in standard formats and to transform them so that can be displayed by these software in a one stop action. The first system is called GMapCreator and we show how the software can be used to produce any number of map layers which can be overlaid on Google Maps, can be combined and toggled in combination, and whose transparency can be varied for a myriad of presentation purposes. We then evolve this into a form called ImageCutter which takes any large image and puts this into a Google Map so that the zoom and pan features of the software can be exploited. These software are now available through a site we call MapTube which is a server pointing to various maps created by GMapCreator which is a rudimentary archive of virtual map resources. Finally, we sketch how these software are being moved into 3D using the capabilities of Google Earth and Second Life to display geographic imagery
Free electron lifetime achievements in Liquid Argon Imaging TPC
A key feature for the success of the liquid Argon imaging TPC (LAr-TPC)
technology is the industrial purification against electro-negative impurities,
especially Oxygen and Nitrogen remnants, which have to be continuously kept at
an exceptionally low level by filtering and recirculating liquid Argon.
Improved purification techniques have been applied to a 120 liters LAr-TPC test
facility in the INFN-LNL laboratory. Through-going muon tracks have been used
to determine the free electron lifetime in liquid Argon against
electro-negative impurities. The short path length here observed (30 cm) is
compensated by the high accuracy in the observation of the specific ionization
of cosmic ray muons at sea level as a function of the drift distance. A free
electron lifetime of (21.4+7.3-4.3) ms, namely > 15.8 ms at 90 % C.L. has been
observed over several weeks under stable conditions, corresponding to a
residual Oxygen equivalent of about 15 ppt (part per trillion). At 500 V/cm,
the free electron speed is 1.5 m/ms. In a LAr-TPC a free electron lifetime in
excess of 15 ms corresponds for instance to an attenuation of less than 15 %
after a drift path of 5 m, opening the way to the operation of the LAr-TPC with
exceptionally long drift distances.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures; Accepted for publication in JINS
Thermal Conductivity of Isotopically Enriched 28Si Revisited
The thermal conductivity of isotopically enriched 28Si (enrichment better
than 99.9%) was redetermined independently in three laboratories by high
precision experiments on a total of 4 samples of different shape and degree of
isotope enrichment in the range from 5 to 300 K with particular emphasis on the
range near room temperature. The results obtained in the different laboratories
are in good agreement with each other. They indicate that at room temperature
the thermal conductivity of isotopically enriched 28Si exceeds the thermal
conductivity of Si with a natural, unmodified isotope mixture by 102 %.
This finding is in disagreement with an earlier report by Ruf et al. At
26 K the thermal conductivity of 28Si reaches a maximum. The maximum
value depends on sample shape and the degree of isotope enrichment and exceeds
the thermal conductivity of natural Si by a factor of 8 for a 99.982%
28Si enriched sample. The thermal conductivity of Si with natural isotope
composition is consistently found to be 3% lower than the values
recommended in the literature
A local trigger system for the large LAr-TPC detector
A special dedicated double-rebinning algorithm has been successfully developed in order to extract the physical hit signal from the TPC wires. This solution has been implemented on digital boards, allowing to realize a local trigger able to identify even localized low-energy small events
Measurement of a large electron lifetime in a liquid argon TPC
An unprecedentedly high value of electron lifetime in a liquid argon TPC, about 21ms, has been measured in a test facility at INFN-LNL. This results opens the way to the future development of TPCs with very long drift distances
Search for anomalies in the {\nu}e appearance from a {\nu}{\mu} beam
We report an updated result from the ICARUS experiment on the search for
{\nu}{\mu} ->{\nu}e anomalies with the CNGS beam, produced at CERN with an
average energy of 20 GeV and travelling 730 km to the Gran Sasso Laboratory.
The present analysis is based on a total sample of 1995 events of CNGS neutrino
interactions, which corresponds to an almost doubled sample with respect to the
previously published result. Four clear {\nu}e events have been visually
identified over the full sample, compared with an expectation of 6.4 +- 0.9
events from conventional sources. The result is compatible with the absence of
additional anomalous contributions. At 90% and 99% confidence levels the limits
to possible oscillated events are 3.7 and 8.3 respectively. The corresponding
limit to oscillation probability becomes consequently 3.4 x 10-3 and 7.6 x 10-3
respectively. The present result confirms, with an improved sensitivity, the
early result already published by the ICARUS collaboration
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