1,677 research outputs found
Applying uncertainty considerations to energy conservation equations
When applying computer simulation tools in practice uncertainties abound, for example in material properties and boundary conditions. To facilitate the quantification of the effects of uncertainties, the differential, factorial and Monte Carlo methods have been implemented within a simulation tool, ESP-r. These methods require multiple simulations to extract statistical measures of model uncertainty. An alternative approach is to embed uncertainty considerations within the simulation tool's algorithms. The principle advantages of this approach are that the uncertainty is quantified at all times and therefore requires only a single simulation. Coupled with this, it is possible to take control action based on the prevailing effects of uncertainties. This paper details the mathematical techniques required to integrate uncertainty considerations within the energy conservation equations when applied to the simulation of buildings. A comparison is made between the use of this novel approach and traditional mechanisms of assessing uncertainty
A computational method for the coupled solution of reactionâdiffusion equations on evolving domains and manifolds: application to a model of cell migration and chemotaxis
In this paper, we devise a moving mesh finite element method for the approximate solution of coupled bulkâsurface reactionâdiffusion equations on an evolving two dimensional domain. Fundamental to the success of the method is the robust generation of bulk and surface meshes. For this purpose, we use a novel moving mesh partial differential equation (MMPDE) approach. The developed method is applied to model problems with known analytical solutions; these experiments indicate second-order spatial and temporal accuracy. Coupled bulkâsurface problems occur frequently in many areas; in particular, in the modelling of eukaryotic cell migration and chemotaxis. We apply the method to a model of the two-way interaction of a migrating cell in a chemotactic field, where the bulk region corresponds to the extracellular region and the surface to the cell membrane
A review of landscape rehabilitation frameworks in ecosystem engineering for mine closure
Mining causes changes to the environment and rehabilitation is necessary at mine closure. There is a lack of appropriate frameworks for mine site rehabilitation. In most cases, restoring the mine to previous conditions
is challenging. Alternatively, mining companies can engineer ecosystems to suit new site conditions and aim for a self-sustaining and resilient ecosystem. In ecosystem design there should be consideration of the four key dimensions of any ecosystem; landscape, function, structure and composition (LFSC). Alcoaâs Bauxite mines and Barrick (Cowal) Limitedâs Gold Mine have considered LFSC in their rehabilitation practices. From this, a framework based on LFSC is proposed as a means of planning, undertaking and monitoring
mine rehabilitation, which together aim for a self-sustaining and resilient ecosystem. Elements of this framework are being utilised in the industry, and are supported by research. The framework could be used
as an industry standard, utilised by regulatory bodies and potentially used in conjunction with other models and in other rehabilitation environments
Online Forum Thread Retrieval using Pseudo Cluster Selection and Voting Techniques
Online forums facilitate knowledge seeking and sharing on the Web. However,
the shared knowledge is not fully utilized due to information overload. Thread
retrieval is one method to overcome information overload. In this paper, we
propose a model that combines two existing approaches: the Pseudo Cluster
Selection and the Voting Techniques. In both, a retrieval system first scores a
list of messages and then ranks threads by aggregating their scored messages.
They differ on what and how to aggregate. The pseudo cluster selection focuses
on input, while voting techniques focus on the aggregation method. Our combined
models focus on the input and the aggregation methods. The result shows that
some combined models are statistically superior to baseline methods.Comment: The original publication is available at
http://www.springerlink.com/. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
arXiv:1212.533
Further developments in the conflation of CFD and building simulation
To provide practitioners with the means to tackle problems related to poor indoor environments, building simulation and computational fluid dynamics can usefully be integrated within a single computational framework. This paper describes the outcomes from a research project sponsored by the European Commission, which furthered the CFD modelling aspects of the ESP-r system. The paper summarises the form of the CFD model and describes the method used to integrate the thermal and flow domains
A computational method for the coupled solution of reaction-diffusion equations on evolving domains and manifolds : application to a model of cell migration and chemotaxis
In this paper, we devise a moving mesh finite element method for the approximate solution of coupled bulk-surface reaction-diffusion equations on an evolving two dimensional domain. Fundamental to the success of the method is the robust generation of bulk and surface meshes. For this purpose, we use a novel moving mesh partial differential equation (MMPDE) approach. The developed method is applied to model problems with known analytical solutions; these experiments indicate second-order spatial and temporal accuracy. Coupled bulk-surface problems occur frequently in many areas; in particular, in the modelling of eukaryotic cell migration and chemotaxis. We apply the method to a model of the two-way interaction of a migrating cell in a chemotactic field, where the bulk region corresponds to the extracellular region and the surface to the cell membrane
Experimental and numerical study of local mean age of air
This paper presents the results from the experimental and numerical study of a room with mixing ventilation, focused on the local mean age of air (LMA). The measurements were performed using the tracer gas concentration decay method. The numerical predictions were obtained from the computational fluid dynamics (CFD) module of the latest version of the ESP-r software
Two-Dimensional Vortex Lattice Melting
We report on a Monte-Carlo study of two-dimensional Ginzburg-Landau
superconductors in a magnetic field which finds clear evidence for a
first-order phase transition characterized by broken translational symmetry of
the superfluid density. A key aspect of our study is the introduction of a
quantity proportional to the Fourier transform of the superfluid density which
can be sampled efficiently in Landau gauge Monte-Carlo simulations and which
satisfies a useful sum rule. We estimate the latent heat per vortex of the
melting transition to be where is the melting
temperature.Comment: 10 pages (4 figures available on request), RevTex 3.0, IUCM93-00
Living on the edge: Exploring the role of coastal refugia in the Alexander Archipelago of Alaska
Although islands are of longâstanding interest to biologists, only a handful of studies have investigated the role of climatic history in shaping evolutionary diversification in highâlatitude archipelagos. In this study of the Alexander Archipelago (AA) of Southeast Alaska, we address the impact of glacial cycles on geographic genetic structure for three mammals coâdistributed along the North Pacific Coast. We examined variation in mitochondrial and nuclear loci for longâtailed voles (Microtus longicaudus), northwestern deermice (Peromyscus keeni), and dusky shrews (Sorex monticola), and then tested hypotheses derived from Species Distribution Models, reconstructions of paleoshorelines, and island area and isolation. In all three species, we identified paleoendemic clades that likely originated in coastal refugia, a finding consistent with other paleoendemic lineages identified in the region such as ermine. Although there is spatial concordance at the regional level for endemism, finer scale spatial and temporal patterns are less clearly defined. Demographic expansion across the region for these distinctive clades is also evident and highlights the dynamic history of Late Quaternary contraction and expansion that characterizes highâlatitude species
Correlations, compressibility, and capacitance in double-quantum-well systems in the quantum Hall regime
In the quantum Hall regime, electronic correlations in double-layer
two-dimensional electron systems are strong because the kinetic energy is
quenched by Landau quantization. In this article we point out that these
correlations are reflected in the way the partitioning of charge between the
two-layers responds to a bias potential. We report on illustrative calculations
based on an unrestricted Hartree-Fock approximation which allows for
spontaneous inter-layer phase coherence. The possibility of studying
inter-layer correlations by capacitive coupling to separately contacted
two-dimensional layers is discussed in detail.Comment: RevTex style, 21 pages, 6 postscript figures in a separate file;
Phys. Rev. B (in press
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