235 research outputs found
Advanced SBAS-DInSAR technique for controlling large civil infrastructures: an application to the Genzano di Lucania dam
Monitoring surface deformation on dams is commonly carried out by in situ geodetic surveying, which is time consuming and characterized by some limitations in space coverage and frequency. More recently microwave satellite-based technologies, such as advanced-DInSAR (Differential Synthetic Aperture Radar Interferometry), have allowed the integration and improvement of the observation capabilities of ground-based methods thanks to their effectiveness in collecting displacement measurements on many non-destructive control points, corresponding to radar reflecting targets. The availability of such a large number of points of measurement, which are distributed along the whole structure and are characterized by millimetric accuracy on displacement rates, can be profitably adopted for the calibration of numerical models. These models are implemented to simulate the structural behaviour of a dam under conditions of stress thus improving the ability to maintain safety standards. In this work, after having analysed how advanced DInSAR can effectively enhance the results from traditional monitoring systems that provide comparable accuracy measurements on a limited number of points, an FEM model of the Genzano di Lucania earth dam is developed and calibrated. This work is concentrated on the advanced DInSAR technique referred to as Small BAseline Subset (SBAS) approach, benefiting from its capability to generate deformation time series at full spatial resolution and from multi-sensor SAR data, to measure the vertical consolidation displacement of the Genzano di Lucania earth dam
Sensors for deformation monitoring of large civil infrastructures
In the maintenance of large infrastructures such as dams, bridges, railways, underground structures (tunnels, mines) and others, monitoring of deformations plays a key role in maintaining the safety serviceability conditions and for mitigating any consequences due to ageing factors and possible structural failures. [...]
Nonlinearity Mitigation in WDM Systems: Models, Strategies, and Achievable Rates
After reviewing models and mitigation strategies for interchannel nonlinear
interference (NLI), we focus on the frequency-resolved logarithmic perturbation
model to study the coherence properties of NLI. Based on this study, we devise
an NLI mitigation strategy which exploits the synergic effect of phase and
polarization noise compensation (PPN) and subcarrier multiplexing with
symbol-rate optimization. This synergy persists even for high-order modulation
alphabets and Gaussian symbols. A particle method for the computation of the
resulting achievable information rate and spectral efficiency (SE) is presented
and employed to lower-bound the channel capacity. The dependence of the SE on
the link length, amplifier spacing, and presence or absence of inline
dispersion compensation is studied. Single-polarization and dual-polarization
scenarios with either independent or joint processing of the two polarizations
are considered. Numerical results show that, in links with ideal distributed
amplification, an SE gain of about 1 bit/s/Hz/polarization can be obtained (or,
in alternative, the system reach can be doubled at a given SE) with respect to
single-carrier systems without PPN mitigation. The gain is lower with lumped
amplification, increases with the number of spans, decreases with the span
length, and is further reduced by in-line dispersion compensation. For
instance, considering a dispersion-unmanaged link with lumped amplification and
an amplifier spacing of 60 km, the SE after 80 spans can be be increased from
4.5 to 4.8 bit/s/Hz/polarization, or the reach raised up to 100 spans (+25%)
for a fixed SE.Comment: Submitted to Journal of Lightwave Technolog
Digital signal processing for compensating fiber nonlinearities
Successful compensation of nonlinear distortions due to fiber Kerr nonlinearities relies on the availability of an accurate channel model. Some models obtained by approximate solutions of the nonlinear Schrödinger equation and the backpropagation method are taken into account. It turns out that backpropagation is not the optimal processing technique and in some cases is outperformed by simpler processing techniques
Stochastic Digital Backpropagation with Residual Memory Compensation
Stochastic digital backpropagation (SDBP) is an extension of digital
backpropagation (DBP) and is based on the maximum a posteriori principle. SDBP
takes into account noise from the optical amplifiers in addition to handling
deterministic linear and nonlinear impairments. The decisions in SDBP are taken
on a symbol-by-symbol (SBS) basis, ignoring any residual memory, which may be
present due to non-optimal processing in SDBP. In this paper, we extend SDBP to
account for memory between symbols. In particular, two different methods are
proposed: a Viterbi algorithm (VA) and a decision directed approach. Symbol
error rate (SER) for memory-based SDBP is significantly lower than the
previously proposed SBS-SDBP. For inline dispersion-managed links, the VA-SDBP
has up to 10 and 14 times lower SER than DBP for QPSK and 16-QAM, respectively.Comment: 7 pages, accepted to publication in 'Journal of Lightwave Technology
(JLT)
On the Use of Factor Graphs in Optical Communications
Factor graphs and message passing allow the near-automated development of algorithms in many engineering disciplines, including digital communications. This paper gives an overview of their possible use in optical communications
Digital sequence information and plant genetic resources: Global policy meets interoperability
The biomedical domain has shown that in silico analyses over vast data pools enhances the speed and scale of scientific innovation. This can hold true in agricultural research and guide similar multi-stakeholder action in service of global food security as well (Streich et al. Curr Opin Biotechnol 61:217â225. Retrieved from https://doi.org/10.1016/j.copbio.2020.01.010, 2020). However, entrenched research culture and data and standards governance issues to enable data interoperability and ease of reuse continue to be roadblocks in the agricultural research for development sector. Effective operationalization of the FAIR Data Principles towards Findable, Accessible, Interoperable, and Reusable data requires that agricultural researchers accept that their responsibilities in a digital age include the stewardship of data assets to assure long-term preservation, access and reuse. The development and adoption of common agricultural data standards are key to assuring good stewardship, but face several challenges, including limited awareness about standards compliance; lagging data science capacity; emphasis on data collection rather than reuse; and limited fund allocation for data and standards management. Community-based hurdles around the development and governance of standards and fostering their adoption also abound. This chapter discusses challenges and possible solutions to making FAIR agricultural data assets the norm rather than the exception to catalyze a much-needed revolution towards âtranslational agricultur
Geodetic and Remote-Sensing Sensors for Dam Deformation Monitoring
In recent years, the measurement of dam displacements has benefited from a great improvement of existing technology, which has allowed a higher degree of automation. This has led to data collection with an improved temporal and spatial resolution. Robotic total stations and GNSS (Global Navigation Satellite System) techniques, often in an integrated manner, may provide efficient solutions for measuring 3D displacements on precise locations on the outer surfaces of dams. On the other hand, remote-sensing techniques, such as terrestrial laser scanning, ground-based SAR (synthetic aperture radar) and satellite differential interferometric SAR offer the chance to extend the observed region to a large portion of a structure and its surrounding areas, integrating the information that is usually provided in a limited number of in-situ control points. The design and implementation of integrated monitoring systems have been revealed as a strategic solution to analyze different situations in a spatial and temporal context. Research devoted to the optimization of data processing tools has evolved with the aim of improving the accuracy and reliability of the measured deformations. The analysis of the observed data for the interpretation and prediction of dam deformations under external loads has been largely investigated on the basis of purely statistical or deterministic methods. The latter may integrate observation from geodetic, remote-sensing and geotechnical/structural sensors with mechanical models of the dam structure. In this paper, a review of the available technologies for dam deformation monitoring is provided, including those sensors that are already applied in routinary operations and some experimental solutions. The aim was to support people who are working in this field to have a complete view of existing solutions, as well as to understand future directions and trends
Terrestrial laser scanning survey in support of unstable slopes analysis. The case of Vulcano Island (Italy)
The capability to measure at distance dense cloud of 3D point has improved the relevance of geomatic techniques to support risk assessment analysis related to slope instability. This work focuses on quantitative analyses carried out to evaluate the effects of potential failures in the Vulcano Island (Italy). Terrestrial laser scanning was adopted to reconstruct the geometry of investigated slopes that is required for the implementation of numerical modeling adopted to simulate runout areas. Structural and morphological elements, which influenced past instabilities or may be linked to new events, were identified on surface models based on ground surveying. Terrestrial laser scanning was adopted to generate detailed 3D models of subvertical slopes allowing to characterize the distribution and orientation of the rock discontinuities that affect instability mechanism caused by critical geometry. Methods for obtaining and analyzing 3D topographic data and to implement simulation analyses contributing to hazard and risk assessment are discussed for two case studies (Forgia Vecchia slope and Lentia rock walls)
Towards the Development, Maintenance, and Standardized Phenotypic Characterization of SingleâSeedâDescent Genetic Resources for Common Bean
The optimal use of legume genetic resources represents a key prerequisite for coping with current agriculture-related societal challenges, including conservation of agrobiodiversity, agricultural sustainability, food security, and human health. Among legumes, the common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris) is the most economically important for human consumption, and its evolutionary trajectories as a species have been crucial to determining the structure and level of its present and available genetic diversity. Genomic advances are considerably enhancing the characterization and assessment of important genetic variants. For this purpose, the development and availability of, and access to, well-described and efficiently managed genetic resource collections that comprise pure lines derived by single-seed-descent cycles will be paramount for the use of the reservoir of common bean variability and for the advanced breeding of legume crops. This is one of the main aims of the new and challenging European project INCREASE, which is the implementation of Intelligent Collections with appropriate
standardized protocols that must be characterized, maintained, and made
available, along with the related data, to users such as breeders and researchers
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