5,968 research outputs found
Heat metering: socio-technical challenges in district-heated social housing
Individual heat metering and charging (IMC) are seen as promising methods to reduce domestic heating and hot water use through the provision of financial incentives. The heat consumption measured by meters is influenced by both the dwelling characteristics and the behaviour of the occupant, but heating charges would ideally relate to occupant behaviour only. This dilemma can be especially relevant under two circumstances: if the thermal performance of the dwelling is poor and/or if heating costs represent a substantial part of the occupants’ income, i.e. in social housing. The case of a district-heated council block in London is presented where the installation of individual heat meters was planned in 2010 but had to be suspended due to concerns about implications for occupant heating costs in light of the thermal performance of the building. It illustrates a technically and socially complex environment where fairness in allocating heating costs is an important concern. The case also shows how lack of funding or other issues on the infrastructure side can hinder behaviour-orientated measures such as IMC. A holistic energy conservation strategy addressing both physical building properties and occupant behaviour is therefore essential and should be supported by policy
Structure and variability of earth's atmosphere Final report
Structure and density variations of earth atmosphere associated with solar flu
Multivariate regression analysis of atmospheric density in the region 30 to 110 km
Multivariate regression analysis of atmospheric density in region 30 to 100 k
Analysis of several relations among atmospheric statistics
Statistical equation relating mean values of pressure, temperature, and density with correction term proportional to covariance between density and temperatur
Global Classical Solutions of the Boltzmann Equation with Long-Range Interactions and Soft Potentials
In this work we prove global stability for the Boltzmann equation (1872) with
the physical collision kernels derived by Maxwell in 1866 for the full range of
inverse power intermolecular potentials, with . This
completes the work which we began in (arXiv:0912.0888v1). We more generally
cover collision kernels with parameters and satisfying
in arbitrary dimensions
with . Moreover, we prove rapid convergence as predicted by the
Boltzmann H-Theorem. When , we have exponential time decay
to the Maxwellian equilibrium states. When , our solutions
decay polynomially fast in time with any rate. These results are constructive.
Additionally, we prove sharp constructive upper and lower bounds for the
linearized collision operator in terms of a geometric fractional Sobolev norm;
we thus observe that a spectral gap exists only when , as
conjectured in Mouhot-Strain (2007).Comment: This file has not changed, but this work has been combined with
(arXiv:0912.0888v1), simplified and extended into a new preprint, please see
the updated version: arXiv:1011.5441v
Range and structure of ambient density from 30 to 120 km altitude
Range and structure of atmospheric density from 30 to 120 km - analysis of statistical models and deviations from U.S. standard and Patrick reference atmosphere
Developing processing techniques for Skylab data
The author has identified the following significant results. The effects of misregistration and the scan-line-straightening algorithm on multispectral data were found to be: (1) there is greatly increased misregistration in scan-line-straightening data over conic data; (2) scanner caused misregistration between any pairs of channels may not be corrected for in scan-line-straightened data; and (3) this data will have few pure field center pixels than will conic data. A program SIMSIG was developed implementing the signature simulation model. Data processing stages of the experiment were carried out, and an analysis was made of the effects of spatial misregistration on field center classification accuracy. Fifteen signatures originally used for classifying the data were analyzed, showing the following breakdown: corn (4 signatures), trees (2), brush (1), grasses, weeds, etc. (5), bare soil (1), soybeans (1), and alfalfa (1)
Developing processing techniques for Skylab data
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Developing processing techniques for Skylab data
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
Developing processing techniques for Skylab data
There are no author-identified significant results in this report
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