402 research outputs found

    Regularity of isoperimetric sets in ℝ² with density

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    We consider the isoperimetric problem in R2with density. We show that, if the density is C0,α, then the boundary of any isoperimetric set is of class C1,α3-2α. This improves the previously known regularity

    Visibility, perception and roundabout safety

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    In Italy, over the past fifteen years, modern, or second generation roundabouts have become very popular. In these roundabouts, entering vehicles must yield to vehicles already within the circle. This modern design provides for much higher capacity of operation. Although first implemented in the UK in the 1960s, it took twenty years for the second generation to begin to spread to other European countries. Between 1987 and 2002, in particular, Germany, France and Switzerland conducted research that led to standards techniques that, along with English ones, now comprise the major technical references. The causes of the delay in implementation are uncertain and the subject of much speculation. The United States has only recently begun implementation, as it was not until the 1998 version did a chapter on roundabouts appear in the Highway Capacity Manual (developed further in the 2000 edition). In Italy, the first standards were proposed for the 1993 New Road Code, but it was not until 2004 that the standards were passed through national legislation. However, these codes are approximate and inadequate, and lack elementary technical foundations (see for instance Art. 4.5 of D.M. 19/04/2006, no.1699). A quick calculation for 4 legs and 60 meters diameter is sufficient to demonstrate its failure and infeasibility. The design of a roundabout, like that of any other road element, should be based on principles of safety, and should be deployed in a systemic context that combines geometric characteristics to meet capacity requirements – the perception of road space is also important. When designing a roundabout, the engineer should consider simultaneously both safety factors and capacity. But in addition to using geometric standards, formulas and models, aspects of perception and visual appeal should be considered

    Testing for a large roundabout capacity model: experimental comparisons between Italy and Bahrain

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    It is well-known that the maximum traffic flow that a roundabout entry is able to accommodate depends on the amount of flow circulating in the roundabout carriageway that conflicts with the entry flow, that exiting from it and strictly related to the geometric characteristics of the roundabout. International guidelines deal with various capacity models requiring different input data and often leading to different results for the same roundabout entry. Recently, an exponential model has been developed for capacity estimates of multi-lane roundabout entries under different conditions of circulating flow and geometrical factors. Such a model was validated by Al-Madani and Saad [1] on data gathered from a sample of existing large roundabouts in Bahrain. Calculations made applying the developed model, or BAHR model, showed a reasonable fitting to computational data obtained from different international models, as German, French SETRA, American HCM, and so on. In this paper, we have collected traffic data during peaks or congested periods and measured geometry parameters on twelve large roundabouts located in Tuscany, Italy. The main goal was in view of testing if the BAHR model could be well suited or not to Italian context. The same previous methodology applied for the BAHR model was followed and found a new exponential entry capacity model, called TUSC. Statistical tests are performed and the paper ends with some comments about the obtained results

    Raised crosswalks efficacy on the lowering of vehicle speeds

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    A road hump, or speed hump, is a traffic calming device used to reduce vehicle speed and volume on residential streets. Road humps are placed across the road to slow traffic and are often installed in a series of several humps in order to prevent cars from speeding before and after the hump. Speed humps are used in locations where very low speeds are desired and reasonable. Speed humps are typically placed on residential roads and are not used on major roads, bus routes, or primary emergency response routes. In Italy, the road humps are often built in shape of raised crosswalks, or RCWs, and they are generally placed both close and between intersections. This paper deals with the analysis of observed data on a large sample of RCWs located in Tuscany, central Italy. Such data were referred both to geometry characteristics of the single raised crosswalk and recorded differences in vehicle speeds before and after it. Speed data were gathered using two automatic radar-recorders for each one of the sampled raised crosswalks. All the collected data were analyzed trough statistical tests in order to assess their homogeneity or not between different locations and various types of roads. Finally, we were able of making some conclusions and highlighting design aspects. On one side, RCWs with similar geometries and higher heights (about 15 cm) have similar effects on vehicle speeds lowering, regardless of local conditions (location, road geometry, driver behaviour, etc.). Moreover, raised crosswalks installed in a series have strong efficacy than the isolated ones. On the opposite side, the effects of raised crosswalks with smaller heights (less than 6 cm) show clearly a very low influence on vehicle speed variations

    The Development of Deep and Short Sea Shipping Container Routes Departing from Italian Ports

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    In this paper, an analysis of the development of Deep Sea Shipping (DSS) and Short Sea Shipping (SSS) container routes calling at Italian ports, is carried out. Data about DSS routes have been collected in the years: 2011, 2014, 2018 and 2019, while data about SSS services have been collected in 2010 and 2018. Italian ports have been classified as follows: Ligurian multi-port gateway cluster, which is formed by Leghorn, La Spezia, Genoa, Savona/Vado Ligure; Northern Adriatic multi-port gateway cluster, made up of Ancona, Ravenna, Venice and Trieste; Campanian multi-port gateway cluster, composed of Naples and Salerno; hub ports, i.e. Gioia Tauro, Cagliari (only until 2018) and Taranto (only until 2014). The most important gateway cluster, for both DSS and SSS services, is the Ligurian one which includes Genoa which is by far the major Italian container gateway port. Genoa has shown an almost constant increase in container traffic in the time period analyzed. Italian hub ports are also an important group, but they have registered a negative trend in the years under analysis. DSS routes, to Far East and the American Continent, usually call at the Ligurian ports and the hub port of Gioia Tauro. Northern Adriatic ports are crossed by only a few DSS routes, but they are crossed by a large number of SSS routes, especially feeder ones, with transshipment mainly in the hub ports of Gioia Tauro, Marsaxlokk, Piraeus and Port Said. The evolution of DSS services shows clearly the effects of naval gigantism phenomenon: the number of DSS services has decreased, but the total and, especially, the average DWT have increased. As regards SSS routes, also their frequencies have decreased, but their length and, in particular, the number of ports called, have increased: this choice is performed by container operators in order to increase the ships ’load factor’

    Integral estimates for transport densities

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    The integration-by-parts methods introduced in this paper improve upon the Lp estimates on transport densities given in the recent paper by L. De Pascale and A. Pratelli (Calc. Var. Partial Differential Equations 14 (2002) 249–274)

    Estimation of Gap Acceptance Parameters for HCM 2010 Roundabout Capacity Model Applications

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    This paper deals with the field data observation and successive application of estimation procedures in order to estimate follow-up headway and critical headway at roundabouts. Average follow-up and average critical headway are two critical parameters in the new roundabout capacity model presented in the 2010 edition of the Highway Capacity Manual (HCM). The HCM 2010 capacity model was developed as an exponential regression model with parameter estimates based on gap acceptance theory. Gap acceptance models are strongly affected by driver behaviour and local habits. Follow-up headways can be field measured, while critical headway cannot be obtained directly. The paper mainly aims to check if general suggested values are well-suited also for Italy or not. There have been numerous techniques developed for estimating critical headway. In order to perform a better check of a sample of experimentally observed values, three different procedures are chosen and applied. The first is a quite popular mathematical method based on maximum likelihood technique. The second is a statistical method based on the median of the observed sample distribution. The third is a graphical method known as Raff’s method. All these three methods require information about the accepted headway and the largest rejected headway for each driver. Therefore a sample of field data was recorded by digital camera and processed following the instructions suggested by NCHRP. The sample data of critical headway and follow-up headway are gathered in seven selected roundabouts located in Northern Tuscany (Italy). Our first obtained results indicate that the average critical headway is significantly lower than the values recommended by some international references. However, the average follow-up headway is only higher than that recommended for the State of California and it is lower than that recommended by all other international references. Finally, conclusions drawn along with insights for further research developments are suggested

    One world, one health, one virology of the mysterious labyrinth of Coronaviruses: the canine coronavirus affair

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    The described pictures underline the ability of CoVs of driving genetic evolution, to undergoes recombination, and to easy cross interspecies barriers. This potential high genetic recombination ability ensures the proliferation of new strains that may have selective advantages over parental genomes.9 In this aspect, the newly identified CCoV-Hupn-2018 should lead researchers to pay a special attention to the mechanisms of recombination among CoVs, in addition to the onset of variants as a result of mutations. Continuous monitoring of these viruses are required because (without saying as Cassandra…!!!) recombination observed in CCoVs may represent a dramatic warning for SARS-CoV-2

    The knotty biology of canine coronavirus: a worrying model of coronaviruses’ danger.

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    Severe clinical diseases associated to αCoronavirus (αCoV) infections were recently demonstrated for the first time in humans and a closely related but distinct canine CoV (CCoV) variant was identified in the nasopharyngeal swabs of children with pneumonia hospitalized in Malaysia, in 2017–2018. The complete genome sequence analysis demonstrated that the isolated strain, CCoV-HuPn-2018, was a novel canine-feline-like recombinant virus with a unique nucleoprotein. The occurrence of three human epidemics/pandemic caused by CoVs in the recent years and the detection of CCoV-HuPn-2018, raises questions about the ability of these viruses to overcome species barriers from their reservoirs jumping to humans. Interestingly, in this perspective, it is interesting to consider the report concerning new CCoV strains with a potential dual recombinant origin through partial S-gene exchange with porcine transmissible gastroenteritis virus (TGEV) identified in pups died with acute gastroenteritis in 2009. The significance of the ability of CCoVs to evolve is still unclear, but several questions arisen on the biology of these viruses, focusing important epidemiological outcomes in the field, in terms of both virus evolution and prophylaxis. The new CCoV-Hupn-2018 should lead researchers to pay more attention to the mechanisms of recombination among CoVs, rather than to the onset of variants as a result of mutations, suggesting a continuous monitoring of these viruses and in particular of SARS-CoV-

    Factors affecting the development of Bovine Respiratory Disease: a cross-sectional study in beef steers shipped from France to Italy

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    Bovine respiratory disease (BRD) is a complex, multifactorial syndrome and one of the major welfare and economical concerns for the cattle industry. This 1-year cross-sectional study was aimed at documenting the prevalence of BRD-related pathogens and clinical signs before and after a long journey and at identifying possible predisposition factors. Male Limousine beef steers (n = 169) traveling from France to Italy were health checked and sampled with Deep Nasopharyngeal Swabs (DNS) at loading (T0) and 4 days after arrival (T1). Real-time quantitative PCR was used to quantify the presence of bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV), bovine respiratory syncytial virus (BRSV), bovine alphaherpesvirus 1 (BoHV-1), bovine coronavirus (BCoV), bovine adenovirus (BAdV), bovine parainfluenza virus 3 (BPIV-3), Histophilus somni, Mannheimia haemolytica, Mycoplasma bovis, and Pasteurella multocida. Weather conditions at departure and arrival were recorded, and the travel conditions were taken from the travel documentation. At T0, even if no animals displayed clinical signs, some of them were already positive for one or more pathogens. At T1, the number of animals displaying clinical signs and positive for BCoV, BAdV, BRSV, H. somni, M. haemolytica, M. bovis, and P. multocida increased dramatically (p < 0.001). Transport also significantly increased co-infection passing from 16.0% at T0 to 82.8% at T1 (p < 0.001). An extra stop during the journey seemed to favor BRSV, M. haemolytica, and P. multocida (p < 0.05). Weather conditions, in particular sudden climate changes from departure to arrival and daily temperature variance, were found to be predisposing factors for many of the pathogens. The farm of arrival also played a role for BRSV, BAdV, and H. somni (p < 0.05). BCoV increased dramatically, but no associations were found confirming that it spreads easily during transport phases. Our findings increased our understanding of factors increasing the likelihood of BRD-related pathogens shedding and can be useful to minimize the incidence of BRD and to implement animal transport regulations
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