706 research outputs found
Procesos erosivos (tasas de erosión) en los deltas mediterráneos andaluces: herramientas de análisis espacial (DSAS) y evolución temporal (servicios OGC)
En la presente comunicación se pretende evaluar y cuantificar la erosión de las playas como proceso
continuo a corto, medio y largo plazo en los principales deltas de la fachada mediterránea andaluza,
así como observar en qué medida la actividad antrópica ha podido alterar sus condiciones naturales.
Metodológicamente, se ha realizado una digitalización precisa de la línea de costa a escala 1:2.500
para los años 1956, 1979, 1984, 2001 y 2009 mediante el uso de los servicios OGC disponibles a
través de la Infraestructura de Datos Espaciales de Andalucía. Los criterios de digitalización han
seguido una estricta base ecológica para la identificación del indicador de línea de costa, a diferencia
de otras líneas oficiales, lo que hace que cada tramo costero sea identificado por un proceso distinto,
diferenciándose procedimientos independientes para las formaciones sedimentarias expuestas, las
costas rocosas o las infraestructuras antrópicas del frente litoral. Los datos digitalizados se han
adaptado al modelo de datos presentado e integrado en el gestor de datos Postgres/PostGis. Las
tasas de evolución de los distintos tramos costeros se han obtenido mediante transectos con un
espaciado de 50 metros utilizando el programa DSAS integrado en ArcGis 10. El análisis diacrónico
que permite la alta disponibilidad de datos de referencia a través de servicios OGC ha permitido el
seguimiento de los deltas y de la influencia de la actividad humana en él.Beach erosion evaluation and quantification as a short, medium and long-term process in several
Andalusian Mediterranean deltas is presented in this paper.From the point of view of the methodology,
a precise shoreline digitalization at a scale of 1:2.500 for years 1956, 1979, 1984, 2001 and 2009 has
been performed by using OGC services, from the Andalusian Spatial Data Infrastructure. Digitalization
criteria were supported by a strict ecological basis for shoreline rate identification, in such a way that
each shoreline segment is identified by a different process, according to its nature: exposed
sedimentary formations, rocky coasts or anthropic infrastructures on the coast. Digitalized data has
been adapted to the data model presented and integrated in Postgres/PostGis database manager.
Each shoreline segment evolution rates have been obtained by 50 meters spacing transects, using
DSAS software integrated into ArcGis 10. The diachronic analysis, allowed by the availability of
reference data through OGC services, has made possible monitoring the evolution of deltas and the
influence of human action on it.Junta de Andalucía RNM-6207Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad CSO2010-1580
Near IR diffraction-limited integral-field SINFONI spectroscopy of the Circinus galaxy
Using the adaptive optics assisted near infrared integral field spectrometer
SINFONI on the VLT, we have obtained observations of the Circinus galaxy on
parsec scales. The morphologies of the H_2(1-0)S(1) 2.12um and Br_gamma 2.17um
emission lines are only slightly different, but their velocity maps are similar
and show a gradient along the major axis of the galaxy, consistent with
rotation.Since V_rot/sigma is approximately 1 suggests that random motions are
also important, it is likely that the lines arise in a rotating spheroid or
thickened disk around the AGN. Comparing the Br_gamma flux to the stellar
continuum indicates that the star formation in this region began almost 10^8 yr
ago. We also detect the [SiVI] 1.96um,[AlIX] 2.04um and [CaVIII] 2.32um coronal
lines. In all cases we observe a broad blue wing, indicating the presence of
two or more components in the coronal line region. A correlation between the
ionisation potential and the asymmetry of the profiles was found for these high
excitation species.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Submitted to the Proceedings of the IFS Workshop,
Jul 4-8 2005, Durham, Englan
PMCTrack: Delivering performance monitoring counter support to the OS scheduler
Hardware performance monitoring counters (PMCs) have proven effective in characterizing application performance. Because PMCs can only be accessed directly at the OS privilege level, kernellevel tools must be developed to enable the end-user and userspace programs to access PMCs. A large body of work has demonstrated that the OS can perform effective runtime optimizations in multicore systems by leveraging performance-counter data. Special attention has been paid to optimizations in the OS scheduler. While existing performance monitoring tools greatly simplify the collection of PMC application data from userspace, they do not provide an architecture-agnostic kernel-level mechanism that is capable of exposing high-level PMC metrics to OS components, such as the scheduler. As a result, the implementation of PMC-based OS scheduling schemes is typically tied to specific processor models. To address this shortcoming we present PMCTrack, a novel tool for the Linux kernel that provides a simple architecture-independent mechanism that makes it possible for the OS scheduler to access per-thread PMC data. Despite being an OSoriented tool, PMCTrack still allows the gathering of monitoring data from userspace, enabling kernel developers to carry out the necessary offline analysis and debugging to assist them during the scheduler design process. In addition, the tool provides both the OS and the user-space PMCTrack components with other insightful metrics available in modern processors and which are not directly exposed as PMCs, such as cache occupancy or energy consumption. This information is also of great value when it comes to analyzing the potential benefits of novel scheduling policies on real systems. In this paper, we analyze different case studies that demonstrate the flexibility, simplicity and powerful features of PMCTrack.Facultad de InformáticaInstituto de Investigación en Informátic
PMCTrack: Delivering performance monitoring counter support to the OS scheduler
Hardware performance monitoring counters (PMCs) have proven effective in characterizing application performance. Because PMCs can only be accessed directly at the OS privilege level, kernellevel tools must be developed to enable the end-user and userspace programs to access PMCs. A large body of work has demonstrated that the OS can perform effective runtime optimizations in multicore systems by leveraging performance-counter data. Special attention has been paid to optimizations in the OS scheduler. While existing performance monitoring tools greatly simplify the collection of PMC application data from userspace, they do not provide an architecture-agnostic kernel-level mechanism that is capable of exposing high-level PMC metrics to OS components, such as the scheduler. As a result, the implementation of PMC-based OS scheduling schemes is typically tied to specific processor models. To address this shortcoming we present PMCTrack, a novel tool for the Linux kernel that provides a simple architecture-independent mechanism that makes it possible for the OS scheduler to access per-thread PMC data. Despite being an OSoriented tool, PMCTrack still allows the gathering of monitoring data from userspace, enabling kernel developers to carry out the necessary offline analysis and debugging to assist them during the scheduler design process. In addition, the tool provides both the OS and the user-space PMCTrack components with other insightful metrics available in modern processors and which are not directly exposed as PMCs, such as cache occupancy or energy consumption. This information is also of great value when it comes to analyzing the potential benefits of novel scheduling policies on real systems. In this paper, we analyze different case studies that demonstrate the flexibility, simplicity and powerful features of PMCTrack.Facultad de InformáticaInstituto de Investigación en Informátic
Differences of the game between the football Spanish team and its rivals.
El objeto de este estudio, analizando la acción de juego en fútbol, describe el uso de los contextos de interacción que la selección española de fútbol y sus rivales hicieron en los campeonatos internacionales. Para ello, 13 partidos fueron observados y codificados (seis de la Eurocopa 2008 y siete del Mundial 2010) gracias a un sistema taxonómico ad hoc previamente definido. Los datos fueron registrados usando un software específico. Después, coordenadas polares fueron desarrolladas usando sólo como conductas criterio los contextos de interacción. Los resultados obtenidos describen que España y sus oponentes no hicieron el mismo uso del espacio de juego en sus partidos (más ofensivo para los primeros), mostrando la dimensión diacrónica de los eventos y combinando las perspectivas prospectiva y retrospectiva. Esto nos permite saber el componente estratégico del uso de los contextos de interacción hechos por los equipos en la competición y optimizar programas de entrenamiento específicos.Este estudio es parte del proyecto titulado Avances Tecnológicos y Metodológicos en la Automatización de Estudios observacionales en deporte, financiado por Dirección General de Investigación de España, Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (PSI2008-01179) en el período 2008-2011. No existen conflictos de intereses para esta investigación
Feasibility Study of Freeze Recovery Options in Parabolic Trough Collector Plants Working with Molten Salt as Heat Transfer Fluid
Parabolic trough collector (PTC) technology is currently the most mature solar technology,
which has led to the accumulation of relevant operational experience. The overall performance and
e ciency of these plants depends on several components, and the heat transfer fluid (HTF) is one
of the most important ones. Using molten salts as HTFs has the advantage of being able to work at
higher temperatures, but it also has the disadvantage of the potential freezing of the HTF in pipes
and components. This paper models and evaluates two methods of freeze recovery, which is needed
for this HTF system design: Heat tracing in pipes and components, and impedance melting in the
solar field. The model is used to compare the parasitic consumption in three molten salts mixtures,
namely Solar Salt, HiTec, and HiTec XL, and the feasibility of this system in a freezing event. After
the investigation of each of these subsystems, it was concluded that freeze recovery for a molten salt
plant is possible.Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades CDTI ITC-2011106Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades RTI2018-093849-B-C3
PMCTrack: Delivering performance monitoring counter support to the OS scheduler
Hardware performance monitoring counters (PMCs) have proven effective in characterizing application performance. Because PMCs can only be accessed directly at the OS privilege level, kernellevel tools must be developed to enable the end-user and userspace programs to access PMCs. A large body of work has demonstrated that the OS can perform effective runtime optimizations in multicore systems by leveraging performance-counter data. Special attention has been paid to optimizations in the OS scheduler. While existing performance monitoring tools greatly simplify the collection of PMC application data from userspace, they do not provide an architecture-agnostic kernel-level mechanism that is capable of exposing high-level PMC metrics to OS components, such as the scheduler. As a result, the implementation of PMC-based OS scheduling schemes is typically tied to specific processor models. To address this shortcoming we present PMCTrack, a novel tool for the Linux kernel that provides a simple architecture-independent mechanism that makes it possible for the OS scheduler to access per-thread PMC data. Despite being an OSoriented tool, PMCTrack still allows the gathering of monitoring data from userspace, enabling kernel developers to carry out the necessary offline analysis and debugging to assist them during the scheduler design process. In addition, the tool provides both the OS and the user-space PMCTrack components with other insightful metrics available in modern processors and which are not directly exposed as PMCs, such as cache occupancy or energy consumption. This information is also of great value when it comes to analyzing the potential benefits of novel scheduling policies on real systems. In this paper, we analyze different case studies that demonstrate the flexibility, simplicity and powerful features of PMCTrack.Facultad de InformáticaInstituto de Investigación en Informátic
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