820 research outputs found
A study of the interannual variability of ECMWF surface re-analysisis meteorological fields over the Mediterranean basin for the period 1979-1993
The analysis of the ECMWF re-analysis surface meteorological fields (wind velocity, air temperature, relative humidity and cloud cover) is conducted on the Mediterranean basin and in its four small areas, mainly focusing on the interannual fluctuations of these data. This analysis (times series of surface integrals and EOF) shows an outstanding interannual signal in all data. In general, sporadic anomalous events in wind speed can occur during the winter months, while those in air temperature can occur during the summer months. Then, by comparing to
COADS, a general underestimation of the wind speed and a good agreement in the air temperature are found
A test of the coevolution theory of autumn colours: colour preference of Rhopalosiphum padi on Prunus padus
According to the coevolution theory of autumn colours, the bright colours of trees evolved as a warning signal towards parasites colonizing the plant in autumn. We monitored colonization of the aphid Rhopalosiphum padi on individual tress of Prunus padus in autumn and observed a strong preference of aphids for trees with green leaves. This is the first direct observation of a key assumption of the theory, that parasites avoid bright colours. Moreover our observations, compared with previous data gathered on the same species, suggest that aphids colonizing trees with green leaves develop better in spring than aphids colonizing trees with bright autumn colours, which is consistent with the second main assumption of the coevolution theory
Wave simulation for the design of an innovative quay wall: the case of Vlorë Harbour
Sea states and environmental conditions are basic data for the
design of marine structures. Hindcasted wave data have been applied here
with the aim of identifying the proper design conditions for an innovative
quay wall concept.
In this paper, the results of a computational fluid dynamics model are used to
optimise the new absorbing quay wall of Vlorë Harbour (Republic of
Albania) and define the design loads under extreme wave
conditions. The design wave states at the harbour entrance have been
estimated analysing 31Â years of hindcasted wave data simulated through the
application of WaveWatch III. Due to the particular geography and topography
of the Bay of Vlorë, wave conditions generated from the north-west are
transferred to the harbour entrance with the application of a 2-D spectral wave
module, whereas southern wave states, which are also the most critical for
the port structures, are defined by means of a wave generation model,
according to the available wind measurements. Finally, the identified extreme
events have been used, through the NewWave approach, as boundary conditions
for the numerical analysis of the interaction between the quay wall and the
extreme events. The results show that the proposed method, based on
numerical modelling at different scales from macro to meso and to micro,
allows for the identification of the best site-specific solutions, also for a
location devoid of any wave measurement. In this light, the objectives of
the paper are two-fold. First, they show the application of sea condition
estimations through the use of wave hindcasted data in order to properly
define the design wave conditions for a new harbour structure. Second, they
present a new approach for investigating an innovative absorbing quay wall based
on CFD modelling and the NewWave theory
Stable Heterogeneity for the Production of Diffusible Factors in Cell Populations
The production of diffusible molecules that promote survival and growth is common in bacterial and eukaryotic cell populations, and can be considered a form of cooperation between cells. While evolutionary game theory shows that producers and non-producers can coexist in well-mixed populations, there is no consensus on the possibility of a stable polymorphism in spatially structured populations where the effect of the diffusible molecule extends beyond one-step neighbours. I study the dynamics of biological public goods using an evolutionary game on a lattice, taking into account two assumptions that have not been considered simultaneously in existing models: that the benefit of the diffusible molecule is a non-linear function of its concentration, and that the molecule diffuses according to a decreasing gradient. Stable coexistence of producers and non-producers is observed when the benefit of the molecule is a sigmoid function of its concentration, while strictly diminishing returns lead to coexistence only for very specific parameters and linear benefits never lead to coexistence. The shape of the diffusion gradient is largely irrelevant and can be approximated by a step function. Since the effect of a biological molecule is generally a sigmoid function of its concentration (as described by the Hill equation), linear benefits or strictly diminishing returns are not an appropriate approximations for the study of biological public goods. A stable polymorphism of producers and non-producers is in line with the predictions of evolutionary game theory and likely to be common in cell populations
The Vehicle Routing Problem with Divisible Deliveries and Pickups
The vehicle routing problem with divisible deliveries and pickups is a new and interesting model within
reverse logistics. Each customer may have a pickup and delivery demand that have to be served with
capacitated vehicles. The pickup and the delivery quantities may be served, if beneficial, in two separate visits.
The model is placed in the context of other delivery and pickup problems and formulated as a mixed-integer
linear programming problem. In this paper, we study the savings that can be achieved by allowing the pickup
and delivery quantities to be served separately with respect to the case where the quantities have to be served
simultaneously. Both exact and heuristic results are analysed in depth for a better understanding of the problem
structure and an average estimation of the savings due to the possibility of serving pickup and delivery
quantities separately
Velocity and density measurements in forced fountains with negative buoyancy
In fluid mechanics, fountains take place when a source fluid is driven by its own momentum into a surrounding ambient fluid, and it is counterbalanced by buoyancy. These phenomena are largely encountered in nature and human activities. Despite the numerous studies on the subject, few experimental data are available about the internal structure of turbulent fountains. Here, we present a set of laboratory experiments with the aim to (i) get direct velocity and density measurements of fountains in a controlled environment and (ii) obtain insights about the basic physics of the phenomenon. The results concern the characteristics of the mean and turbulent flow: we report the analysis of the turbulent kinetic energy, the velocity skewness, and the Reynolds stresses, including a quadrant analysis of the fluctuating velocities. For some tests, the correlation between density and vertical velocity is investigated for both mean and fluctuating values. We have quantified the momentum transport, which is mainly out-downward at the nozzle axis with peaks at the mean rise height, where also maximum levels of the buoyancy and mass fluxes are present. The ability of acoustic Doppler current profilers to identify the rise height of the fountain and to measure the velocity field is also discussed
Reoptimization of Some Maximum Weight Induced Hereditary Subgraph Problems
The reoptimization issue studied in this paper can be described as follows: given an instance I of some problem Î , an optimal solution OPT for Î in I and an instance IâČ resulting from a local perturbation of I that consists of insertions or removals of a small number of data, we wish to use OPT in order to solve Î in I', either optimally or by guaranteeing an approximation ratio better than that guaranteed by an ex nihilo computation and with running time better than that needed for such a computation. We use this setting in order to study weighted versions of several representatives of a broad class of problems known in the literature as maximum induced hereditary subgraph problems. The main problems studied are max independent set, max k-colorable subgraph and max split subgraph under vertex insertions and deletion
Development of flood probability charts for urban drainage network in coastal areas through a simplified joint assessment approach
The operating conditions of urban drainage networks during storm events depend on the hydraulic conveying capacity of conduits and also on downstream boundary conditions. This is particularly true in coastal areas where the level of the receiving water body is directly or indirectly affected by tidal or wave effects. In such cases, not just different rainfall conditions (varying intensity and duration), but also different sea-levels and their effects on the network operation should be considered. This paper aims to study the behaviour of a seaside town storm sewer network, estimating the threshold condition for flooding and proposing a simplified method to assess the urban flooding severity as a function of climate variables. The case study is a portion of the drainage system of Rimini (Italy), implemented and numerically modelled by means of InfoWorks CS code. The hydraulic simulation of the sewerage system identified the percentage of nodes of the drainage system where flooding is expected to occur. Combining these percentages with both climate variables' values has lead to the definition of charts representing the combined degree of risk "rainfall-sea level" for the drainage system under investigation. A final comparison between such charts and the results obtained from a one-year rainfall-sea level time series has demonstrated the reliability of the analysis
CFD investigations of OXYFLUX device, an innovative wave pump technology for artificial downwelling of surface water
publisher: Elsevier articletitle: CFD investigations of OXYFLUX device, an innovative wave pump technology for artificial downwelling of surface water journaltitle: Applied Ocean Research articlelink: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apor.2016.10.002 content_type: article copyright: © 2016 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
MEDSLIK-II, a Lagrangian marine surface oil spill model for short-term forecasting â Part 2: Numerical simulations and validations
Abstract. In this paper we use MEDSLIK-II, a Lagrangian marine surface oil spill model described in Part 1 (De Dominicis et al., 2013), to simulate oil slick transport and transformation processes for realistic oceanic cases, where satellite or drifting buoys data are available for verification. The model is coupled with operational oceanographic currents, atmospheric analyses winds and remote sensing data for initialization. The sensitivity of the oil spill simulations to several model parameterizations is analyzed and the results are validated using surface drifters, SAR (synthetic aperture radar) and optical satellite images in different regions of the Mediterranean Sea. It is found that the forecast skill of Lagrangian trajectories largely depends on the accuracy of the Eulerian ocean currents: the operational models give useful estimates of currents, but high-frequency (hourly) and high-spatial resolution is required, and the Stokes drift velocity has to be added, especially in coastal areas. From a numerical point of view, it is found that a realistic oil concentration reconstruction is obtained using an oil tracer grid resolution of about 100 m, with at least 100 000 Lagrangian particles. Moreover, sensitivity experiments to uncertain model parameters show that the knowledge of oil type and slick thickness are, among all the others, key model parameters affecting the simulation results. Considering acceptable for the simulated trajectories a maximum spatial error of the order of three times the horizontal resolution of the Eulerian ocean currents, the predictability skill for particle trajectories is from 1 to 2.5 days depending on the specific current regime. This suggests that re-initialization of the simulations is required every day
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