2,108 research outputs found
Model Rancangan Rumah Susun Di Kampung Wisata Jetisharjo YOGYAKARTA Dengan Pendekatan Green Landscape Dan Green Facade
Tujuan penulisan adalah merencanakan dan merancang rumah susun di permukiman kampung wisata Jetisharjo dengan penekanan Green Landscape dan Green Facade. Permasalahan lingkungan di sekitar kali Code merupakan pemukiman yang sangat padat dan sebagian di antaranya kumuh dan kurang ruang terbuka hijau. Di lingkungan perkotaan Yogyakarta, khusunya di kawasan pinggiran sungai Code, dapat dinilai kurang berkembang pada aspek tata lingkungan landscape maupun facade bangunan. Konsep tersebut sangat relevan dengan pendekatan green architecture sebagai metoda yang digunakan dalam mewujudkan arsitektur ekologis atau ramah lingkungan untuk mencapai keseimbangan pada sistem interaksi manusia dengan lingkungan. Metoda untuk memperoleh data dilakukan dengan cara pengambilan data primer dan sekunder. Data primer berupa kondisi sosial fisik lingkungan lokasi perencanaan dilakukan dengan pencatatan, wawancara, dan pengambilan gambar (foto dan internet). Sedangkan data sekunder berupa data statistik dan literatur diperoleh melalui pencarian pada media internet dan perpustakaan. Metoda analisis perancangan lansekap dilakukan dengan penetapan green open space strategi yang mengedepankan aspek civic space dan kind of vegetation. Adapun analisis green facade dilakukan dengan strategi perancangan green roof dan green wall. Diharapkan pendekatan tersebut akan memberikan citra dan estetika lingkungan rumah susun yang ramah terhadap lingkungan pinggiran suangai. Studi kasus perencanaan berada di kampung wisata Jetisharjo, Yogyakarta yang sebagian berada di bantaran kali Code Yogyakarta. Analisis Perundangan tata bangunan dan lingkungan serta kebijakan green landscape yang akan menghasilkan zona-zona yang ramah lingkungan dimana ruang terbuka hijau direncanakan lebih besar dibanding luas maksimum diijinkan oleh peraturan daerah setempat, sehinga perlu adanya insentif menambah ruang hijau perkotaan. Hasil yang diharapkan adalah suatu masterplan untuk sebagai dasar penataan landscape dan perancangan bangunan rumah susun dengan penekanan Green Landscape dan Green Facade
Culverted rivers in the historic center of Genoa (Italy) as an emblematic case of human pressure and fluvial landscape changes
The city of Genoa is internationally known its the recurrent floods, mainly related to the Bisagno River.
The high risk is linked to meteo-hydrological hazard and to the urbanisation in hazardous areas and consequently to the high exposure of risk elements.
The present research concerns the hydrographic network that characterises the historical center of Genoa, i.e. the natural amphitheatre bordering the Polcevera valley to the W and the Bisagno valley to the E.
In this area of just 8.5 km2 there are eight catchments ranging from 0.49 km2 to 2.36 km2 in size: from W to E we recognise the basins of the San Bartolomeo, San Lazzaro, San Teodoro, Lagaccio, Sant'Ugo, Carbonara, Sant'Anna and Torbido streams.
These watercourses have been subject to anthropic modifications since the Middle Ages, sometimes with significant diversions, rectifications and channelling; today the watercourse network appears almost entirely artificial, flowing under the streets and buildings of the historic centre. The name of some alleys recalls their presence, which is otherwise not perceptible. Only the upper basin of the Lagaccio and San Lazzaro streams still have a watercourse with a natural riverbed, although the area is still significantly urbanised.
The construction of these culverts over time and the modifications they have undergone over the following centuries up to very recent times due to progressive urbanisation have led to a reduction in the hydraulic cross-section, which can lead to a possible flow of water under pressure and the consequent flooding hazard.
Therefore a better geographic knowledge of these culverted streams in Genoa historical city is crucial for hazard and risk assessments and for the planning of related hydraulic risk reduction activities
Combining controlled-source seismology and receiver function information to derive 3-D Moho topography for Italy
The accurate definition of 3-D crustal structures and, in primis, the Moho depth, are the most important requirement for seismological, geophysical and geodynamic modelling in complex tectonic regions. In such areas, like the Mediterranean region, various active and passive seismic experiments are performed, locally reveal information on Moho depth, average and gradient crustal Vp velocity and average Vp/Vs velocity ratios. Until now, the most reliable information on crustal structures stems from controlled-source seismology experiments. In most parts of the Alpine region, a relatively large number of controlled-source seismology information are available though the overall coverage in the central Mediterranean area is still sparse due to high costs of such experiments. Thus, results from other seismic methodologies, such as local earthquake tomography, receiver functions and ambient noise tomography can be used to complement the controlled-source seismology information to increase coverage and thus the quality of 3-D crustal models. In this paper, we introduce a methodology to directly combine controlled-source seismology and receiver functions information relying on the strengths of each method and in relation to quantitative uncertainty estimates for all data to derive a well resolved Moho map for Italy. To obtain a homogeneous elaboration of controlled-source seismology and receiver functions results, we introduce a new classification/weighting scheme based on uncertainty assessment for receiver functions data. In order to tune the receiver functions information quality, we compare local receiver functions Moho depths and uncertainties with a recently derived well-resolved local earthquake tomography-derived Moho map and with controlled-source seismology information. We find an excellent correlation in the Moho information obtained by these three methodologies in Italy. In the final step, we interpolate the controlled-source seismology and receiver functions information to derive the map of Moho topography in Italy and surrounding regions. Our results show high-frequency undulation in the Moho topography of three different Moho interfaces, the European, the Adriatic-Ionian, and the Liguria-Corsica-Sardinia-Tyrrhenia, reflecting the complexity of geodynamical evolutio
Solar wind density turbulence and solar flare electron transport from the Sun to the Earth
Solar flare accelerated electron beams propagating away from the Sun can
interact with the turbulent interplanetary media, producing plasma waves and
type III radio emission. These electron beams are detected near the Earth with
a double power-law energy spectrum. We simulate electron beam propagation from
the Sun to the Earth in the weak turbulent regime taking into account the
self-consistent generation of plasma waves and subsequent wave interaction with
density fluctuations from low frequency MHD turbulence. The rate at which
plasma waves are induced by an unstable electron beam is reduced by background
density fluctuations, most acutely when fluctuations have large amplitudes or
small wavelengths. This suppression of plasma waves alters the wave
distribution which changes the electron beam transport. Assuming a 5/3
Kolmogorov-type power density spectrum of fluctuations often observed near the
Earth, we investigate the corresponding energy spectrum of the electron beam
after it has propagated 1 AU. We find a direct correlation between the spectrum
of the double power-law below the break energy and the turbulent intensity of
the background plasma. For an initial spectral index of 3.5, we find a range of
spectra below the break energy between 1.6-2.1, with higher levels of
turbulence corresponding to higher spectral indices.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Ap
Analysis of movement quality in full-body physical activities
Full-body human movement is characterized by fine-grain expressive qualities that humans are easily capable of exhibiting and recognizing in others' movement. In sports (e.g., martial arts) and performing arts (e.g., dance), the same sequence of movements can be performed in a wide range of ways characterized by different qualities, often in terms of subtle (spatial and temporal) perturbations of the movement. Even a non-expert observer can distinguish between a top-level and average performance by a dancer or martial artist. The difference is not in the performed movements-the same in both cases-but in the \u201cquality\u201d of their performance. In this article, we present a computational framework aimed at an automated approximate measure of movement quality in full-body physical activities. Starting from motion capture data, the framework computes low-level (e.g., a limb velocity) and high-level (e.g., synchronization between different limbs) movement features. Then, this vector of features is integrated to compute a value aimed at providing a quantitative assessment of movement quality approximating the evaluation that an external expert observer would give of the same sequence of movements. Next, a system representing a concrete implementation of the framework is proposed. Karate is adopted as a testbed. We selected two different katas (i.e., detailed choreographies of movements in karate) characterized by different overall attitudes and expressions (aggressiveness, meditation), and we asked seven athletes, having various levels of experience and age, to perform them. Motion capture data were collected from the performances and were analyzed with the system. The results of the automated analysis were compared with the scores given by 14 karate experts who rated the same performances. Results show that the movement-quality scores computed by the system and the ratings given by the human observers are highly correlated (Pearson's correlations r = 0.84, p = 0.001 and r = 0.75, p = 0.005)
Incidentally discovered pheochromocytoma and aldosterone-producing adenoma in the same adrenal gland
Simultaneous occurrence of pheochromocytoma and aldosterone-producing adrenocortical tumor has been rarely reported in patients with symptoms or findings suggestive for both neoplasms. Herein, we report and discuss on a challenging case of synchronous pheochromocytoma and aldosterone-producing adenoma incidentally detected in the same adrenal gland and documented by biochemical studies and pathological examination
The sub-arcsecond hard X-ray structure of loop footpoints in a solar flare
The newly developed X-ray visibility forward fitting technique is applied to
Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI) data of a limb
flare to investigate the energy and height dependence on sizes, shapes, and
position of hard X-ray chromospheric footpoint sources. This provides
information about the electron transport and chromospheric density structure.
The spatial distribution of two footpoint X-ray sources is analyzed using
PIXON, Maximum Entropy Method, CLEAN and visibility forward fit algorithms at
nonthermal energies from to keV. We report, for the first
time, the vertical extents and widths of hard X-ray chromospheric sources
measured as a function of energy for a limb event. Our observations suggest
that both the vertical and horizontal sizes of footpoints are decreasing with
energy. Higher energy emission originates progressively deeper in the
chromosphere consistent with downward flare accelerated streaming electrons.
The ellipticity of the footpoints grows with energy from at keV to at keV. The positions of X-ray emission are in
agreement with an exponential density profile of scale height ~km.
The characteristic size of the hard X-ray footpoint source along the limb is
decreasing with energy suggesting a converging magnetic field in the footpoint.
The vertical sizes of X-ray sources are inconsistent with simple collisional
transport in a single density scale height but can be explained using a
multi-threaded density structure in the chromosphere.Comment: 7 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Ap
Climate change effects on bread wheat phenology and grain quality: A case study in the north of Italy
Increasing temperatures, heat waves, and reduction of annual precipitation are all the expressions of climate change (CC), strongly affecting bread wheat (Triticum aestivum L.) grain yield in Southern Europe. Being temperature the major driving force of plants' phenological development, these variations also have effects on wheat phenology, with possible consequences on grain quality, and gluten protein accumulation. Here, through a case study in the Bolognese Plain (North of Italy), we assessed the effects of CC in the area, the impacts on bread wheat phenological development, and the consequences on grain gluten quality. The increasing trend in mean annual air temperature in the area since 1952 was significant, with a breakpoint identified in 1989, rising from 12.7 to 14.1°C, accompanied by the signals of increasing aridity, i.e., increase in water table depth. Bread wheat phenological development was compared in two 15-year periods before and after the breakpoint, i.e., 1952-1966 (past period), and 2006-2020 (present period), the latest characterized by aridity and increased temperatures. A significant shortening of the chronological time necessary to reach the main phenological phases was observed for the present period compared to the past period, finally shortening the whole life cycle. This reduction, as well as the higher temperature regime, affected gluten accumulation during the grain-filling process, as emerged analyzing gluten composition in grain samples of the same variety harvested in the area both before and after the breakpoint in temperature. In particular, the proportion of gluten polymers (i.e., gliadins, high and low molecular weight glutenins, and their ratio) showed a strong and significant correlation with cumulative growing degree days (CGDDs) accumulated during the grain filling. Higher CGDD values during the period, typical of CC in Southern Europe, accounting for higher temperature and faster grain filling, correlated with gliadins, high molecular weight glutenins, and their proportion with low molecular weight glutenins. In summary, herein reported, data might contribute to assessing the effects of CC on wheat phenology and quality, representing a tool for both predictive purposes and decision supporting systems for farmers, as well as can guide future breeding choices for varietal innovation
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