1,635 research outputs found

    Inspection system for in use pesticide application equiupment in Greece. First three years of application

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    According to Directive 2009/128/EC, all member states should have inspected all in-use Pesticide Application Equipment (PAE) by November 2016. In Greece, Law 4036/2012 embodied the provisions of this Directive into Greek legislation, but unfortunately due to various reasons, the inspections were significantly delayed. Aim of the current study is to briefly present the inspection system of in-use PAE that was developed due to the aforementioned law and then provide the statistical results of the inspections until February 2018. The progress of the last two years was significant, but a lot of work remains to make the inspection system functional and unproblematic.According to Directive 2009/128/EC, all member states should have inspected all in-use Pesticide Application Equipment (PAE) by November 2016. In Greece, Law 4036/2012 embodied the provisions of this Directive into Greek legislation, but unfortunately due to various reasons, the inspections were significantly delayed. Aim of the current study is to briefly present the inspection system of in-use PAE that was developed due to the aforementioned law and then provide the statistical results of the inspections until February 2018. The progress of the last two years was significant, but a lot of work remains to make the inspection system functional and unproblematic

    Classical and quantum dynamics of a trapped ion coupled to a charged nanowire

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    We study theoretically the mechanical drive of a trapped ultracold ion by a charged nanowire through their mutual Coulomb interaction. We characterize the perturbation of the trapping potential for the ion by the nanowire and discuss the parameters determining the dynamics of the ion under the action of the nanooscillator. We explore the classical dynamics as well as motional quantum states of the ion which can be generated and manipulated with the resonant drive of the nanowire and the effects of anharmonicities of the ion-trap potential on the system. Our modelling indicates that unusual quantum states of the ion motion can be generated with this approach and that sympathetic cooling and quantum entanglement can be realised when both subsystems operate in the quantum regime. The present ion-mechanical hybrid system might prove interesting as a new quantum device, for quantum sensing experiments, for spectroscopy and for mass spectrometry

    Intelligent dual curve-driven tool path optimization and virtual CMM inspection for sculptured surface CNC machining

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    This paper investigates the profitability of a dual‐curve driven surface finish tool path under the concept of optimizing crucial machining parameters such as toroidal end‐mill diameter, lead angle and tilt angle. Surface machining error as well as tool path time are treated as optimization objectives under a multi‐criteria sense, whilst a central composite design is conducted to obtain experimental outputs for examination and, finally, fit a full quadratic model considered as the fitness function for process optimization by means of a genetic algorithm. A benchmark sculptured surface given as a second‐order parametric equation was tested and simulated using a cutting‐edge manufacturing modeling software and best parameters recommended by the genetic algorithm were implemented for validation. Further assessment involves the virtual inspection to selected profile sections on the part. It was shown that the approach can produce dual‐curve driven tool trajectories capable of eliminating sharp scallop heights, maximizing machining strip widths as well as maintaining smoothness quality and machining efficiency

    Fossil Fuel Deficit-Conservation Tillage and on Farm Biofuel Production to Cope With the Problem

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    Abstract The limited resources of fossil fuels along with the highly fluctuating prices, call for investigation to find diesel alternatives. Biofuels from vegetable oils, seems the easiest accessible substitutes as they can be used in conventional diesel engines without lot of modifications. There are though two mainstream attitudes on this approach. The one points that it is immoral to divert environmental resources from food production to energy production when the global population increases and the other claims that without mechanization and fuel to power it, food production will finally be decreased. Conservation tillage adoption may contribute in significant fuel savings by eliminating tillage operations. If they would be combined with on farm biofuel production, they would certainly require less land to be devoted for this purpose. In the present work, based on data of a long term tillage experiment, it was calculated the percentage of land that would be required to cultivate with a biofuel crop (sunflower for instance) in order to cover the fuel requirements of an arable farm, for three alternative tillage methods: conventional (CT), reduced (RT) and no-tillage (NT). The results indicated that in CT, the 11% of the land would be enough to provide the biofuel for all the field operations (except irrigation). In RT, due to lower fuel consumption, the 7.5% of the land would be sufficient. That means that a 3.6% yield reduction is justified. In NT, only the 3.5% of the land is required to produce the biofuels justifying a 7.7% yield reduction. This sets the limits of yield reduction that can be acceptable. However we have to add in this balance the environmental effects of using conservation tillage like erosion reduction, increasing soil organic matter and biodiversity maintenance

    Yield sensing technologies for perennial and annual horticultural crops: a review

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    Yield maps provide a detailed account of crop production and potential revenue of a farm. This level of details enables a range of possibilities from improving input management, conducting on-farm experimentation, or generating profitability map, thus creating value for farmers. While this technology is widely available for field crops such as maize, soybean and grain, few yield sensing systems exist for horticultural crops such as berries, field vegetable or orchards. Nevertheless, a wide range of techniques and technologies have been investigated as potential means of sensing crop yield for horticultural crops. This paper reviews yield monitoring approaches that can be divided into proximal, either direct or indirect, and remote measurement principles. It reviews remote sensing as a way to estimate and forecast yield prior to harvest. For each approach, basic principles are explained as well as examples of application in horticultural crops and success rate. The different approaches provide whether a deterministic (direct measurement of weight for instance) or an empirical (capacitance measurements correlated to weight for instance) result, which may impact transferability. The discussion also covers the level of precision required for different tasks and the trend and future perspectives. This review demonstrated the need for more commercial solutions to map yield of horticultural crops. It also showed that several approaches have demonstrated high success rate and that combining technologies may be the best way to provide enough accuracy and robustness for future commercial systems

    Exploring the adoption of precision agricultural technologies: a cross regional study of EU farmers

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    Precision agricultural technologies (PATs) allow more detailed management of in-field variability. Policy and advisory communities have championed PATs as a route to preserving natural capital whilst increasing productivity from agricultural land. A range of PATs are currently available for the agricultural producer but uptake varies by the type of technology and region. Whereas most studies on uptake have focused on US or Australia we empirically examine uptake of machine guidance (MG) and variable rate nitrogen technologies (VRNT) within European farming systems. Using primary information from 971 arable crop growers across five countries: Belgium, Germany, Greece, the Netherlands and the UK, a multilevel random intercept regression estimated a) the differences between adoption and non-adoption and b) the differences between VRNT and MG adoption. We find, aside from size and income differences, which reflect the economic cost barrier to adoption, an attitudinal difference, in terms of optimism towards the technology's economic return leading to more probability of uptake. Moreover innovative and information seeking behaviour also proved significant when upgrading from machine guidance to variable rate technologies. Subsidy and taxation were considered positive drivers of uptake within the community. However, results suggest that more indirect interventions, such as informational support to counteract industry bias, and demonstration to prove the viability of economic return may be effective at meeting land manager and policy expectations towards PATs
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