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- UWRL (4)
- Optimization (3)
- Energy balance (2)
- Ground effect (2)
- Induced drag (2)
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- Latent heat flux (2)
- Lift (2)
- Lift line (2)
- Mass balance (2)
- Modeling (2)
- Sensible heat flux (2)
- Snow (2)
- Texel images (2)
- Water resources management (2)
- 3D image creation (1)
- Administrative systems (1)
- Analysis (1)
- Application (1)
- Asymptotic (1)
- Automatic differentiation (1)
- Automatic registration (1)
- Axiomatic (1)
- Bassianolide (1)
- BbBEAS (1)
- BbBSLS (1)
- Beauvericins (1)
- Benefits (1)
- Biofuels (1)
- Biosynthesis (1)
- Calibration (1)
Articles 1 - 30 of 36
Full-Text Articles in Engineering
Calibration Method For Texel Images Created From Fused Lidar And Digital Camera Images, Scott E. Budge, N.S. Badamikar
Calibration Method For Texel Images Created From Fused Lidar And Digital Camera Images, Scott E. Budge, N.S. Badamikar
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
The fusion of imaging lidar information and digital imagery results in 2.5-dimensional surfaces covered with texture information, called texel images. These data sets, when taken from different viewpoints, can be combined to create three-dimensional (3-D) images of buildings, vehicles, or other objects. This paper presents a procedure for calibration, error correction, and fusing of flash lidar and digital camera information from a single sensor configuration to create accurate texel images. A brief description of a prototype sensor is given, along with a calibration technique used with the sensor, which is applicable to other flash lidar/digital image sensor systems. The method …
Water Resources Management - University Of California, Davis, Jay R. Lund
Water Resources Management - University Of California, Davis, Jay R. Lund
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Graduate course in water resources management offered at University California, Davis in Fall 2013.
Environmental Systems Modeling And Management - University Of Virginia, Charlottesville, Teresa Culver
Environmental Systems Modeling And Management - University Of Virginia, Charlottesville, Teresa Culver
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Grad/Undergrad course in environmental systems modeling and management offered at University of Virginia, Charlottesville in Fall 2013.
Deterministic Optimization And Design - University Of California, Davis, Jay R. Lund
Deterministic Optimization And Design - University Of California, Davis, Jay R. Lund
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Undergraduate course in deterministic optimization and design offered at U.C. Davis.
Water Resources Planning And Management - Michigan Technological University, Houghton, David Watkins
Water Resources Planning And Management - Michigan Technological University, Houghton, David Watkins
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Graduate course in water resources planning and management offered at Michigan Technological University, Houghton in Fall 2013.
Water Resource Economics And Management - University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill, Greg Characklis
Water Resource Economics And Management - University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill, Greg Characklis
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Graduate course in water resources economics and management offered at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in Fall 2013.
Infrastructure Systems Analysis - George Mason University, Mark Houck
Infrastructure Systems Analysis - George Mason University, Mark Houck
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To introduce the concepts of systems analysis and systems engineering within the domain of civil and infrastructure engineering To introduce/review a variety of tools and methods used in the analysis of infrastructure systems To prepare students for continued study in civil, environmental and infrastructure engineering. Course taught at George Mason University.
Water Resources Planning - University Of Massachusetts Amherst, Richard Palmer
Water Resources Planning - University Of Massachusetts Amherst, Richard Palmer
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Course taught at University of Massachusetts Amherst.
Water Resources Planning - Fall 2013 - University Of Massachusetts Amherst, Richard Palmer
Water Resources Planning - Fall 2013 - University Of Massachusetts Amherst, Richard Palmer
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Water Resources Planning course taught by Richard Palmer offered in Fall 2013 at University of Massachusetts Amherst. Course materials include lecture slides on specified topics (.ppt and .pdf) and 8 exercises:
Exercise 1 - Fairweather planning (Exer1-2013.pdf)
Exercise 2 - Developing a team (Exer2-2013.pdf)
Exercise 3 - Problems, Opportunities, and Goals Revisited (Exer3-2013.pdf)
Exercise 4 - Defining the Status Quo (Exer4-2013.pdf)
Exercise 5 - Shared Vision Models (Exer5-2013.pdf)
Exercise 6 - Formulating Alternative Plans (Exer6-2013.pdf)
Exercise 7 - Measures of Performance (Exer7-2013.pdf)
Exercise 8 - Selecting Among Alternatives (Exer8-2013.pdf)
Materials also include an example student final report (NOFAWAC_FINAL-Planning Report.pdf)
Hydroshare: Advancing Collaboration Through Hydrologic Data And Model Sharing, David G. Tarboton
Hydroshare: Advancing Collaboration Through Hydrologic Data And Model Sharing, David G. Tarboton
Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Response Of Stream Ecosystems To Climate Change (Iii): Characterizing And Predicting Ecologically Relevant Flow Regimes, David G. Tarboton, Sulochan Dhungel, Yi He, J.J. V. Laan, Ryan A. Hill, Jiming Jin
Response Of Stream Ecosystems To Climate Change (Iii): Characterizing And Predicting Ecologically Relevant Flow Regimes, David G. Tarboton, Sulochan Dhungel, Yi He, J.J. V. Laan, Ryan A. Hill, Jiming Jin
Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications
No abstract provided.
Lifting-Line Predictions For Induced Drag And Lift In Ground Effect, W. F. Phillips, Doug F. Hunsaker
Lifting-Line Predictions For Induced Drag And Lift In Ground Effect, W. F. Phillips, Doug F. Hunsaker
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
Closed-form relations are presented for estimating ratios of the induced-drag and lift coefficients acting on a wing in ground effect to those acting on the same wing outside the influence of ground effect. The closed-form relations for these ground-effect influence ratios were developed by correlating results obtained from numerical solutions to Prandtl’s lifting-line theory. Results show that these influence ratios are not unique functions of the ratio of wing height to wingspan, as is sometimes suggested in the literature. These ground-effect influence ratios also depend on the wing planform, aspect ratio, and lift coefficient.
Momentum Theory With Slipstream Rotation Applied To Wind Turbines, Doug F. Hunsaker, W. F. Phillips
Momentum Theory With Slipstream Rotation Applied To Wind Turbines, Doug F. Hunsaker, W. F. Phillips
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
A momentum theory which includes the effects of slipstream rotation for wind turbines is presented. The theory accounts for the axial and radial pressure gradients within the slipstream as well as the wake expansion caused by wake rotation. Because of the limiting approximations of previous methods, the effects of slipstream rotation have not been accurately realized. The method included here, which does not suffer from the unrealistic approximations of previous methods, predicts that the effects of slipstream rotation are manifest entirely through an increase in the turbine thrust coefficient. The method predicts, as previous methods do, that the Lanchester-Betz-Joukowski limit …
Lifting-Line Predictions For Induced Drag And Lift In Ground Effect, W. F. Phillips, Doug F. Hunsaker
Lifting-Line Predictions For Induced Drag And Lift In Ground Effect, W. F. Phillips, Doug F. Hunsaker
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
Closed-form relations are presented for estimating ratios of the induced-drag and lift coefficients acting on a wing in ground effect to those acting on the same wing outside the influence of ground effect. The closed-form relations for these ground-effect influence ratios were developed by correlating results obtained from numerical solutions to Prandtl's lifting-line theory. Results show that these influence ratios are not unique functions of the ratio of wing height to wingspan, as is sometimes suggested in the literature. These ground-effect influence ratios also depend on the wing planform, aspect ratio, and lift coefficient.
Decomposed Lifting-Line Predictions And Optimization For Propulsive Efficiency Of Flapping Wings, W. F. Phillips, R. A. Miller, Doug F. Hunsaker
Decomposed Lifting-Line Predictions And Optimization For Propulsive Efficiency Of Flapping Wings, W. F. Phillips, R. A. Miller, Doug F. Hunsaker
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
A decomposed Fourier series solution to Prandtl's classical lifting-line theory is used to predict the lift, induced-thrust, and power coefficients developed by a flapping wing. A significant advantage of this quasi-steady analytical solution over commonly used numerical methods is the utility provided for optimizing wing flapping cycles. The analytical solution involves five time-dependent functions that could all be optimized to maximize thrust, propulsive efficiency, and/or other performance measures. Results show that by optimizing only two of these five functions, propulsive efficiencies exceeding 97% can be obtained. Results are presented for untwisted rectangular wings in pure plunging, rectangular wings with linear …
Automatic Registration Of Multiple Texel Images (Fused Lidar/Digital Imagery) For 3d Image Creation, Scott E. Budge, N. Badamikar
Automatic Registration Of Multiple Texel Images (Fused Lidar/Digital Imagery) For 3d Image Creation, Scott E. Budge, N. Badamikar
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
Creation of 3D images through remote sensing is a topic of interest in many applications such as terrain / building modeling and automatic target recognition (ATR). Several photogrammetry-based methods have been proposed that derive 3D information from digital images from different perspectives, and lidar- based methods have been proposed that merge lidar point clouds and texture the merged point clouds with digital imagery. Image registra tion alone has difficulty with smooth regions with low contrast, whereas point cloud merging alone has difficulty with outliers and lack of proper convergence in the merging process. This paper presents a method to create …
Hci-Tolerant Noc Router Microarchitecture, Dean Michael Ancajas, James Mccabe Nickerson, Koushik Chakraborty, Sanghamitra Roy
Hci-Tolerant Noc Router Microarchitecture, Dean Michael Ancajas, James Mccabe Nickerson, Koushik Chakraborty, Sanghamitra Roy
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
The trend towards massive parallel computing has necessitated the need for an On-Chip communication framework that can scale well with the increasing number of cores. At the same time, technology scaling has made transistors susceptible to a multitude of reliability issues (NBTI, HCI, TDDB). In this work, we propose an HCI-Tolerant microarchitecture for an NoC Router by manipulating the switching activity around the circuit. We find that most of the switch- ing activity (the primary cause of HCI degradation) are only concentrated in a few parts of the circuit, severely degrading some portions more than others. Our techniques increase the …
Efficiently Tolerating Timing Violations In Pipelined Microprocessors, Koushik Chakraborty, Brennan Cozzens, Sanghamitra Roy, Dean M. Ancajas
Efficiently Tolerating Timing Violations In Pipelined Microprocessors, Koushik Chakraborty, Brennan Cozzens, Sanghamitra Roy, Dean M. Ancajas
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
Early prediction of an upcoming timing violation presents a tremendous opportunity to mask the performance overhead of tolerating these faults. In this paper, we explore several techniques for optimizing instruction scheduling in an Out-of-Order pipeline, exploiting this new perspective in robust system design. Compared to recently proposed stall based techniques for tolerating predictabletiming violations, we demonstrate a massive reduction in performance overhead, while supporting correct execution in faulty environments (64-97% across different benchmarks). Copyright © 2013 ACM.
Community Approaches To Hydrologic Data And Model Sharing Using Cloud Resources, David G. Tarboton, R. Idaszak, Jeffery S. Horsburgh, Daniel Ames, J. Goodall, L. Band, V. Merwade, A. Couch, J. Arrigo, R. P. Hooper, D. W. Valentine
Community Approaches To Hydrologic Data And Model Sharing Using Cloud Resources, David G. Tarboton, R. Idaszak, Jeffery S. Horsburgh, Daniel Ames, J. Goodall, L. Band, V. Merwade, A. Couch, J. Arrigo, R. P. Hooper, D. W. Valentine
Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications
Cloud Computing
The CUAHSI HIS
- A Services-Oriented Architecture Based System for Sharing Hydrologic Data
HydroShare
- A Web-Based Collaborative Environment for the Sharing of Hydrologic Data and Models
A Decision Tree Model To Estimate The Value Of Information Provided By A Groundwater Quality Monitoring Network, Abdelhaleem I. Khader, David E. Rosenberg, Mac Mckee
A Decision Tree Model To Estimate The Value Of Information Provided By A Groundwater Quality Monitoring Network, Abdelhaleem I. Khader, David E. Rosenberg, Mac Mckee
Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications
Groundwater contaminated with nitrate poses a serious health risk to infants when this contaminated water is used for culinary purposes. To avoid this health risk, people need to know whether their culinary water is contaminated or not. Therefore, there is a need to design an effective groundwater monitoring network, acquire information on groundwater conditions, and use acquired information to inform management options. These actions require time, money, and effort. This paper presents a method to estimate the value of information (VOI) provided by a groundwater quality monitoring network located in an aquifer whose water poses a spatially heterogeneous and uncertain …
Muller C-Element Based Decoder (Mcd): A Decoder Against Transient Faults, Y. Tang, Chris J. Winstead, C. Jego, E. Boutillon, M. Jezequel
Muller C-Element Based Decoder (Mcd): A Decoder Against Transient Faults, Y. Tang, Chris J. Winstead, C. Jego, E. Boutillon, M. Jezequel
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
This work extends the analysis and application of a digital error correction method called Muller C-element Decoding (MCD), which has been proposed for fault masking in logic circuits comprised of unreliable elements. The proposed technique employs cascaded Muller C-elements and XOR gates to achieve efficient error-correction in the presence of internal upsets. The error-correction analysis of MCD architecture and the investigation of C-element’s robustness are first introduced. We demonstrate that the MCD is able to produce error-correction benefit in a high error-rate of internal faults. Significantly, for a (3,6) short-length LDPC code, when the decoding process is internally error-free the …
Functional Dissection And Module Swapping Of Fungal Cyclooligomer Depsipeptide Synthetases, Dayu Yu, Fuchao Xu, David Gage, Jixun Zhan
Functional Dissection And Module Swapping Of Fungal Cyclooligomer Depsipeptide Synthetases, Dayu Yu, Fuchao Xu, David Gage, Jixun Zhan
Biological Engineering Faculty Publications
BbBSLS and BbBEAS were dissected and reconstituted in Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The intermodular linker is essential for the reconstitution of the separate modules. Module 1 can be swapped between BbBEAS and BbBSLS, while modules 2 and 3 control the product profiles. BbBSLS is a flexible enzyme that also synthesizes beauvericins.
Energy-Vorticity Turbulence Model With Application To Flow Near Rough Surfaces, W. F. Phillips, E. B. Fowler, Doug F. Hunsaker
Energy-Vorticity Turbulence Model With Application To Flow Near Rough Surfaces, W. F. Phillips, E. B. Fowler, Doug F. Hunsaker
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
Based on a more direct analogy between turbulent and molecular transport, a foundation is presented for an energy–vorticity turbulence model. Whereas traditional k-εk-ε, k-ωk-ω, and k-ζk-ζ models relate the eddy viscosity to a dissipation length scale associated with the smaller eddies having the highest strain rates, the proposed model relates the eddy viscosity to a mean vortex wavelength associated with the larger eddies primarily responsible for turbulent transport. A rigorous development of the turbulent-energy-transport equation from the Navier–Stokes equations includes exact relations for the viscous dissipation and molecular transport of turbulent kinetic energy. Application of Boussinesq’s analogy between turbulent and …
Analysis Of Water Footprint Of A Photobioreactor Microalgae Biofuel 1 Production System From Blue, Green And Lifecycle Perspectives, Jason C. Quinn
Analysis Of Water Footprint Of A Photobioreactor Microalgae Biofuel 1 Production System From Blue, Green And Lifecycle Perspectives, Jason C. Quinn
Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Faculty Publications
Microalgae are currently being investigated as a feedstock for the commercial production of transportation fuels, due to their potential scalability and sustainability advantages over conventional feedstocks. The water consumption of microalgae has been postulated to be a resource barrier for large-scale production. This study presents an assessment of the water footprint (WF) of a closed photobioreactor-based biofuel production system, where microalgae cultivation is simulated with geographical and temporal resolution. The assessment focuses on the WF as modeled for four different fuel conversion pathways, and in 10 continental US locations corresponding to high productivity yields. The WF is comprehensively assessed using …
Architecturally Homogeneous Power-Performance Heterogeneous Multicore Systems, Koushik Chakraborty, Sanghamitra Roy
Architecturally Homogeneous Power-Performance Heterogeneous Multicore Systems, Koushik Chakraborty, Sanghamitra Roy
Electrical and Computer Engineering Faculty Publications
Dynamic voltage and frequency scaling (DVFS), a widely adopted technique to ensure safe thermal characteristics while delivering superior energy efficiency, is rapidly becoming inefficient with technology scaling due to two critical factors: 1) inability to scale the supply voltage due to reliability concerns and 2) dynamic adaptations through DVFS cannot alter underlying power hungry circuit characteristics, designed for the nominal frequency. In this paper, we show that DVFS scaled circuits substantially lag in energy efficiency, by 22%-86%, compared to ground up designs for target frequency levels. We propose architecturally homogeneous power-performance heterogeneous multicore systems, a fundamentally alternate means to design …
Engineered Production Of Fungal Anticancer Cyclooligomer Depsipeptides In Saccharo-Myces Cerevisiae, Dayu Yu, Fuchao Xu, Jiachen Zi, Siyuan Wang, David Gage, Jia Zeng, Jixun Zhan
Engineered Production Of Fungal Anticancer Cyclooligomer Depsipeptides In Saccharo-Myces Cerevisiae, Dayu Yu, Fuchao Xu, Jiachen Zi, Siyuan Wang, David Gage, Jia Zeng, Jixun Zhan
Biological Engineering Faculty Publications
Two fungal cyclooligomer depsipeptide synthetases (CODSs), BbBEAS (352 kDa) and BbBSLS (348 kDa) from Beauveria bassiana ATCC 7159, were reconstituted in Saccharomyces cerevisiae BJ5464-NpgA, leading to the production of the corresponding anticancer natural products, beauvericins and bassianolide, respectively. The titers of beauvericins (33.82±1.41 mg/l) and bassianolide (21.74±0.08 mg/l) in the engineered S. cerevisiae BJ5464-NpgA strains were comparable to those in the native producer B. bassiana. Feeding D-hydroxyisovaleric acid (D-Hiv) and the corresponding L-amino acid precursors improved the production of beauvericins and bassianolide. However, the high price of D-Hiv limits its application in large-scale production of these cyclooligomer depsipeptides. Alternatively, we …
Water Policy, Planning And Governance - University Of Central Florida, Kaveh Madani
Water Policy, Planning And Governance - University Of Central Florida, Kaveh Madani
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Water Resources Policy, Planning and Governance deals with political, social, economic and administrative systems that affect the use, development, planning, and management of water resources at different levels. Course taught at University of Central Florida.
Testing Above- And Below-Canopy Representations Of Turbulent Fluxes In An Energy Balance Snowmelt Model, Vinod Mahat, David G. Tarboton, Noah P. Molotch
Testing Above- And Below-Canopy Representations Of Turbulent Fluxes In An Energy Balance Snowmelt Model, Vinod Mahat, David G. Tarboton, Noah P. Molotch
T.W. "Doc" Daniel Experimental Forest
Turbulent fluxes of sensible and latent heat are important processes in the surface energy balance that drives snowmelt. Modeling these fluxes in a forested environment is complicated because of the canopy effects on the wind field. This paper presents and tests a turbulent flux model developed to represent these processes in an energy balance snowmelt model. The goal is to model these processes using the readily available inputs of canopy height and leaf area index in a way that minimizes the number of parameters, state variables, and assumptions about hard to quantify processes. Selected periods from 9 years of eddy-covariance …
Testing Above- And Below-Canopy Representations Of Turbulent Fluxes In An Energy Balance Snowmelt Model, Vinod Mahat, David G. Tarboton, Noah P. Molotch
Testing Above- And Below-Canopy Representations Of Turbulent Fluxes In An Energy Balance Snowmelt Model, Vinod Mahat, David G. Tarboton, Noah P. Molotch
Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications
Turbulent fluxes of sensible and latent heat are important processes in the surface energy balance that drives snowmelt. Modeling these fluxes in a forested environment is complicated because of the canopy effects on the wind field. This paper presents and tests a turbulent flux model developed to represent these processes in an energy balance snowmelt model. The goal is to model these processes using the readily available inputs of canopy height and leaf area index in a way that minimizes the number of parameters, state variables, and assumptions about hard to quantify processes. Selected periods from 9 years of eddy-covariance …
Design And Application Of An In Vivo Reporter Assay For Phenylalanine Ammonialyase, S. Wang, S. Zhang, T. Zhou, J. Zeng, Jixun Zhan
Design And Application Of An In Vivo Reporter Assay For Phenylalanine Ammonialyase, S. Wang, S. Zhang, T. Zhou, J. Zeng, Jixun Zhan
Biological Engineering Faculty Publications
Phenylalanine ammonia-lyase (PAL) is an important enzyme that links primary metabolism to secondary metabolism. Its efficiency is often a critical factor that affects the overall flux of a related metabolic pathway, the titer of the final products, and the efficacy of PAL-based therapies. Thus, PAL is a common target for metabolic engineering and it is of significant interest to screen efficient PALs for industrial and medical applications. In this study, a novel and efficient visible reporter assay for screening of PAL efficiency in Escherichia coli was established based on a plant type III polyketide biosynthetic pathway. The candidate PALs were …