2,019 research outputs found
User requirements Massive Point Clouds for eSciences (WP1)
This report is a milestone in work package 1 (WP1) of the project Massive point clouds for eSciences. In WP1 the basic functionalities needed for a new Point Cloud Spatial Database Management System are identified. This is achieved by (1) literature research, (2) discussions with the project members, and (3) customer surveys. In this work package three organizations TU Delft, Rijkswaterstaat and Fugro have worked together to assemble the user requirements for a new Point Cloud Spatial Database Management System. The following persons were involved in this work package. A.E. Nonhebel (Ardi) TU Delft, TU Delft Library/3TU.Datacentrum (work package manager) Ir. I. Alkemade (Ingrid) Rijkswaterstaat, Centrale Informatievoorziening Ir. M.P. Kodde (Martin) Fugro GeoServices B.V. Drs. T.P.M. Tijssen (Theo) TU Delft, Onderzoeksinstituut OTB, department of GIS Technology Prof.dr.ir. P.J.M. van Oosterom (Peter) TU Delft, Onderzoeksinstituut OTB, department of GIS Technology Drs. P.M. Suijker (Paul) TU Delft, TU Delft Library, section Research support During the investigation the Up-to-date Height Model of the Netherlands1 (AHN) datasets have been used as an example of the type of data that will be included in the new point cloud spatial DBMS. The AHN data consists of raster data and point cloud data. Both data types have been considered.LibraryDelft University of Technolog
Glacier Surface Analysis. Airborne Laser Scanning for monitoring glaciers and crevasses
Aerospace Engineerin
Detergency in Liquid CO2
In this dissertation we study Detergency in liquid Carbon Dioxide. Detergency is the cleaning performance of additives, surfactants in particular, in washing fluids. Liquid CO2 is under consideration, for environmental and toxicological reasons, to replace perchloro-ethylene as the solvent in textile dry cleaning technology. Inherent problems of such a transition were confronted with the methodology of chemical engineering design. The Basic Cycle of Design (BCD) approach was used as a pathway for designing a detergent. The BCD also establishes the structural framework of the thesis, which can, therefore, be read as records from a successful product engineering project, in which an effective detergent has been designed for a new dry cleaning solvent. The Dynamic Detergency Model (DDM), which succeeds to explain the role of surfactants in the washing operation, is used as a rational starting point for the design of a detergent in liquid CO2. According to this model, such a surfactant must be: sparingly soluble in the solvent, surface-active and able to form micelles in the solution. The different experiments carried out (solubility, interfacial-tension and dye solubilisation measurements), show that a number of molecules of the homologous polyoxyethylene/alkane series, generally described by the shorthand formula CiEj did indeed behave as surfactants and can be then considered detergents for liquid CO2. In the technical evaluation of the detergents, at laboratory as well as at semi-pilot scale, high washing performances were obtained. They are, indeed, as good for dry cleaning textiles as the present perchloro-ethylene (Perc) technology.Applied Science
'Her Irish Heritage' : Annie M.P Smithson and autobiography
This paper examines some aspects of the work of Annie M.P. Smithson, the author of 21 romance novels between 1917 and 1946. Her attitudes towards women, religion and politics are explored, and the importance of autobiography in her fiction discussed.Cet article analyse divers aspects de l'oeuvre d'Annie M.P. Smithson, l'auteur de vingt et un romans 'romanesques' publiés entre 1917 et 1946. Il étudie son attitude concernant les femmes, la religion, la politique, ainsi que le rôle de l'autobiographie dans sa fiction.Walsh Oonagh. 'Her Irish Heritage' : Annie M.P Smithson and autobiography. In: Études irlandaises, n°23-1, 1998. pp. 27-42
Il ruolo della linguistica in un'iniziativa di internazionalizzazione
The author deals with the role of linguistic sciences and language teaching in the internationalization project of an e-learning Specialization Course
Quality of Photogrammetry in Oblique Aerial Imagery for 3D Reconstruction: Assessing the quality of photogrammetry on aerial image sets and incorporate the quality in geometric feature extraction
Photogrammetry is a well-established technique that has a significant impact on the use of images for mapping purposes. Employing feature extraction, matching, and the bundle adjustment, a large number of images can be automatically processed. Ingenieursbureau Geodelta developed an application for measurements in processed (oblique) aerial images. However, the quality of these measurements and the added value of oblique images on the adjustment's quality were unclear. This will be assessed by means of the theoretical standard deviation resulting from the bundle adjustment. Upon estimating this quality, an adapted RANSAC method is proposed that incorporates this quality as weights within its algorithm to extract geometric features. The objective is to evaluate whether this enhances the RANSAC results and could be applied to 3D reconstructions. The results indicate three key factors that influence the theoretical standard deviation: high tie point availability, larger observation angles, and image viewing direction. With this, the theoretical standard deviation for tie points in both Nadir and Oblique image sets separately approximates 3 centimeters in the horizontal direction and about 10 in the height direction. Combining the two sets enhances the results by nearly a factor of three in all directions because the Nadir images connect the Oblique images, combining the strong characteristics of both sets. This demonstrates the value of both Nadir and Oblique imagery. For image exteriors, the improvement is even more pronounced, yielding an improvement factor of 4 or 5. However, propagating this quality metric through a dense matching algorithm in an adapted, weighted RANSAC algorithm does not show significant improvements in the number of planes found or the percentage of points classified as inliers of those planes. Furthermore, the RANSAC method does not converge to a better result in fewer iterations using the proposed method.Civil Engineerin
The influence of steady blowing and roughness on transitional separated boundary layers
This paper presents the results of a study between two types of forcing, namely steady blowing and a tripwire, on the control of laminar separated boundary layers. The analysis focuses on the differences in the transition process between these two types of forcing. This effect will be studied using direct numerical simulation. The main differences consists in the coherent structures formed during transition and the overall kinetic energy growth
Gusmani grecista
The author deals with the Roberto Gusmani's works about Ancient Greek language
Skin-Friction Measurements on Mathematically Generated Roughness in a Turbulent Channel Flow
Engineering systems are affected by surface roughness, however, predicting frictional drag has proven to be challenging. The present work takes a systematic approach by generating and manufacturing surfaces roughness where surface statistics, such as rms, skewness and power-spectral density can be controlled. The frictional drag on these surfaces is measured in a turbulent channel flow facility
Photogrammetric Deformation Analysis of a Quay Wall: Stochastic non-linear least-squares deformation analysis from photogrammetric measurements on a quay wall
In recent years, unstable quay walls are a problem in The Netherlands. 100-year-old quay walls in cities like Amsterdam are collapsing and endanger people and property. The government needs to renovate unstable quay walls quickly. With 600 kilometre of quay wall in Amsterdam alone, this is a great challenge. Currently, unstable walls are found by deformation monitoring using tacheometry, which takes too much time for large scale monitoring. To increase both speed and coverage, a photogrammetric deformation analysis is proposed. In multiple epochs, at months interval, a series of images of the quay wall is made from a boat. In these images, feature points are identified and matched, where part of the feature points are matched across multiple epochs. All feature point observations are put in a multi-epoch least squares adjustment. This adjustment integrates both feature point observations of individual epochs and point deformations between multiple epochs. Using photogrammetry in combination with such a deformation adjustment has not been done previously, but has great advantages. The least squares adjustment allows to take the stochastic nature of the observations into account. This enables proper error propagation, such that not only quay wall stability can be assessed, but also the corresponding error budget. Results show that using two epochs 300 multi-epoch feature points can be found per square meter quay wall. With these points, sub-centimetre deformation can be estimated.Civil Engineerin
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