• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 252
  • 80
  • 32
  • 23
  • 23
  • 13
  • 9
  • 7
  • 5
  • 3
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • Tagged with
  • 573
  • 95
  • 53
  • 47
  • 43
  • 43
  • 42
  • 41
  • 37
  • 36
  • 36
  • 36
  • 30
  • 28
  • 27
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
71

Investigating monitoring options for harbour seals in Special Areas of Conservation in Scotland

Cunningham, Louise January 2007 (has links)
Managing a wild population effectively requires knowledge of the abundance and behaviour of the species. Harbour seals (Phoca vitulina) are usually counted when they come ashore at haul-out sites, and so it is important to understand how the number of seals counted at this time relates to total population size. Satellite telemetry studies confirmed that harbour seals on the west coast of Scotland showed a degree of site fidelity and coastal foraging. Most trips taken by tagged animals involved travelling only 10-30 km from haul-outs and lasted less than a day (mean 21.07 hours, SE = 0.54), although some seals travelled over 100 km. Eighteen percent of the time these tagged seals spent hauled out was in the Special Area of Conservation where they were caught. Individual seals can be recognised from their unique pelage patterns using computer-assisted photo-identification. Capture histories for adult harbour seals at a site in north-west Scotland indicated that the number of seals using the study area between April and October was 3.4 times higher than the number counted during an aerial survey made during the August moult. In the UK, aerial surveys of harbour seals are usually conducted during the first three weeks of August, when seals are moulting. These counts have a coefficient of variation of around 15%. Land-based counts made at study sites on the north-west coast of Scotland indicated that the number of seals hauled out was most consistent during the moult, but highest counts were from the pupping period. Analysis of moult counts indicated that starting surveys one week earlier (on 7th August) and surveying 1½ hours earlier in the tidal cycle would reduce the count variation. There was spatial, seasonal, diurnal and sex-related variation in the proportion of time harbour seals hauled out. Thus the relationship between counts and total population size is likely to vary spatially and temporally. This variation should be included in the estimates of the CV of correction factors. A 5% annual change in harbour seal population size was predicted to take around 14 years to detect based on annual surveys and a CV = 0.15. This detection period increases when monitoring methods with lower precision are used, or surveys are made less frequently. Trends in seal abundance at pairs of haul-out sites were not synchronous and so it is unlikely that counts from small land-based protected areas, such as Special Areas of Conservation, can be used to monitor overall population status.
72

Chemical interrogation of low level radioactivity

Holland, Paul Edward January 1997 (has links)
No description available.
73

Statistically monitoring inventory accuracy in large warehouse and retail environments

Huschka, Andrew January 1900 (has links)
Master of Science / Department of Industrial & Manufacturing Systems Engineering / John English / This research builds upon previous efforts to explore the use of Statistical Process Control (SPC) in lieu of cycle counting. Specifically a three pronged effort is developed. First, in the work of Huschka (2009) and Miller (2008), a mixture distribution is proposed to model the complexities of multiple Stock Keeping Units (SKU) within an operating department. We have gained access to data set from a large retailer and have analyzed the data in an effort to validate the core models. Secondly, we develop a recursive relationship that enables large samples of SKUs to be evaluated with appropriately with the SPC approach. Finally, we present a comprehensive set of type I and type II error rates for the SPC approach to inventory accuracy monitoring.
74

Estimating the number of people in an area : Using Bluetooth and WiFi signals

Naga, Alex January 2019 (has links)
In this world of the digital era, a large percentage of the world population and almost everyone in Sweden today owns a smartphone, and possibly even a smartwatch. By using this to our advantage, it would be possible to check whether an area is currently very busy or not, based on how many smartphones or other wearables technology it is possible to discover in the area. The approach chosen to dig into this problem was to research suitable hardware devices with Bluetooth and WiFi compatibility, that could detect probe requests broadcasted by smartphones or wearable devices in the area. The knowledge gained from the research in this thesis set the foundation for implementing a prototype with the desired functionality. Testing of the prototype was then conducted in a university library and analysed how it performed. Through testing the developed prototype, it revealed that it is possible to obtain an indication of whether an area is currently very crowded or not using Bluetooth and WiFi signals. A suggestion on how to proceed in creating more fine-tuned improvements is also described.
75

Escher's Problem and Numerical Sequences

Palmacci, Matthew Stephen 27 April 2006 (has links)
Counting problems lead naturally to integer sequences. For example if one asks for the number of subsets of an $n$-set, the answer is $2^n$, or the integer sequence $1,~2,~4,~8,~ldots$. Conversely, given an integer sequence, or part of it, one may ask if there is an associated counting problem. There might be several different counting problems that produce the same integer sequence. To illustrate the nature of mathematical research involving integer sequences, we will consider Escher's counting problem and a generalization, as well as counting problems associated with the Catalan numbers, and the Collatz conjecture. We will also discuss the purpose of the On-Line-Encyclopedia of Integer Sequences.
76

Combinatória: abordagem precisa / Combinatorial analysis: a precise approach

Francisco Eduardo Faustino de Paula 24 September 2014 (has links)
Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior / O objetivo central deste projeto é precisar matematicamente certos objetos combinatórios que servem como ponto de partida nas apresentações usuais da Análise Combinatória e são comumente apresentados de maneira informal e intuitiva. Estabelecido este referencial teórico preciso, pretendemos, a partir dele, reapresentar os conceitos de Análise Combinatória de modo mais rigoroso privilegiando sempre a apresentação mais natural possível. Mais precisamente, estaremos interessados em reapresentar os resultados referentes ao capítulo dois do livro do professor Augusto C. Morgado a partir de uma versão matematicamente mais precisa dos Princípios Aditivo e Multiplicativo. Além disso, pretendemos que os argumentos usados em nossas deduções usem predominantemente indução ou construção de bijeções, o que é um dos grandes objetos de estudo da combinatória moderna
77

An Evaluation of Methods of Concentrating and Counting the Phytoplankton of Bear Lake, Utah-Idaho

Clark, William J. 01 May 1956 (has links)
The phytoplankton, or plant plankton, live in the open water throughout their life cycle and obtain the necessary nutrients from the water. They are important contributors to the total plant production of lakes and ponds.
78

Implementing the Schoof-Elkies-Atkin Algorithm with NTL

Kok, Yik Siong 25 April 2013 (has links)
In elliptic curve cryptography, cryptosystems are based on an additive subgroup of an elliptic curve defined over a finite field, and the hardness of the Elliptic Curve Discrete Logarithm Problem is dependent on the order of this subgroup. In particular, we often want to find a subgroup with large prime order. Hence when finding a suitable curve for cryptography, counting the number of points on the curve is an essential step in determining its security. In 1985, René Schoof proposed the first deterministic polynomial-time algorithm for point counting on elliptic curves over finite fields. The algorithm was improved by Noam Elkies and Oliver Atkin, resulting in an algorithm which is sufficiently fast for practical purposes. The enhancements leveraged the arithmetic properties of the l-th classical modular polynomial, where l- is either an Elkies or Atkin prime. As the Match-Sort algorithm relating to Atkin primes runs in exponential time, it is eschewed in common practice. In this thesis, I will discuss my implementation of the Schoof-Elkies-Atkin algorithm in C++, which makes use of the NTL package. The implementation also supports the computation of classical modular polynomials via isogeny volcanoes, based on the methods proposed recently by Bröker, Lauter and Sutherland. Existing complexity analysis of the Schoof-Elkies-Atkin algorithm focuses on its asymptotic performance. As such, there is no estimate of the actual impact of the Match-Sort algorithm on the running time of the Schoof-Elkies-Atkin algorithm for elliptic curves defined over prime fields of cryptographic sizes. I will provide rudimentary estimates for the largest Elkies or Atkin prime used, and discuss the variants of the Schoof-Elkies-Atkin algorithm using their run-time performances. The running times of the SEA variants supports the use Atkin primes for prime fields of sizes up to 256 bits. At this size, the selective use of Atkin primes runs in half the time of the Elkies-only variant on average. This suggests that Atkin primes should be used in point counting on elliptic curves of cryptographic sizes.
79

Photon flux monitor for a mono-energetic gamma ray source

Mavrichi, Octavian 25 March 2010
A novel photon flux monitor has been designed and tested for use at the Duke University High Intensity Gamma Source, where the photon beam produced is essentially mono-energetic but it is not tagged. Direct counting of the number of photons using a high-efficiency detector is not possible because of the high photon fluxes expected. Therefore, a direct counting detector with a low, accurately known efficiency was required.<p> The photon flux monitor based on a five scintillator paddle system detects recoil electrons and positrons from photoelectric, Compton and pair-production processes. It has been designed to be insensitive to gain and detector threshold changes and to be usable for photon energies above 5 MeV. It has been calibrated using direct counting with a NaI detector and its efficiency has been shown to be well predicted by a GEANT4 simulation.<p> Results of measurements, calibration and calculations required to characterize the 5-paddle photon flux monitor are presented. The photon flux monitor has met its design specifications of being able to determine the number of photons incident on it during the live time of a measurement to within a systematic error of 2%.<p> A paper based on the work for this thesis has been published in the Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Journal.
80

Optimization of Dual Energy data acquisition using CdTe-detectors with electronic spectrum splitting

Eriksson, Charlotte January 2013 (has links)
Dual energy imaging has made it possible to enhance contrast in medical images using images containing different energy information, by combining low and high energy images. Dual energy data can either be acquired using double exposures or splitting the energy spectrum into two images using one exposure. This thesis presents investigations of dual energy imaging using a detector solution developed by XCounter which provides dual energy images in a single exposure with a threshold separating low and high energy images. Phantom experiments with phantoms of aluminum and plexiglas were performed using weighted logarithmic subtraction and basis material decomposition to produce dual energy images. Methods were validated and images were evaluated in terms of signal difference in noise ratio to find the threshold and tube voltage combination for optimum energy spectrum separation. The methods were also tested on biological materials using bone, soft tissue and iodine solution as contrast enhancer, to investigate K-edge imaging.  Optimal separation of plexiglas and aluminum were found at 70 kVp and the threshold parameter set within a range of 8 to 9, which corresponds to approximately 30 to 34 keV. For K-edge imaging, the optimum separation were found close to K-edge energy of iodine. The results found in the phantom study correlated with results from the biological material study.

Page generated in 0.0942 seconds