• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 49
  • 40
  • 16
  • 11
  • 8
  • 8
  • 5
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 144
  • 144
  • 51
  • 49
  • 47
  • 32
  • 31
  • 28
  • 26
  • 23
  • 23
  • 17
  • 16
  • 16
  • 16
  • 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.
41

The effects of defoliation on seasonal growth dynamics, the importance of internal nitrogen-recycling and the availability of soil nutrients: implications for the invasive potential of Buddleia davidii (Franch.)

Thomas, Marc Merlin January 2007 (has links)
ABSTRACT Assessing the impact of herbivory on plant growth and reproduction is important to predict the success of biocontrol of invasive plants. Leaf area production is most important, as photosynthesis provides the foundation for all plant growth and fitness. High levels of defoliation generally reduce the productivity of plants. However, leaf area production fluctuates during the season and compensational growth may occur, which both complicate accurate estimations of defoliation impacts. Under field conditions the interaction with neighbouring species and the availability of soil nutrients need to be assessed in order to gauge long term effects of weed invasions on natural environments. In this thesis I have investigated seasonal leaf area dynamics in Buddleia davidii following repeated artificial defoliation, to quantify compensational leaf production and to understand the regulatory mechanisms involved. The impact of defoliation on photosynthesis, seed production, germination and nitrogen translocation patterns were analysed. Finally, possible facilitation between B. davidii and a native nitrogen fixer, Coriaria arborea, and the impact of B. davidii on soil nutrient availability were investigated. In defoliated B. davidii, increased node production (34%), leaf size (35%) and leaf longevity (12%) resulted in 52% greater total emergent leaf area in the short term. However, with time and diminishing tissue resources the compensation declined. No upregulation of photosynthesis was observed in pre-existing leaves. Compensational leaf area production occurred at the expense of reproduction but the germination capacity of individual seeds was unaffected. In B. davidii, nitrogen reserves are stored in old leaves. Thus, the defoliation-induced decline in tissue reserves led to changes in the remobilisation pattern and increased the importance of soil uptake but biomass production especially that of roots had declined significantly (39%). Slight facilitation effects from the neighbouring nitrogen fixer and VA-mycorrhizae were observed on B. davidii in the field, while its impact on soil chemistry during spring was negligible. Defoliation of B. davidii resulted in priority allocation of resources to compensational leaf growth and a concomitant reduction in flower and seed production. The compensational leaf production greatly increased the demand for nitrogen, while continued leaf removal decreased the pool of stored nitrogen. This led to changes in nitrogen remobilisation and an increased importance of root uptake. However, the significant decline in root growth will likely impair adequate nutrient uptake from the soil, which is especially important where B. davidii invades nutrient poor habitats and will increase the success of biocontrol of the species. While mycorrhizae increase nutrient accessibility for B. davidii, it is likely that the additional stress of defoliation will negate the small facilitative effects from nitrogen-fixing species like C. arborea. This research provides new insights into the mechanisms regulating leaf area dynamics at the shoot level and systemic physiological responses to defoliation in plants, such as nitrogen translocation. The compensation in leaf area production was considerable but only transitory and thus, the opportunity to alleviate effects of leaf loss though adjustment of light capture limited. However, to ascertain that photosynthesis at whole plant level does not increase after defoliation, more detailed measurements especially on new grown leaves are necessary. In general, defoliation had greatly reduced plant growth and performance so that an optimistic outlook for controlling this species can be given. Conclusions about the wider impacts of B. davidii on soil chemistry and community function will require further research.
42

Analyses et simulations multifractales pour une meilleure gestion des eaux pluviales en milieu urbain et péri-urbain / Improving storm water management in urban and peri-urban areas with the help of multifractal analysis and simulations

Gires, Auguste 05 October 2012 (has links)
Les multifractals universels (UM) sont un outil puissant et abondement utilisé d'analyse et de simulation de champs géophysiques, comme la pluie, extrêmement variables sur une large gamme d'échelle. Ils sont basés sur le concept de cascade multiplicative qui repose sur la notion physique d'invariance d'échelle pour explorer le phénomène fondamental qu'est l'intermittence. Dans ce cadre, toute la variabilité du champ est caractérisée à l'aide de simplement trois paramètres qui ont en plus une interprétation physique. Dans cette thèse on utilise ce cadre théorique pour quantifier l'impact de la variabilité à petite échelle de la pluie en hydrologie urbaine. La première étape consiste à analyser la variabilité spatio-temporelle de données radar de précipitation à l'aide d'un modèle multifractal anisotrope simple. Divers évènements pluvieux sont analysés. Un comportement scalant a été observé sur deux gammes d'échelles séparées par une rupture à 16 km qui est discutée. Ces données sont globalement en accord avec un modèle spatio-temporel simple reposant un exposant d'anisotropie entre l'espace et de temps. Les résultats suggèrent une possible universalité des paramètres UM pour les précipitations. Cette thèse aborde également un autre aspect de l'intermittence, particulièrement important pour les longues séries temporelles pluviométriques, que sont les nombreuses mesures nulles de la pluie (c'est-à-dire un pixel où aucune pluie n'est relevée), i.e. les longues périodes sèches. L'ancienne question de la source de cette intermittence, et notamment la nécessité d'un modèle dédié, est revisitée. D'abord les effets d'un seuil sur un champ multifractal sont analysés et ensuite un « toy model » qui introduit des zéros au sein du processus de cascade et conditionnellement aux valeurs du champ est développé. Cela permet d'expliquer la plupart des comportements observés, e.g. les différences entre les statistiques évènementielles et globales. L'impact de la variabilité de la pluie est analysé à travers l'étude de la sensibilité de modèles d'hydrologie/hydraulique urbaine à la donnée de pluie. Deux bassins versants essentiellement urbains (un de 3 400 ha en Seine-Saint-Denis à proximité de Paris, et un de 900 ha à Londres) modélisés avec des modèles opérationnels semi-distribués sont pris comme cas d'études. Par ailleurs le modèle distribué Multi-Hydro (en développement au LEESU) est testé sur une portion de 145 ha du cas d'étude parisien. L'impact de la variabilité à petites échelles non mesurée des précipitations (i.e. se produisant à des échelles plus petites que 1 km en espace et 5 min en temps qui sont disponibles avec les données radar à bande C) est d'abord évalué. Ceci est réalisé par la génération d'un ensemble de pluie réaliste désagrégée en continuant stochastiquement le processus sous-jacent de cascade au-delà de l'échelle d'observation, puis la simulation de l'ensemble correspondant d'hydrographes. Il apparaît que la variabilité à petites échelles de la pluie engendre une variabilité hydrologique qui ne doit pas être négligée. De plus le modèle Multi-Hydro génère une variabilité plus importante et pas seulement au niveau du pic de débit, i.e. même pour les pluies modérées. Ces résultats mettent en lumière la nécessité d'installer des radars en bande X (dont la résolution est hectométrique) en milieu urbain. Dans un deuxième temps les outils multifractals sont employés sur les pluies et les débits simulés qui présentent aussi un comportement scalant. Il apparaît que le réseau d'assainissement transmet simplement la variabilité des précipitations sans l'atténuer, au moins en termes de statistiques multifractals / The Universal Multifractals (UM) are a powerful tool which has been extensively used to analyze and simulate geophysical fields, such as rainfall, that are extremely variable over wide range of scales. It is based on the concept of cascade phenomenology that relies on the physical notion of scale invariance to explore the fundamental phenomenon of intermittency. In this framework the whole variability of a field is characterized with the help of only three parameters that are furthermore physically meaningful. In this PhD thesis we use this theoretical framework to quantify the impacts of small scale rainfall variability in urban hydrology. The first step consists in analysing radar rainfall space-time variability with the help of a simple anisotropic multifractal model. A variety of rainfall events are analyzed. It appears that a scaling behaviour was observed on two distinct ranges of scales separated by a break at roughly 16 km that is discussed. These data sets are in overall agreement with a simple space-time scaling model relying on single anisotropy exponent between space and time. The results hint at a possible universality of the UM parameters for rainfall. This thesis also explores another facet of intermittency, which is particularly important for long time series of precipitation, that of numerous zero rainfall measurements (a pixel or a time step with no recorded rainfall), i. e. long “dry” periods. We revisit the long lasting discussion on the source of this intermittency, e.g. whether it requires a specific modelling. First the effects of a threshold on a universal multifractal field are investigated and second a toy model that introduces some zeros within the cascade process conditioned by the field value is developed. This enables to explain most of the observed behaviour, e.g. the difference between event statistics and overall statistics. The impact of rainfall variability is investigated through the analysis of the sensitivity to the rainfall input of urban hydrologic-hydraulic models. Two predominantly urban catchments (a 3 400 ha one in Seine-Saint-Denis near Paris, and a 900 ha one in London) modelled with the help of operational semi-distributed models are used as case studies. The fully distributed model Multi-Hydro (under development at LEESU) is also tested on a 147 ha portion of the Paris case study. First the impact of unmeasured small scale rainfall variability (i.e. occurring at scales smaller than 1 km in space and 5 min in time which are available with C-band radar data) is evaluated. This is achieved by generating an ensemble of realistic downscaled rainfall fields by continuing the stochastic cascade process below the observation scale and then simulating the corresponding ensemble of hydrographs. It appears that the small scale rainfall variability generates significant hydrological variability that should not be neglected. Furthermore the Multi-Hydro model generates a larger variability not only during the peak flow, but during the whole event, i.e. for moderate rain rates. These findings highlight the need to implement X-band radars (whose resolution is hectometric) in urban areas. In a second part multifractal tools are used on both rainfall and simulated discharges that also exhibit a scaling behaviour. It appears that the rainfall drainage system basically transmits the rainfall variability without damping it, at least in terms of multifractal statistics
43

Share-Driven Scheduling of Embedded Networks

Nolte, Thomas January 2006 (has links)
Many products are built from more or less independently developed subsystems. For instance, a car consists of subsystems for transmission, braking, suspension, etc. These subsystems are frequently controlled by an embedded computer system. In the automotive industry, as well as in other application domains, there is currently a trend from an approach where subsystems have dedicated computer hardware and other resources (a federated approach) to an approach where subsystems share hardware and other resources (an integrated approach). This is motivated by a strong pressure to reduce product cost, at the same time as an increasing number of subsystems are being introduced. When integrating subsystems, it is desirable that guarantees valid before integration are also valid after integration, since this would eliminate the need for costly reverifications. The computer network is a resource that is typically shared among all subsystems. Hence, a central issue when integrating subsystems is to provide an efficient scheduling of message transmissions on the network. There are essentially three families of schedulers that can be used: priority-driven schedulers that assign priorities to messages, time-driven schedulers that assign specific time-slots for transmission of specific messages, and share-driven schedulers that assign shares of the available network capacity to groups of messages. This thesis presents a framework for share-driven scheduling, to be implemented and used in embedded networks, with the aim to facilitate subsystem integration by reducing the risk of interference between subsystems. The framework is applied in the automotive domain. The initial parts of the thesis give an overview of systems, subsystems and network technologies found and used in the automotive domain. Then, the share-driven scheduling framework is presented, analytically investigated and proven, as well as evaluated in a simulation study. Finally it is shown how the framework is to be configured and used in the context of subsystem integration. The results show that the framework allows for flexible and efficient scheduling of messages with real-time constraints, facilitating integration of subsystems from a network point of view.
44

The effects of defoliation on seasonal growth dynamics, the importance of internal nitrogen-recycling and the availability of soil nutrients: implications for the invasive potential of Buddleia davidii (Franch.)

Thomas, Marc Merlin January 2007 (has links)
ABSTRACT Assessing the impact of herbivory on plant growth and reproduction is important to predict the success of biocontrol of invasive plants. Leaf area production is most important, as photosynthesis provides the foundation for all plant growth and fitness. High levels of defoliation generally reduce the productivity of plants. However, leaf area production fluctuates during the season and compensational growth may occur, which both complicate accurate estimations of defoliation impacts. Under field conditions the interaction with neighbouring species and the availability of soil nutrients need to be assessed in order to gauge long term effects of weed invasions on natural environments. In this thesis I have investigated seasonal leaf area dynamics in Buddleia davidii following repeated artificial defoliation, to quantify compensational leaf production and to understand the regulatory mechanisms involved. The impact of defoliation on photosynthesis, seed production, germination and nitrogen translocation patterns were analysed. Finally, possible facilitation between B. davidii and a native nitrogen fixer, Coriaria arborea, and the impact of B. davidii on soil nutrient availability were investigated. In defoliated B. davidii, increased node production (34%), leaf size (35%) and leaf longevity (12%) resulted in 52% greater total emergent leaf area in the short term. However, with time and diminishing tissue resources the compensation declined. No upregulation of photosynthesis was observed in pre-existing leaves. Compensational leaf area production occurred at the expense of reproduction but the germination capacity of individual seeds was unaffected. In B. davidii, nitrogen reserves are stored in old leaves. Thus, the defoliation-induced decline in tissue reserves led to changes in the remobilisation pattern and increased the importance of soil uptake but biomass production especially that of roots had declined significantly (39%). Slight facilitation effects from the neighbouring nitrogen fixer and VA-mycorrhizae were observed on B. davidii in the field, while its impact on soil chemistry during spring was negligible. Defoliation of B. davidii resulted in priority allocation of resources to compensational leaf growth and a concomitant reduction in flower and seed production. The compensational leaf production greatly increased the demand for nitrogen, while continued leaf removal decreased the pool of stored nitrogen. This led to changes in nitrogen remobilisation and an increased importance of root uptake. However, the significant decline in root growth will likely impair adequate nutrient uptake from the soil, which is especially important where B. davidii invades nutrient poor habitats and will increase the success of biocontrol of the species. While mycorrhizae increase nutrient accessibility for B. davidii, it is likely that the additional stress of defoliation will negate the small facilitative effects from nitrogen-fixing species like C. arborea. This research provides new insights into the mechanisms regulating leaf area dynamics at the shoot level and systemic physiological responses to defoliation in plants, such as nitrogen translocation. The compensation in leaf area production was considerable but only transitory and thus, the opportunity to alleviate effects of leaf loss though adjustment of light capture limited. However, to ascertain that photosynthesis at whole plant level does not increase after defoliation, more detailed measurements especially on new grown leaves are necessary. In general, defoliation had greatly reduced plant growth and performance so that an optimistic outlook for controlling this species can be given. Conclusions about the wider impacts of B. davidii on soil chemistry and community function will require further research.
45

Avaliação do desmatamento e seus possíveis impactos nas mudanças climáticas da bacia do Rio Turvo Sujo - MG / Investigates impacts of deforestation on the regional climatic changes of the Turvo Sujo River Basin

Vilela, Tatiane Assis 17 February 2009 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-26T13:27:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 texto completo.pdf: 3635755 bytes, checksum: b5b997989b5eac8d749ff8739618bcb2 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2009-02-17 / Fundação de Amparo a Pesquisa do Estado de Minas Gerais / This work investigates impacts of deforestation on the regional climatic changes of the Turvo Sujo River Basin, MG during the past 24 years. Landsat images of 1984, 1989, 2000 and 2008 were used to define the deforestation rate. Annual NDVI data ( Normalized Difference Vegetation Index ) for the period from 1984 to 2006 generated from NOAA satellites were used to generate deforestation tendency. This tendency was compared to temporal evolution of temperature and precipitation to investigate the impacts of deforestation on local climate changes. The results showed that vegetative area increased from 21.01% in 1984 to 24.00% in 1900, 29.56% in 2000 and 25.96% in 2008. It indicated that the studied basin was under reforestation during the years before 2000 which resulted a better climatic change but and deforestation and land degradation afterward. From the temporal evolution analysis, it was observed that NDVI was closed related to precipitation but inversely related to temperature. From the tendency analysis of NDVI, precipitation and temperature, it was observed that NDVI increased slightly from 6.60 to 6.64, precipitation from 1200 mm to 1220 mm and temperature from 19.6 °C to 20.5 °C. It is concluded that the time series of annual NDVI, generated from the NOAA satellites, provides us an important source to investigate the deforestation impacts on regional climatic changes as well as the reforestation effects on minimizing local climatic changes. It is suggested that suitable actions of reforestation and natural resources management should be taken to reverse the current tendency of temperature increase in the Basin. / Este trabalho investiga os impactos do desmatamento nas mudanças climáticas regionais da Bacia do Rio Turvo Sujo, localizada no estado de Minas Gerais, durante os últimos 24 anos. As imagens obtidas do sensor TM/Landsat referente aos anos de 1984, 1989, 2000 e 2008 foram usadas para calcular a taxa de desmatamento existente na área de estudo. Os dados de NDVI anuais ("Normalized Difference Vegetation Index ) referentes ao período de 1984 a 2006 gerados a partir do sensor NOAA/AVHRR foram empregados no cálculo da tendência de desmatamento. Esta tendência foi comparada a evolução temporal de temperatura e precipitação de forma a proporcionar uma análise dos impactos do desmatamento nas mudanças climáticas locais. Os resultados mostraram que a taxa do desmatamento foi reduzida e a área com cobertura vegetal aumentada de 21,01% em 1984 a 24,00% em 1989, 29.56% em 2000 diminuindo para 25.96% em 2008. Estes dados indicaram aumento do reflorestamento durante o período de 1984 a 2000 e uma tendência de desaceleração após 2000. Da análise da evolução temporal, foi observado que o NDVI relacionou-se diretamente com a precipitação, mas inversamente com a temperatura. Da análise de tendência do NDVI, da precipitação e da temperatura, foi observado que NDVI aumentou ligeiramente de 6.60 a 6.64, a precipitação de 1200 mm para 1220 mm e a temperatura de 19.6 °C para 20.5 °C. Concluiu-se que as séries temporais da média anual de NDVI geradas a partir do satélite NOAA provêem uma importante fonte de investigação dos impactos de desmatamento nas mudanças climáticas regionais como também o reflorestamento minimiza as mudanças climáticas locais. É sugerido que haja melhor administração dos recursos naturais e implantação de novas áreas de reflorestamento de forma a inverter a tendência atual de aumento da temperatura na na Bacia.
46

Návrh projektu aplikace metody SMED ve společnosti / Project Design Application of SMED Methodology in the Company

Machalová, Šárka January 2015 (has links)
The master’s thesis considers a project proposal for reduce changeover time by application one of the lean manufacturing methods. The thesis specifies the basic theoretical concepts and methods of project management and lean manufacturing. It contains analysis of the current state of injecting moulding machine and workplace. The main output of the thesis is compiled the project plan.
47

La détection des sursauts gamma par le télescope ECLAIRs pour la mission spatiale SVOM / Detection of Gamma-Ray Bursts with the ECLAIRs instrument onboard the space mission SVOM

Antier-Farfar, Sarah 29 November 2016 (has links)
Les sursauts gamma sont des événements fascinants de par leur origine longtemps restée mystérieuse, leur apparition imprévisible dans le ciel, et la formidable énergie qu'ils libèrent sous forme de bouffées de rayonnement gamma. Découverts fortuitement au début des années 1970, ils se traduisent par un intense flash de rayons gamma de brève durée (de quelques ms à quelques min), appelé émission prompte, suivi d'une émission longue, appelée rémanence, qui décroît rapidement, en émettant depuis les rayons X jusqu'au domaine radio. L'origine des sursauts gamma est encore largement discutée mais ces phénomènes extrêmes sont très vraisemblablement associés à la formation de nouveaux trous noirs stellaires. Mon sujet de thèse se situe au coeur de la mission sino-française SVOM dont le lancement du satellite est prévu en 2021, qui scrutera le ciel pour observer les sursauts avec une précision inégalée, associant observations spatiales et terrestres. Mon travail concerne l'instrument principal de la mission, le télescope spatial ECLAIRs. Il s'agit d'une caméra à masque codé sensible aux rayons X et gamma de basse énergie, en charge de la détection et de la localisation de l'émission prompte des sursauts. Durant mon travail de thèse, j'ai travaillé sur les performances scientifiques de l'instrument ECLAIRs et j'ai en particulier estimé le nombre de sursauts qui seront détectés et leurs caractéristiques. Pour cela, j'ai mis en place des simulations de performances utilisant les prototypes des algorithmes de détection embarqués combinés au modèle de l'instrument ECLAIRs. Les données en entrée des simulations comportent un bruit de fond simulé, et une population synthétique de sursauts gamma générée à partir de catalogues existants issus des observations des missions antérieures (CGRO, HETE-2, Swift et Fermi). Mon étude a permis d'estimer finement l'efficacité de détection d'ECLAIRs et prédit un taux de sursauts attendu par ECLAIRs entre 40 et 70 sursauts par an. Par ailleurs, mon travail a montré qu'ECLAIRs sera particulièrement sensible à une population de sursauts très riches en rayons X, population encore mal connue. Ma thèse présente plusieurs autres études complémentaires portant sur la performance de localisation, le taux de fausses alertes et les caractéristiques des déclenchements des algorithmes. Enfin, j'ai proposé deux nouvelles méthodes originales de détection de sursauts dont les résultats préliminaires présentés dans ma thèse sont très encourageants. Ils montrent que la sensibilité d'ECLAIRs aux sursauts courts (population d'intérêt particulier en raison de son lien attendu avec les ondes gravitationnelles) peut être encore améliorée. / Discovered in the early 1970s, gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are amazing cosmic phenomena appearing randomly on the sky and releasing large amounts of energy mainly through gamma-ray emission. Although their origin is still under debate, they are believed to be produced by some of the most violent explosions in the Universe leading to the formation of stellar black-holes. GRBs are detected by their prompt emission, an intense short burst of gamma-rays (from a few millisecondes to few minutes), and are followed by a lived-afterglow emission observed on longer timescales from the X-ray to the radio domain. My thesis participates to the developement of the SVOM mission, which a Chinese-French mission to be launched in 2021, devoted to the study of GRBs and involving space and ground instruments. My work is focussed on the main instrument ECLAIRs, a hard X-ray coded mask imaging camera, in charge of the near real-time detection and localization of the prompt emission of GRBs. During my thesis, I studied the scientific performances of ECLAIRs and in particular the number of GRBs expected to be detected by ECLAIRs and their characteristics. For this purpose, I performed simulations using the prototypes of the embedded trigger algorithms combined with the model of the ECLAIRs instrument. The input data of the simulations include a background model and a synthetic population of gamma-ray bursts generated from existing catalogs (CGRO, HETE-2, Fermi and Swift). As a result, I estimated precisely the ECLAIRs detection efficiency of the algorithms and I predicted the number of GRBs to be detected by ECLAIRs : 40 to 70 GRBs per year. Moreover, the study highlighted that ECLAIRs will be particularly sensitive to the X-ray rich GRB population. My thesis provided additional studies about the localization performance, the rate of false alarm and the characteristics of the triggers of the algorithms. Finally, I also proposed two new methods for the detection of GRBs.The preliminary results were very promising and demonstrate that the sensitivity of ECLAIRs to the short GRBs (an interesting population due to the predicted association with gravitational waves) could be improved further.
48

Využití nástrojů projektového managementu při řízení IT projektů / The Use of Methods of the Project Management in IT Projects

Mrhač, Ondřej January 2020 (has links)
This master’s thesis is focused on practical use of project management in order to buy new videotransmitting technical cars for ABC company. First of all, necessary theoretical knowledge and informations are explained, then market analysis is made. Based on outcomes the project proposal solution is created for this project.
49

Podnikatelský záměr-rozšíření stavební firmy / Business Plan - Extension of the Construction Company

Gróf, Michal January 2013 (has links)
The thesis is written in order to composition of business plan for creation of new consultant centre of construction company NOSTA s. r. o. For elaboration were used special methods which properly analyses actual statement and also point out new possibilities for improvement of efficiency of the company. Project part describes the new product and the procedure of its placing on the market. Economic effectiveness is evaluated too.
50

Využití nástrojů projektového managementu ve firmě / The Use of Methods of the Project Management in Company

Cvrček, Josef January 2013 (has links)
The thesis deals with application of project management methods in a company. The proposed project focuses on introduction of an interactive menu in the U Koníčka hotel and restaurant. The introductory part of the thesis contains the theoretical base of project management followed by analysis of the existing situation in the chosen business entity. Pre-project study with a proposal for effective elimination of found drawbacks is the output of the thesis.

Page generated in 0.0707 seconds