scholarly journals Explaining the impact of conductor surface type on wet weather HVDC corona characteristics

2016 ◽  
Vol 79 ◽  
pp. 45-55 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin Pfeiffer ◽  
Tim Schultz ◽  
Sören Hedtke ◽  
Christian M. Franck
1996 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 292-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arthur W. L. Veen ◽  
Wim Klaassen ◽  
Bart Kruijt ◽  
Ronald W.A. Hutjes

Although the soil-vegetation-atmosphere exchange of momentum and heat is fairly well understood for many types of homogeneous surfaces, the disturbances created by tran sitions of one surface type to another remain to be analysed more fully. This is especially true for the impact which a large transition such as the forest edge has on the average fluxes in a small-scale heterogeneous landscape with forest. Recently acquired experimental evidence appears to some extent contradictory and at variance with conventional concepts.


2010 ◽  
Vol 50 (6) ◽  
pp. 400 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. R. Stockdale

The objective of the present review was to establish levels of conserved fodder wastage when feeding livestock (sheep, beef cattle, dairy cattle) under various conditions and using various feed-out systems, and to determine the factors affecting wastage. The mean wastage of hay recorded in the literature reviewed was 17% of the DM offered, but the range was from 4 to 77%. The main factors affecting the degree of wastage were storage method, packaging method, method of feeding out, amount of fodder on offer and its palatability and/or quality and the impact of wet weather. Although the emphasis was on hay, the principles should also apply to silage. If wastage was 40% rather than 5%, the cost of feeding conserved fodder to livestock would be a third greater than producers might expect or budget on.


Water ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (20) ◽  
pp. 2865
Author(s):  
Baden Myers ◽  
John Awad ◽  
David Pezzaniti ◽  
Dennis Gonzalez ◽  
Declan Page ◽  
...  

Water quality is a key consideration for urban stormwater harvesting via aquifers. This study assessed catchment spill management options based on a calibrated dynamic wave routing model of stormwater flow in an urban catchment. The study used measured travel times, pluviometer and gauging station observations from 21 storms to calibrate a stormwater model to simulate transport of pollutants from spill locations to the point of harvest. The simulations considered the impact of spill locations, spill durations, storm intensities and storm durations on the pollutant concentration at the point of harvest and travel time of a pollutant spill to the harvesting point. During dry weather, spill events travelled slower than spills occurring during wet weather. For wet weather spills, the shortest travel times tended to occur in higher intensity storms with shorter duration, particularly when a spill occurred in the middle of the storm. Increasing the intensity of rainfall reduced the peak concentration of pollutant at the harvest point via dilution, but it also reduced the time of travel. On a practical level, due to the short response times in urban catchments, management of spills should be supported by automated detection/diversion systems to protect stormwater harvesting schemes.


2010 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 4145-4165 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. F. Baker ◽  
H. Bösch ◽  
S. C. Doney ◽  
D. O'Brien ◽  
D. S. Schimel

Abstract. We quantify how well column-integrated CO2 measurements from the Orbiting Carbon Observatory (OCO) should be able to constrain surface CO2 fluxes, given the presence of various error sources. We use variational data assimilation to optimize weekly fluxes at a 2°×5° resolution (lat/lon) using simulated data averaged across each model grid box overflight (typically every ~33 s). Grid-scale simulations of this sort have been carried out before for OCO using simplified assumptions for the measurement error. Here, we more accurately describe the OCO measurements in two ways. First, we use new estimates of the single-sounding retrieval uncertainty and averaging kernel, both computed as a function of surface type, solar zenith angle, aerosol optical depth, and pointing mode (nadir vs. glint). Second, we collapse the information content of all valid retrievals from each grid box crossing into an equivalent multi-sounding measurement uncertainty, factoring in both time/space error correlations and data rejection due to clouds and thick aerosols. Finally, we examine the impact of three types of systematic errors: measurement biases due to aerosols, transport errors, and mistuning errors caused by assuming incorrect statistics. When only random measurement errors are considered, both nadir- and glint-mode data give error reductions over the land of ~45% for the weekly fluxes, and ~65% for seasonal fluxes. Systematic errors reduce both the magnitude and spatial extent of these improvements by about a factor of two, however. Improvements nearly as large are achieved over the ocean using glint-mode data, but are degraded even more by the systematic errors. Our ability to identify and remove systematic errors in both the column retrievals and atmospheric assimilations will thus be critical for maximizing the usefulness of the OCO data.


Energies ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 3034
Author(s):  
Zhenyu Li ◽  
Xuezeng Zhao

In this work, an effective calculation method of the ion flow field that considers the impact of wind flow and water drops is presented. To be explicit, the nominal electric field is solved by the charge simulation method (CSM) whilst the space charge density is calculated adopting a second order upwind finite volume method. In addition, a method that determines the roughness factor of a conductor surface is used to enhance calculation accuracy. The influence of various properties of the water drops exerting on an ion flow field is analyzed. Eventually, a practical experiment is conducted to verify the calculated result, and the effectiveness and reliability of this method are then proved via comparing calculated and measured results.


2007 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 35-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert S. Fausto ◽  
Christoph Mayer ◽  
Andreas P. Ahlstrøm

AbstractA new surface classification algorithm for monitoring snow and ice masses based on data from the moderate-resolution imaging spectroradiometer (MODIS) is presented. The algorithm is applied to the Greenland ice sheet for the period 2000–05 and exploits the spectral variability of ice and snow reflectance to determine the surface classes dry snow, wet snow and glacier ice. The result is a monthly glacier surface type (GST) product on a 1 km resolution grid. The GST product is based on a grouped criteria technique with spectral thresholds and normalized indices for the classification on a pixel-by-pixel basis. The GST shows the changing surface classes, revealing the impact of climate variations on the Greenland ice sheet over time. The area of wet snow and glacier ice is combined into the glacier melt area (GMA) product. The GMA is analyzed in relation to the different surface classes in the GST product. The results are validated with data from weather stations and similar types of satellite-derived products. The validation shows that the automated algorithm successfully distinguishes between the different surface types, implying that the product is a promising indicator of climate change impact on the Greenland ice sheet.


Prospects for ultra-high voltage (1000 kV and above) a.c. power transmission are discussed, and the problems involved in developing and constructing this u.h.v. transmission are reviewed. Research above 1000 kV is concerned with minimizing the impact of u.h.v. lines on the immediate environment, particu ­ larly radio and audible noise emission due to wet-weather corona effects, and electrostatic induction phenomena near the lines. The paper reviews the design constraints now envisaged to avoid these problems, as well as insulation requirements that may be necessary. No specific technical limitations through 1500 kV have yet been encountered, although the formation of power corridors w ith limited public access may be necessary above 1500 kV.


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