scholarly journals Developing Analytical Model for Locating Preferred Ecovillage Sites Using GIS - The Case Study of Bukgu, Pohang

Author(s):  
Doo-Soon Kim ◽  
Seon-A Jung
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Koki Ho ◽  
Hao Chen ◽  
Harrison Kim

This paper analyzes the value of staged deployment for complex infrastructure system and propose a concept of bootstrapping staged deployment. Staged deployment has been well known for its advantage of providing flexibility in an uncertain environment. In contrast, this paper demonstrates that the proposed bootstrapping staged deployment can even add values in a deterministic environment. The key idea of bootstrapping staged deployment is to have the previously deployed stages support the subsequent deployment. We develop an analytical model to demonstrate the effects of bootstrapping staged deployment with a case study in space exploration. Our analysis results show that with a well-coordinated deployment plan, staged deployment can overperform single-stage deployment even in a deterministic environment, and that there is an optimal number of stages in terms of lifecycle cost under certain conditions. Our method can find the analytical expression for the optimal number of stages and its deployment strategies. The general findings from the proposed concept and analytical method can advance our knowledge about systems staged deployment, and make operational planning of resource generation infrastructure more efficient.


Author(s):  
V Murugesan ◽  
Sreejith Plappillimadam ◽  
VJ Saji ◽  
SS Maruthi ◽  
AK Anilkumar

Reliability is one of the critical design parameters for the launch vehicles and its systems. When the systems are ready to fly the first time, only limited test data are available and accordingly reliability assessed will be very low. However, in most cases, the new systems are derived and developed using the knowledge and experience gained from the heritage systems to meet the fresh challenges. Hence, the reliability assessed with the minimum number of tests done on the new system does not truly reflect the inherent reliability of the system. In this paper, an approach and a new analytical model are developed for the reliability assessment of systems with limited test data, giving an accurate weighting for the tests and flight experiences with similar systems. The method gives a systematic procedure for arriving at the weighting factor for test data of the pedigree system, with due consideration of the similarities between the systems and various factors influencing system reliability. The method is illustrated with a case study of a newly developed liquid propellant rocket system. The model is validated using the available test and flight data of two propulsion systems with adequate flight experience. The analytical model is generic in nature and can be applied to reliability analysis of any system, which has considerable similarities with a pedigree system.


Author(s):  
Andrea Micheletti

Tensegrity systems are prestressed frameworks composed of bars and cables. A particular elastic tensegrity system is examined. This system can be bistable in two fundamentally different ways, one depending on its geometric dimensions, and the other one depending on the initial deformation, or prestrain, of the elastic elements. A reduced-order semi-analytical model is derived, and its predictions are verified with a full-order numerical model. In particular, the critical geometry and prestrain at which the system switches from one regime to another are determined. This case study provides a benchmark and new insights on this class of structures.


Author(s):  
S A Hamed Hosseini

Drawing on the World Social Forum as an exemplary case study, this article shows how an emerging mode of cosmopolitanist vision (‘transversalism’) can be explained in terms of activists’ experiences of both complexity and contradiction in their networks. The paper questions the idea that the transnationalization of networks of solidarity and interconnection can uncomplicatedly encourage the growth of cosmopolitanism among global justice activists. Activists’ experiences of dissonances between their ideals, the complexity of power relations and the structural uncertainties in their global justice networks can provide them with a base for self-reflexive ideation and deliberation, and thereby encourage agendas for accommodating differences. Underpinning the accommodating measures which arise for dealing with such a cognitive-practical dissonance is a new mode of cosmopolitanism, coined here as ‘transversalism’. The article proposes a new conceptual framework and an analytical model to investigate the complexity of this process more inclusively and systematically.


Author(s):  
Noppadol Prammance

This chapter reports the results of the case study of online interaction. Prior to conducting the case study, the author conducted a pre-study to understand how students and instructors view the problems they face in online courses. After that, the author used Hillman et al. and Moore’s four types of interaction and Henri’s analytical model as a framework to guide the investigation in order to understand the nature of interaction in an online course. The results of this study showed that combination three of the types of interaction and the analytical model help teaching and learning become more effective. Furthermore, this study provides recommendations and practices that would be helpful for online instructors to design and deliver online courses effectively.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luka Serianz ◽  
Nina Rman ◽  
Mihael Brenčič

<p>In Alps, a number of thermal springs are known, which represent the outflow of thermal water from low temperature geothermal systems in fractured rocks. Such dynamics is usually characterized with convection flow, derived either by fault intersection or hydrogeological barrier where the thermal water is uprising due to hydraulic pressure imbalance. When the water is uprising due to convection, it is very likely that the mixing processes between the deep thermal component and the shallow fresh groundwater are established. In Bled case study in Slovenia, the thermal water with average temperature of 21.5 °C, which is around 12 °C higher than average annual air temperature, is discharging from fractured carbonate rocks into glacial Quaternary sediments. Since they have relatively higher but heterogeneous permeability, the uprising thermal water drains into these deposits and, consequently, forms thermal plume which is extending parallel to prevailing fresh groundwater flow direction. Knowing the extent of the thermal plume is of crucial importance for sustainable exploration of the geothermal resource, since it provides answers also to the key issues related to its geothermal and hydraulic characteristics and the dynamics of the regional flow of groundwater, including its recharge area. By approximating the thermal water outflow as a planar source (since we assume it springs out from a fault zone), a planar advective heat transport model (PAHM) was used to evaluate its geometry and quantify the rates. Nine scenarios were applied accounting for different dimensions of the heat source. Each scenario was verified by calculating relative error between the analytical model results and measured borehole temperatures. The PAHM proved to be a useful tool in applying heat transfer as a planar source in groundwater flow. Still, it is necessary to consider or to introduce relatively rough assumptions (e.g. simple model geometry) leading to a very conservative approach. The heterogeneity of the medium has a significant influence on the temperature distributions obtained with different simulation scenarios. Therefore, the calculated temperature distribution within a thermal plume is a subject to uncertainty. In addition, some small portion of a relative error can be attributed to Lake Bled, since the thermal plume is extending in the zone of lake water temperature fluctuation influence. Nevertheless, the analytical model can be used as a tool for simulating spatial distribution of the observed values acquired from field measurements and thus more correctly evaluating the average natural conditions.</p>


2015 ◽  
Vol 100 ◽  
pp. 87-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francesco Leccese ◽  
Giuseppe Tuoni ◽  
Giacomo Salvadori ◽  
Michele Rocca

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