A collective framework to assess the adoption of precision agriculture in France: description and preliminary results after two years

Author(s):  
N. Lachia ◽  
L. Pichon ◽  
B. Tisseyre
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Falocchi ◽  
Lorenzo Giovannini ◽  
Luca Belelli Marchesini ◽  
Damiano Gianelle ◽  
Leonardo Montagnani ◽  
...  

<p>The estimate and parameterization of mass and energy fluxes exchanged in the atmospheric surface-layer, between the biosphere and the atmosphere, plays a key role in many disciplines, e.g. meteorology and atmospheric sciences, ecology and precision agriculture.</p><p>In mountain environments, crests lines tend to decouple the atmospheric processes close to the ground from those in the upper layers and deeply affect the penetration of solar radiation on the floors and the sidewalls of valleys. The consequent differential heating of the surface allows the onset of many local phenomena, such as thermally-driven flows and temperature inversions, with impacts on the regime of the exchanges. Indeed, the low-wind conditions, the wind interaction with landforms and the atmospheric stability control the turbulence and the development of sub-meso motions, i.e. those phenomena responsible for the diffusion and transport of substances, respectively.</p><p>The Wheat Project is a 2-year-long project, started on November 2018 and funded by the CARITRO Foundation (“Cassa di Risparmio di Trento e Rovereto”, Italy), which aims at investigating the basic mechanisms responsible for biosphere-atmosphere exchanges in mountain areas, in order to improve their estimate and scaling.</p><p>Three datasets collected by long-term research infrastructures and composed of both biochemical and atmospheric quantities measured over different ecosystems were selected in the Trentino Alto Adige/South Tirol region (Italy). Data were measured at the research facility managed by the Free University of Bolzano/Bozen at Caldaro, over an apple orchard (220 m ASL, available period 2010-2018), and at the research facilities managed by the Fondazione Edmund Mach at Monte Lavarone, over a forest (1349 m ASL, available period 2000-2018) and at Viote del Monte Bondone, over an Alpine grassland (1553 m ASL, available period 2002-2018).</p><p>This contribution focuses on the pre-processing procedure adopted to identify representative periods for the analyses and on the methods implemented to retrieve turbulence parameters. In particular, the identification of the characteristic time-scales of small-scale turbulence is carried out through an application of the anisotropic analysis of turbulence, whereas the separation of the turbulence signal from low-frequency fluctuations is performed by implementing a recursive digital filter. Finally, some preliminary results regarding the estimate and the scaling of the turbulent fluxes of momentum, sensible heat, moisture and carbon dioxide are presented.</p>


1999 ◽  
Vol 173 ◽  
pp. 185-188
Author(s):  
Gy. Szabó ◽  
K. Sárneczky ◽  
L.L. Kiss

AbstractA widely used tool in studying quasi-monoperiodic processes is the O–C diagram. This paper deals with the application of this diagram in minor planet studies. The main difference between our approach and the classical O–C diagram is that we transform the epoch (=time) dependence into the geocentric longitude domain. We outline a rotation modelling using this modified O–C and illustrate the abilities with detailed error analysis. The primary assumption, that the monotonity and the shape of this diagram is (almost) independent of the geometry of the asteroids is discussed and tested. The monotonity enables an unambiguous distinction between the prograde and retrograde rotation, thus the four-fold (or in some cases the two-fold) ambiguities can be avoided. This turned out to be the main advantage of the O–C examination. As an extension to the theoretical work, we present some preliminary results on 1727 Mette based on new CCD observations.


2000 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 163-165
Author(s):  
S. K. Solanki ◽  
M. Fligge ◽  
P. Pulkkinen ◽  
P. Hoyng

AbstractThe records of sunspot number, sunspot areas and sunspot locations gathered over the centuries by various observatories are reanalysed with the aim of finding as yet undiscovered connections between the different parameters of the sunspot cycle and the butterfly diagram. Preliminary results of such interrelationships are presented.


1978 ◽  
Vol 48 ◽  
pp. 31-35
Author(s):  
R. B. Hanson

Several outstanding problems affecting the existing parallaxes should be resolved to form a coherent system for the new General Catalogue proposed by van Altena, as well as to improve luminosity calibrations and other parallax applications. Lutz has reviewed several of these problems, such as: (A) systematic differences between observatories, (B) external error estimates, (C) the absolute zero point, and (D) systematic observational effects (in right ascension, declination, apparent magnitude, etc.). Here we explore the use of cluster and spectroscopic parallaxes, and the distributions of observed parallaxes, to bring new evidence to bear on these classic problems. Several preliminary results have been obtained.


Author(s):  
Irwin Bendet ◽  
Nabil Rizk

Preliminary results reported last year on the ion etching of tobacco mosaic virus indicated that the diameter of the virus decreased more rapidly at 10KV than at 5KV, perhaps reaching a constant value before disappearing completely.In order to follow the effects of ion etching on TMV more quantitatively we have designed and built a second apparatus (Fig. 1), which incorporates monitoring devices for measuring ion current and vacuum as well as accelerating voltage. In addition, the beam diameter has been increased to approximately 1 cm., so that ten electron microscope grids can be exposed to the beam simultaneously.


Author(s):  
R. Varughese ◽  
S. W. Thompson ◽  
P. R. Howell

Ever since Habraken and Economopoulos first employed the term granular bainite to classify certain unconventional transformation products in continuously cooled steels, the term has been widely accepted and used, despite the lack of a clear consensus as to the detailed nature of the transformation products which constitute granular bainite. This paper presents the preliminary results of a TEM investigation of an 0.04 wt% C, copper-containing steel (designated HSLA-100). It is suggested that the term granular ferrite rather than granular bainite is a more accurate description of this multiphase reaction product.Figure 1 is a light micrograph of a sample which had been air-cooled from 900°C to room temperature. The microstructure is typical of that which has been termed granular bainite in the past and appears to consist of equiaxed ferritic grains together with other minor transformation products. In order to examine these structures in more detail, both continuously cooled and isothermally transformed and quenched materials have been examined with TEM. Granular bainite has been found in virtually all samples.


1998 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 269-269
Author(s):  
Granerus ◽  
Ohlsson ◽  
Areskog ◽  
Andersson

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