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Advances in Information Technologies for Electromagnetics

Luciano Tarricone ; Alessandra Esposito (eds.)

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Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2006 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-1-4020-4748-0

ISBN electrónico

978-1-4020-4749-5

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer 2006

Tabla de contenidos

Distributed and Object-Oriented Computational Electromagnetics on the Grid

Denis Caromel; Fabrice Huet; Stefane Lanteri; Nikos Parlavantzas

We used a dynamic model to estimate the net carbon dioxide production (NCP) of three experimentally flooded upland areas (FLUDEX) over a period of 4 years and NCP from a flooded wetland (ELARP) over 12 years (2 year pre-flooding, 10 years post-flooding). The 3 flooded upland areas had been chosen to have differing amounts of carbon stored in soils and vegetation. Estimates of NCP ranged from 33–55 mmole·m·d in the first year and decreased steadily to 13–30 mmole·m·d in the fourth year. The NCP from the reservoir with the lowest carbon stock was always lowest, the other two were similar. The NCP estimated for the wetland rose from 45 mmole·m·d in the first year of flooding to 178 mmole·m·d in the years 7–9. A decrease to 126 mmole·m·d was seen in the last year. Overall the model did a good job of simulating the measured results and provided a consistent methodology for comparison of NCP. In this boreal forest area of northwest Ontario flooding of wetland area results in much higher NCP and over a much greater duration than upland flooding.

Pp. 327-343

Software Agents for Parametric Computational Electromagnetics Applications

Dimitrios G. Lymperopoulos; Ioannis E. Foukarakis; Antonis I. Kostaridis; Christos G. Biniaris; Dimitra I. Kaklamani

We used a dynamic model to estimate the net carbon dioxide production (NCP) of three experimentally flooded upland areas (FLUDEX) over a period of 4 years and NCP from a flooded wetland (ELARP) over 12 years (2 year pre-flooding, 10 years post-flooding). The 3 flooded upland areas had been chosen to have differing amounts of carbon stored in soils and vegetation. Estimates of NCP ranged from 33–55 mmole·m·d in the first year and decreased steadily to 13–30 mmole·m·d in the fourth year. The NCP from the reservoir with the lowest carbon stock was always lowest, the other two were similar. The NCP estimated for the wetland rose from 45 mmole·m·d in the first year of flooding to 178 mmole·m·d in the years 7–9. A decrease to 126 mmole·m·d was seen in the last year. Overall the model did a good job of simulating the measured results and provided a consistent methodology for comparison of NCP. In this boreal forest area of northwest Ontario flooding of wetland area results in much higher NCP and over a much greater duration than upland flooding.

Pp. 345-379

Web Services Enhanced Platform for Distributed Signal Processing in Electromagnetics

Ioannis E. Foukarakis; Dyonisios B. Logothetis; Antonis I. Kostaridis; Dimitrios G. Lymperopoulos; Dimitra I. Kaklamani

We used a dynamic model to estimate the net carbon dioxide production (NCP) of three experimentally flooded upland areas (FLUDEX) over a period of 4 years and NCP from a flooded wetland (ELARP) over 12 years (2 year pre-flooding, 10 years post-flooding). The 3 flooded upland areas had been chosen to have differing amounts of carbon stored in soils and vegetation. Estimates of NCP ranged from 33–55 mmole·m·d in the first year and decreased steadily to 13–30 mmole·m·d in the fourth year. The NCP from the reservoir with the lowest carbon stock was always lowest, the other two were similar. The NCP estimated for the wetland rose from 45 mmole·m·d in the first year of flooding to 178 mmole·m·d in the years 7–9. A decrease to 126 mmole·m·d was seen in the last year. Overall the model did a good job of simulating the measured results and provided a consistent methodology for comparison of NCP. In this boreal forest area of northwest Ontario flooding of wetland area results in much higher NCP and over a much greater duration than upland flooding.

Pp. 381-397

Grid-Enabled Transmission Line Matrix (TLM) Modelling of Electromagnetic Structures

Peter Russer; Bruno Biscontini; Petr Lorenz

We used a dynamic model to estimate the net carbon dioxide production (NCP) of three experimentally flooded upland areas (FLUDEX) over a period of 4 years and NCP from a flooded wetland (ELARP) over 12 years (2 year pre-flooding, 10 years post-flooding). The 3 flooded upland areas had been chosen to have differing amounts of carbon stored in soils and vegetation. Estimates of NCP ranged from 33–55 mmole·m·d in the first year and decreased steadily to 13–30 mmole·m·d in the fourth year. The NCP from the reservoir with the lowest carbon stock was always lowest, the other two were similar. The NCP estimated for the wetland rose from 45 mmole·m·d in the first year of flooding to 178 mmole·m·d in the years 7–9. A decrease to 126 mmole·m·d was seen in the last year. Overall the model did a good job of simulating the measured results and provided a consistent methodology for comparison of NCP. In this boreal forest area of northwest Ontario flooding of wetland area results in much higher NCP and over a much greater duration than upland flooding.

Pp. 399-431