Listing 1 - 4 of 4 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
The book presents a collection of papers focused on recent progress in key areas of photogrammetry for environmental research. Applications oriented to the understanding of natural phenomena and quantitative processes using dataset from photogrammetry (from satellite to unmanned aerial vehicle images) and terrestrial laser scanning, also by a diachronic approach, are reported. The book covers topics of interest of many disciplines from geography, geomorphology, engineering geology, geotechnology, including landscape description and coastal studies. Mains issues faced by the book are related to applications on coastal monitoring, using multitemporal aerial images, and investigations on geomorphological hazard by the joint use of proximal photogrammetry, terrestrial and aerial laser scanning aimed to the reconstruction of detailed surface topography and successive 2D/3D numerical simulations for rock slope stability analyses. Results reported in the book bring into evidence the fundamental role of multitemporal surveys and reliable reconstruction of morphologies from photogrammetry and laser scanning as support to environmental researches.
damage --- n/a --- plain area --- UAS --- photogrammetry --- geological hazard --- ZY3-02 --- UAV --- Remote sensing --- geohazards --- declassified satellite imagery --- TLS --- rock slope stability --- field work --- Pleiades --- georelief --- landslide mapping --- talus cones --- coastline --- unmanned aerial vehicle --- SfM photogrammetry --- beach monitoring --- LiDAR --- poplar plantation --- air photos --- canopy height --- remote sensing --- monitoring --- torrential rainfall --- SfM-MVS --- rockfall runout --- rockfall hazard --- SfM --- Lefkada Island --- slope stability --- coastal observatory
Choose an application
This Special Issue aims at providing the state-of-the-art on procedures and methodologies developed to improve energy and environmental performance through building renovation. We are greatly thankful to our colleagues building physics experts, building technology researchers, and urban environment scholars who contributed to this Special Issue, for sharing their original works in the field.
CFD --- enclosed building --- wind environment --- group layout --- Hangzhou --- China --- indoor air quality --- IAQ --- enthalpy --- humidity --- thermal comfort --- TC --- dissatisfaction --- panel tests --- nearly zero energy building --- NZEB --- indoor environmental quality --- IEQ --- indoor air quality models --- sustainable building --- multi-criteria decision analysis --- MCDM --- MADM --- user dissatisfaction --- weights system --- building comfort --- PD --- Residential users --- Demand Response --- Flexible loads --- Dwellings clustering --- building-integrated photovoltaics—BIPV --- building heritage --- energy efficiency --- traditional materials --- resilience --- urban regeneration --- adapting to change --- climate performance --- innovative technologies --- smoke --- natural exhaust --- mechanical exhaust --- smoke curtain --- fire dynamics simulator --- drying --- heat and moisture transfer --- hygro-thermal behavior --- masonry walls --- wet wall --- in situ monitoring --- energy benchmarking --- university campus --- energy performance certificate --- CIBSE TM46 --- thermal energy efficiency --- dynamic model --- energy performance of buildings --- low temperature district heating --- indoor comfort --- renovation --- urban scale --- energy requalification --- building envelope --- sustainable development and planning --- standardized interventions of requalification --- Geographic Information System --- biometric data --- biosignals --- non-intrusive sensing --- physiological metrics --- environmental stimuli --- stress detection --- health --- comfort --- human thermal perception --- multi-domain interactions --- noise sensation --- cross-modal perception --- n/a --- building-integrated photovoltaics-BIPV --- Lake Mungo / Walls of China (Willandra SW NSW SI54-08)
Choose an application
The Special Issue collects papers showing the progress made in key areas of photogrammetry and remote sensing such as modern and/or forthcoming sensors, improvements in data processing strategies and assessment of their reliability, application of innovations as proof of the contribution offered in the observation of the natural and built environment with better understanding of phenomena at required spatial scale.
VHR tri-stereo satellite imagery --- digital elevation model --- isolated objects --- dense image matching --- change detection --- natural disasters --- deep learning --- threshold selection --- optical flow estimation --- Structure from Motion (SfM) --- 3D reconstruction --- noise estimation --- point clouds --- roughness --- surface reconstruction --- mesh model --- visibility constraints --- volumetric methods --- dense point cloud --- multiple view stereo (MVS) --- dense image matching (DIM) --- photogrammetry --- computer vision --- Copernicus --- Sentinel-1 --- Sentinel-2 --- InSAR --- damage proxy map --- Beirut --- Lebanon --- explosion --- radiometric calibration --- modeling --- geometric error --- high-precision calibration --- n/a --- preprocessing --- enhancement --- point cloud --- image processing --- image histogram --- UAV --- camera calibration --- GNSS-assisted block orientation --- dome effect --- Monte Carlo simulation --- soil moisture content --- artificial neural network --- sample optimization --- synthetic aperture radar --- optical remote sensing image
Choose an application
C’est le propre de certaines vies hors du commun de refléter le mouvement global d’une époque dans ses élans, ses revirements, ses échecs. Sans avoir eu le charisme de David ou le charme inné de Gérard, Jean-Baptiste Wicar, par sa personnalité multiforme et son existence aventureuse, demeure une figure emblématique du monde français de l’art, entre le 18e et le 19e siècle. Sa vie fut partagée entre la France et l’Italie ; son œuvre l’est encore aujourd’hui et contribue à consolider les liens entre les deux pays et à mettre en valeur leur complémentarité. Le fonds de l’atelier de Wicar, conservé à l’Académie des Beaux-Arts de Pérouse, constitue le plus important ensemble d’œuvres françaises de l’époque néoclassique appartenant au patrimoine italien. La collection de dessins de Wicar, qui fut très convoitée en son temps, est entrée en revanche au musée de Lille, où elle continue de familiariser le public avec l’art italien de la Renaissance. Né pauvre, à Lille, sous l’Ancien Régime, Wicar mourut riche et célèbre dans la Rome de la Restauration, qui l’honora d’un tombeau dans Saint-Louis des Français. Cet ouvrage collectif restitue les étapes de la vie de Wicar dans leur contexte et met l’accent sur les échanges entre une Italie en éveil, ébauchant sa quête d’unité nationale, et la France de la Révolution et de l’Empire.
Arts & Humanities --- art --- musée --- œuvre --- artiste
Listing 1 - 4 of 4 |
Sort by
|