988 resultados para Arctia Shipping
Resumo:
The estimation of the carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes above the open ocean plays an important role for the determination of the global carbon cycle. A frequently used method therefore is the eddy-covariance technique, which is based on the theory of the Prandl-layer with height-constant fluxes in the atmospheric boundary layer. To test the assumption of the constant flux layer, in 2008 measurements of turbulent heat and CO2 fluxes were started within the project Surface Ocean Processes in the Anthropocene (SOPRAN) at the research platform FINO2. The FINO2 platform is situated in the South-west of the Baltic Sea, in the tri-border region between Germany, Denmark, and Sweden. In the frame of the Research project SOPRAN, the platform was equipped with additional sensors in June 2008. A combination of 3-component sonic anemometers (USA-1) and open-path infrared gas analyzers for absolute humidity (H2O) and CO2 (LICOR 7500) were installed at a 9m long boom directed southward of the platform in two heights, at 6.8 and 13.8m above sea surface. Additionally slow temperature and humidity sensors were installed at each height. The gas analyzer systems were calibrated before the installation and worked permanently without any calibration during the first measurement period of one and a half years. The comparison with the measurements of the slow sensors showed for both instruments no significant long-term drift in H2O and CO2. Drifts on smaller time scales (in the order of days) due to the contamination with sea salt, were cleaned naturally by rain. The drift of both quantities had no influence on the fluctuation, which, in contrast to the mean values, are important for the flux estimation. All data were filtered due to spikes, rain, and the influence of the mast. The data set includes the measurements of all sensors as average over 30 minutes each for one and a half years, June 2008 to December 2009, and 10 month from November 2011 to August 2012. Additionally derived quantities for 30 minutes intervals each, like the variances for the fast-sensor variables, as well as the momentum, sensible and latent heat, and CO2 flux are presented.
Resumo:
Scientific background: Marine mammals use sound for communication, navigation and prey detection. Acoustic sensors therefore allow the detection of marine mammals, even during polar winter months, when restricted visibility prohibits visual sightings. The animals are surrounded by a permanent natural soundscape, which, in polar waters, is mainly dominated by the movement of ice. In addition to the detection of marine mammals, acoustic long-term recordings provide information on intensity and temporal variability of characteristic natural and anthropogenic background sounds, as well as their influence on the vocalization of marine mammals Scientific objectives: The PerenniAL Acoustic Observatory in the Antarctic Ocean (PALAOA, Hawaiian "whale") near Neumayer Station is intended to record the underwater soundscape in the vicinity of the shelf ice edge over the duration of several years. These long-term recordings will allow studying the acoustic repertoire of whales and seals continuously in an environment almost undisturbed by humans. The data will be analyzed to (1) register species specific vocalizations, (2) infer the approximate number of animals inside the measuring range, (3) calculate their movements relative to the observatory, and (4) examine possible effects of the sporadic shipping traffic on the acoustic and locomotive behaviour of marine mammals. The data, which are largely free of anthropogenic noise, provide also a base to set up passive acoustic mitigation systems used on research vessels. Noise-free bioacoustic data thereby represent the foundation for the development of automatic pattern recognition procedures in the presence of interfering sounds, e.g. propeller noise.
Resumo:
This paper investigates Japanese trade by mode of transport, i.e., air transport versus maritime shipping. Some facts about Japanese machinery exports by mode of transport in the 1990s are examined first. Then it will be shown that products of the machinery sector where international fragmentation prevails are more likely to be exported by air.
Resumo:
Geographic distance is a standard proxy for transport costs under the simple assumption that freight fees increase monotonically over space. Using the Japanese Census of Logistics, this paper examines the extent to which transport distance and time affect freight costs across shipping modes, commodity groups, and prefecture pairs. The results show substantial heterogeneity in transport costs and time across shipping modes. Consistent with an iceberg formulation of transport costs, distance has a significantly positive effect on freight costs by air transportation. However, I find the puzzling results that business enterprises are likely to pay more for short-distance shipments by truck, ship, and railroad transportation. As a plausible explanation, I discuss aggregation bias arising from freight-specific premiums for timely, frequent, and small-batch shipments.
Resumo:
We examine transport modal decision by multinational firms to shed light on the role of freight logistics in multinational activity. Using a firm-level survey in Southeast Asia, we show that foreign ownership has a significantly positive and quantitatively large impact on the likelihood that air/sea transportation is chosen relative to truck shipping. This result is robust to the shipping distance, cross-border freight, and transport infrastructure. Both foreign-owned exporters and importers also tend to use air/sea transportation. Thus, our analysis presents a new distinction between multinational and domestic firms in their decision over transport modes.
Resumo:
Esta Tesis Doctoral evalúa empíricamente la calidad del servicio en la línea de atraque de las terminales portuarias de contenedores. La metodología propuesta utiliza indicadores de calidad y se basa en el concepto de la segmentación de servicio. Para ello se desarrolla la teoría del Control Estadístico de Procesos (CEP) y se utilizan los gráficos de control para clasificar el servicio en las terminales de contenedores. El propósito de la Tesis es proporcionar una metodología basada en el Control Estadístico de Procesos (CEP) para evaluar la calidad del servicio y detectar las escalas de un servicio regular de línea que se encuentran fuera de control. Por tanto, la metodología se puede utilizar para detectar eventos que son indicativos de cambio real del proceso en la línea de atraque. Esta detección puede ser compleja pues las características de los procesos en terminales de contenedores son variables. La metodología proporciona mediante los gráficos de control criterios estadísticamente objetivos de cambio. Cuando el cambio es detectado y considerado bueno sus causas deben ser identificadas y posiblemente convertirse en la nueva forma de trabajar, cuando el cambio es negativo, entonces sus causas deberían ser identificadas y eliminadas. La Tesis Doctoral está organizado de la siguiente manera: La primera parte es la introducción, e incluye los capítulos 1 al 4, la segunda parte presenta el Estado del Arte (capítulo 5) y algunos de los estudios que han inspirado esta investigación, la tercera parte se centra en la metodología utilizada (capítulo 6) y su aplicación sobre un caso de estudio (capítulo 7). Finalmente, en la cuarta parte se presentan las conclusiones y se proponen algunas de las nuevas líneas de investigación que quedan abiertas (capítulo 8). This Thesis empirically evaluates the quality of service in the berthing face of container terminals. The methodology proposed is focused on quality of service indicators and is based on the concept of service segmentation. The Statistical Process Control (SPC) theory and the control charts are used to classify container terminal service. The aim of this Thesis is to provide a methodology based on Statistical Process Control that can evaluate the quality of service and also can detect scales of shipping liner service that are out of control. Therefore, the methodology can be used to detect events that are indicative of real change in the berthing process of container vessels. The methodology proposed allows simple detection of events that are indicative of actual process change in container terminals. This detection is complex because the characteristics of the processes are variable in the container terminals; the control chart provides statistically objective criteria of change. When change is detected and considered good its cause should be identified and possibly become the new way of working, where the change is bad then its cause should be identified and eliminated. This Thesis is organized as follows: The first part is the introduction (includes Chapters 1 to 4), the second part presents the State of the Art (Chapter 5) and some of the studies that have inspired this research. The third part focuses on the methodology used (Chapter 6) and its application to a case study (Chapter 7). Finally, Part 4 presents the conclusions and suggests future research (Chapter 8).