scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Institution

Polytechnic University of Milan

EducationMilan, Italy
About: Polytechnic University of Milan is a education organization based out in Milan, Italy. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Computer science & Finite element method. The organization has 18231 authors who have published 58416 publications receiving 1229711 citations. The organization is also known as: PoliMi & L-NESS.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the addition of steel and polypropylene fibers on the mechanical and some durability properties of high-strength concrete (HSC) was investigated, and the results showed that the incorporation of 1% steel fiber significantly enhanced the splitting tensile strength and flexural strength of concrete.

521 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is found that land and water grabbing are occurring at alarming rates in all continents except Antarctica and the per capita volume of grabbed water often exceeds the water requirements for a balanced diet and would be sufficient to improve food security and abate malnourishment in the grabbed countries.
Abstract: Societal pressure on the global land and freshwater resources is increasing as a result of the rising food demand by the growing human population, dietary changes, and the enhancement of biofuel production induced by the rising oil prices and recent changes in United States and European Union bioethanol policies. Many countries and corporations have started to acquire relatively inexpensive and productive agricultural land located in foreign countries, as evidenced by the dramatic increase in the number of transnational land deals between 2005 and 2009. Often known as “land grabbing,” this phenomenon is associated with an appropriation of freshwater resources that has never been assessed before. Here we gather land-grabbing data from multiple sources and use a hydrological model to determine the associated rates of freshwater grabbing. We find that land and water grabbing are occurring at alarming rates in all continents except Antarctica. The per capita volume of grabbed water often exceeds the water requirements for a balanced diet and would be sufficient to improve food security and abate malnourishment in the grabbed countries. It is found that about 0.31 × 1012 m3⋅y−1 of green water (i.e., rainwater) and up to 0.14 × 1012 m3⋅y−1 of blue water (i.e., irrigation water) are appropriated globally for crop and livestock production in 47 × 106 ha of grabbed land worldwide (i.e., in 90% of the reported global grabbed land).

519 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
15 Jul 2015-Europace
TL;DR: A critical review of new HRV methodologies and their application in different physiological and clinical studies, with particular attention paid to methodologies that have not been reported in the 1996 standardization document but have been more recently tested in sufficiently sized populations.
Abstract: Following the publication of the Task Force document on heart rate variability (HRV) in 1996, a number of articles have been published to describe new HRV methodologies and their application in different physiological and clinical studies. This document presents a critical review of the new methods. A particular attention has been paid to methodologies that have not been reported in the 1996 standardization document but have been more recently tested in sufficiently sized populations. The following methods were considered: Long-range correlation and fractal analysis; Short-term complexity; Entropy and regularity; and Nonlinear dynamical systems and chaotic behaviour. For each of these methods, technical aspects, clinical achievements, and suggestions for clinical application were reviewed. While the novel approaches have contributed in the technical understanding of the signal character of HRV, their success in developing new clinical tools, such as those for the identification of high-risk patients, has been rather limited. Available results obtained in selected populations of patients by specialized laboratories are nevertheless of interest but new prospective studies are needed. The investigation of new parameters, descriptive of the complex regulation mechanisms of heart rate, has to be encouraged because not all information in the HRV signal is captured by traditional methods. The new technologies thus could provide after proper validation, additional physiological, and clinical meaning. Multidisciplinary dialogue and specialized courses in the combination of clinical cardiology and complex signal processing methods seem warranted for further advances in studies of cardiac oscillations and in the understanding normal and abnormal cardiac control processes.

518 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the dependence on initial conditions of the three-dimensional algebraic spatial instability of the Blasius boundary layer is examined by a recently developed method of receptivity analysis based on the upstream integration of adjoint equations.
Abstract: The dependence on initial conditions of the three-dimensional algebraic spatial instability of the Blasius boundary layer is examined by a recently developed method of receptivity analysis based on the upstream integration of adjoint equations. This method allows us to determine optimal perturbations, i.e. initial perturbations that maximize the energy growth, even in the wavenumber range where the problem is not amenable to a mode analysis, and thus to complement a previous paper in which the small-wavenumber regime was described.

517 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
28 Jun 1999
TL;DR: In this article, the Permanent Scatterers (PS) were used as a "natural GPS network" to monitor terrain motion, analysing the phase history of each one, and results obtained using 34 ERS SAR images gathered over the Italian city of Ancona are presented.
Abstract: Differential SAR interferometry (DInSAR) is an unique tool for low-cost, large-coverage surface deformations monitoring. As well known, the technique involves interferometric phase comparison of SAR images gathered at different times and has the potential to provide millimetric accuracy. Though temporal decorrelation and atmospheric dishomogeneities strongly affect interferogram quality, reliable deformation measurements can be obtained in a multi-image framework on a small subset of image pixels, corresponding to stable areas. These points, hereafter called Permanent Scatterers (PS), can be used as a "natural GPS network" to monitor terrain motion, analysing the phase history of each one. In this paper, results obtained using 34 ERS SAR images gathered over the Italian city of Ancona are presented.

517 citations


Authors

Showing all 18743 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
Alex J. Barker132127384746
Pierluigi Zotto128119778259
Andrea C. Ferrari126636124533
Marco Dorigo10565791418
Marcello Giroletti10355841565
Luciano Gattinoni10361048055
Luca Benini101145347862
Alberto Sangiovanni-Vincentelli9993445201
Surendra P. Shah9971032832
X. Sunney Xie9822544104
Peter Nijkamp97240750826
Nicola Neri92112241986
Ursula Keller9293433229
A. Rizzi9165340038
Martin J. Blunt8948529225
Network Information
Related Institutions (5)
Delft University of Technology
94.4K papers, 2.7M citations

96% related

Georgia Institute of Technology
119K papers, 4.6M citations

94% related

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne
98.2K papers, 4.3M citations

94% related

ETH Zurich
122.4K papers, 5.1M citations

93% related

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
82.1K papers, 2.1M citations

92% related

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
2023302
2022813
20214,152
20204,301
20193,831
20183,767