when local information alone (method 2) is
not sufficient.
In order to take into account seasonal effects, a moving window of +/– 45 days centered on the
target day was considered for the selection of analogues, so that in an archive made of Y years,
each target day was at most associated to Y x 91 potential analogues. The window size was
arbitrarily defined and not optimized. A similar window
/media/vedurstofan/utgafa/skyrslur/2013/VI_2013_008.pdf
were collected through a mail survey in Sweden,
Acceptability of travel demand managemen
of problem awareness, persona
Louise Erikssona,b,, Jo¨rgen Garvil
aDepartment of Psychology
bTransportation Research Unit
Available onlin
Abstract
y 26 (2006) 15–26
t measures: The importance
norm, freedom, and fairness
la,b, Annika M. Nordlunda,b
a˚ University, Sweden
Umea˚ University, Sweden
14 July 2006
/media/loftslag/Eriksson_Garvill_Nordlund_2006.pdf
climate changes between the CMIP3 and ENSEMBLES
simulations 15
4. Impact of RCM data on forecasts of climate change 18
5. Probabilistic projections of temperature and precipitation change 24
5.1 Best estimates and uncertainty ranges of temperature and precipitation change 24
5.2 How probably will temperature increase (precipitation change) by at least X°C (Y%)?
28
6. Conclusions 34
References
/media/ces/D2.3_CES_Prob_fcsts_GCMs_and_RCMs.pdf
from the glacier margins). This
was done by shifting the x and y coordinates of the
40 m40 m DEMs in 5 m steps and calculating the
correlation to the corresponding values of the 5 m5 m
EMISAR DEM. In all cases, both the maximum correla-
tion and minimum standard deviation yielded the same
shift. After the co-registration, the same ice-free areas
were used to correct the vertical offset of the DMA
/media/ces/Gudmundsson-etal-2011-PR-7282-26519-1-PB.pdf
moment release is observed before the onset of the fissure eruption (red bar), i.e. while the dyke was growing, and the moment release in the dyke is now 10,000 times less than it was before the eruption (logaritmic scale on y-axis).
For the caldera (lower panels), things are a bit more complicated, although a clear trend of decreasing activity is found there as well. Most moment is released during
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/3055
moment release is observed before the onset of the fissure eruption (red bar), i.e. while the dyke was growing, and the moment release in the dyke is now 10,000 times less than it was before the eruption (logaritmic scale on y-axis).
For the caldera (lower panels), things are a bit more complicated, although a clear trend of decreasing activity is found there as well. Most moment is released during
/earthquakes-and-volcanism/articles/nr/3055/
has been done (see link).
The situation is quite evident for the dyke intrusion (upper panels): The highest moment
release is observed before the onset of the fissure eruption (red bar), i.e. while the dyke was
growing, and the moment release in the dyke is now 10,000 times less than it was before the
eruption (logaritmic scale on y-axis).
For the caldera (lower panels), things are a bit more
/media/jar/Bardarbunga-2014_December-events.pdf
of Geophysical Research, 108(D3), 4124, doi:10.1029/2002JD002287.
IPCC (2001), Climate change 2001: the scientific basis. Contribution of working group I to the
third assessment report of the intergovernmental panel on climate change. (eds. Houghton,
J. T. , Y. Ding, D. J. Griggs, M. Noguer, P. J. van der Linden, X. Dai, K. Maskell and C.
A. Johnson), Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
/media/ces/ces_geus_paakitsoq_full_report.pdf
2004. Further towards
a taxonomy of agent-based simulation models in
environmental management. Mathematics and
Computers in Simulation 64(1):25-40.
Henle, K., W. Kunin, O. Schweiger, D. S.
Schmeller, V. Grobelnik, Y. Matsinos, J. Pantis, L.
Penev, S. G. Potts, I. Ring, J. Similä, J. Tzanopoulos,
S. van den Hove, M. Baguette, J. Clobert, L.
Excoffier, E. Framstad, M. Grodzinska-Jurczak, S.
Lengyel, P
/media/loftslag/Kok_and_Veldkamp_editorial_ES-2011-4160.pdf