988 research outputs found
Urban floods: a case study in the Savigliano area (North-Western Italy)
Flood processes and effects are examined, concerning two rivers in an urbanized area in North-Western Italy (Piedmont – Cuneo Plain). In May 2008, some areas in Northern Italy were struck by intense and persistent rainfall. In the Cuneo province (Southern Piedmont), floodplain with some urban areas was inundated over ca. ten square kilometres, and the city of Savigliano (about 21 000 inhabitants) was particularly hit by flood. A purposely-made historical research has evidenced approximately fifty flood events as having occurred since 1350 in the Savigliano area. Based upon historical data, both documents and maps, GIS (Geographical Information System) technique and field surveys were used to quantitatively assess the growing urbanization of the city and to describe flood processes and effects over years. This work aims to describe the dynamic behaviour of the 2008 flood, also comparing it to past events, in particular those that occurred in 1896. It is emphasized how the knowledge of past events can be helpful in reducing urban flooding
Uncorrected land-use planning highlighted by flooding: the Alba case study (Piedmont, Italy)
Alba is a town of over 30 000 inhabitants located along the Tanaro River (Piedmont, northwestern Italy) and is famous for its wine and white truffles. Many important industries and companies are based in Alba, including the famous confectionery group Ferrero. <br><br> The town suffered considerably from a flood that occurred on 5–6 November 1994. Forty-eight percent of the urban area was inundated, causing severe damage and killing nine people. After the flood, the Alba area was analysed in detail to determine the reasons for its vulnerability. <br><br> Information on serious floods in this area since 1800 was gathered from official records, state technical office reports, unpublished documents in the municipal archives, and articles published in local and national newspapers. Maps, plans and aerial photographs (since 1954) were examined to reconstruct Alba's urban development over the last two centuries and the planform changes of the Tanaro River. <br><br> The results were compared with the effects of the November 1994 flood, which was mapped from aerial photographs taken immediately after the flood, field surveys and eyewitness reports. <br><br> The territory of Alba was subdivided into six categories: residential; public service; industrial, commercial and hotels; sports areas, utilities and standards (public gardens, parks, athletics grounds, private and public sport clubs); aggregate plants and dumps; and agriculture and riverine strip. The six categories were then grouped into three classes with different flooding-vulnerability levels according to various parameters. Using GIS, the three river corridors along the Tanaro identified by the Autorità di Bacino del Fiume Po were overlaid on the three classes to produce a final map of the risk areas. <br><br> This study shows that the historic floods and their dynamics have not been duly considered in the land-use planning of Alba. The zones that were most heavily damaged in the 1994 flood were those that were frequently affected in the past and sites of more recent urbanisation. Despite recurrent severe flooding of the Tanaro River and its tributaries, areas along the riverbed and its paleochannels have been increasingly used for infrastructure and building (e.g., roads, a municipal dump, a prison, natural aggregate plants, a nomad camp), which has often interfered with the natural spread of the floodwaters. Since the 1994 flood, many remedial projects have been completed along the Tanaro and its tributaries, including levees, bank protection, concrete walls and floodway channels. In spite of these costly projects, some areas remain at high risk for flooding. <br><br> The method used, which considered historical data, river corridors identified by hydraulic calculations, geomorphological aspects and land-use planning, can indicate with good accuracy flood-prone areas and in consequence to be an useful tool for the coherent planning of urban expansion and the mitigation of flood risk
Intrinsic Environmental Vulnerability as Shallow Landslide Susceptibility in Environmental Impact Assessment
This work investigated the susceptibility factors that trigger shallow landslides. In particular,
the objective of the research was the implementation of a method to determine the relevant factors that
can trigger shallow landslide events. However, with respect to the existing methods, the integration
with historical datasets and the inclusion of spatial factors displaying dynamics in the same characteristic
timescales were specific features of the developed tool. The study area included the watersheds of
the Sessera and Strona rivers in the alpine area of the Province of Biella (Piedmont, NW Italy).
The method was developed and tested from two sub-datasets derived from an integrated dataset
that referred to an intense event, involving the same area, that occurred in 1968 (2\u20133 November).
This allowed the implementation of an integrated representation of landslides\u2019 predisposing factors
and the identification and classification in dierent groups of the areas susceptible to geo-hydrological
instability processes. The previously existing databases were verified and integrated into a geographic
information system (GIS) environment, giving a potentially sharable source of information for
planning purposes. The obtained maps represent a metric of one of the possible intrinsic environmental
vulnerability factors for the area under study. Consequently, this method can represent a future
instrument for determining the intrinsic environmental vulnerability dependent on landslides within
an environmental impact assessment (EIA), as required by the most recent European regulation on EIA.
Moreover, the shared information can be used to implement informed policy and planning processes,
based on a bottom-up approach. In particular, the availability online of landslide susceptibility
maps could support the generation of augmented information\u2014useful for both local administrators
and planners as well as for stakeholders willing to implement specific projects or infrastructure in
vulnerable areas, such as mountain
Localization and Broadband Follow-Up of the Gravitational-Wave Transient GW150914
A gravitational-wave (GW) transient was identified in data recorded by the Advanced Laser InterferometerGravitational-wave Observatory (LIGO) detectors on 2015 September 14. The event, initially designated G184098and later given the name GW150914, is described in detail elsewhere. By prior arrangement, preliminary estimatesof the time, significance, and sky location of the event were shared with 63 teams of observers covering radio,optical, near-infrared, X-ray, and gamma-ray wavelengths with ground- and space-based facilities. In this Letter wedescribe the low-latency analysis of the GW data and present the sky localization of the first observed compactbinary merger. We summarize the follow-up observations reported by 25 teams via private Gamma-rayCoordinates Network circulars, giving an overview of the participating facilities, the GW sky localizationcoverage, the timeline, and depth of the observations. As this event turned out to be a binary black hole merger,there is little expectation of a detectable electromagnetic (EM) signature. Nevertheless, this first broadbandcampaign to search for a counterpart of an Advanced LIGO source represents a milestone and highlights the broadcapabilities of the transient astronomy community and the observing strategies that have been developed to pursueneutron star binary merger events. Detailed investigations of the EM data and results of the EM follow-upcampaign are being disseminated in papers by the individual teams
A spatial multicriteria prioritizing approach for geo-hydrological risk mitigation planning in small and densely urbanized Mediterranean basins
Landslides and floods, particularly flash floods, occurred recently in many
Mediterranean catchments as a consequence of heavy rainfall events, causing
damage and sometimes casualties. The high hazard is often associated with
high vulnerability deriving from intense urbanization, in particular along
the coastline where streams are habitually culverted. The necessary risk
mitigation strategies should be applied at the catchment scale with a holistic
approach, avoiding spot interventions.
In the present work, a high-risk area, hit in the past by several floods and
concurrent superficial landslides due to extremely localized and intense
rain events, has been studied. A total of 21 small catchments have been identified:
only some of them have been hit by extremely damaging past events, but all
lie in the intense-rain high-hazard area and are strongly urbanized in the
lower coastal zone. The question is what would happen if an intense rain
event should strike one of the not previously hit catchments; some situations
could be worse or not, so attention has been focused on the comparison
among catchments. The aim of the research has been identifying a priority
scale among catchments, pointing out the more critical ones and giving a
quantitative comparison tool for decision makers to support strong
scheduling of long-time planning interventions at the catchment scale. The past
events' effects and the geomorphic process analysis together with the field
survey allowed us to select three sets of parameters: one describing the
morphometric–morphological features related to flood and landslide hazard,
another describing the degree of urbanization and of anthropogenic
modifications at the catchment scale and the last related to the elements that
are exposed to risk. The realized geodatabase allowed us to apply the spatial
multicriteria analysis technique (S-MCA) to the descriptive parameters and
to obtain a priority scale among the analyzed catchments. The scale can be
used to plan risk mitigation interventions starting from the more critical
catchments, then focusing economic resources primarily on them and obtaining
an effective prevention strategy. The methodology could be useful even to
check how the priority scale is modified during the progress of the
mitigation work realization.
In addition, this approach could be applied in a similar context, even among
sub-catchments, after identifying a suitable set of descriptive parameters
depending on the active geomorphological processes and the kind of
anthropogenic modification. The prioritization would allow to invest
economic resources in risk mitigation interventions priory in the more
critical catchments.</p
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Time–frequency representation of autoionization dynamics in helium
Autoionization, which results from the interference between direct photoionization and photoexcitation to a discrete state decaying to the continuum by configuration interaction, is a well known example of the important role of electron correlation in light–matter interaction. Information on this process can be obtained by studying the spectral, or equivalently, temporal complex amplitude of the ionized electron wave packet. Using an energy-resolved interferometric technique, we measure the spectral amplitude and phase of autoionized wave packets emitted via the sp2+ and sp3+ resonances in helium. These measurements allow us to reconstruct the corresponding temporal profiles by Fourier transform. In addition, applying various time–frequency representations, we observe the build-up of the wave packets in the continuum, monitor the instantaneous frequencies emitted at any time and disentangle the dynamics of the direct and resonant ionization channels
Processing Ordinality and Quantity: The Case of Developmental Dyscalculia
In contrast to quantity processing, up to date, the nature of ordinality has received little attention from researchers despite the fact that both quantity and ordinality are embodied in numerical information. Here we ask if there are two separate core systems that lie at the foundations of numerical cognition: (1) the traditionally and well accepted numerical magnitude system but also (2) core system for representing ordinal information. We report two novel experiments of ordinal processing that explored the relation between ordinal and numerical information processing in typically developing adults and adults with developmental dyscalculia (DD). Participants made “ordered” or “non-ordered” judgments about 3 groups of dots (non-symbolic numerical stimuli; in Experiment 1) and 3 numbers (symbolic task: Experiment 2). In contrast to previous findings and arguments about quantity deficit in DD participants, when quantity and ordinality are dissociated (as in the current tasks), DD participants exhibited a normal ratio effect in the non-symbolic ordinal task. They did not show, however, the ordinality effect. Ordinality effect in DD appeared only when area and density were randomized, but only in the descending direction. In the symbolic task, the ordinality effect was modulated by ratio and direction in both groups. These findings suggest that there might be two separate cognitive representations of ordinal and quantity information and that linguistic knowledge may facilitate estimation of ordinal information
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