Monitoring Experiment Hopes to Save Water

This article touts the Laser aspect of this story, but what is behind the idea is better monitoring to save water.

Laser experiment hopes to save farm water

Seventy-six years after the invention of the modern sprinkler helped revolutionize farming, lasers may revolutionize it again.

By JOHN ROGERS

Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES —

Seventy-six years after the invention of the modern sprinkler helped revolutionize farming, lasers may revolutionize it again.

Jan Kleissl and a handful of his students at the University of California at San Diego think technology using laser beams might lead to a better way to conserve the millions of gallons of water sprayed each year on thirsty crops.

The monitoring is done by a Scintillomter.

He and his team are using a large aperture scintillometer to study how much water crops lose to evaporation and the peak times that water disappears.

The hope is to give farmers a more accurate, up-to-date reading of how efficiently their crops are using water than current technology allows.

"What's new about our approach is the monitoring side of it," Kleissl said by phone from his office. "We're trying to improve on that."

But Kleissl's team hopes to give farmers more valuable information by using the scintillometer, which focuses laser beams across a farm field and records fluctuations of the refractive index of air that is caused by such things as changes in temperature and humidity.

What the device sees is similar to the waves in the air that people see emanating from the pavement of a highway on a hot day. But the scintillometer sees those waves in much greater detail. The hope is farmers can eventually use the lasers to more accurately measure the amount of irrigated farm water lost to evapotranspiration

What is a scintillometer?

Scintillometer

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A Large Aperture Scintillometer (transmitter) for measurement of the sensible heat flux over long distances at Wageningen University measurement site

A Scintillometer is a scientific device used to measure small fluctuations of the refractive index of air caused by variations in temperature, humidity, and pressure. It consists of an optical or radio wave transmitter and a receiver at both ends of an atmospheric propagation path. The receiver detects and evaluates the intensity fluctuations of the transmitted signal, called scintillation.

The magnitude of the refractive index fluctuations is usually measured in terms of Cn^2, the structure constant of refractive index fluctuations, which is the spectral amplitude of refractive index fluctuations in the inertial subrange of turbulence. Some types of scintillometers, such as displaced-beam scintillometers, can also measure the inner scale of refractive index fluctuations, which is the smallest size of eddies in the inertial subrage.

Scintillometers also allow measurements of the transfer of heat between the Earth's surface and the air above, called the sensible heat flux [1]. Inner-scale scintillometers can also measure the dissipation rate of turbulent kinetic energy and the momentum flux.

The term Scintillometer has been used, in its original sense (though relatively infrequently today except in a few specialized instances (such as the mining industry for checking drillcores for the presence of uranium)) to refer to a Scintillation counter, which measures ionizing radiation.

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Dell Says Apple is Greenwashing its Notebooks

Dell and Apple are having a PR battle regarding Apple’s claims of being the greenest notebooks.

Dell Says Apple is Greenwashing Its Gear

by Jaymi Heimbuch, Central Coast, California on 12.22.08

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY (electronics)

BUZZ UP!

apple green macbook family ad image
Screen capture from Apple's Green Ad

There's a hot debate out in the enviro-sphere on whether or not Apple is as green as it says it is, or green at all. Well, Dell tends to side with the nay sayers.

Unless you've been under a rock, or are utterly uninterested in computers, you haven't missed Apple's latest ads touting the greenness of its products. Dell, however, says that's a bunch of huff and puff.

Bob Pearson, Dell's VP of Communities and Conversations (you can have a VP for that??), says that Apple is being irresponsible to the earth by making false claims for how green it is and hoping consumers won't notice. Apple, along with Dell and HP, areperceived to be the greenest computer companies, so the two are direct competitors for the up-and-coming greener consumer base.

The greenwashing claim is

And now, the blogosphere is abuzz with the latest entry to Dell's blog knocking Apple for what it says are green fake-outs.

Our view is that companies who choose to lead have an obligation to be open and transparent. We have a responsibility to engage in dialogue about the environment, whether we agree or disagree with an individual person or group. It all contributes to the greater good.

What is not good is to skip steps, avoid dialogue and pray that people aren't smart enough to figure it out. That doesn't help any of us and it certainly doesn't further the environmental cause for those of us who care deeply about it.

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Smart Meter Industry Taking off

TreeHugger (A Discovery Channel) Blog has a post about smart meters.

Smart Meters So Hot, They Cause Fights

by Jaymi Heimbuch, Central Coast, California on 12.19.08

SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY

red electricity meter photo
Photo via Clearly Ambiguous

The Smart Meter industry is really taking off. That means tech firms that want to solidify contracts in the UK are starting to have to duke it out.

An (expected) upcoming mandate will require a smart meter to be installed in every British home, so the tech companies involved in the industry now have the need to begin talks about the resulting run on contracts.

In recent weeks the government and the energy industry has agreed to a broad strategy on how smart meters will be introduced and how the huge amount of data generated from the new meters will be processed. The contract for the central information-processing repository alone is expected to run in the multi-billion pound range.

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Superinsulate Project adds Monitoring Device

news.com has an article on a superisulate project.

Can you 'superinsulate' that home, please?

Most energy-conscious people know that when it comes to home insulation, more is better. But homeowner Alex Cheimets is literally thinking outside the box with his "superinsulation" plan.

Rather than just blow in a few more inches of standard cellulose insulation in his attic, Cheimets is in the throes of an ambitious project to seal the outside of his home with two layers of insulating foam board.

Known in building industry as a superinsulated home, the foam blanket will keep hot (and cool) air in, and also block the cracks that let in outside air. If all goes as hoped, he will cut oil consumption by 70 percent at his 80-year-old, two-family home in Arlington, Mass.

A superinsulated home has foam insulation placed on the outside of the walls and ontop of the existing roof.

The homeowner being an engineer has integated monitoring.

Being part of a pilot project, Cheimets will need to gather data on humidity and temperature levels and how much oil he is using. His home is being equipped with four sensors from Onset Computer, as are his neighbors on both sides (both scientists). Once a month, they will download data using an USB connection to a laptop and report it to the state.

Onset Computer has a set of energy monitoring devices

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Onset energy logging systems save you time and money by offering plug-and-play convenience and industrial-grade performance.

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Highmark Greens its Data Center, Long Term Costs of Energy Efficiency projects?

Data Center journal publishes a press release on IBM’s efforts to green the data center for Highmark.

IBM Helps Highmark Optimize “Green” Data Center

Written by Press Release

Thursday, 18 December 2008

IBM has announced it has partnered with Highmark Inc. to transform Highmark’s energy-efficient data center in its Harrisburg, PA location. For Highmark, Pennsylvania’s largest health insurer, a commitment toward a healthier environment will help to create healthier communities.

An increasing number of companies are implementing initiatives to reduce the risk of climate change’s impact.  Highmark’s active role in green business projects was awarded a prestigious honor by Computerworld magazine, which ranked it as a top “green” information technology company for 2008. 

“A significant percent of our IT costs are driven by actual computing systems -- the hard drives, servers and storage appliances.  At Highmark, we are always looking for opportunities to reduce our power footprint.  IBM has shown us how we can improve efficiency in our data center – both to reduce our environmental impact and to support our offerings to the community,” said Mark Wood, director of data center infrastructure at Highmark.

This is an IBM press release article. 

Facts not presented is the length of time before changes in the environment warrant a data center tune-up.  Without data, it is hard for the customer to know when maintenance provides a good ROI.

IBM continues the marketing in the press release.

IBM's technologies and services are aimed at helping clients sharply reduce data center energy consumption. The data center is an area of information technology (IT) that can reap substantial and lasting benefits by using 'greener' technology. IBM's analysis of Highmark's data center included a data center energy efficiency assessment and a thermal analysis using IBM's Mobile Measurement Technology (MMT), which measures 3D temperature distributions within data centers to discover where improvements are needed.

Which this reminds me why in general press releases don’t make it into this blog.  They are just marketing announcements.

I would be more curious as to the long term maintenance costs to maintain their data center energy improvements.  This is all dependent on the customers use of the data center which is why there is great opportunities for condition based maintenance.

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