Books on the topic 'Large scale 3D printing'

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1

Koch, Reinhard, and Luc Van Gool, eds. 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1998. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-49437-5.

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2

Mavriplis, Dimitri. Large-scale parallel unstructured mesh computations for 3D high-lift analysis. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1999.

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3

Jaroslav, Králíček, and Zachoval Jaromír, eds. Resists in microlithography and printing. 2nd ed. Amsterdam: Elsevier, 1993.

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4

Reinhard, Koch, Gool Luc van, and European Conference on Computer Vision (5th : 1998 : Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany), eds. 3D structure from multiple images of large-scale environments: European workshop, SMILE '98, Freiburg, Germany, June 6-7, 1998 : proceedings. Berlin: Springer, 1998.

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5

European Workshop on 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments (2nd 2000 Dublin, Ireland). 3D structure from images - SMILE 2000: Second European Workshop on 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments, Dublin, Irleand [i.e. Ireland], July 1-2, 2000 : revised papers. Berlin: Springer, 2001.

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6

Bashkatov, Alexander. Modeling in OpenSCAD: examples. ru: INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/959073.

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The tutorial is an introductory course to the study of the basics of geometric modeling for 3D printing using the programming language OpenSCAD and is built on the basis of descriptions of instructions for creating primitives, determining their properties, carrying out transformations and other service operations. It contains a large number of examples with detailed comments and description of the performed actions, which allows you to get basic skills in creating three-dimensional and flat models, exporting and importing graphical data. Meets the requirements of the Federal state educational standards of higher education of the last generation. It can be useful for computer science teachers, students, students and anyone who is interested in three-dimensional modeling and preparation of products for 3D printing.
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7

Large-scale 3D data integration: Challenges and opportunities. Boca Raton, FL: CRC/Taylor & Francis, 2005.

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8

Siyka, Zlatanova, and Prosperi David, eds. Large-scale 3D data integration: Challenges and opportunities. Boca Raton: CRC/Taylor & Francis, 2006.

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9

Zlatanova, Sisi, and David Prosperi. Large-Scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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10

Zlatanova, Siyka, and David Prosperi. Large-Scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities. Taylor & Francis Group, 2010.

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11

Zlatanova, Sisi, and David Prosperi. Large-Scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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12

Zlatanova, Sisi, and David Prosperi. Large-Scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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13

Zlatanova, Sisi, and David Prosperi. Large-Scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities. Taylor & Francis Group, 2005.

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14

Large-scale 3D Data Integration: Challenges and Opportunities (Gisdata). CRC, 2005.

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15

Sakuma, Katsuyuki. 3D Integration in Vlsi Circuits. Taylor & Francis Group, 2021.

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16

S, Pirzadeh, and Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering., eds. Large-scale parallel unstructured mesh computations for 3D high-lift analysis. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1999.

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17

S, Pirzadeh, and Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering., eds. Large-scale parallel unstructured mesh computations for 3D high-lift analysis. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1999.

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18

S, Pirzadeh, and Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering., eds. Large-scale parallel unstructured mesh computations for 3D high-lift analysis. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1999.

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19

S, Pirzadeh, and Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering., eds. Large-scale parallel unstructured mesh computations for 3D high-lift analysis. Hampton, VA: Institute for Computer Applications in Science and Engineering, NASA Langley Research Center, 1999.

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20

Sakuma, Katsuyuki. 3D Integration in VLSI Circuits: Implementation Technologies and Applications. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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21

Sakuma, Katsuyuki. 3D Integration in VLSI Circuits: Implementation Technologies and Applications. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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22

3D Integration in VLSI Circuits: Implementation Technologies and Applications. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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23

Sakuma, Katsuyuki. 3D Integration in VLSI Circuits: Implementation Technologies and Applications. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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24

Sakuma, Katsuyuki. 3D Integration in VLSI Circuits: Implementation Technologies and Applications. Taylor & Francis Group, 2018.

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25

Rendering Large-Scale Terrain Models and Positioning Objects in Relation to 3D Terrain. Storming Media, 2003.

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26

Zisserman, Andrew, Andrew Fitzgibbon, Marc Pollefeys, and Luc van Gool. 3D Structure from Images - SMILE 2000: Second European Workshop on 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments Dublin, Ireland, July 12, 2000, Revised Papers. Springer London, Limited, 2003.

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27

Koch, Reinhard, and Luc van Gool. 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments: European Workshop, SMILE'98, Freiburg, Germany, June 6-7, 1998, Proceedings. Springer London, Limited, 2003.

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28

(Editor), Marc Pollefeys, Luc van Gool (Editor), Andrew Zisserman (Editor), and Andrew Fitzgibbon (Editor), eds. 3D Structure from Images - SMILE 2000: Second European Workshop on 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments Dublin, Ireland, July ... Papers (Lecture Notes in Computer Science). Springer, 2001.

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29

(Editor), Reinhard Koch, and Luc Van Gool (Editor), eds. 3D Structure from Multiple Images of Large-Scale Environments: European Workshop, Smile '98, Freiburg, Germany, June 1998 : Proceedings (Lecture Notes in Computer Science). Springer-Verlag Telos, 1999.

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30

Warner, H. R. “Hal.” The Reservoir Engineering Aspects of Waterflooding. Society of Petroleum Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/9781613994214.

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The first edition of The Reservoir Engineering Aspects of Waterflooding was published in 1970 and written by Forrest F. Craig, Jr. At the time of publication, much of the theory of oil displacement by water had been developed and many laboratory studies completed; however, the ability to perform computer modeling of 3D fluid flow in reservoirs with complex geologic depositions was in its infancy. In addition, several of the earliest, large-scale field applications of pattern waterflooding had begun, but long-term performance results were not yet known, and various infill drilling programs had yet to be implemented. This second edition reviews the fundamentals of waterflooding theory, and the experimental studies undertaken to understand the water displacement of oil in one, two, and three dimensions.
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31

Lapaz Castillo, Jose Luis, Oscar Farrerons Vidal, and Noelia Olmedo Torre. Research and Technology in Graphic Engineering and Design at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya. OmniaScience, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.3926/ege2022.

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The Department of Graphic Engineering and Design (DEGD) of the Polytechnic University of Catalonia has undergone continuous and rapid changes in its teaching and research methods in recent years. The DEGD has pursued continuous improvement in learning techniques in its Undergraduate, Master’s and Doctoral programs, striving for excellence, adapting to the increasingly more varied research needs demanded by society from institutions of higher education. We are experiencing paradigm shifts, to a great extent due to the global change affecting the Earth, and we cannot sit back and wait as a society or a department. It is for this reason that a large part of the research carried out recently is related to improved sustainability, investigating new materials, industrial processes, technologies and mechanisms to repurpose and recycle, as is evident in the chapters of the present book. Graphic Engineering and Design is present in the design methodologies used to design a competition motorcycle, in the study of the potential of cellulose as a sustainable material, in the learning about equidistant curves and the solving of tangency problems, in the quest for an alternative to materials derived from fossil resources, in the new production processes for e-commerce packaging, in additive manufacturing, in 3D printing, in the new design methods for porous scaffolds; cross-curricular and innovative knowledge that forms part of the research at DEGD.
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32

Ślusarski, Marek. Metody i modele oceny jakości danych przestrzennych. Publishing House of the University of Agriculture in Krakow, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.15576/978-83-66602-30-4.

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The quality of data collected in official spatial databases is crucial in making strategic decisions as well as in the implementation of planning and design works. Awareness of the level of the quality of these data is also important for individual users of official spatial data. The author presents methods and models of description and evaluation of the quality of spatial data collected in public registers. Data describing the space in the highest degree of detail, which are collected in three databases: land and buildings registry (EGiB), geodetic registry of the land infrastructure network (GESUT) and in database of topographic objects (BDOT500) were analyzed. The results of the research concerned selected aspects of activities in terms of the spatial data quality. These activities include: the assessment of the accuracy of data collected in official spatial databases; determination of the uncertainty of the area of registry parcels, analysis of the risk of damage to the underground infrastructure network due to the quality of spatial data, construction of the quality model of data collected in official databases and visualization of the phenomenon of uncertainty in spatial data. The evaluation of the accuracy of data collected in official, large-scale spatial databases was based on a representative sample of data. The test sample was a set of deviations of coordinates with three variables dX, dY and Dl – deviations from the X and Y coordinates and the length of the point offset vector of the test sample in relation to its position recognized as a faultless. The compatibility of empirical data accuracy distributions with models (theoretical distributions of random variables) was investigated and also the accuracy of the spatial data has been assessed by means of the methods resistant to the outliers. In the process of determination of the accuracy of spatial data collected in public registers, the author’s solution was used – resistant method of the relative frequency. Weight functions, which modify (to varying degree) the sizes of the vectors Dl – the lengths of the points offset vector of the test sample in relation to their position recognized as a faultless were proposed. From the scope of the uncertainty of estimation of the area of registry parcels the impact of the errors of the geodetic network points was determined (points of reference and of the higher class networks) and the effect of the correlation between the coordinates of the same point on the accuracy of the determined plot area. The scope of the correction was determined (in EGiB database) of the plots area, calculated on the basis of re-measurements, performed using equivalent techniques (in terms of accuracy). The analysis of the risk of damage to the underground infrastructure network due to the low quality of spatial data is another research topic presented in the paper. Three main factors have been identified that influence the value of this risk: incompleteness of spatial data sets and insufficient accuracy of determination of the horizontal and vertical position of underground infrastructure. A method for estimation of the project risk has been developed (quantitative and qualitative) and the author’s risk estimation technique, based on the idea of fuzzy logic was proposed. Maps (2D and 3D) of the risk of damage to the underground infrastructure network were developed in the form of large-scale thematic maps, presenting the design risk in qualitative and quantitative form. The data quality model is a set of rules used to describe the quality of these data sets. The model that has been proposed defines a standardized approach for assessing and reporting the quality of EGiB, GESUT and BDOT500 spatial data bases. Quantitative and qualitative rules (automatic, office and field) of data sets control were defined. The minimum sample size and the number of eligible nonconformities in random samples were determined. The data quality elements were described using the following descriptors: range, measure, result, and type and unit of value. Data quality studies were performed according to the users needs. The values of impact weights were determined by the hierarchical analytical process method (AHP). The harmonization of conceptual models of EGiB, GESUT and BDOT500 databases with BDOT10k database was analysed too. It was found that the downloading and supplying of the information in BDOT10k creation and update processes from the analyzed registers are limited. An effective approach to providing spatial data sets users with information concerning data uncertainty are cartographic visualization techniques. Based on the author’s own experience and research works on the quality of official spatial database data examination, the set of methods for visualization of the uncertainty of data bases EGiB, GESUT and BDOT500 was defined. This set includes visualization techniques designed to present three types of uncertainty: location, attribute values and time. Uncertainty of the position was defined (for surface, line, and point objects) using several (three to five) visual variables. Uncertainty of attribute values and time uncertainty, describing (for example) completeness or timeliness of sets, are presented by means of three graphical variables. The research problems presented in the paper are of cognitive and application importance. They indicate on the possibility of effective evaluation of the quality of spatial data collected in public registers and may be an important element of the expert system.
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33

Cukierman, Alex. Central Banks. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.64.

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The first CBs were private institutions that were given a monopoly over the issuance of currency by government in return for help in financing the budget and adherence to the rules of the gold standard. Under this standard the price of gold in terms of currency was fixed and the CB could issue or retire domestic currency only in line with gold inflows or outflows. Due to the scarcity of gold this system assured price stability as long as it functioned. Wars and depressions led to the replacement of the gold standard by the more flexible gold exchange standard. Along with restrictions on international capital flows this standard became a major pillar of the post–WWII Bretton Woods system. Under this system the U.S. dollar (USD) was pegged to gold, and other countries’ exchange rates were pegged to the USD. In many developing economies CBs functioned as governmental development banks.Following the world inflation of the 1970s and the collapse of the Bretton Woods system in 1971, eradication of inflation gradually became the explicit number one priority of CBs. The hyperinflationary experiences of the first half of the 20th century, which were mainly caused by over-utilization of the printing press to finance budgetary expenditures, convinced policymakers in developed economies, following Germany’s lead, that the conduct of monetary policy should be delegated to instrument independent CBs, that governments should be prohibited from borrowing from them, and that the main goal of the CB should be price stability. During the late 1980s and the 1990s numerous CBs obtained instrument independence and started to operate on inflation targeting systems. Under this system the CB is expected to use interest rate policy to deliver a low inflation rate in the long run and to stabilize fluctuations in economic activity in the short and medium terms. In parallel the fixed exchange rates of the Bretton Woods system were replaced by flexible rates or dirty floats. The conjunction of more flexible rates and IT effectively moved the control over exchange rates from governments to CBs.The global financial crisis reminded policymakers that, of all public institutions, the CB has a comparative advantage in swiftly preventing the crisis from becoming a generalized panic that would seriously cripple the financial system. The crisis precipitated the financial stability motive into the forefront of CBs’ policy concerns and revived the explicit recognition of the lender of last resort function of the CB in the face of shocks to the financial system. Although the financial stability objective appeared in CBs’ charters, along with the price stability objective, also prior to the crisis, the crisis highlighted the critical importance of the supervisory and regulatory functions of CBs and other regulators. An important lesson from the crisis was that micro-prudential supervision and regulation should be supplemented with macro-prudential regulation and that the CB is the choice institution to perform this function. The crisis led CBs of major developed economies to reduce their policy rates to zero (and even to negative values in some cases) and to engage in large-scale asset purchases that bloat their balance sheets to this day. It also induced CBs of small open economies to supplement their interest rate policies with occasional foreign exchange interventions.
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