04 Fakultät Energie-, Verfahrens- und Biotechnik

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    MESAP-III: a tool for energy planning and environmental management : history and new developments ; STE-Seminar, KFA Jülich, 6. September 1994
    (1994) Voß, Alfred; Schlenzig, Christoph; Reuter, Albrecht
    The utilization of energy contributes substantially to environmental pollution. Increasing environmental degradation calls for quick decisions in the field of energy and environmental planning, which anyhow are subject to a high degree of uncertainty. Major investments in this field are necessary to cope with the challenging environmental targets and to provide suffcient affordable and reliable energy for a growing population in an environmentally compatible way. In the early eighties IER at the University of Stuttgart started the development of the MESAP system, the Microcomputer based Energy Sector Analysis and Planning system. The main objective was to improve the planning capabilities of existing models by integrating modern information management tools with the existing operations research methodologies.
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    Proceedings of the 8th bwHPC Symposium 2022 : 28 November 2022, online
    (2024) Gautam, Anupam; Huson, Daniel H.; Böhler, Michael; Pollak, Felix; Ziegler, Elisa; Erokhina, Olga; Rehfeld, Kira; Sharma, Aadhar; Rotter, Stefan; Axenfeld, Julian; Yismaw, Habtamu; Troost, Christian; Berger, Thomas; Siovitz, Ido; Heinen, Philipp; Rasch, Niklas; Lannig, Stefan; Deller, Yannick; Strobel, Helmut; Oberthaler, Markus; Gasenzer, Thomas; Weyers, Cosima-Maria
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    The flora, vegetation and monuments of classical Greece
    (1987) Kull, Ulrich; Diamantoglou, Stergos
    Attica, Central Greece ("Roumeli") and the Peloponnese ("Morea") form the heart of classical Greece. In this area, the landscape, vegetation and human history are intimately associated and interwoven. All three will be given equal consideration during this excursion, where the visit of the sites of Greek Antiquity will each time provide insights into the flora of the past and present. Among and around the ruins, the different types of the characteristic sclerophyllous vegetation of the Mediterranean, including the products of its degradation by man, may be studied. The altitudinal zonation of the vegetation will also be demonstrated, e.g. on Mt. Parnassus and in the central Peloponnese where relatively undisturbed Abies forests still cover extensive areas.