Showing results for: real-time water data Articles
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Monitoring watershed health
Background Municipal water quality managers recognize the need for data that can be used to monitor and assess the impact of urbanization on the condition of natural watersheds. Storm events, in conjunction with the alteration of native landscape, building of roads and overuse of fertilizer, can contribute to excess nutrients, sediment and other pollutants in environmentally significant ...
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Senix sensors monitor Philippine flooding
Extraordinary flood risks require extraordinary technology A variety of factors make the Philippines, and especially the Manila region, among the most flood prone in the world. Tropical rains flow rapidly from mountain uplands to the Manila basin where dense urbanization accelerates run-off. To make matters worse, Manila is built on lowlands that are getting lower due to ground water ...
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Diver-NETZ Reduced operational costs by 97% - Case Study
Near-real-time monitoring increased efficiency, reduced costs, and delivered critical insight into groundwater resources Challenge Reduce municipal groundwater monitoring costs, improve data quality, and achieve greater insight into groundwater resources. Solution Upgrade existing monitoring network with Diver-NETZ* wireless groundwater monitoring system that acquires, transmits and processes ...
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The impact of climate change on water quality
Deforestation has the high potential to accelerate reservoir eutrophication Long-term changes in thermal dynamics may increase the direct effects of climate change on lakes and reservoirs A High-frequency monitoring strategy is proposed by researchers to tackle this challenge Rapid climate change as a result of global warming has made deforestation a widespread phenomenon and a major ...
By LG Sonic
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Importance of Monitoring Water Tanks
For certain industries, water storage tanks are very important for a variety of reasons from cutting costs, to going green. Farms, for example, can save money by reducing water waste after studying data captured by different remote sensors. These sensors deliver data to a central location where analysts study inefficiencies learned from monitoring water levels. Water utilities are cutting costs ...
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Sewer System Water Level Monitoring
Monitoring the water level in a sewer system is crucial for efficiently managing urban water infrastructure. Real-time data is used for early warning to detect flooding and leaks. Collected data is also analyzed to provide insights on performance and enable opportunities for optimization, improving efficiency and planning future upgrades/maintenance needs. ABM's non-contact ultrasonic and radar ...
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Water Level Measurements-Part 1
Confused about which instrumentation to use in your water level monitoring system? In-Situ offers two categories of pressure sensors for water level measurements: absolute or non-vented sensors, and gauged or vented sensors. They look the same and both measure pressure and water level, but they have drastically different applications, outputs and accuracy. The absolute (or non-vented) water level ...
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