Authors
Avi Ostfeld, James G Uber, Elad Salomons, Jonathan W Berry, William E Hart, Cindy A Phillips, Jean-Paul Watson, Gianluca Dorini, Philip Jonkergouw, Zoran Kapelan, Francesco Di Pierro, Soon-Thiam Khu, Dragan Savic, Demetrios Eliades, Marios Polycarpou, Santosh R Ghimire, Brian D Barkdoll, Roberto Gueli, Jinhui J Huang, Edward A McBean, William James, Andreas Krause, Jure Leskovec, Shannon Isovitsch, Jianhua Xu, Carlos Guestrin, Jeanne VanBriesen, Mitchell Small, Paul Fischbeck, Ami Preis, Marco Propato, Olivier Piller, Gary B Trachtman, Zheng Yi Wu, Tom Walski
Publication date
2008/11
Journal
Journal of water resources planning and management
Volume
134
Issue
6
Pages
556-568
Publisher
American Society of Civil Engineers
Description
Following the events of September 11, 2001, in the United States, world public awareness for possible terrorist attacks on water supply systems has increased dramatically. Among the different threats for a water distribution system, the most difficult to address is a deliberate chemical or biological contaminant injection, due to both the uncertainty of the type of injected contaminant and its consequences, and the uncertainty of the time and location of the injection. An online contaminant monitoring system is considered as a major opportunity to protect against the impacts of a deliberate contaminant intrusion. However, although optimization models and solution algorithms have been developed for locating sensors, little is known about how these design algorithms compare to the efforts of human designers, and thus, the advantages they propose for practical design of sensor networks. To explore these issues, the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
A Ostfeld, JG Uber, E Salomons, JW Berry, WE Hart… - Journal of water resources planning and management, 2008